My church band records services using one. Our sound tech records using
an IBM laptop running Windows XP, and way too often (today was most
recent example), he can't get the Windows driver to recognize the
Audiofire. So he falls back to recording via the laptop's built-in mic.
Blah!
The Linux audio distros I've looked at don't seem to include FFADO 2.0,
which supports the Audiofire. Anyone know of any that do? Or a way to
add them to an existing Live Linux distro?
--
David
gnome(a)hawaii.rr.com
authenticity, honesty, community
Hi, I've played arround with LASH, and it seems to do what it was ment
for. Hydrogen and Zynadd already support it, and I think Ardour too. So
its not about LASH its self, but about the apps that use it. If I were
to push LASH developement, it wouldn't change anything. I mean to force
audio apps, which use Jack, to use LASH as well. For me it is super
important, to be able to save the whole session with one click. There
are so many standalone jack apps out there, which I'd like to use for
recording. I simply don't rewiring everything that belongs to project
everytime I work on it.
To get specific, say you have a project with Ardour, Hydrogen,
Rosegarden, 3x Zynadd, 5x freqtweak. Since the last 2 aren't available
as plugins (what's the status of zynjack, it seems abandoned), you 11
apps! This setup seems crazy, but freqtweak is soooo cool, I'd like to
use multiple instances as inserts in ardour.
I just don't feel like firing 11 apps, and wiring them everytime.
Gerald
On Fri, 2010-03-05 at 14:20 +0300, Louigi Verona wrote:
> If you can finance LASH development by giving jobs to 2-3 dedicated
> coders - it might be a good way to force it. Other than that I am not
> sure.
>
> On Fri, Mar 5, 2010 at 2:08 PM, Gerald Mwangi <gerald.mwangi(a)gmx.de>
> wrote:
> Hi, maybe you can enlighten me on the alternatives.
> It just seems to me that the majority of audio devs, simply
> don't seem
> to care about session management. So my idea is just to force
> them to.
> Gerald
>
>
> On Fri, 2010-03-05 at 13:47 +0300, alex stone wrote:
>
> >
> > I disagree with LASH inclusion in jack itself.
> > There is work going to consider alternatives at the moment.
> >
> > Alex.
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> Linux-audio-dev mailing list
> Linux-audio-dev(a)lists.linuxaudio.org
> http://lists.linuxaudio.org/listinfo/linux-audio-dev
>
>
On 6 March 2010 at 7:11, fred <f.rech(a)yahoo.fr> wrote:
> maybe you'll like to test Rhythmbox (it's in Debian repo, and
> with 2 "h")
Not sure about what the 2 h is about.
> It can browse thru your library with applying filters you like
> to, and then just put the songs in a playlist you can save.
I just installed it. It looks like the playlist creation is a little
more flexible than Amarok. But, I didn't see a way to specify year,
and I'd rather have this run as a batch or cron job.
Thanks....
--
Kevin
Hi all,
I've been ripping my CD collection into a bunch of FLAC files for
easier access around my house. I'd like to create playlist based on
the tags inside those FLAC files, and also inside some OGG and MP3
files. I could probably script this up myself. But, I'll bet
there's already a lot of people who've done just this, or at least
some Perl modules to help with it.
I'm specifically interested in creating playlists for:
- all songs of a specific year
- all songs of a specific genre
- all songs of a specific album
- all songs of a specific artist
I would likely run such a program manually. But, I can see wrapping
make around it, then running it from cron, or something like that.
What might exist to help me with this?
Thanks all...
--
Kevin
After reading that last post about the distributed studio[1], it made me
think of how network transfer of 40 channels of audio into and out of
up to 6 machines is possible.
As a simple test, I wired 2 machines over a 10/100Mb connection, private
network, 1 router and 1 switch. I fired up the tools as described in the
how-to[2] then opened up xmms, wired it to netjack (on the client)
and routed the server netjack to my main outs... sounded great! until I
noticed xruns occasionally.
So I guess my question is simply: is netjack2 really that capable and
if so, what are the tweaks involved to get seemless audio using it.
Does anyone here use netjack2 ... and if so, what is the primary
purpose?
thanks
David
[1]
http://www.itwire.com/opinion-and-analysis/open-sauce/36698-from-windows-to…
[2] http://trac.jackaudio.org/wiki/WalkThrough/User/NetJack2
Hi all, Just wanted to share our new venture, a FLOSS GNU/Linux based studio
established in Milan, Italy
Features
One control room with two DAWs for Recording/Mix/Master and
Preproduction/electronic music
Two recording areas
Recording/Mix/Master DAW:
Desk: Tascam DM-3200
Monitors: Yamaha HS80M
Preamps: Focusrite Twin Track Pro Platinum, Mindprint En-Voice, SM Pro Audio
PR8 MK2
Outboard: T.C. Electronic M350
PC: Intel Core2 Quad CPU Q6600 2.40GHz
Audio interface: RME Multiface II
OS: Ubuntustudio 9.10 (Linux)
Audio tools: Jack, Ardour, Rosegarden, Jamin
Plugins: LADSPA, LV2, Invada, Calf
Preproduction/electronic music DAW:
Monitors: Seiwin ST-5a
Preamps: SM Pro Audio TC02
Controllers: Korg Nano Kontrol, Behringer U-Control
PC: Inter Core2 Quad CPU Q8300 2.50 GHz
Audio Interface: M-Audio Delta 1010
OS: Ubuntustudio 9.10 (Linux)
Audio tools: Hydrogen, Muse, Rosegarden, Jamin, ZynAddSub, Bristol, Nekobee
www.kubistudio.it (only in italian for now)
--
Giorgio Baù
Sound engineer
giorgio(a)kubistudio.it
www.kubistudio.itwww.myspace.com/kubistudio
Hello, whenever I try to run aconnect to connect some alsa-midi ports, I
get
Connection failed (Operation not permitted)
even as root. I can smoothly make alsa-midi connections from patchage
or qjackctl. What should I check?
Renato
> Or the CALF Organ.
>
I find all three whysynth, yoshimi and calf wonderful synths.
Attached are a couple of very slow Pad-type patches for calf organ that I made some time ago. It really has a warm and rich sound going way beyond organ type sounds.
IMO they sound best if you add a little reverb ladspa behind.
Hope you guys find them useful. You'll need to extract the archive and append that xml to your ~/.calfpresets file (or create that file if you don't have it yet.
Regards
Frank
Hi, maybe you can enlighten me on the alternatives.
It just seems to me that the majority of audio devs, simply don't seem
to care about session management. So my idea is just to force them to.
Gerald
On Fri, 2010-03-05 at 13:47 +0300, alex stone wrote:
>
> I disagree with LASH inclusion in jack itself.
> There is work going to consider alternatives at the moment.
>
> Alex.
Dear List,
When booting my computer having the HDSP Pcmcia card inserted but no
multiface connected, something in the boot process times out and delays
the boot for 16seconds, posting
"Hammerfall DSP: No Digiface or Multiface connected" (obviously).
My question is, is this delay necessary? What is causing this delay and
why does the timeout happen after such a long time?
Don't get me wrong, everything works as it should, but whenever I boot
into my machine I wonder (for about 16seconds) if there is a quicker way
of making the computer become aware of the fact that I don't have the
multiface connected.
This is on a Debian testing, with
2.6.32-trunk-686 #1 SMP Sun Jan 10 06:32:16 UTC 2010 i686 GNU/Linux
thanks!
P