Nice for the mention - but where can one find Transmission?
Sorry for the top posting - that's all my phone supports.
Bill
On Jun 4, 2009 12:42 AM, "Ronald Stewart" <ronaldjstewart(a)gmail.com> wrote:
wow Patrick! - Thanks for the mention :)
Ronald Stewart
www.indamixx.com
On Wed, Jun 3, 2009 at 9:38 PM, Scott <lau(a)troutpocket.org> wrote: > > > Can
we “prime this pump” ...
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>but for stuff like audio where 98% of the stuff you want to instal resides in
Git/Hg,
>
>ive had much greater availability and ease with two solutions:
>
>proaudio overlay (for gentoo) and Paludis (for handling of hg/git/vcs depchain
updating)
>
>and the AUR / archaudio.org project for Arch..
I can vouch for pro-audio..but haven't really tried Paludis (definitely something
I will look into though).
I personally think a Gentoo (pro-audio) or arch based distro (or even snapshot)
is best for audio...
Doing something like "Gmaq" (for lack of knowing his real name) has been doing
with AVLinux.. and effectively creating a snapshot once or maybe twice a year (at
the absolute most)....
Experienced/Adventurous users could use this as a base to work from.. newbies, or
people who want something that just works could just update the image every time
it comes out (preferably it wouldn't touch your /etc/* files and obviously not
/home) ..
The Pro-Audio overlay and Arch Audio guys have the right idea, only focussing on
packaging things that aren't covered in the mainstream distro. IN the case of
Pro-Audio (as I can't speak for arch) also creating a "package" for SVN,GIT,CVS
trunks for those that want or need to use the development versions.
The next stage would be to simply create the image/snapshot ... initially this
could be installed from another live cd... (instructions on how to partition,
what filesystems to choose and then basically copy, edit fstab and networking
config files, install grub and reboot)...
and finally a very basic install media (like ARCH... although with the ability to
discover and create mdadm lvm partitions)...
Hi
I do (and did over the years) quite some recording with vocals. I know a
few tricks when it comes to processing lead vocals, but sometimes I feel
I'm doing the same thing over and over. So obviously I'm looking for
other directions and therefore I'll save my own approaches for later in
this thread...
My question is: how do *you guys* work with processing on lead vocals,
mostly in pop/rock setting? We all learn the most the more precise this
discussion gets, so if you'd share sound examples and screenshots of DSP
chains that'd be great.
Note: I'm not looking for that golden setting or trying to squeeze your
golden eggs out of you. I'm just trying to learn, and hopefully this can
be a fruitful experience for all of us :-)
--
Atte
http://atte.dkhttp://modlys.dkhttp://virb.com/atte
Pursuant to the recent discussion of Hammond emulations on Linux:
I just got back from the Boom Boom Room in San Francisco, where I spent the night playing their house Hammond B3.
That is just one magical instrument. And, after playing the real thing for several hours with a full band and for a packed dancefloor, it's clear that nothing I've ever heard in emulation comes close to it. There's something about the way it moves air around that I really doubt could be duplicated.
The bass player enjoyed standing in front of the Leslie, and said, "When you get those swells going I get a nice back massage!".
Still, I'm going to try out Connie and am very intrigued by the idea of running Beatrix on a dedicated netbook. And also need to get AZR3 running on my netbook too. And motivated to finish writing the code for my Arduino-based swell pedal.
I think the Hammond might could be the original mad scientist instrument. Long before Robert Moog started building synths, the Hammond had lots of knobs and buttons and sliders for nerds to play around with.
-ken
On Tue, 2 Jun 2009 09:31:53 +0200
torbenh at gmx.de wrote:
> the signal sent into system:playback will showup on
> the master on netsource:capture ... you need to connect these to your
> soundcard.
jack_connect netsource:capture_1 system:playback_1
jack_connect netsource:capture_2 system:playback_2
Cheers
Torben
--
Lose wait. Get Gentoo.
Fons,
Have you noticed similar issues with export?
Just curious, there is an issue when Ardour puts the Jack/ffado connection
in free wheel mode
during certain operations then tries to reconnect.
This means I can't export while using ffado as the back end. Problem
disappears when I switch the back end to alsa.
