Oops,
I get informed that mails didn't came through the list, but they came
through. My apologize for already sending a copy of one mail.
I've taken a look to the archive and I guess _all_ mails came through.
It might be an issue with my provider, but I want to inform about this,
perhaps it's an issue for the list.
Unfortunately I deleted the notification mails, but it were _no_
postmaster mails about _delayed_ mails, there was the claim that mails
didn't came through.
Regards,
Ralf
-------- Forwarded Message --------
From: Ralf Mardorf <info.mardorf(a)rocketmail.com>
To: linux-audio-user(a)lists.linuxaudio.org
Subject: Re: [LAU] Special Consideration for WD Green HDDs
Date: Thu, 14 Mar 2013 22:09:05 +0100
On Thu, 2013-03-14 at 20:38 +0000, John Murphy wrote:
> 2.5"
It's a 3.5" and should do 7200rpm.
I'll try idle3ctl -d
https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Advanced_Format#Disable_via_changing_f…
if the USB controller doesn't allow to disable it, than I need to find
out, how to open the case :(, without damaging it.
[root@archlinux rocketmouse]# smartctl -i /dev/sdc
smartctl 6.0 2012-10-10 r3643 [x86_64-linux-3.7.10-1-ARCH] (local build)
Copyright (C) 2002-12, Bruce Allen, Christian Franke,
www.smartmontools.org
=== START OF INFORMATION SECTION ===
Device Model: WDC WD20EZRX-00DC0B0
Serial Number: WD-WMC300753067
LU WWN Device Id: 5 0014ee 65863b194
Firmware Version: 80.00A80
User Capacity: 2,000,398,934,016 bytes [2.00 TB]
Sector Sizes: 512 bytes logical, 4096 bytes physical
Device is: Not in smartctl database [for details use: -P showall]
ATA Version is: ACS-2 (minor revision not indicated)
SATA Version is: SATA 3.0, 6.0 Gb/s (current: 1.5 Gb/s)
Local Time is: Thu Mar 14 22:04:48 2013 CET
SMART support is: Available - device has SMART capability.
SMART support is: Enabled
If it would work as it did in the BIOS, I wouldn't disable it :(.
--
ASCII Ribbon Campaign http://www.asciiribbon.org/index-de.html
There are ways missing to donate directly by giro account to giro
account and to do an anonymous in-payment to a giro account.
Everybody of us, even the most poor of us, sometimes have little money
willing to donate it, but not all of us are willing to do it by the
options that are often provided instead of a giro account.
In Germany there are donation accounts for some things, so it's easy to
transfer or to pay in cash.
Perhaps you could statutorily regulated hold in trust such an account?
This IMO would fit better to the policy of FLOSS than advertising does.
Advertising will lead to hype with all it's consequences.
Hi,
Some of you might be interested in my new project. It's been a few years
in the making
http://channellinux.com
We have big plans for this new project. Please let me know if you come
across anything that you think would be interesting for the viewing
audience and please link to the site everywhere you have an opportunity.
If you help me to grow the traffic and keep the content coming it will pay
back to the community tenfold.
Please refrain from replying to this post with content links or feedback
on the site. I'm sure everyone knows my position by now so I will refrain
from commenting on replies to this post too :-)
TECHNICAL
I have created two separate threads for this on each list so if people
want to navel gaze and politic, please refrain from doing that on LAD ;-)
The site is designed to work on all screen sizes but has only been tested
on Firefox and Chrome. I am not interested in testing on other browsers.
The ones that don't work are either broken or do not have a large enough
user base to justify my time.
I am interested in results on small screen mobile devices. Not because I
don't know what will happen but because I would like to hear some more
ideas for how to tweak the layout to work more effectively. If you have
any ideas for that please start a new thread or send me a direct email.
Ideas for UX improvements on usability or additional media types like
livecast, radio and audio streaming will also be very helpful. As above
please send me a seperate email or start a new thread for that. I know
some of you on this list have many years of experience in the industry so
your ideas will be taken seriously and implemented with gusto. If you do
want to start a new thread please consider if it is a technical issue or
not and direct to LAD if it is something that requires advanced technical
discussion.
Due to the "BETA" mode this is not a finished product. I am posting here
as a preliminary announcement to get some usability testing and feedback
results from a wider pool of knowledgable technical users. At a later date
I will push for an official release announcement.
