Which is why this one stumps me.
Only my left speaker works. I don't know why. Up until a few weeks ago, both did. Now, without me really noticing, the right one doesn't work. I just realized it after putting in a song that has distinct left/right parts, and suddenly it explains the anomalous quietness I've heard from Mount and Blade and why enemies sneak up on me in FPSes suddenly.
All of my speaker settings (I've checked every single one I can think of, from the simple Volume Panel to screwing about with the Device Manager, troubleshooting with microsoft's useless interface that doesn't even list my problem, and mucking about in the Control Panel) are on neutral balance. Turning it to right balance makes it silent, turning it to left balance makes it twice as loud.
So obviously the right speaker just no longer is playing.
Headphones plugged into the right speaker (the only reciever) play from the left but not the right, just like the speakers.
I relaly don't know much about computer audio systems, so all I really can say is this from DxDiag:
Yamaha AC-XG WDM Audio from 2002, no longer supported by manufacturer for updates and so forth.
Thus, the Drivers (v. 6.13.0010.3154 English) are from 9/19/2002, the latest Drivers (v. 6.13.0010.3157, so obviously not much younger) say this ominous warning:
So I refrained from updating my drivers. Hell, if they don't have a warning sometimes shit happens with drivers. If that will fix it, I suppose I can chance it and roll back if it stops both from working.This generic driver may NOT work with your system. You MUST consult with your PC manufacturer before download AC-XG Generic Drivers to make sure it works. Also this generic driver supports basic functions only. If you would like to have the full feature supported driver, contact your PC manufacturer.
Based on the scant information above, does anyone have any ideas on what's happened? I don't think it could be simple hardware failure, since the right speaker just doesn't work, even with headphones. And as far as I know, it should even if the speaker itself were broken.