Pete Bessman wrote:
At Thu, 19 Feb 2004 15:14:14 -0800,
Mark Knecht wrote:
Or come help develop LinuxSampler!
http://www.linuxsampler.org
From the website:
"A fully usable LinuxSampler will require several months probably a few
years of development so consider it a long-term project."
Fsck that. They can come help Specimen, which is fully usable now, if
not feature rich. Or they can work on SimSam (
simsam.sf.net). Not to
be a polemicist, but I predict this will go the way of Octal
(
www.gnu.org/software/octal). Too much planning, too little product.
Failing that, when it does reach maturity in a few years, I'll just
whore the read-from-disk and network control code from 'em.
Nice attitude. While this ethic is understandable it doesn't help
progressions very much. Maybe now you've had a couple of days to think
rationally about it you have changed your mind anyway.
Considering how far Specimen has come in a few months
of hacking
(mostly part time, since I was between colleges and working full time
at a *movie theater* for the first two months), that will probably be
the only advantage it has.
Bwahahaha!
[pb]
--
Patrick Shirkey - Boost Hardware Ltd.
Http://www.boosthardware.com
Http://www.djcj.org/LAU/guide/ - The Linux Audio Users guide
Http://www.djcj.org/gigs/ - Gigs guide Korea
========================================
Apparently upon the beginning of the barrage, the donkey broke
discipline and panicked, toppling the cart. At that point, the rockets
disconnected from the timer, leaving them strewn around the street.
Tethered to the now toppled cart, the donkey was unable to escape before
the arrival of U.S. troops.
United Press International
Rockets on donkeys hit major Baghdad sites
By P. MITCHELL PROTHERO
Published 11/21/2003 11:13 AM