Hallo,
Kent, Gary hat gesagt: // Kent, Gary wrote:
When you say supported as a USB-device does that mean
that
essentially my Linux box will recognize it as a device which allows me
to use it as a recording device into Ardour or Muse or Audacity (in this
case allowing 2 channels of recording) just as I would in my Mac, but
just bypassing all of the Event provided interface software such as the
Mix Librarian and templates that are issued for Win/Mac users?
I don't have the device, but as you own one, it would be worth a try
to see, what "modprobe snd-usb-audio" will bring to the light of day.
USB audio is more or less standardized, so many devices just work out
of the box, if they follow the standard. For example, i just today got
my Evolution UC-33 USB control surface. Installation was plug and play
par excellence. It is even much simpler than on Windows, according to
the instructions in the manual which goes something like this:
* DON'T plug in the device yet!
* first insert driver CD!
* run win2Kdriverpatch.exe befor connecting!
* still no connect, please!
* Don't install the W2k standard drivers
* open Device manager
* Select "Driver", click update driver!
* more instructions...
* even more instructions...
* Reboot computer
In total, installing the UC-33 on W2000 requires 20 steps!!!
No tell me, what is easier, that or this: "apt-get install hotplug
alsa-modules" without downtime.
I understand your concern for wanting the source
itself instead of a
version done by the manufacturer. I guess I was just eager about an
Event driver since when I see the RME products that work well with Linux
I assumed that this is how RME was issuing their drivers, namely, from
within their organization. Does RME or M-Audio give their code to Linux
developers?
RME and M-Audio just supply specifications and documentation, AFAIK.
The ALSA drivers were written by free software developers like Paul
Davis, who did a lot of work on RME cards. The source to their windows
or mac drivers isn't available.
I didn't want to discourage your writing at all. Of course, it would
be wonderful, if hardware manufactures would directly support Linux on
their driver CDs, and remembering them of our needs as customers is
very important. But then personally I would like to have the source
code as well. I'm insatiable. ;)
ciao
--
Frank Barknecht _ ______footils.org__