Hey, I just tested it with a youtube video and with Cantata/mpd. Cranked it up to about 120% (my ears couldn't stand more), paused the video or the music, waited a bit and started it again. In both instances, they retained their ~120% value. Do you have any specific applications where it happens or does it happen with every program? Might have something to do with flat-volumes. Do you have them enabled? (`grep flat-volume /etc/pulse/daemon.conf`) If so, try disabling them: Set flat-volumes to no in /etc/pulse/daemon.conf. Restart pulseaudio with `pulseaudio -k` or simply logging out and back in. Greetings On 03.04.2018 09:13, Axel Braun wrote:
Morning,
the issue sounds peanuts, but is quite annoying if you have a device where the maximum volume is quite low (in this case: My T520 Laptop):
In the system settings one can set the maximum volume for output to 150%. If you start a stream you can increase the volume in the KDE volume control (menu bar) to lets say 150%. Pause the stream: stays on 150%. Play the stream again: Volume reduced to 100%. So you have to pump it up each time you start/stop a stream or audio output. This bug was just introduced in one of the last TW updates , probably between 20180222 and 20180324
Anyone else noticed this? I have opened https://bugs.kde.org/show_bug.cgi?id=392666 for this