>> http://www.reduz.com.ar/chionic/
>>
>This page is gone - AFAIK chionic is abandoned....
Chionic was part of cheesetronic which can be found :-
http://sourceforge.net/projects/cheesetronic
However, this is out of date and appears to have no maintainer.
The cheesetracker part of cheesetronic has been taken over and is at :-
http://cheesetracker.sourceforge.net/
Juan Linietsky (the original developer) is now working on chibitracker
:-
http://www.chibitracker.com/
Please note that is all just from googling about and I have no direct
experience of any of these programs.
Simon Fielding
Hi list,
I've looked around a lot and asked questions in the IRC Channel but just
to go sure:
Is there a Linuxsoftware avaible which is a traditional sequencer,
endless scolling view from left to right, but uses staff notation for
each track?
In other words: Think about Rosegarden or Ardour with staff-tracks
instead of piano roll.
I hardly believe it since the user has to be a classical musician who
wants to record and compose directly on screen, without using paper and
transfering it later (which WYSIWYG-users prefer). I strangly noticed
that these users are a minority.
Greetings,
Nils
Is there a reference or HOWTO on how all of the various audio parts work together in Linux? I've looked around, and most are horribly out of date, and don't cover it all anyway.
My goal is to get everything I need on Linux to replace my Sonar 3.1 setup, and it looks like the programs are available. I just can't get everything to work, and part of the problem is that I don't understand Linux audio very well yet. I need to understand how alsa relates to jackd, what is 'oss,' and why is that the only option available in Audacity to me that works, and why when I run jackd, some of my other programs no longer have a sound output available at all.
Any help, or pointers to the information, would be greatly appreciated.
This might seem like a stupid question, but it's really starting to
annoy me.
I have an Emu sound card that I set to 44.1khz. The problem comes in
when I try to use anything, whether it be Amarok, mplayer, Totem, or
anything, to play a file or a radio stream (or even the audio in a
video) at a different sample rate. Instead of the sample rate getting
converted to my system's 44.1khz, these files get played back either too
fast or too slow, like a tape deck set to the wrong speed.
Is there a solution to this issue? When I boot into Windows, JetPlayer
automatically converts the sample rates of any file to the system rate,
if it's required, so it must be possible. Thanks!
-- Darren
I was just looking some old photos from LAC2005 and I saw too many M-Audio
Ozones in the pictures.
Does Ozone work with ALSA ?
--
Arda EDEN
Cumhuriyet University
Faculty of Fine Arts
Department of Music Technology
Sivas/TURKEY
Hi list,
I want to create a sample bank of a traditional Turkish plucked instrument
called "Tanbur".
The only sampler installed on my GNU/Linux system is Linux Sampler and it
only works with Giga sample libraries. I want to accomplish this project by
using only free software. Native Instrument's Kontakt Sampler is a real
strong sampler with it's scripting support but, because I do not want to
work with any proprietary software I can't use it any more.
I need some suggestions of any samplers and editors that can equal with
Kontakt.
Thanks.
--
Arda EDEN
Cumhuriyet University
Faculty of Fine Arts
Department of Music Technology
Sivas/TURKEY
With synaptic, I only find libgettext for Ruby. Is it OK ?
On Wed, Apr 9, 2008 at 9:03 PM, Justin Smith <noisesmith(a)gmail.com> wrote:
> It looks like some variable representing the name is a program is not
> being set. It is trying to make the file de.gmo. I quick google tells me
> that msgfmt is a file that is run with a .po file as an input, and produces
> a .gmo file as an output. apt-cache search tells me that msgfmt is part of
> libgettext. You probably need to have libgettext-dev installed, and the
> gigedit build needs to know where that is.
>
>
> On Wed, Apr 9, 2008 at 10:55 AM, Arda Eden <ardaeden(a)gmail.com> wrote:
>
> > Hi,
> > I had some problems compiling gigedit.
> > Can you have a look at this please ?
