2008/7/10 David Baron <d_baron(a)012.net.il>:
> What about intel 32-bit?
My system is 32-bit. And the config I provided too.
I'm not informed, if and what would be required to be changed for 64-bit.
-- If that was your question ?
Okay, I just installed a fresh Ubuntu Studio next to my XP and was kinda
hoping to get some music creation going.
I've read a lot from internet that linux needs a lot of configuring and
tweaking to get it running smoothly as a Digital Audio Workstation, so my
question is what to tweak?
I've already configured JACK through qjackctl to be pretty okay and added
the /etc/security/limits.conf @audio things (@audio rtprio 95, @audio
memlock 1024000, @audio nice -19).
Is there still something to get the ball rolling fast and hard?
--
- Tuukka J. / 100% of Solarians
Svend-Erik Kjær Madsen:
>Now I'm so pleased with my Multiface though it's just a Steinberg
>AudioLink 96 Multiset, I don't regret the money I spend on it, that's
>foe sure. And now I'm pretty confident with the thought of selling out
>my ADAT's and only use my notebook or my stationary computer for music
>recording.
Make sure you turn off cron-jobs, or at least the hardisk
file find updater [1], before doing any important recordings. :-)
[1] Everyone working with audio should probably turn off
that cron job.
Everytime I want to change an instrument/ bank in zynsubaddfx (beginner
mode), it crashes...
$ zynaddsubfx
ZynAddSubFX - Copyright (c) 2002-2005 Nasca Octavian Paul
Compiled: Dec 18 2007 21:09:57
This program is free software (GNU GPL v.2) and
it comes with ABSOLUTELY NO WARRANTY.
Try 'zynaddsubfx --help' for command-line options.
Sound Buffer Size = 256 samples
Internal latency = 5.8 ms
ADsynth Oscil.Size = 512 samples
Internal SampleRate = 44100
Jack Output SampleRate= 44100
cannot complete execution of the processing graph (Resource temporarily
unavailable)
zombified - calling shutdown handler
Hi All,
I'm using Ubuntu Hardy Heron 8.04, and am having problems with sound
capture using jackd, and also using fldigi with oss or portaudio. Sound
output seems to work just fine, and fiddling with the mixer, I can set
it up so I can monitor the sound input on the output. I just can't get
it working in jackd or fldigi (and I haven't tried other applications
yet). I have tried other sound cards and they work just fine, including
the Indigo IO and the built in sound card.
Any ideas or tips on how to debug this would be appreciated.
Thanks,
Rob
--
Rob Frohne <frohro(a)wallawalla.edu>
Walla Walla University
Rubber Band is an audio time-stretching and pitch-shifting library and
utility designed for musical applications.
http://www.breakfastquay.com/rubberband/
It includes a library that supports a sample-accurate multithreaded
offline mode and a real-time lock-free streaming mode; a command-line
utility program; and a LADSPA pitch-shifter plugin. Version 1.2 is
faster in most situations, better sounding in many, and less
potentially subject to patent claims than version 1.0.1 was.
Rubber Band is Free Software under the GNU GPL.
Chris
Sonic Visualiser is an application for inspecting and analysing the
contents of music audio files. It combines powerful waveform and
spectral visualisation tools with automated feature extraction plugins
and annotation capabilities.
Version 1.3 of Sonic Visualiser is now available.
http://www.sonicvisualiser.org/
This is a feature release, containing several new features and a
number of bug fixes over the previous 1.2 release. For more details,
please read the release notes at
http://sourceforge.net/project/shownotes.php?release_id=612594
Sonic Visualiser contains advanced waveform and spectrogram viewers,
as well as editors for many sorts of audio annotations. Besides
visualisation, it can make and play selections based on the locations
of automatically detected features, seamlessly loop playback of single
or multiple noncontiguous regions, synthesise annotations for
playback, slow down playback while retaining display synchronisation,
and show the ongoing alignment in time between multiple recordings of
a piece with different timings.
Sonic Visualiser supports the Vamp plugin API for plugins that extract
descriptive or analytical data from audio. Vamp plugins for onset,
pitch and note detection, tempo tracking, chromagram analysis,
constant-Q spectrogram, spectral centroid, power curve, key
estimation, tonal change detection, harmonic spectrogram, structural
segmentation, timbral similarity, audio alignment calculation and a
large number of low-level spectral features are available. There is
also a comprehensive SDK for use by developers of Vamp plugins and
hosts. For more information about Vamp plugins, please see:
http://www.vamp-plugins.org/
Sonic Visualiser was developed at the Centre for Digital Music,
Queen Mary, University of London:
http://www.elec.qmul.ac.uk/digitalmusic/
Sonic Visualiser is Free Software distributed under the GNU General
Public License. The 1.3 release is available now in source code form
or as binaries for Linux, OS/X, and Windows.
Chris
Greetings,
Has anyone here used a webcam with Pd ? Or Fluxus ? Or Gephex or FLxER ?
If so, how ?
I have my camera working now with xawtv4 and luvcview, but I'm having a
terrible time with just about everything else.
Advice would be nice. :)
Anyone ?
Best,
dp
Hi
I'm having a little trouble figuring out how to connect my video camera
and my laptop via FireWire.
I have installed and loaded following modules:
linux:/home/sem # lsmod|grep ieee
ieee1394 96384 2 raw1394,sbp2
linux:/home/sem #
But Kino cant find the camera, although there is a little indicator in
the cameras display saying that dv-in is connected ? I've tried to do an
chmod 777 on /dev/raw1394 without any luck.
Can anyone help, thanks in advantage.
/Sv-e