ADVERTISING
The long term plan for this project is to generate income from advertising
just like a regular TV/Radio station and feed that back to the community
by paying people to create content. During the Beta period I am offering
free advertising to interested companies to allow me to test and iron out
the usability for a new format of internet advertising across multiple
devices. This is still fresh ground so no one has really nailed it yet.
I have several companies already participating but I am still working out
the display mechanism for the various ads that have been provided to me
across all devices and screen sizes.
BACKGROUND
Linux Audio and Multimedia has a large and thriving community of
developers, creators, artists and users. FLOSS and GNU/Linux has an even
larger global community of people who are passionate about their OS of
choice and wear the badge of FLOSS and GNU/Linux proudly whenever they
have the chance. One thing has been missing. A dedicated Channel for all
things Linux Multimedia. Sure, there are lots of news sites out there and
many communities and people that produce digital content but no one has
really taken on the task of collating all the various media spread out
across the internet into a one stop and easy access portal.
But why stop there?
GNU/Linux is the dominant operating system on the planet and enables or
creates billions of dollars in revenue for some of the largest companies
on the planet. As a global community we effectively power the internet,
create the worlds best movies, participate in and drive scientific
progress at the highest level, power the next generation of green
technology, send rockets into space, enable governments to operate
efficiently and even feed and power the world.
Why not take things to the next level and create a truly cross device
experience for mobile, desktop and TV? We have the knowledge to make it
happen.
However there is also a problem facing the global pool of artists and
developers who dedicate their time to FLOSS multimedia. We don't get the
kind of financial support that we deserve for all our efforts. The big
companies barely spend a fraction of their wealth on supporting and
growing the FLOSS multimedia tools that enable us to entertain the world.
What can we do about that? We don't have to sit here crying into our milk.
We can generate our own income and feed that back into the community by
promoting and marketing to the global community of people interested in
FLOSS and GNU/Linux. It doesn't mean we have sold out. It just means we
are using what we have got to make things better.
Channel Linux is in Beta mode and it might stay like that for some time.
The first step is growing the traffic to the site. The next step is taking
that traffic and making it work for us. Companies are prepared to pay
serious cash if they have a guaranteed way to reach their target market.
So what does it all mean? We need content, lots of it. We need
constructive feedback and suggestions for making the site really hit the
sweet spot of usability and entertainment. And we need your links, tweets,
facebook likes and passionate evangelism to help us grow the traffic to
the kind of numbers that companies with serious cash are prepared to spend
their money on.
We have the capacity if we choose to use it. I hope you are prepared for
the ride :-)
--
Patrick Shirkey
Boost Digital / Boost Hardware Ltd
MFP -- Music For Programmers
Release 0.02, "Making Fine Progress"
I'm pleased to announce an updated release of MFP, containing many
fixes and improvements. It is still not anywhere near a "production"
level, but is becoming more and more usable. Your interest and
participation are invited!
A summary of changes is below. Please see the GitHub issue tracker
for complete details:
https://github.com/bgribble/mfp
Changes since initial release v0.01:
----------------------------------------
* #30: Fix RMS calculation in [ampl~]
* #37: Add [s~], [r~] and different via graphics for signals
* #41: Clean up SSE vs non-SSE, add tests for non-SSE build
* #42: Make parameter setting non-locking; add mfp_alloc thread
for non-blocking memory allocation; in general, clean up
RT components of operation
* #43: Refactor color name usage to avoid API breakage with
different versions of Clutter python bindings
* #44: Fix broken tests
* #46: Add ability to load .so extension libraries with new DSP types
* #47: Handle JACK block size changes at runtime
* #48: Add [latency] object to report JACK input and output latency
changes to patches
About MFP:
----------------------------------------
MFP is an environment for visually composing computer programs, with
an emphasis on music and real-time audio synthesis and analysis. It's
very much inspired by Miller Puckette's Pure Data (pd) and Max/MSP,
with a bit of LabView and TouchOSC for good measure. It is targeted
at musicians, recording engineers, and software developers who like
the "patching" dataflow metaphor for constructing audio synthesis,
processing, and analysis networks.
MFP is a completely new code base, written in Python and C, with a
Clutter UI. It has been under development by a solo developer (me!),
as a spare-time project for several years.
