2015-03-04 14:11 GMT+01:00 Simon Wise <simonzwise@gmail.com>:
On 04/03/15 02:13, Jonathan E. Brickman wrote:
I have been trying to strategize cutting the USB cord (right now, one USB, one Firewire...) for my portable synth on and off for a long time; I really don't like wearing out USB ports and cables !!!! Was just perusing some of the AoIP conversation and thinking...and then a thought was given, did a search, and found:

https://www.hifiberry.com/

So, at least in theory, for about $160 or so, I could get one of those and an
RPi 2.0 starter kit, run netjack and qmidinet, and have a 96kHz wifi audio
interface with MIDI...? Anyone see an obvious catch?

Raspberries and networking and usb and wifi are not a good idea together.

They are great for what they do, but the USB and LAN on them is very poor.

Maybe an Odroid-C1 model with a reasonable USB audio interface and wifi module would do it better and cheaper (at $35 list price for quad core, GB ethernet, separate USB2 from the USB-OTG etc etc and similar gpio to the Pi it looks interesting but I haven't tested it yet) there are now quite a few options around at the under $200 price level, with different configurations and processing power.

WIFI isn't what I'd want to be using without a very controlled environment.

If your issue is wear and tear on the cables, can't you arrange some short extensions, and leave them fixed at each end till they wear out?

Or probably the ethernet sockets are more durable, and GB ethernet would be a great deal better than WIFI in almost every respect.

the Odroid ...

http://www.hardkernel.com/main/products/prdt_info.php?g_code=G141578608433&tab_idx=2

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Although (it seems) it has no audio onboard (anyway I prefer better audio using an external IF), Odroid + Audio IF seems a good option to RPi +Audio IF, and its connectivity is great:IR, WiFi, USB3.0 to Gigabit Ethe, Bluetooth, Ethernet Cable CAT6, USB GPS Module, USB3.0 to SATA3 HDD/SS.

An even better if it has a non-Atom chip so you just can use just any distro, at least Debian or Musix, without worrying about that specific architecture and the availability of certain software for it.

--

C. sanchiavedraZ:
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