Hi everyone!
I've had some problems with ecasound's neteci in scripting. I wonderif it is
a bug or a feature.
I simply seems, that ecasound doesn't accept "realtime" commands over a
net-connection. I started ecasound in daemon mode and let my script pass a lot
of commands using the telnet program.
Can anyone please help me?
Kindest regards
Julien
--------
Music was my first love and it will be my last (John Miles)
======== FIND MY WEB-PROJECT AT: ========
http://ltsb.sourceforge.net
the Linux TextBased Studio guide
======= AND MY PERSONAL PAGES AT: =======
http://www.juliencoder.de
(Sorry if this post hits the list twice, the first attempt hasn't shown
up in my mailbox for over an hour. Trying again CC'ing myself to ensure
my outbound mail system is working.)
To any Delta 1010LT/Envy24control gurus:
First I want to state that I am aware that analog inputs #1 & #2 for
this card can be configured via on-card jumpers to either of 2 Mic
levels or either of 2 Line levels. My questions below do not pertain to
these jumpers. (Although in talking about jumper settings for each of
the 2 Line level options here, the manual mentions a "+4 mode" that I'm
not familiar with, so if someone wants to explain that.....it might be
related to my questions below!) Anyways:
I've been reading the M-Audio manual that came with this card and it
refers to the ability to control the variable input and output levels
for this card. It mentions a simplified "Consumer" interface with three
radio button options labeled +4dBu, "Consumer" (which the manual
describes as -4dBV), -10dBV. There is also a more "Advanced" interface
that uses sliders to allow finer grain control of each Input and Output
individually. What I'm describing here is the PC/Mac control software
that M-Audio distributes with these cards. Obviously, I'm using this
card in Linux and my control software is Envy24control and Alsamixer.
Questions:
1) Can anyone tell me if the "Consumer" I/O levels (described above)
actually set the hardware on the card to different dynamic range modes?
What I mean here is if this is something *different* than changing the
ADC/DAC slider controls in Envy24control & Alsamixer?
2) Or, are these +4dBu, Consumer (-4dBV), -10dBV buttons, just preset
slider controls that one could manually set on the "Advanced"
slider-based interface. And if this is the case, is this just doing the
same thing the ADC/DAC slider controls are doing in Envy24control &
Alsamixer?
3) If the PC/Mac control software is actually setting the card to
different I/O range modes, then is this also possible with Envy24control?
Finally, I want to restate that I am not confusing the configurable I/O
range limits with the Mic/Line level jumpers available on the card for
analog inputs #1 & #2. What I would like to know is if there are other
software configurable I/O range modes that this card is capable of
running in that Envy24control is not exposing.
Thanks in advance for any hints.
Rick
To any Delta 1010LT/Envy24control gurus:
First I want to state that I am aware that analog inputs #1 & #2 for
this card can be configured via on-card jumpers to either of 2 Mic
levels or either of 2 Line levels. My questions below do not pertain to
these jumpers. (Although in talking about jumper settings for each of
the 2 Line level options here, the manual mentions a "+4 mode" that I'm
not familiar with, so if someone wants to explain that.....it might be
related to my questions below!) Anyways:
I've been reading the M-Audio manual that came with this card and it
refers to the ability to control the variable input and output levels
for this card. It mentions a simplified "Consumer" interface with three
radio button options labeled +4dBu, "Consumer" (which the manual
describes as -4dBV), -10dBV. There is also a more "Advanced" interface
that uses sliders to allow finer grain control of each Input and Output
individually. What I'm describing here is the PC/Mac control software
that M-Audio distributes with these cards. Obviously, I'm using this
card in Linux and my control software is Envy24control and Alsamixer.
Questions:
1) Can anyone tell me if the "Consumer" I/O levels (described above)
actually set the hardware on the card to different dynamic range modes?
What I mean here is if this is something *different* than changing the
ADC/DAC slider controls in Envy24control & Alsamixer?
2) Or, are these +4dBu, Consumer (-4dBV), -10dBV buttons, just preset
slider controls that one could manually set on the "Advanced"
slider-based interface. And if this is the case, is this just doing the
same thing the ADC/DAC slider controls are doing in Envy24control &
Alsamixer?
3) If the PC/Mac control software is actually setting the card to
different I/O range modes, then is this also possible with Envy24control?
Finally, I want to restate that I am not confusing the configurable I/O
range limits with the Mic/Line level jumpers available on the card for
analog inputs #1 & #2. What I would like to know is if there are other
software configurable I/O range modes that this card is capable of
running in that Envy24control is not exposing.
Thanks in advance for any hints.
