Last Sunday 11 July 2004 00:01, R Parker was like:
I'm using
ardour 0.9beta11.2-2 on Debian testing and
a Midiman Audiophile 2496
soundcard.
That version of Ardour is pretty old. I'm not a Debian
user so I can't help with any of upgrade issues. I was
gonna suggest you upgrade but you are new to linux
that might not be the best advice. If that version of
Ardour has the features you need for learning and
working on your sessions don't bother. A 1.0 stable
release is expected soon enough that you could wait
for it.
Hmm, this is a bit problematical.
Ardour is probably changing too fast for Debian packagers to keep up with at a
guess. If a stable release is on the horizon it's probably best for all of us
to wait (that will be at _least_ two months for a Debian package to appear
[0] ;-) I assume anyone following Ardour's development on Debian is compiling
from CVS, which puts it out of range for newbies. That, and I'd also guess
that a lot of Debian users would be happy to continue using ecasound.
Well, that's true for me, anyway. I shouldn't generalise about others. I look
at Ardour occasionally, sigh and think 'this is going to be _Magnificent_ -
when it's finished'. Right now I wouldn't commit an important project to it.
All in all, that's a fat lot of use to Sebastian. If it's a straightforward
build, installing a more recent snapshot to /usr/local/bin/ might be an
option. It depends how much of a learning curve you're ready for ;-]
A stable release on the horizon is indeed good news. I'd love to see Debian
Sarge go stable including stable versions of ALSA, JACK, Rosegarden and
Ardour, I think it would be kind of neat. It would also provide a solid,
reliable and user-friendly production environment (albeit with no guarantees,
of course ;-). I'm not really expecting to see this manifest before the
autumn. I think it will represent a major milestone in Linux Audio
development, which is good enough for me, I have enough work to do just
remastering some of my old stuff with JAMin and preparing new MIDI files. I
have yet to get deeply into multitracking, so I'll probably shut up at this
point (again, no guarantees ;-).
cheers
tim hall
[0] if (length of time it takes one person with no free time to compile and
package an application for 13 different architectures > length of time
between minor releases) : Is it worth trying to keep up with frequent beta
releases?