----- Lee Revell <rlrevell(a)joe-job.com> wrote:
> On Thu, 2006-03-02 at 13:27 -0500, Lee A. Azzarello wrote:
> > Seriously? I have 2.6.12.2 and I have read reports of people
> solving
> > this problem with 2.6.11! How much newer is new? Doing kernel
> compile
> > foo is one of my least favorite things.
> >
>
> 2.6.16 is about to be released and 2.6.15 was the last release. So
> you're 3-4 versions behind.
>
> LOTS of bugs have been fixed in year or so since 2.6.12.
I compiled 2.6.15.5 from source at kernel.org. After some anticipation, I rebooted and my mouse didn't work. Oh well. Back to 2.6.12.2. I did discover some interesting use cases where the emi26 works. Some of them make no sense at all. In particular, stereo duplex at 44100hz starts, then produces hunderds of xruns, killing jackd after a few seconds. But get this, stereo duplex at 96000hz works fine with very low latency. Unfortunately few of the files I have recorded on disk or applications that talk to jack opperate at this rate. I'm taking this to the Debian maintainer and jackit-devel list. It's obviously a problem with that code and not my kernel/device.
-lee
I had a read through this:
http://demudi.agnula.org/wiki/DocumentsFaq#TheXWindowgraphicalsystemfailsto…
To see how I can get my demudi distro to connect to the internet but I am
getting nowhere.
I loaded up Network settings and added a connection for eth0 Lan card but
when I tell it to conenct it just does nothing. The mouse pointer still
works but I get no reponse from anything and I still can not connect to the
internet.
Can someone guide me through this process please.
Many thanks.
Bal.
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I have just put back my Audiophile 2496 SC into my DAW and when I shut down
the system I get a terrible bizzing sound comng from the speakers.
The AP2496 is connected to an A&H analogue mixing desk and the speakers are
Mackie 824s.
I am running various distros and it happend on all them. The buzzing goes
when I switch the pc on.
If I boot up into windows I get a sharp hissing sound which I sort out by
not picking the SPDIF I/O.
What is going on here???
I have checked in alsamixer and there is nothing there that would indicate
why I get this sound which only occurs when the machine is switched off.
--
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Artemiy,
I did not find your announcement offensive or inappropriate - (but then I
differ w/ most folks here on just about everything.) :)
Some people get their knickers in a twist about the pettiest things.
Perhaps it does qualify as advertising and is not allowed on the list - I
didn't see anything about it in the rules one way or the other, only:
"It's a place for all things audio, but they should be viewed from a user's
perspective."
I think a useful collection of drum samples, whether for free or a modest
price, certainly fits within that description.
(If the list is to be restricted only to free oss then perhaps that should
be better clarified in the list rules.)
Personally, I think it's great that you're trying to get some compensation
for your hard work and are offering it at such an affordable price.
It's nice to know one can get good samples without having to shell out
$300+ for them.
Thanks for the link, and best of luck to you with your continuing
endeavors.
[BTW - hey list members: whatever you're doing *for_a_living* - I want it
for free! Really!
That way we won't need to try to make any money from our music.
Free housing, free food, free gas, free everything - then free art makes
sense too.
JMNHO]
- Maluvia
>Guys,
>
>thanks for your understanding and little misunderstanding.
>
>To Peter:
>
>1. It *was" an announcement, I do not ever "advertise". Or you want to say
>that if it's free product then it's an annoucemenet, and if it's not, this
>is
>an advertisement? I didn't yet know about such specifics in OSS
>terminology ;-)
>
>2. I didn't say the sounds are great, I said "amazing" and "superb" ;-)
>
>3. I don't think anyone ever released a commercial library for Linux
>software,
>so at least I thought you developers should know I did.
>
>Please take my apologies to anyone who my post hurt. But anyway I am a
>little
>surprised by how unwelcome any Linux-for-audio promotiing intentions like
>mine appeared to be to some of you. I must say that, still, there were
>much
>more positive reaction to this commercial Linux sound library from users
>who
>have been awating for some changes for a while.
>
>Anyway, for those whose ears fade away when they hear a word "commercial",
>please see: http://rolandclan.info/en/samples/index/
>
>;-)
>
>
>Yours,
>
>Artemiy.
Dear Linux audio software users and developers,
many of you may know me - a sound designer behind many free sounds I keep on
making for Hydrogen rhythm machine and other samplers.
Now I am pleased to announce Rhythm Galaxy vol. 1 - an all-new sound library
which boasts a huge load of drums, percussion and effects - from analog and
digital emulations to brand new, amazing sounds. It is a low-cost but very
high-quality library which delivers just the right sounds for various styles.
Rhythm Galaxy vol. 1 includes over 250 world-class, superb sounds which
satisfy the needs of professional composers and music-making lovers who have
been searching for fresh, unique and inspiring material. All sounds are
totally original material, they have been created completely from scratch,
using Roland Fantom-S, V-Synth and VC-1 synthesizers, Krok 2401 analog vocoder
and also ALSA Modular synth.
Rhythm Galaxy is available in two formats:
- .WAV files grouped in folders ("Kick", "Snare", etc.) - suitable for any
hardware/software sampler
- Hydrogen drum kit with all 256 sounds (will work only in Hydrogen 0.9.4
sound library manager).