> >
> > Making check in po
> > make[1]: Entering directory `/home/bowman/tmp/gigedit-0.1.1/po'
> > file=`echo de | sed 's,.*/,,'`.gmo \
> > && rm -f $file && -o $file de.po
> > /bin/sh: -o: not found
> > make[1]: *** [de.gmo] Error 127
> > make[1]: Leaving directory `/home/bowman/tmp/gigedit-0.1.1/po'
> > make: *** [check-recursive] Error 1
> >
> > I couldn't understand what is not found here.
> >
> >
> > On Wed, Apr 9, 2008 at 8:38 PM, Arda Eden <ardaeden(a)gmail.com> wrote:
> >
> > > Yes,
> > > Giga still seems to be the most featured format for GNU/Linux.
> > > Linuxsampler works fine. I think gigedit will be my choice.
> > > Thanks.
> > >
> > >
> > > On Wed, Apr 9, 2008 at 8:15 PM, Julien Claassen <julien(a)c-lab.de>
> > > wrote:
> > >
> > > > Hi!
> > > > Regarding chionic, maybe I misspelled it. Have a look at Dave's
> > > > page:
> > > > http://linux-sound.org
> > > > I'm very sure it's linked from there.
> > > > 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
> > > > _______________________________________________
> > > > Linux-audio-user mailing list
> > > > Linux-audio-user(a)lists.linuxaudio.org
> > > > http://lists.linuxaudio.org/mailman/listinfo/linux-audio-user
> > > >
> > >
> > >
> > >
> > > --
> > > Arda EDEN
> > > Cumhuriyet University
> > > Faculty of Fine Arts
> > > Department of Music Technology
> > > Sivas/TURKEY
> > >
> >
> >
> >
> > --
> > Arda EDEN
> > Cumhuriyet University
> > Faculty of Fine Arts
> > Department of Music Technology
> > Sivas/TURKEY
> >
> > _______________________________________________
> > Linux-audio-user mailing list
> > Linux-audio-user(a)lists.linuxaudio.org
> > http://lists.linuxaudio.org/mailman/listinfo/linux-audio-user
> >
> >
>
--
Arda EDEN
Cumhuriyet University
Faculty of Fine Arts
Department of Music Technology
Sivas/TURKEY
Hi,
Carotinho and Norval Watson thanks for the quick replies! :)
I've been trying a little more with the card, but I still haven't been able to
make it emit a single sound to the speakers, and I'm starting to worry about
the Delta66 compatibility (I thought when I bought it it was mature enough to
not having these kind of problems...) here is some more information:
The sliders of the DAC, ADC in the "analog volume" were at 75% aprox, so it's
not the problem... in fact, I see the signal in envy24control in the digital
MIXER, so I'm routing everything ok I think (and I route HWout1&2 to
DigitalMixer or PCM1&3)...
BUT in that tab, someone told me I should have 10 sliders, but I only have 8
(4 DAC and 4 ADC), is that normal? does it depends on the version?? my
envy24control is version 0.6.0, and it shows in the console:
----------
using --- input_channels: 4
--- output_channels: 4
--- pcm_output_channels: 8
--- spdif in/out channels: 2
----------
I also upgraded to the real time kernel (Kubuntu 7.10), and installed the
backports to get ALSA updated to the version 1.0.15rc3... but it didn't work
either (though the latencies were incredible low!!).
I have confirmed that in windows I can get input signal, route it, mix it, and
get an output to the speakers, so I know to use the mixer, and that the card
works, and also that the input signal I'm trying is apropiate.
NEW INFO: in Linux, although I can see the output signal in envy24, I can't
see the input signals!! (the sliders of analog volume tab are at 75%)...
I'm really completely lost here, Google seems to be useless, and the people
that tried to help me at #alsa couldn't figure this out either... how can I
debug this problem to get more useful info?? I have no clue at all about what
can be the problem, any idea please??
Anyone has experience with a Delta66??
Thanks very much!
Jorge.