• AllNewTypeFace@leminal.space
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    24 hours ago

    IIRC, Spotify watches the system volume and doesn’t pay for streams playing when it’s muted. Physically unplugging your speakers should work, though.

    • Alk@sh.itjust.works
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      24 hours ago

      If you have a desktop and not a laptop, it’s always a great idea to get a separate sound controller. Either a dac/amp for nice headphones, volume controls on a wireless headset, or even buy a sound mixer like the rodecaster duo so you can assign independent applications to each physical slider on the mixer. I do that last one and it’s such a quality of life improvement if you use your PC a lot.

      All of these options can’t be seen from Spotify.

        • waldfee@feddit.org
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          1 hour ago

          afaik Spotify(or any site) Cannot see if a tab is muted. The method you’re referring to is part of the tabs API, which can only be used by extensions that have been given permission to the tabs api

        • Alk@sh.itjust.works
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          22 hours ago

          I think the Spotify application may be able to, I assume this is what OP was talking about.

        • Alk@sh.itjust.works
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          22 hours ago

          Yeah that one is pricey, but you can certainly get cheap ones for a fraction of the price. Most people don’t need the one I have, and smaller ones can serve the same purpose.

        • remotelove@lemmy.ca
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          22 hours ago

          I have a Zoom L12 for mixing/recording my synthesizers, PC system sound and additional PC audio interface. I got it used for $500.

          You can get super cheap mixers as well, but the quality will probably be hit-or-miss. (Proper grounding and interference being the biggest issues.) I got lucky with a $40 4 channel mixer that I use when running too many synths and just need to route sound somehow.

        • Alk@sh.itjust.works
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          17 hours ago

          you can assign independent applications > I know you can do this in windows without needing an extra sound controller it’s in ‘Settings>system>Sound>Volume Mixer’

          Yeah, but separate physical controls are beneficial when you have full-screen apps, are busy, don’t want to lose your place, or if you need to do it more frequently and quickly than the sound mixer allows.

          Linux largely has this too, but in both OS’s it’s less convenient than reaching over and quickly pressing a button or sliding a slider in many scenarios.

          Of course if you just need to edit these infrequently then that’s a perfectly good solution and there’s no reason to spend any money at all.

    • cm0002@lemmy.worldOP
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      23 hours ago

      Interesting, I actually just adjust the volume knob on my desktop speakers so I didn’t think of this when I wrote the meme.

      But now I kinda wanna see if I can hijack this monitoring it does and fake 100% volume to the application at all times…hmm welp to the mile long project list it goes!

      • davidgro@lemmy.world
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        22 hours ago

        I was on a team testing multimedia for a while and this was the solution for the big lab full of desktops and laptops running automated tests.

    • Kualdir@feddit.nl
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      23 hours ago

      I think if you just use voicemeeter and set it to a monitor as output that should work