Jump to content
  • 0

I have a problem here 1 prson out of 10 is all static, but the other 9 people can hear the person?


Jewel1986
 Share

You are about to reply to a thread that has been inactive for 3967 days.

Please take a moment to consider if this thread is worth bumping.

Question

Basicly the persons voice is all static with voice in the back. Everyone else in the room can hear them fine, but i get static. The other people hear me fine as well. Any possible fix?

 

 

I could accept it was a hardware thing, if it wasn't for the fact i hear everyone else fine but the one person. I at first assumed it was on there side untill i heard that others had no static from them. Other than the one person everything checks out as i can hear everyone else perfectly. I just don't know why 1 person has static for just my self when i can hear everyone else, and they can hear the 1 person i can't.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 answers to this question

Recommended Posts

  • 0

Voice is always a flaky service in SL.  It has improved over the years, but there are simply too many ways that it can be messed up.  The bulk of voice support is given by the external application called SLVoice, which is made by the SL voice provider, Vivox. Voice failures are almost always due to one of the following reasons:

  • Your ISP is throttling or blocking the voice service;
  • failure of the Vivox service;
  • voice issues on the region you are on;
  • voice being throttled by bandwidth set incorrectly - please check it by following the instructions here;
  • voice hardware (mic, headset) not configured correctly in your operating system settings;
  • voice hardware not configured correctly in the viewer;
  • another application has your voice hardware in use (example, Skype);
  • your anti virus software has “mangled” the voice application; see here.

If I had to guess, I'd say that you either have a hardware problem or some sort of local interference.  If any parts of your system are wireless, you might try replacing them with direct cable connections to see if you can get around radio frequency interference.  I know that's not as helpful as you'd like, but it's about the best anyone can do without sitting next to you and doing a lot of hardware tests.

 

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

You are about to reply to a thread that has been inactive for 3967 days.

Please take a moment to consider if this thread is worth bumping.

Please sign in to comment

You will be able to leave a comment after signing in



Sign In Now
 Share

×
×
  • Create New...