And there's the Avid/Softimage/SGI/IRIX connection... I'm sure it wouldn't
be any big deal.
{I just ran across an ad for Discreet's Smoke 6 for linux, by the way.}
> > You can't really run their software without their hardware,
But they could.
> way to support all the different distributions and hardware
Probably, but... they could do that anyway. And... The free '98 version
doesn't seem to have hurt them. They could always release a "common" and
an "elite" version. Linux people are pretty good about copyrights. They'd
get their bugs fixed... linux would get a real boost.
> I think the Linux architecture (or what little of it I understand) makes
Probably the way things are headed anyway.
> > {{Linux strikes me as being vastly more suited to industrial scale
VST's pretty similar... It is the users and small developers that have
built the bulk of the win/mac software. Once VST support gets a bit more
complete, I have a feeling linux music will flourish {The platform is
perfectly suited}. With a few good hosts {a good, commercial keykit
would be great.} linux folk will have access to all sorts {even more}
of synths, etc. :} What linux audio needs is more users.
LADSPA, etc {most linux software} does seem a bit more "hardcore" to me.
Something that professionals might take a bit more seriously than your
run of the mill VST reverb. Linux has always struck me that way though
...practical, no-nonsense software that does its job properly.