[LAU] So what do you think sucks about Linux audio ?

Jörn Nettingsmeier nettings at stackingdwarves.net
Sun Feb 10 11:17:34 UTC 2013


On 02/10/2013 01:59 AM, gerald.mwangi at gmx.de wrote:

hi gerald!


<strong disagreement next 5 miles, and likely some alligators crossing>

> What sucks: the workflow does not feel organic! Can you say that
> bringing down an idea alone with multiple instruments (sequentially
> recording all instruments, including synths) to disk is as easy as
> recording it with a band on an 8track machine? No!

as someone who has done his share of 8track reel-to-reel recording: 
BWAHAHAHAHAAAHAAAA.

compare:
* clean and degauss tape heads
* find some empty tape (at something like 90 € per half hour)
* thread the tape
* lay down test tones
* (optional) wrestle with your noise reduction
* level, arm, roll
to:
* start jack
* start ardour with 8-track template
* level, arm, roll

when it comes to editing and mixing, the whole comparison becomes 
ridiculously unbalanced. and i'm not even talking sound quality yet.

and if you want to include the setup and configuration of a bare-bones 
machine, then please also include the soldering iron and oscilloscope :)

don't get me wrong, gerald, this isn't meant as personal criticism, and 
your input is certainly appreciated, but this statement just doesn't 
hold water.

> And just saying that
> it is not possible with other OS's is no excuse. The linux audio
> experience has to feel like just picking up an instrument (complex
> synths included) and a band to jam in the idea.
<snip>
> But, and this a big but: as I don't need nor want documentation to get a
> tone out of my guitar/ my voice, I don't want documentation to handle
> linux audio!

dude. you have practised your guitar for years. at some point, that 
surely involved reading documentation, or at least very thorough and 
systematic exploration on your part.
if you were to claim that guitars are needlessly complex and you are 
entitled to just grab one and go, hard-working guitarists would be 
rightfully offended and laugh at you.

a studio workflow is no different. it takes practice and respect to 
master. why does everybody and their grandma just assume that when they 
suck at recording, it must be the studio's fault? that is kind of 
offending to hard-working recording engineers. ;)

> The whole ecosystem has to be integrated and simple to be
> operated at the ease of a few clicks with no prior knowledge! To the
> same extent as it is open to all.

no. no. no. i don't want to be limited to a three-stringed guitar 
because people can only count "one, two, many".

stuff that works without prior knowledge or some will to study is 
usually boring, and ineffective. it's cool for a week, and then you 
outgrow it.

now i'm all ears when it comes to discussing workflow and how to 
streamline stuff - after all, professional studio work is all about 
workflow. but i don't like blanket statements that threaten to make 
software too simplistic for more demanding work.

best,


jörn


-- 
Jörn Nettingsmeier
Lortzingstr. 11, 45128 Essen, Tel. +49 177 7937487

Meister für Veranstaltungstechnik (Bühne/Studio)
Tonmeister VDT

http://stackingdwarves.net



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