Hi
I asked a while back about a midi processor, and was told to look at
QMidiRoute. I haven't figured out how to build that yet.
But now I'm thinking wouldn't it be possible use pd instead?
Basically I'd like to have input from at least 3 keyboards distributed
to various alsa clients, maybe with some splits. The setup needs to be
recallable from command line...
--
.''`. Peace, love & harmony
: :' : Atte
`. `'
`- http://www.atte.dk
A while ago I posted on some trouble I was having compiling
xjadeo, so I figured that for posterity I'd post again with my
solution. Turned out that the package that I needed was
libavcodeccvs-dev, (current version: 3:20050427-0sarge0.1).
I got the package from the Marillat repository, with this line in
my etc/apt/sources.list file:
deb ftp://ftp.nerim.net/debian-marillat/ unstable main
Hope this can help some people out. This program really is very
handy for doing any video production work.
-spencer
Hallo,
"plak" is here:
http://footils.org/cms/show/44
silly minimal music like steve reich
plak: 15MB, 21:29min, ogg.
techinfo: using Pd a couple of walking state machines were set free to
transcend randomized matrices. the piano is gort's mini piano
soundfont, which is just so lovely cheesy and out of tune sometimes,
it's a blast.
Ciao
--
Frank Barknecht _ ______footils.org__
_ __latest track: "plak" @ http://footils.org/cms/show/44
> Date: Sun, 17 Jul 2005 20:08:43 -0600
> From: Steve D <groups(a)xscd.com>
> Subject: Re: [linux-audio-user] Re: Music
> To: A list for linux audio users <linux-audio-user(a)music.columbia.edu>
> Message-ID: <20050718020843.GO7792(a)xscd.com>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
> I look forward to hearing some of your music, if you care to post it
> here in the LAU list.
Hi Steve,
I have some tracks dating back a few years at Vitaminic - no solo piano
work, but a variety of instrumental/electronic tracks ranging in style
from easy listening to experimental. I hope you enjoy them (or at least
those you choose to hear). These tracks can be found here:
http://stage.vitaminic.co.uk/main/gavin_stevens/all_tracks/
Best wishes,
Gavin.
Angmering, West Sussex, England.
Hi,
if anyone could provide a link to the patch mentioned above,
I'd be very happy.
I once run a 2.6.10 with the RT-LSM patch applied and was
relatively happy with it.
Because I have a lot of trouble with more recent kernels, I'd
like to rebuild a 2.6.10 but I cannot find the RT-LSM patch
for it.
Thanks & best regards
ce
Thanks for the reply Frank. But I've tried alsamixer with no success.
I actually usually use Envy24control which seems to control most of the
same settings (all of which I have at max just to be sure.) Although in
the past "PCM Outs" 1 and 2 have been adequate along with DAC 1 and 2.
I'm wondering if my burner has actually failed. Could it be that the
digital output is broken even though the built-in DtoA is fine?
The other evidence is that when I try to burn wav files to it with
XcdRoast, I get: "OPC Failed".
Any other ideas?
Thanks,
Mike
<pirrone(a)localnet.com> wrote:
Mike,
You've got to closely scrutinize alsamixer to make sure the correct
channel is unmuted and raised to the point where you will hear the CD
playing. The headphone jack has nothing to do with your computer at
all
so it tells you nothing. The fact that your card is working and that
your CD drive worked suggests the upgrade left a setting altered on the
mixer.
Frank
On Tuesday 19 July 2005 13:09, linux-audio-user-request(a)music.columbia.edu
wrote:
> > On Tuesday 19 July 2005 02:21, Lee Revell wrote:
> >> You should not need it, since 2.6.12 the standard kernel contains the
> >> realtime rlimits. If your distro ships a 2.6.12 kernel, they need to
> >> update their PAM and bash packages to support this feature
> >> (check /etc/security/limits.conf and the output of ulimit for any
> >> mention of real time priority). Otherwise it's a bug.
> >
> > I'm running kubuntu/breezy with their 2.6.12-3-amd64-generic kernel
> > and not sure what else to actually check for. My
> > /etc/security/limits.conf is totally commented out and ulimit returns
> > "unlimited".
>
> You want to execute "ulimit -a".
$ ulimit -a
core file size (blocks, -c) 0
data seg size (kbytes, -d) unlimited
file size (blocks, -f) unlimited
max locked memory (kbytes, -l) unlimited
max memory size (kbytes, -m) unlimited
open files (-n) 1024
pipe size (512 bytes, -p) 8
stack size (kbytes, -s) 8192
cpu time (seconds, -t) unlimited
max user processes (-u) unlimited
virtual memory (kbytes, -v) unlimited
On Tuesday 19 July 2005 19:09, linux-audio-user-request(a)music.columbia.edu
wrote:
> > > You want to execute "ulimit -a".
> >
> > $ ulimit -a
> > core file size (blocks, -c) 0
> > data seg size (kbytes, -d) unlimited
> > file size (blocks, -f) unlimited
> > max locked memory (kbytes, -l) unlimited
> > max memory size (kbytes, -m) unlimited
> > open files (-n) 1024
> > pipe size (512 bytes, -p) 8
> > stack size (kbytes, -s) 8192
> > cpu time (seconds, -t) unlimited
> > max user processes (-u) unlimited
> > virtual memory (kbytes, -v) unlimited
>
> Great, thanks David, my output looks similar to this and certainly no
> mention of any realtime anything.
This was not run with that kernel. However, these are the items documented in
my operationally blank limits.conf. If realtime be built into the kernel,
then there should be ducumentation. And it does not fit the mold of the
above.
> I suggest writing to Bill Schottstaedt, Paul Lansky, and John ffitch
> for a heads-up on Ye Olde Days.
Don't get me started reminiscing!! Here at CCRMA, nearly all our software
has always been freely available (Score/MS was the obvious exception) -- we
were a part of the AI lab, and it's "culture" was one of sharing freely.
Unfortuately, we had unique hardware (PDP-10, Samson box, etc), so as far
as I know, only Colgate and IRCAM actually used our code.
I kept all the documentation from that era, but not much of the code;
most of it was written in SAIL (a wonderful, but now defunct Algol language),
or FAIL (the local PDP-10 assembly language), and some in Maclisp, I think --
it was awhile ago...
On the Apple question, I worked there from 1980 to 1983 or thereabouts --
I remember some company called Mountain Hardware making a synthesizer;
we didn't have much of an audio presence at the time -- my understanding
of the issue (which was just "stuff overheard in the halls") was that
there was some agreement with Apple Records to stay out of the music
business. But Apple was very eager at that time to get outside programmers
interested -- I wasn't aware of any hostility toward hackers. You really
couldn't do much computer music with an Apple 2, however.
Hot off the press on Debian Sid. No sources yet so cannot compile realtime,
etc.
The snd-mpu401 driver fails to load. The .ko file is in its place. Anyone had
this problem?