I've set up an old single core athlon with debian 6.0.8-i386 (the final version
of squeeze) in order to compile old versions of yoshimi which won't compile on
the latest version of debian testing, but I've hit a really odd problem. The
programs seem to compile perfectly, with no errors reported, but they won't
run. As a cross-check, I tried to compile the latest yoshimi version as well as
the latest version of zynaddsubfx. Again no compile errors are reported but
running them fails.
zynaddsubfx give an error 'illegal instruction', while yoshimi gives 'segfault'
Can anyone suggest what might be the problem?
--
Will J Godfrey
http://www.musically.me.uk
Say you have a poem and I have a tune.
Exchange them and we can both have a poem, a tune, and a song.
Hi listers,
I'm working on a project and being constantly reminded that, though
I'm not bad, I'm an imperfect vocalist. :( That's just the breaks.
Anyway, I'm using Nama with Ecasound which allows me to do my
production from the commandline, which is necessary because I am blind
and it's my only option right now, but his powerful tool does not, at
this point, play nicely with the lv2 plugins like talentedhack which
provide pitch correction.
Does anyone know of a cli based method of pitchcorrecting an audio
file? I mean I want to tell it what key I'm singing in, set some
parameters, and have it process a file to fix some of my intonation
problems.
You might say, why not just sing it again? Honestly, I don't have the
patience or the time.
Anyway, if anyone has a suggestion, I would much appreciate it.
Thanks!
Rusty
On Mon, Oct 21, 2013 at 08:33:18AM -0500, Neil djdualcore-at-gmail.com wrote:
> MIDI Learn works correctly on my laptop (Ardour 3.5, Linux Mint 15), but I
> have not found a way to emulate middle-click on my laptop's trackpad*. If
> I plug in an external mouse it works fine.
>
> Is it possible to change the binding for MIDI Learn? When I looked at the
> list of key bindings I did not find it.
Have you tried MouseKeys? There's a description of it at:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mouse_keys
According to that article, Switching to MouseKeys mode and back again is
done by pressing NumLock with Shift-Alt, but I found that on my laptop,
Shift-ScrollLock works. Since on my laptop, the Scroll Lock key is the
NumLock key pressed with a key labelled "Fn", that means I need to press
Fn-Shift-NumLock to enable/disable the mode. Also, since I don't have a
separate number keypad, I have to use Fn with a section of the keyboard
from the 7890 row at the top to M./ at the bottom (the , key is the only
one in that range that doesn't have a numeric keypad function). This
allows moving the mouse cursor as well as clicking all three buttons with
single and double clicks and even click and drag.
If you can't figure out what key combination turns this mode on and off,
try "xmodmap -pke" to find it.
Chuck
Hi everyone,
I realise this is not strictly linux audio related, but I guessed that
the most likely people to be able to answer this would be on this
list.
I am wanting to get some audio and video recorded - sample accurately
- so there is minimal delay between audio and video, and no drift. Can
any format do this? Do you have recommendations about how to record a
file which will play back with perfect audio and video sync on all
players (file size is not an issue)?
Secondly, I am wanting to intentionally shift the audio timing so it
may be 5ms/10ms/50ms/100ms or more out of time with the video. Do you
have any suggestions on software which will do this?
Lastly, do any of you know any research about the limits of human
perception with these kinds of things?
Best wishes
James
I recently purchased a Zoom H6, and today tried it out for the first time
on Linux. With a clean install of UbuntuStudio 13.10 (Just released this
morning), I found that it is recognized as an audio interface in two-track
mode, but in multitrack mode, Jack won't start, complaining that it can't
acquire hw:H6 or hw:1 or hw:(1,0), I tried them all.
Any word on an ALSA driver for multitrack mode?
...just as a reference point, the H6 was plug-n-play on a mac with
pro-tools 10 in multitrack mode. The manual also claims Windows support,
but with a manually-installed driver.
--
Rick Green
...I live in the hope that one day the fine line of distinction between
genius and insanity will be decided in my favor.
Is there a simpler way in Ardour to put different plugins on one side of
a stereo field than what is on the other side, than to split into to two
mono tracks/buses with their own completely separate channel strips?
I'm assuming there probably isn't, and if so, that's ok...just
wondering.
--
+ Brent A. Busby + "We've all heard that a million monkeys
+ Sr. UNIX Systems Admin + banging on a million typewriters will
+ University of Chicago + eventually reproduce the entire works of
+ James Franck Institute + Shakespeare. Now, thanks to the Internet,
+ Materials Research Ctr + we know this is not true." -Robert Wilensky
I'm happy to announce the second (v0.2) release of Linux Show Player!
Linux Show Player (LiSP) is a sound player specifically designed for
stage productions.
*I need developers / tester / helper to help me in the project (much
needed), I'm open to any suggestion that can improve it, but I can not
do it all alone* ;-)
New (major) Features:
Step based programming;
Reversible actions (do/undo operations);
MIDI remote control.
Plan for next release:
Better audio management (with output device selection);
New (timeline) gui for time-based programming;
Better standalone theme (if someone help me);
Any other.
Linux Show Player is available at:
http://code.google.com/p/linux-show-player/
Please report bugs using the issue tracker:
http://code.google.com/p/linux-show-player/issues/list
Sorry if this is an obvious question, but I'm short of time today and
really tired of Google searching.
I'm running:
Linux dlm-A6200 3.2.0-54-lowlatency #56-Ubuntu SMP PREEMPT Thu Sep 19
17:22:47 UTC 2013 x86_64 x86_64 x86_64 GNU/Linux
I have jack 2 connected via ALSA to an M-Audio Fast Track Pro.
If there is any slight glitch in the USB power -- for instance, in a
performance space where the sound engineer might need to plug/unplug cables
frequently -- jackd spins out of control on one CPU and often locks up the
user interface, forcing a hard shutdown and reboot. If I'm very lucky, I
can get into the terminal, find jack's PID and kill it, but when the mouse
and keyboard stop responding, there's nothing I can do reach for the power
button.
This occurs less frequently in 12.04 than it did when I started with 10.04,
but when it does happen (as it did just now), it really, really ticks me
off.
I think there must be some automated way for the system to recognize that
jack is out of control and kill it. [1] notes:
-t, --timeout int
Set client timeout limit in milliseconds. The default is
500
msec. In realtime mode the client timeout must be smaller
than
the watchdog timeout (5000 msec).
Interesting... "watchdog timeout"... but I have never seen any effect from
the watchdog mentioned here. Jack just keeps locking up the system for way
longer than 5 seconds.
I'm happy to provide more info if you can tell me what commands to run.
Normally I would research it myself, but I'm just not in the mood today. If
there's already good documentation on this, great, but... too many pages to
read and I have no idea which is the best one.
Thanks,
hjh
[1] http://manpages.ubuntu.com/manpages/precise/man1/jackd.1.html