Hi all,
It is my pleasure to announce the release of "Borealis" Linux desktop sound
theme v.0.9.
Changelog:
09/01/2004 -- ver.0.9
*Reuploaded old startup sounds (version 0.8 had by mistake ones that were of
lesser quality)
*Fixed bug where ownership of the config files was not properly set during
install and uninstall
*Fixed permissions to the config file
*Added config file for the K3b
*Fixed config scripts for the ogg theme
*Added K3b to the install and uninstall script
*Added K3b sound when the burning of the CD is completed
*Updated FAQ
For more info and downloads, please visit:
http://kde-look.org/content/show.php?content=12584
Best wishes,
Ivica Ico Bukvic, composer & multimedia sculptor
http://meowing.ccm.uc.edu/~ico/
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>From: "Ruth A. Kramer" <rhkramer(a)fast.net>
>> > >
>> > > http://www.slinkp.com/LiLAQ/
>> > > http://www.slinkp.com/LiLAQ/LinuxSoundcards/contents
>
> * By reading (loading) the master page, you can read that
>entire document in serial order.
Yes, the pages should be downloadable for offline reading.
But the format of the wiki pages need not be tied to that.
Check out how
http://wiki.beyondunreal.com
has done it. (I don't know how they technically do it.)
For a good reason they disallow the download of the entire
site, but they wisely provide the whole site in one package.
More sites should do the same.
Juhana
--
http://music.columbia.edu/mailman/listinfo/linux-graphics-dev
for developers of open source graphics software
Hi,
Porhaps I will have the opportunity to buy a new computer. I have
allready my soudcard and microphone and I am waiting for my mixer.
So the question is: what motherboard, processor, power supply unit,
computer case, harddisk etc. do you recommend and whitch pieces of
hardware are problematic?
I want to do harddisk recording and midi with softsynths. I want
the computer to be silent (I have a condenser microphone) and
I want low latency, of cource.
Kind regards,
Pieter Penninckx
Hello Mark,
I take this back to the list because it seems I have to explain the
approach that QMidiArp uses in a bit more detail...
On Mon, 23 Aug 2004, Mark Knecht wrote:
> I'm having some trouble with the pattern syntax. Let's says that I want to
> create an arpeggio based around just playing and holding a single key but
> creating a series of non-overlapping notes within an octave or two.
>
> Play and hold: C4
>
> Hear: (quarter notes at tempo) C4, E4, G4, C5, E4, C4, G3, C3
>
> and when I release C4 the pattern stops immediately.
>
> the arpeggio should always be based around the single key I'm playing, so if I
> play a G3, I'd hear G3, B3, D4, G4, B3, G3, D3, G2
An example of this kind of arpeggiator is miniArp, an example of my ALSA HowTo
http://www.suse.de/~mana/alsa090_howto.html#sect07
If you look at its simple pattern synthax you'll find that notes are
explicitely defined (IIRC on base note C). And here the pattern is
transposed whenever you press another key on the keyboard.
However QMidiArp works differently. It is based on my experience with the
MAP1 hardware arpeggiator. The MAP1 takes the notes into which the pattern
is translated from the chord that you play on the keyboard. This way you can
play whatever complicated chords with the most complicated alterations and
the arpeggiator will still perfectly follow it.
I already have an extension to QMidiArp in mind: There could be an
additional tab that would have radiobuttons to select chords, like
e.g. M, m, 7, M7, m7, ... This could then serve to fill the note buffer
that the arpeggiator uses for its pattern. But then you would have to
manually change the chord whenever you do a modulation.
Matthias
--
Dr. Matthias Nagorni
SuSE Linux AG
Maxfeldstr. 5 phone: +49 911 74053375
D - 90409 Nuernberg fax : +49 911 74053483
I need to stretch my wings a little and try something outside of
Mandrake 10.0...
Can I get some basic pros and cons of the different distro's you're
using? And especially from previous Mandrake users.
Been thinking about CCRMA because I'm used to packages but I would build
more stuff if it wasn't such a struggle every time I do it. Sometimes I
just need to install stuff and have it work and not spend 20 hours
sifting through Google hits, how to's, etc. I enjoy the learning and
Linux; I just don't have a lot of spare time.
Thanks
R~
Greetings:
While doing some research on VST/VSTi technology I checked the
Wikipedia page for "VST". It's a good informative page, and there's even
an entry regarding the fst/libfst project. However, there was no mention
of Kjetil's vstserver and its clients. There is now.
It occurred to me that while we're laboring over where & whether to
use wikis, there's already a place for us to get some more information
out to the public: the Wikipedia. I don't know how many other Linux
audio projects are detailed. Ardour, ALSA, Pd, and others are already
there, but I don't know how up-to-date that material is. So, would-be
documenter writers, avail thyselves of this opportunity and start
hitting the wikipedia ! Add new entries, correct the old ones, bring 'em
up to date, but just do it ! ;-)
Thank you for your attention. We now return you to your regularly
scheduled programming.
Best,
dp
->Sorry, yes I meant Planet CCRMA. I was wondering when I could go to
the CCRMA website and download the modified iso's of FC2 (with apt as
the default package manager) and the modified kernel. Wish I could say
that I was doing some important audio work, but I mainly use Planet
CCRMA's version of Fedora and the modified kernel for gaming, as
benchmarks show better results than with other distro's and kernels on
similar equipment.<-
Fernando has been doing a hell of a job getting things working. We're
running one of the latest kernels in our studio on a P4 (no
hyperthreading) with astoundingly few issues. Read through some of the
last couple of weeks' worth of the planetccrma mailing list (archived on
the web) to get an idea of where things stand.
Matt