Tuesday, 23 October 2007 alle 20:00:20, Frank Barknecht ha scritto:
Oh yes, ardour is the central application here... what I meant is that
if you use ardour you are forced (on linux, at least) to use jack, and
if you use jack with no realtime things aren't going to be good (in my
experience). So, ardour is without doubt the best multitrack application
out there, but jack is not so easy to get going with a standard
kernel/system (say an "out of the box" debian system). Maybe I have that
belief that's out of date and you can run jack perfectly with a vanilla
kernel, but I recently tried ubuntustudio (which has preemption in the
kernel but lacks ingo molnar's patches) and I had many xruns even with a
setting of 1024 for frames/period. But maybe it's my machine...
So, if the OP can run a rock solid jack server, ok... ardour is the
natural (and preferred) choice, but if he/she can't, then
arecord/ecasound can be a viable alternative that doesn't involve jack.
Speaking of audio editors, I don't use audacity very much too.. now I do
most of my daily editing with mhwaveedit, which seems to be the only one
that handles jack reliably and natively. Feature wise rezound is better
IMHO, but I can't seem to be able to use it with jack in a stable way
(lots of xruns..)
> Ciao
Cheers
--
Emiliano Grilli
Linux user #209089
http://www.emillo.net
LINUX® is a registered trademark of Linus Torvalds in the USA and other countries.
Linuxaudio.org logo copyright Thorsten Wilms © 2006.
Hosting provided by the Virginia Tech Department of Music and DISIS.