<html><div style='background-color:'><FONT style="FONT-SIZE: 11px; FONT-FAMILY: tahoma,sans-serif">
<P>From: <I>"Yuan LIU" <yliu11@hotmail.com></I><BR>>Another bizarry: If I run the Echo application from the console, I <BR>>can hear a very long delay (upward to 1,000 ms). I can run the same <BR>>application from a GrandStream phone (on the same LAN) and hear <BR>>little delay. What could possibly be wrong? If it were interrupt <BR>>overload, I'd hear lots of cracks in my echo, right? I'm not <BR>>hearing that. Besides, a telephony card is not involved.</P>
<P>For future reference, I have determined that this was related to the ISA card used. It may not be entirely due to card, but when I replaced the card with a newer card (a SIIG Wavetable 5.1 PCI, identified as CMI8738-MC6 ), things improved significantly.</P>
<P>Yuan Liu</P>
<BLOCKQUOTE style="PADDING-LEFT: 5px; MARGIN-LEFT: 5px; BORDER-LEFT: #a0c6e5 2px solid; MARGIN-RIGHT: 0px">
<P>>I'm running asterisk-1.2.13 and zaptel-1.2.10 on Linux <BR>>2.6.15-27-386 (Ubuntu 6 distribution without X). Hardware includes <BR>>a P III 600 MHz, 386 MB RAM, an X100P card that's not part of this <BR>>test (also used an X100P clone card to same result), and a CS4239 <BR>>sound card (ISA) with ALSA driver (also tried with OSS to similar <BR>>result but OSS had a harder time getting volume up). ALSA needed a <BR>>bit of tweak to work properly with CS4239, but afer carefully <BR>>setting alsamixer, I don't hear much echo when making calls from the <BR>>console.<BR>><BR>>Yuan Liu</P></FONT></BLOCKQUOTE></div></html>