Hello Dana,
Am 2006-02-24 12:49:55, schrieb Dana Olson:
Well, I don't think that it can be labeled as
full-featured as
Rosegarden et al, but seq24 does a decent job, although it is not so
I will look into "seq24".
much linear as it is pattern-based. It seems pretty
light to me, and
if you're using a light desktop/wm, you probably don't mind missing
some features, I would think... I don't know, I had a lot of issues
with Rosegarden and the way it manages the instruments and how it
never remembered them if I re-open the file again at a later date, but
I think it's a great application just the same. But I'll likely use
seq24 myself, as it seems more like my hardware-based sequencer/synth.
So, to the OP, there's an option to look into if you can deal with
loop/pattern-based sequencers.
It is not only me, because I am designing desktops for countries
where a CPU's with 500 MHz with 128 MB of memory is the maximum.
Even if I run curently 4 Quad-Opteron with each 32 GByte of memory,
99% of my friends will never have such machine.
My smallest machine is currently a Sempron 2200+ which is allready
to expensive for most of my friends. (I have bought it in germany
for 220 € without OS)
If the Geeks and Nerds here think only on there self...
...there will never a real success story about OSS!
It is hypocrisy.
Dana
Greetings
Michelle Konzack
Systemadministrator
Tamay Dogan Network
Debian GNU/Linux Consultant
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