SUMMARY *** NOTE: If you are reporting a crash, please try to attach a backtrace with debug symbols. See https://community.kde.org/Guidelines_and_HOWTOs/Debugging/How_to_create_useful_crash_reports *** STEPS TO REPRODUCE 1. download a podcast 2. play the podcast 3. increase speed to 1.5 for example OBSERVED RESULT voices are deformed making it impossible to listen issue didnt happen to 2022.09 on Fedora 37 EXPECTED RESULT normal voices speed up SOFTWARE/OS VERSIONS Windows: macOS: Linux/KDE Plasma: fedora37/38 (available in About System) KDE Plasma Version: 5.27.4 KDE Frameworks Version: 5.105.0 Qt Version: 5.15.8 ADDITIONAL INFORMATION I used to downgrade on fedora 37 but the version 2022.9 is not available on fedora 38. other podcast apps are awful
Does it sound like the voices are higher pitched? Can you look in the general settings and report which audio backend is in use? It should be VLC, otherwise the package was not built correctly by the fedora packager. (For the time being, it might help to switch to the gstreamer backend manually.)
(In reply to bart from comment #1) > Does it sound like the voices are higher pitched? Yes voices are higher pitched > Can you look in the general settings and report which audio backend is in > use? Select Audio Backend is Qt Multimedia > It should be VLC, otherwise the package was not built correctly by the > fedora packager. So install the flatpak should fix it ? > (For the time being, it might help to switch to the gstreamer backend > manually.) I can't select any other audio backend. Only choice is QT
Mmm, further investigation shows that fedora simply doesn't have VLC at all. It should probably have been compiled with gstreamer support to be able to fall back to that, though. Yes, switching to the flatpak version will solve the issue, if you're fine with that. PS: The backend change was needed because the old audio backend solution for the pitch will not work with qt6 which we are switching to this year.
I've switched to flatpak, works well. Workaround is good enough for me thank you very much for the quick answers
I've noticed this issue on the Android version. Is there the option to install other sound backends there too?
(In reply to Andrew Smith from comment #5) > I've noticed this issue on the Android version. Is there the option to > install other sound backends there too? This is a semi-related issue: the android audio backend never had support for resampling to correct for pitch. Co-incidentally I have been searching for suitable other backends that would allow this. Only last week I managed to get the MPV backend up-and-running for android, and that has support for pitch correction. So there now is a possible solution available. However, I cannot guarantee when this feature will be finished.