Maybe it will be possible to add an interface to ALSA
so users
can easily contribute card/computer specific mixer
information. But still there will be some disadvantages:
look, just a lib.so or a class which is capable of parsing a
/usr/src/linux/.config file, working out what the currently-installed
kernel 'expects', and greps a /dev tree (or two) would be good enough
for the average ALSA app.
look at all the apps. they've all got useless, redundant code,
opening an i/o channel, doing something to it, closing it. grok all
that, glue it into an ALSA helper-lib, give budding hackers a working
tool to build, and away we go ..
* Even if there were many and good user contributed
mixer
interfaces it will still be difficult for "normal" Desktop
users to understand and use it.
if your standard is that 'the user should -absolutely- not have to
have anything to do with this shit in order to treat audio like
text', then you wouldn't be concerned about such things. its some
sort of beautiful irony, but it is irony.
The signal flow in a
soundcard still is a black boxed thing for common users. What
does monitoring mean?
it means "let me listen to -this-", where '-this-' is either one or
the sum of "n" audio sources existing in the system. i would love
for "n" to be the sum total of all audio-generating
drivers+applications (alike) according to user preferences
(determined by running actual apps, like normal), instead of there
being a difference between 'audio driver' and 'audio application',
but thats just me...
one thing i -loooooove- about MidiShare on Linux, for example, is the
fact that it forces me to treat the MIDI i/o devices just like a MIDI
i/o application .. i actually -like- that, MIDI hacker that i am.
honest.
Why does the CD slider not affect the
volume of a CD I play via xmms? What the heck does PCM mean?
why shouldn't xmms just have its own audio volume slider? i mean,
'volume' is a paremeter just like 'kerning' is a parameter in a word
processor. the user can work that out, if its considered 'standard'
that all audio-generating apps should have a volume control, like
they have a 'minimize window' control ..
Let's be honest: Let a "normal" desktop
user look into the
mixer panel on a WXP driven notebook. He will be disappointed
as much as looking into todays alsamixer ;-) .
do not overlook the isolation that the 'normal' desktop user has for
their application space. a cubase user doesn't generally give a damn
if windows lets him mix things from the windows audio control panel;
cubase, after all, just gives him the feature.
ALSA has, traditionally, drawn lines in order to define boundaries
worthy of pillage on either side. sometimes however, such pillage
ignores riches to be obtained 'on the other side' ...
--
;
Jay Vaughan