Dear all,
as a user of a "low end" machine (duron 1Ghz, 256MB) I am trying to get
some reverb on the snare drum (living as a soundfont in the Emu10k1
wavetable) being triggered by my MIDI-Sequencer (MusE).
Unfortunately, the hardware reverb on SBlive rev.4 is afaik not
supported, so I wondered whether there is a possibility to route the
wavetable output through JACK into JACK-Rack or something similar?
Simply connecting the MusE output to the JACK-Rack ins in the qjackctl
connection bay does not work (and would btw also put reverb on the
keyboards).
I tried fluidsynth with the jack output, but I can't really get it on
time (too slow, esp. the rolls sound very bad).
Is there any other way to do this?
Thank you,
t.
--
Thorsten Mika mailto: tmika(a)t-online.de
Hamm / Germany TM5173-RIPE
Public Key ID: 41338C37 -- http://www.keyserver.net
Hi!
gmorgan is a rhythm station. a full programable accompaniment tool in
real-time and also a pattern based sequencer.
Requerimnets:
---------------------
ALSA
FLTK
News on 0.19
--------------------
This version is internationalized with gettext.
French and Spanish languages and full documentation in pdf and Open Office
formats has been added.
gmorgan is availabe on:
http://gmorgan.sf.net
Thanks
Josep
>From: Frank Barknecht [mailto:fbar@footils.org]
>Hallo,
>Reuben Martin hat gesagt: // Reuben Martin wrote:
>
>> I'm not too concerned with the 2.6.0 kernel. I'm more interested in
>> the 2.6.1 kernel after Andrew Morton has merged his patch set into
>> the official kernel. Does anybody know what type of effect, if any,
>> his patch set has on multimedia work?
>
>Ah, cool. Will he do that??
From what I understand, now that 2.6.0 is official, the 2.6 series will be handed off to Andrew Morton to maintain and he has a massive patchset prepared to be merged in. I'm not sure if the entire patch set is going to be merged in at once or if it will be a more gradual thing. I would start comparing 2.6 to 2.4 until he has merged those patches.
-Reuben
Hi
Horgand ... is a organ, jack capable who generates sound with a FM based
synthesizer, also provides DSP effects and a small programable accompaniment
in wave table.
Requires:
FLTK
ALSA
JACK
LIBSNDFILE
News on 1.04
--------------------
- This version fix the problem in compilation and other major and minor bugs.
- Load default bank at start.
- Settings changed, Added default bank.
horgand is available in:
http://personal.telefonica.terra.es/web/soudfontcombi/http://www.telefonica.net/web/soudfontcombi/
JACK 0.92.0 has been released.
Mostly minor changes:
* allow `jackd' to belong to a non-root group
* new ./configure option, --disable-ensure-mlock
- allows JACK and its clients to run in realtime mode without
having memory locking privileges.
- default behavior same as before (--enable-ensure-mlock), JACK
clients terminate if running -R and unable to lock memory.
* option parsing bugs fixed.
* correctly handle deactivate/activate sequence for:
- slow-syn callback
- timebase callback
Jack can be downloaded at http://jackit.sf.net .
Taybin Rutkin
> > My experience with 2.6, and also the impression I have got
> from reading
> > linux-audio-dev, is actually the opposite. The 2.6.0 kernel is worse
> > for multimedia work, because the latency is higher than
> 2.4.0 with the
> > low-latency patch. I don't know mathematical that this is
> correct, but it
> > seems so.
>
> This is my experience, too, comparing a 2.4 with low latency patches
> to an unpatched 2.6 kernel.
I'm not too concerned with the 2.6.0 kernel. I'm more interested in the 2.6.1 kernel after Andrew Morton has merged his patch set into the official kernel. Does anybody know what type of effect, if any, his patch set has on multimedia work?
-Reuben
aguerrier:
> Hi
> What sort of improvements are we(linux-audio-users) to expect upon
> upgrading the kernel of our DAW to 2.6.0? I am asking the question to
> get some knowledge and start a nice discussion. I have read 'The
> Wonderful World of Linux 2.6' on http://www.kniggit.net/wwol26.html
> There is a nice paragraph on 'audio and multimedia'; it mentions ALSA's
> inclusion in the kernel and improvements in USB Audio and MIDI devices
> and some upgrade in Video4Linux subsystem, as well.
> What does it all mean to our day-to-day productivity? Should I now get
> the M-Audio Firewire 410, because its functionality might/probably have
> improved?
> Any thoughts?
My experience with 2.6, and also the impression I have got from reading
linux-audio-dev, is actually the opposite. The 2.6.0 kernel is worse
for multimedia work, because the latency is higher than 2.4.0 with the
low-latency patch. I don't know mathematical that this is correct, but it
seems so.
Hopefully it is possible to make a low-latency patch for the 2.6 kernel as
well?
--
>From: r7 <r4nd0m7(a)yahoo.com>
>
>Apologies for interrupting with a rather basic
>question.
But that kind of questions reveal what we are missing.
It could be better you to continue using Cooledit.
I use Audacity nearly daily and would use it more if it would
not miss some features. Audacity and Rosegarden have quite bad
audio engines: Audacity freezes completely if one has several
tracks (even if only one track is soloed), and Rosegarden skips
segments and plays segments at wrong speed.
I would not go to any exhibition and show Linux audio yet.
Good luck for you who do that.
I'm quite critical user (if pointing out malfunctions can be called
"critic"), so, if anyone of you developer would like to have my feedback
on your software, please let me know. I will install latest version of
your software and will tell what happens and what I experience. Maybe
such a feedback could lead to a better software. I cannot myself
go and fix 20+ Linux audio software even I would like to do that.
Regards,
Juhana
I tried to duplicate the distortion w/ Hydrogen & Ardour, and couldn't.
It happened consistently at the end of the first play-through of the
song. What version of Hydrogen are you using? I upgrade to 0.8.1 last
night.