Alejandro Lopez wrote:
Chaps,
Just installed Demudi, sorry I can't remember versions, it's some beta
that came out something like 2-3 months ago which was the first to
merge Debian + music studio on the same CD (requiring one installation
only).
instalate la 1.2.0 que acaba de salir
Generally, I would recommend the distribution for an
easy install
(I've not used it yet), I'd like to make a couple of comments in case
anyone is interested.
-My PC won't boot from CD-ROM. By browsing the directory structure, I
kind of guessed I had at least a couple of choices for DOS: booting
from a rawrite2'd floppy or run loadlin. Fair enough, there's a
vmlinuz file there as well as several .bin floppy images. But: loadlin
is not included in the CD image, not it is rawrite2. Not a big deal
for me as I had several other distros handy but not elegant either. In
the same directory where these images reside, there's a little text
file which lists loadlin and rawrite2: should read "loadlin", reads
"lodlin" (in case anyone would like report this for future versions).
no configuraste la bios para arrancar des de CD?
-I was not able to select English language with a
Spanish keyboard
layout (I'm Spanish). You are supposed to select both in one go, the 2
different options in the menu (that you can see if you select back
somewhere in the middle of the process) seem to be related and didn't
work as such distinct options for me.
es un error de configuracion de Agnula. Haz un bug-report en la pagina
www.agnula.org. Yo tb quiero que lo arreglen!
lo puedes arreglar haciendo en la consola:
"xf86cfg -textmode" y configurando el texto
-At one point, I went back and selected Spanish (for everything, that
is), next step was repartitioning my hard disk which is inherently a
dangerous operation. The translation of the partitioning software to
Spanish was so poor (wrong actually) that I was scared to repartition
in Spanish. Went back to English so I could understand what the
software would do with my hard disk but now my keyboard layout doesn't
match. I'm planning installing to a different machine I imported from
Germany, so I'll have the same layout problem (I'd rather not choose
German language to repartition my disk in order to have the keyboard
properly installed).
-From there on, the installation was as smooth as one could have asked
for. All my hardware was detected and installed automagically
including graphics card, monitor, mouse, sound card (ALSA), network
card, modem, CD-ROM.
So generally I'd say it's a very easy to install distribution, and
definitely a huge improvement over the classic "2 installation steps"
approach that all the other music distributions have or used to have.
I'm very pleased with regards to that.
The only other thing is I may need to buy a decent soundcard for this
PC. It should have a GM synth (nothing special since I guess I'll be
using soft synths anyway but I don't want to run a synth just to write
a couple of arrangements), one stereo output and one stereo input both
with good overall audio quality. Seemingly, the current trend is
towards either USB 2.0, firewire or PCI. A colleague has just told me
that USB 2.0 is supported by the Linux kernel starting from the latest
version (2.6 I think?) only. Since music distributions are based on
other distributions, chances are that they now run the 2.4 kernel or
maybe older. Does that make sense or am I talking complete b*ll*cks?
Also, this friend has heard about drops happening with audio over USB,
but apparently this was on a Mac and the USB device was a hard disk
rather than a soundcard. Still, he seems to think that USB 2.0 is not
as good option as firewire for audio. (Which reminds me of SCSI vs IDE
drives for audio a few years back, yes SCSI was the serious option for
a couple of years but it was an 80% more expensive as well, and
shortly afterwards IDE started to go "fast enough" and cheaper.) Is
firewire better? Is it more expensive? Also, how does it compare to
PCI? Lastly, if any of you has bought a soundcard (recently so the
card is still in production) which is reasonably similar to what I
need (wouldn't mind if it's slightly better, say 4 mono inputs and 4
mono outputs or something) and has succeed with having it running
under a Linux based music studio, I'd be grateful if you drop a line.
estoy exactamente en el mismo punto que tu. yo tengo una Creative Audigy
que para grabar es correcta(para maquetas) pero no puedes monitorizar a
tiempo real. tb quiero dar el paso a una targeta mejor y no se por donde
empezar teniendo en cuenta el soporte limitado en Linux.
te agredeceria muchisimo si me comentas lo que descubras cuando hagas
progresos!
saludos des de Barcelona,
MarC
Many thanks!!
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