Rick
Holger Wirtz wrote:
> On Wed, Sep 26, 2007 at 01:10:31AM -0400, D. Michael McIntyre wrote:
>> On Tuesday 25 September 2007, Holger Wirtz wrote:
>>> Has anyone on the list such a file? If not I will try to make one on my
>>> own.
>> As far as we know, everybody who has ever made one of these has shared it, and
>> it has wound up going into our source tree. If you don't see it in the
>> library in the current SVN version, we don't have it. I don't know why
>> anybody would go to the trouble to make an .rgd file and then not share it,
>> so if it's not in there, it's unlikely to exist, and you probably have to
>> make one yourself (and then share it, please.)
>
> Ok. I will check out the sources and if I write a new .rgd I will
> announce it on this list!
Is there a Yamaha PSR-740 RGD in there? If not, I have one ...
--
David
gnome(a)hawaii.rr.com
authenticity, honesty, community
>
> I have a good number of lyrics and parts of lyrics. I am willing to put
> them
> under a CC BY-SA license (if you don't like that, suggest another) and you
> can go to town.
>
> Let me know if you are interested.
>
> You cn find some spoken word stuff and some things people have done with
> them. If you prefer the test, let me know and I can put them up somewhere.
>
> http://www.archive.org/search.php?query=%22drew%20Roberts%22
>
> all the best,
>
> drew
>
Hey, what do you mean with "If you prefer the test"?
I listened to some of your spoken words on archive..great!! some really
really great stuff.
It would be good to have some written ones..so I could try some of them!
You can send them by email..or we can set up a wiki as people suggest along
and put them under CC BY-SA licence..
Thanks
Musix GNU+Linux 1.0 R3 Test1 Released!
See:
http://www.musix.org.ar/wiki/index.php?title=Musix1.0r3test1-announce
The Musix project has released the “Musix GNU+Linux 1.0 R3 test1” Live-CD.
This testing version was produced on the basis of the stable version 1.0 R2,
based on Knoppix and Debian/Stable.
Musix 1.0 R3 Test1 solves several problems, among them, the “Inconsistent
Filesystem Structure” bug after an electrical shutdown.
New functionalities were added, for instance: automount of CDs, DVDs and USB
memories, or the "install" boot argument.
Video edition and graphic design applications have been moved towards the
Live-DVD version that will be out in a few weeks, but Musix 1.0 R2 Live-CD
will have them forever.
Fundamental programs have been updated: Ardour 2.0.5, Jackd 0,103, or Solfege
3.6.4. New packages were added: Firefox 2.0.0.3 (iceweasel) aMSN 0.97rc1 or
Gnumeric, turning Musix into a friendlier system for general users.
Our software repository now contains LMMS 0.3.0, which can handle native VST
plugins.
Enjoy it!
--
`&'
# Marcos Guglielmetti, co-director de
# Musix GNU+Linux, 100% Software Libre para artistas
_#_ http://www.musix.org.ar
(#)
/ O \ + archivos: ftp://musix.ourproject.org/pub/musix
( === ) Ecología: http://autosus.wordpress.com
`---' Personal: http://marcospcmusica.wordpress.com
"¡Ya cállate, cállate, cállate que me desespeeeeras!"
http://es.wikiquote.org/wiki/El_Chavo_del_Ocho
Simon Williams <systemparadox(a)googlemail.com> writes:
> WHAT? Why?
Hardware mixing usually also means that the device does internal
resampling, which is an algorithm you really want to control.
--
Esben Stien is b0ef@e s a
http://www. s t n m
irc://irc. b - i . e/%23contact
sip:b0ef@ e e
jid:b0ef@ n n
>
> zotz wrote:
>
> > I have a good number of lyrics and parts of lyrics. I am willing to put
> them
> > under a CC BY-SA license (if you don't like that, suggest another) and
> you
>
> Sorry - "CC BY-SA" license?
>
> --
> David
> gnome(a)hawaii.rr.com
> authenticity, honesty, community
What's the difference? You typed twice the same :-)
Ok, I found this link: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0/
I'm ok with what I read. Is this complete?
So..yes that would be great if you put them under this license.
Thanks.
Julien
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Is there any command-line tool to extract and print the tempo of a MIDI file?
I suppose I could read the MIDI spec, and hack something up pretty quickly in Python/Perl/PD/C/etc to extract that data, but why reinvent the wheel if there's already a tool that'll do that?
- -ken
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I have an Evolution MK-461C USB midi controller, which has a whole bunch
of buttons, knobs and sliders.
Now, I'm not entirely sure what these are supposed to be used for. I
have some ideas of things I want to use them for, but I don't have the
Windows software for it and can't find any Linux applications which make
use of any of them.
So, anyone with an MK or similar midi controller-
1. What do you use these controls for?
2. What can the windows software do with them?
3. Is there any Linux software which will make use of them?
Thanks
Simon