------------------------------
Message: 11
Date: Sun, 31 May 2009 22:07:44 +0200
From: Fons Adriaensen <fons(a)kokkinizita.net>
Subject: Re: [LAU] Building a DAW
What happens regularly with my current setup is that after
one second or so you get an error saying that writing to the
disk failed for some reason. Restarting doesn't seem to help
in such cases, saving and reloading the session may help.
It's not something you'd want to happen twice in front of a
performing customer trying to concentrate on getting his/her
side of the punch right.
***********************************************
--------------------------------------------------------------------
mail2web.com What can On Demand Business Solutions do for you?
http://link.mail2web.com/Business/SharePoint
>From: Asmo Koskinen <asmo.koskinen(a)arkki.info>
>Subject: Re: [LAU] ubuntu realtime.
>
>https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/ubuntu-studio-users/2009-April/004507.html
>
>And then there was a long discuss about Ubuntu Studio.
>
>Cory stepped down, all others in the team are here:
>https://wiki.ubuntu.com/UbuntuStudio/TeamStructure
>
>Maybe Debian, 64 Studio, Musix or CCRMA have much more stable and active
>community around them, I really do not know. Right now Ubuntu Studio is
>not so strong, I think.
>
>Best Regards Asmo Koskinen.
Hi,
I'm sad to hear that there has not been enough user contribution to the project and I can imagine the workload Cory and others have been struggling with. Unfortunately I have to admit that I've also been just enjoying their work more than helping to get things done or fixed. Perhaps I should try to put some effort on those testing and documentation parts mentioned.
The most alarming point however was the statement that the upstream is not responding to the studio devel team requests. I don't know if the upstream upgrades and fixes can be speed up but at least the communication should work to get anything accomplished.
Regarding the financial and motivational part of the core team it seems that it really would be important to get more active and supportive users. Recently the Ardour team had a wide discussion about the financial problems of the project. I don't know if same kind of model could be used with Ubuntu Studio?
At least it seems that Ardour dev team has managed to get the donations and 'feature sponsoring' working quite well. Perhaps similar kind of a system could help the core team to develop the system and even tempt new talented and dedicated developers still keeping the Ubuntu Studio free for all.
Best regards:
Aapo Romu
Hi,
since a couple of month i cant use 88200 and 96000 hz anymore .
I tried older version of my kernel, alsa-lib, alsa-firmwares and jack.
That doesnt change anything.
My sound card is an echo layla3g.
In the message box of qjackctl i can read this:
/usr/bin/jackd -R -P89 -dalsa -r88200 -p512 -n2 -D -Chw:1,0 -Phw:1,0 -i8
-o8 -Xseq
jackd 0.116.2
Copyright 2001-2005 Paul Davis and others.
jackd comes with ABSOLUTELY NO WARRANTY
This is free software, and you are welcme to redistribute it
under certain conditions; see the file COPYING for details
JACK compiled with System V SHM support.
loading driver ..
03:44:37.021 ALSA active patchbay scan...
apparent rate = 88200
creating alsa driver ... hw:1,0|hw:1,0|512|2|88200|8|8|nomon|swmeter|-|
32bit
control device hw:1
configuring for 88200Hz, period = 512 frames (5.8 ms), buffer = 2
periods
ALSA: final selected sample format for capture: 32bit integer
little-endian
ALSA: use 2 periods for capture
ALSA: final selected sample format for playback: 32bit integer
little-endian
ALSA: use 2 periods for playback
but qjackctl and
#cat /proc/asound/card1/pcm0p/sub0/hw_params
shows
rate: 48000 (48000/1)
I dont understand what have changed. Any ideas what's going on here?
Thanks,
Guillaume
On Mon, 01 Jun 2009 12:00:03 -0400
linux-audio-user-request(a)lists.linuxaudio.org wrote:
> did you connect the ports of the netsource ?
> they are not autoconnected.
Mmmm, head scratch, I don't know. I didn't read about connecting the
ports of netsource in the walkthrough.
Under qjackctl on slave I can "Connect", and then connect "capture_1"
to "playback_1" and "capture_2" to "playback_2". Is that it?
Thanks for your interest Torben.
Regards
Fog_Watch.
--
Lose wait. Get Gentoo.
I forgot to mention that I also played the Calf Monosynth DSSI synth live last night too. Nice synth sounds, runs well on my EEE netbook (where my favorite AMS patches are a bit too heavyweight).
Avec photo: http://www.restivo.org/blog/archives/on-the-hammond-again
-ken