I think that it is very suitable, *if* you know how to create your own
kernel that allows for jack, et al to run with preemptable
capabilities. I am not very knowledgeable with compiling kernels, so
I had to wait until someone else provided a how-to for getting my own
kernel.
Quite the contrary, I see big things on the horizon for Ubuntu. This
might be heresy, but I would like for Agnula to merge its efforts in
with Ubuntu, thus making both distributions more complete.
Josh
On 12/4/05, Steve Lindsay <stephen.a.lindsay(a)gmail.com> wrote:
On 12/4/05, Christoph Eckert <ce(a)christeck.de>
wrote:
With all the press about Ubuntu I'd imaginge
it's
worth a look, but I don't know who uses it for audio.
I heard rumors that it's a bit hard to convert it into an audio machine,
but I also heard about people who have been very successful using it
for audio.
Can you elaborate on what makes it hard? Is it just that the kernel is
not optimised for this sort of stuff or are there other things that
make ubuntu not suitable for linux audio?
I'm just starting to look at getting into linux audio and am a bit of
an ubuntu tragic so am interested in what makes it unsuitable.
Cheers.....Steve
--
Josh