After an evaluation, GNOME has moved from Bugzilla to GitLab. Learn more about GitLab.
No new issues can be reported in GNOME Bugzilla anymore.
To report an issue in a GNOME project, go to GNOME GitLab.
Do not go to GNOME Gitlab for: Bluefish, Doxygen, GnuCash, GStreamer, java-gnome, LDTP, NetworkManager, Tomboy.
Bug 691693 - Keybindings for volume up/down painfully granular
Keybindings for volume up/down painfully granular
Status: RESOLVED DUPLICATE of bug 650371
Product: gnome-settings-daemon
Classification: Core
Component: media-keys
3.6.x
Other Linux
: Normal normal
: ---
Assigned To: gnome-settings-daemon-maint
gnome-settings-daemon-maint
Depends on:
Blocks:
 
 
Reported: 2013-01-14 08:23 UTC by Tom Most
Modified: 2013-03-05 13:19 UTC
See Also:
GNOME target: ---
GNOME version: ---



Description Tom Most 2013-01-14 08:23:22 UTC
The default keybindings for the volume up and volume down keys are too granular.  On my hardware, when using headphones, the difference between "just a little too quiet" and outright auditory pain is a single keypress.

I'm filing this against 3.6.3, but I had the same issue since the 2.x days, at which point I tracked it down to a constant somewhere in g-s-d which hardcoded the adjustment per keypress to 10%.  At the time it was an even worse issue, because those keypresses mapped to a rotating dial, which was difficult to accurately control.  I mention this because the hardware seems to have been tuned to Windows' volume control behavior, which is much finer (I'd guess 1% adjustment per press, based on how difficult it is to achieve a noticable change when I boot into that OS on the same hardware.)
Comment 1 Bastien Nocera 2013-03-05 13:19:23 UTC
Thanks for the bug report. This particular bug has already been reported into our bug tracking system, but please feel free to report any further bugs you find.

*** This bug has been marked as a duplicate of bug 650371 ***