Personally, I would say that KXStudio has made a
mistake here. There
is no reason to run PulseAudio for this purpose.
Torben wrote a
libflashsupport-jack which routes Flash straight to JACK, and
http://jackaudio.org/faq describes ways to get a variety of other
desktop software to talk to JACK. I spend all day listening to
internet radio and my own music collection via Rhythmbox, browing the
catalog at
emusic.com, watching Flash *and* working on Ardour ... all
via JACK and all without a large, complex layer like PulseAudio in the
middle.
Some of these are not quite as robust as they should be but it would
be far better (I think) to focus resources on making them more robust
than introducing PulseAudio as a desktop<->JACK middle layer.
I'm going to have to disagree here. falktx, the guy behind KXStudio, has
written a very useful script called pulse-jack that configures Pulseaudio
automatically to work with Jack. I have found this to work better and
require much less configuration than alsa-jack and allows me to use Skype
and Google Voice Chat for my podcast. I also use Torben's Flash Jack driver
and this setup doesn't interfere with pulseaudio or jack. There is NO way to
get the current version of Skype working with Jack without using Pulseaudio.
never say never :)
Older versions of skype worked just fine with ALSA-jackplug. Any version
of skype works with the alsa loopback:
I have spent years perfecting my podcasting setup and
thanks to falktx I'm
now closer to the perfect setup than I ever have been before. I haven't had
any issues with his packages and I use it for audio everyday. I use both
KXStudio and his PPAs on top of vanilla Ubuntu and I've never been happier.
The fact is that Pulseaudio is winning the widest adoption and thanks to the
pulse-jack script Pulseaudio works very well with jack.
Daniel Worth
Host
The Open Source Musician Podcast
http://opensourcemusician.com
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