We have collected the most relevant information on Gnome Audio Control Panel. Open the URLs, which are collected below, and you will find all the info you are interested in.


Change the sound volume - GNOME

    https://help.gnome.org/users/gnome-help/stable/sound-volume.html.en
    Open the Activities overview and start typing Sound. Click on Sound to open the panel. Under Volume Levels, change the volume of the application listed there. Only applications that are playing sounds are listed. If an application is playing sounds but is not listed, it might not support the feature that lets you control its volume in this way.

gnome-audio - Vergenet

    http://www.vergenet.net/~conrad/sounds/gnome-audio/
    Action button click. gtk-events/clicked.wav. Menu item activation. gtk-events/activate.wav. Check box toggled. gtk-events/toggled.wav. You may need to restart the gnome panel and flush part of esd's sample cache for these changes to take effect. The easiest way to do this (lame as it is) is to log out and log back in again.

Ubuntu Manpage: gnome-control-center - Configure GNOME ...

    https://manpages.ubuntu.com/manpages/bionic/man1/gnome-control-center.1.html
    DESCRIPTION gnome-control-center is a graphical user interface to configure various aspects of GNOME. When run without arguments, the shell displays the overview, which shows all available configuration panels. The overview allows to open individual panels by clicking on them. It also has a search entry to find panels by searching keywords.

gnome-control-center: Configure GNOME settings - Linux Man ...

    https://www.systutorials.com/docs/linux/man/1-gnome-control-center/
    The sound panel shows all known sound devices and their configuration, including volume and balance settings. You can open this panel on a specific tab by passing output , input , hardware , effects or applications as extra argument. universal-access

sound - More KDE-esque audio control in Ubuntu/GNOME …

    https://askubuntu.com/questions/1131303/more-kde-esque-audio-control-in-ubuntu-gnome-menu-bar-or-pulseaudio-cum-gnome-i
    GNOME's system menu only features a volume slider for the currently selected audio output. More functionality is found in Settings > Sound. Not only is this inconvenient, it lacks any way to change audio output on a per application basis. You can only select one output at a time, for all applications.

Now you know Gnome Audio Control Panel

Now that you know Gnome Audio Control Panel, we suggest that you familiarize yourself with information on similar questions.