My current [Gentoo] Rezound doesn't do this on my PC, but does on my
PPC. Also, I remember my CCRMA Rezound acting similar. If that isn't bad
enough, you also won't get anything like normal throughput using Rezound
+ Jack. My typical experience in this way had lots of glitches and
awful, repetitive buffering noises.
In such a situation, Rezound is totally unreliable for recording with
Jack, and its only thinkable use would be to edit samples while in th
emiddle of a Jack session.
The problem is that Rezound is a very unruley Jack client, and the
makers fully acknowledge this. One solution is to put more pressure [in
the nicest possibly way] on the Rezound list to make the app fully
compatible with Jack.
Another problem, which goes hand-in-hand with this, is Audacity's
anachronistic dependency on OSS. The new versions of Audacity can do
lots of stuff that I otherwise would use Ardour for... namely the
ability to load lots of different clips and do my arrangements there.
But without Jack, or even ALSA, I don't see myself ever using it as a
real sound app in my setup. So Rezound, buggy as it is, remains the main
choice.
good luck,
d.
R Parker wrote:
I've always had trouble getting the Rezound CCRMA
package to work as a jack client. When starting, it
asks what alsa_pcm:playback is wanted, establishes the
connection with jack but never starts the gui.
root 8244 1.8 2.1 19376 19376 pts/8 SL
12:00 0:03 rezound --audio-method=jack
It starts fine if the audio method isn't jack. It also
will start with jack as the audio method if I compile
from source. Is there some trick I need to employ?
--
derek holzer :::
http://www.umatic.nl
---Oblique Strategy # 78:
"Go outside. Shut the door."