Sound demo:
http://soniccharger.com/media/demos/Rhythm_Galaxy_1_demo.mp3
Specs and complete sample list:
http://soniccharger.com/media/manuals/Rhythm_Galaxy_manual.pdf
More info:
http://store.rolandclan.info/?action=catalogueViewItem&category=4&id=RGALAX…
You can also read more about me and my works at http://sineshine.com.
Sincerely,
Artemiy.
Hi everybody,
after almost two years spent ramblin about music distribution in the
internet age, copyright issues, file sharing and such, trying to
convince some people that physical mediums like CDs are dead and that
artist must find other ways of financial support other than selling
records, I've just stumbled upon the website of a musician I respect and
follow since many years ago.
There's a brand new mp3 store over there.
If you decide to purchase a track you are redirected to a page - a
typical shopping cart - in which you can choose (!?!?!?) the quantity of
mp3s you want to buy of the same track.
I'm tempted to try and buy two copies of a track to see if I receive two
links of the same track or if I'll have to download the track two times,
one for myself and one for a friend.
My mind is exploding.
c.
--
www.cesaremarilungo.com
>If there's to be a common language,
>there's always going to be the native speakers that get the free ride,
>whatever it is.
Touch�
But Americans (and English) do seem to be notoriously reluctant to learn
other languages.
I mean - we can't even wrap our heads around the metric system.
>If English-speaking countries became insignificant AND there was a
>drop-in alternative waiting in the wings (maybe French? Isn't that the
>runner-up?), then we might see a change.
Well, there's a reason they call it the linuga-franca.
French once was, and may yet be again.
If the dollar continues its decline in relation to the euro, and
international culture starts becoming more Eurocentric - as seems very
likely right now - we may indeed see another language replace English.
Then we Americans will really have to buck-up, swallow our pride, and join
the rest of the multilingual world.
(Let's just hope it does not end up being Chinese!)
- Maluvia
I get exactly the same thing. In fact any kind of GUI movement crashes either
Jack or Ardour.
Asus a7n8x Deluxe 2800 amd
Delta 1010lt
1gig ddr
Archlinux latest
(tried both as root and set_limits - there seems to be problem with pam at the
moment.)
>On Friday 03 March 2006 08:59, Carlos Pino wrote:
>Hi there,I found an issue with ardour 0.99-1 and 0.99-2,that make
>crash the app if I move the playing cursor,with the mouse, during the
>reproduction of the tracks.It doesn't happens with 0.99,that works really
>smooth.Also tryed with the cvs version with same results.
>Anybody got the same or similar? Is there something to do to avoid
>these?
>My machine:
>PIV 2.6 mhz,1gb ddr,terratec dmx6 fire ,running Debian Sarge.
>Saludos.
>Carlos.
Greetings,
So here comes the time for another public release of the (cute) FluidSynth
Qt Interface: Qsynth 0.2.5 is out!
Just as one can read from the change log:
- New dial-knob behavior now follows mouse pointer angular position,
almost similar to old QDial, but this time avoiding that nasty and rather
abrupt change on first mouse click.
- By simple use of widget subclassing, the value/position of any dial knob
can now be reset to its default or original position at any time, by
simply pressing the mouse mid-button. These default value positions are
just committed to current dial values when switching engines and/or
closing the application.
- Optional specification of alternate fluidsynth installation path has
been added to configure command arguments (--with-fluidsynth).
- After some source code tweaks, a win32 build is now possible
(instructions will be provided on demand :)
- Bank offset finally gets its due effect, while on the channels and
channel preset selection dialogs. Regretfully, the soundfont bank offset
feature has been lurking ever since its inception, but now its live and
hopefully effective.
- A new fancy widget has arrived, qsynthKnob, with some modifications to
replace the actual *ugly* QDial widgets in the main window. This widget is
based on a design by Thorsten Wilms, formerly implemented by Chris Cannam
in Rosegarden, and finally adapted and brought to Qsynth by Pedro
Lopez-Cabanillas. Thankyou all.
Available from the usual places:
http://qsynth.sourceforge.nethttp://sourceforge.net/projects/qsynth
Enjoy.
--
rncbc aka Rui Nuno Capela
rncbc(a)rncbc.org
----- torbenh(a)gmx.de wrote:
> On Sat, Mar 04, 2006 at 02:44:43AM +0900, hard off wrote:
> > no, i mean like actual jamming..in realtime.
> >
> > still science fiction, yeah? i think it must be getting closer
> > though. i have had some pretty good realtime phone conversations.
> > don't get much lag over the phone line.
> >
> > of course sending actual audio data would be crazy, cos there's not
> > even very good live audio streaming available yet....but simple
> > control data must be possible, right?
Kind of off topic, but the Asterisk PBX can send a 64kbit RTP stream in realtime with no latency. The current implementation is for voice only, so the ulaw codec is fixed at a mono stream at 8000hz. Not too practical for music. I would guess that it's not impossible to up the bitrate a little by hacking the source to allow for a mono 44100hz stream. The transport is UDP, therefore it'll simply drop packets that don't get there. There's also the issue of signalling. The current sane options are SIP and IAX2. SIP seems like overkill. I'd go with IAX2.
I could imagine a situation where you run an IAX2 softphone with JACK inputs through a hacked Asterisk PBX. Science fiction? Not at all. Hard? Probably.
-lee