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The proprietary âZoomâ meeting system has an error (bug) in its GNU/Linux version that sometimes causes sound to cut out.âI have confirmed this bug exists in at least versions 3.5.385850.0413 (April 2020) through 5.7.4 (28991.0726, July 2021).
It is possible to âwork aroundâ this bug as follows (assuming youâve already clicked âJoin audioâ if necessaryâremembering that some desktop environments hide this button behind a bottom toolbar if youâve made the Zoom window too large; itâs easier if Zoom has been set to always join audio when you join a new meeting)â
1. When youâre in the meeting where you canât hear sound, press Alt-Tab (or Alt-` if youâre using the Gnome desktop) until you see Zoomâs main settings window:
(On older versions of Zoom the text might be too small to read, because Zoomâs developers apparently didnât know about DPI settingsâthey fixed that on the GNU/Linux platform in Version 5.1.418436.0628.)
2. Just below the top right corner of that window, there is a very tiny cog-wheel.âYou have to aim the mouse pointer at that and click.âThis is difficult if you have any kind of disability that affects mouse work, and I am not aware of any keyboard shortcut.
3. Select the third item on the left of the Settings window, to bring up the audio settings:
4. The first blue slider on the right, on the third row, is a volume control.âIt might look like it is already turned up.âBut use the mouse to drag it down and up again.
Performing this action appears to âfixâ the sound issue, at least for the current meeting.
(Why does it work?âWell as Zoom is closed-source proprietary software, I donât get to see the code, so I have no idea.âMy *guess* is that some timing-related bug can cause Zoom to fail to send the correct volume level to the sound system on startup, but fiddling with Zoomâs internal volume control causes that value to be re-sent.âItâs important to tell meeting participants that the volume control to fiddle with is the one in the Zoom settings and *not* their main system volume if this is already turned up: turning the main system volume down and up again will *not* solve the issue.)
At least the 5.4.x versions of Zoom on GNU/Linux have been known to throw you completely out of a meeting if you stay in a breakout room right up until the breakout room time expires, whereas the previous behaviour was to return you to the main meeting when that happens.
To work around this problem, you need to be aware of the breakout room time expiring, and manually leave the breakout room yourself just before it does so.âYou should then be returned to the main meeting room as with previous versions.
If the Zoom window is too large for the screen (e.g. if high-DPI is in use and the monitor is small), and if Zoom refuses to be resized, then one workaround (at least in 5.4.x) is to press Alt-U to bring up the participants list, and then press Alt-U again to dismiss it.âThis works if and only if the participants list is merged with the main window.âThe main window should then be reduced in size to just about fit the screen, although the controls at the bottom might remain unreachable.
If in this situation, you might also need to join meetings with video turned off, because you wonât be able to reach the mouse-only controls at the bottom of the video verification dialogueâyou should be able to switch video back on with Alt-V after joining.
In some cases you might be able to use Gnomeâs Alt-F7 + arrow keys (or Super key + drag) to move Zoom windows partially off-screen at the top in order to access off-screen controls at the bottom; this might be necessary for example to raise hand in versions prior to 5.5.2 (7011.0206, February 2021) which fixed the Alt-Y keyboard shortcut for raising hand on GNU/Linux.
A related annoyance is the large âplease wait for the host to start the meetingâ window which (at least on some Zoom versions) insists on being âalways on topâ of your other windows, and can take up most of the screen when in high DPI (and cannot be moved off-screen by dragging its title bar, although it can if you use Alt-F7 or the Super key)âin Gnome you can press Alt-Space on it and de-select the âalways on topâ option.
Zoom versions 5.1.x introduced a separate bug that can cause Zoom to crash just after joining a meeting if youâre running the 32-bit GNU/Linux binary (at least under LXDE in Ubuntu 18.04-derived distributions).âThe 64-bit binary is not affected.âSo if youâre upgrading from 5.0 or earlier to 5.1+, you might also wish to move to 64-bit if you havenât already done so.
If you donât really need to see the incoming video and prefer to save bandwidth, it seems you cannot turn off incoming video (at least not without using a telephone line instead), but you can reduce bandwidth by shrinking the meeting window to be as small as possible without minimising it.
If you cannot use the mouse, then some desktops let you shrink windows via the keyboard.âFor example, in Gnome 3, provided the window has not been maximised, use the following key sequence: Alt-F8, Left Shift-Right Shift-Right, Up Shift-Down Shift-Down, Enter.â(If the window has been maximised then press Alt-F10 to toggle that first.)âDo not touch the physical mouse during these keyboard sequences, as doing so will interfere with the resulting window size.
There are command lines to do this more efficiently on my mplayer notes page.
All material © Silas S. Brown unless otherwise stated. Linux is the registered trademark of Linus Torvalds in the U.S. and other countries. Zoom is a trademark of Zoom Video Communications, Inc. Any other trademarks I mentioned without realising are trademarks of their respective holders.