Compared to Pure Data, its nearest relative, MFP is superficially
pretty similar but differs in a few key ways:
* MFP uses Python data natively. Any literal data entered in the
UI is parsed by the Python evaluator, and any Python value is a
legitimate "message" on the dataflow network
* MFP provides fairly raw access to Python constructs if desired.
For example, the built-in Python console allows live coding of
Python functions as patch elements at runtime.
* Name resolution and namespacing are addressed more robustly,
with explicit support for lexical scoping
* The UI is largely keyboard-driven, with a modal input system
that feels a bit like vim. The graphical presentation is a
single-window style with layers rather than multiple windows.
* There is fairly deep integration of Open Sound Control (OSC), with
every patch element having an OSC address and the ability to learn
any other desired address.
The code is still in early days, but has reached a point in its
lifecycle where at least some interesting workflows are operational
and it can be used for a good number of things. I think MFP is now
ripe for those with an experimental streak and/or development skills
to grab it, use it, and contribute to its design and development.
The code and issue tracker are hosted on GitHub:
https://github.com/bgribble/mfp
You can find an introductory paper (submitted to LAC-2013) and
accompanying screenshots, some sample patches, and a few other bits of
documentation in the doc directory of the GitHub repo. The README
at the top level of the source tree contains dependency, build,
and getting-started information.
Thanks,
Bill Gribble
-------- Forwarded Message --------
From: Ralf Mardorf <info.mardorf(a)rocketmail.com>
To: linux-audio-user(a)lists.linuxaudio.org
Subject: Re: [LAU] LightWorks for Linux Demo
Date: Wed, 13 Mar 2013 13:16:41 +0100
On Wed, 2013-03-13 at 07:48 -0400, Thomas Vecchione wrote:
> There really aren't several options for professional AV editing, if by
> professional you mean AV editing in need of more advanced workflows.
We had this discussion several times. You're right and somewhere in the
LAU and/or LAD archive are a lot of explanations.
We don't have free as in speech professional NL video E. Period. We
can't blame anybody for that, since it's very time consuming to program
this software. Free video editing software used by professional studios
isn't for NLE and even for animations we don't have professional lip
sync apps and it's beyond my knowledge, I suspect color calibration and
other things like that aren't free either.
Somebody might have a professional studio to make commercials for the
local TV station using Linux FLOSS NLE, but for sure nobody ever made an
excellent cut, for a 80 minutes action film using such software.
Perhaps we should avoid the word professional and instead talk about
"averaged/usual professional workflows" instead.
--
http://sacom.hk/mission
Anyone else getting bad sound from jack in 3.9 but not 3.8? It sounds
like the CPU is struggling to keep up but top shows the CPU is 80%-90%
idle. I'm using jack to send audio from my laptop to another system.
How can I figure out what is wrong?
- Grant
Hi,
Same question but now for Ingen: where can I find Ingen patches?
Might it be a good idea to have a central repo for it? I think it can't
be too early to start with such a thing. AMS for example, comes with
quite some useful patches if I install it in Debian.
Best regards,
\r
>> Might it be a good idea to have a central repo for it? I think it can't
>> be too early to start with such a thing. AMS for example, comes with
>> quite some useful patches if I install it in Debian.
>
> I'd say a release should come first. Nobody will stop anyone from
> setting up a repo with ingen patches, but you can bet that there are
> very few people who have working patches for ingen at all, right now.
>
> I think David (not subscribed here) plans to include one or the other
> example patch.
I have actually been using Ingen for a while, two simple patches are
available with the source code of the plugins I ported from AMS into
LV2 especially for Ingen:
http://sourceforge.net/projects/avwlv2/
A while back I even did a started video tutorials on Youtube on my
experience of creating Modular Synths with Ingen (sadly, I created
only one, but I have some material for more):
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9nC7giX1ToQ
Aurélien
I'm searching a spectrum analyzer software.
What do you recommend?
I've tried JAAA but it's not much user-friendly and there's no manual.
I'd like to visualize the harmonics produced by a guitar string.
How can I achieve what I see in this screenshot?
http://kokkinizita.linuxaudio.org/linuxaudio/jaaa-pict.html
Any other suggestion is welcome.
Thanks
--
Federico