Humm, Even after * Blitzing all of Jack's preferences * Using a buffer size in Fluxus of 2048 * Using the 'dummy' JACK driver to bypass any dodgy audio devices
I'm still getting the same result, everything is jumping around like crazy. It's as if Fluxus was getting a fed bunch of zeros and then a big surge of non-zeros to make up for it. Is there anything else I can try? Ta Chris Targett On Tue, Dec 22, 2009 at 2:04 AM, Dave Griffiths <[email protected]> wrote: > On Mon, 2009-12-21 at 12:52 +0000, evan.raskob [lists] wrote: >> >> On Dec 21, 2009, at 12:57 AM, Glauber Alex Dias Prado wrote: >> >>> >> >>> I thought it was the music I was listening to and used Jaaa to >> >>> generate a pure sinewave but I still get the same result. >> >>> >> >>> Is this likely to be an issue with Fluxus, or >> >>> something/bad-configuration in Jack? >> > isnt the gh code not dependendant on jack, only on the audio >> > sources?(audio file) >> >> This is true, but noisy audio in == noisy result, which can be due to >> jack adding glitches and noise (this certainly happens to me a lot). > > If you read from a wav file jack isn't involved. > > It's much more likely to be a problem with the fft implementation in > fluxus than anything to do with jack (which is specifically designed to > prevent clicks and glitches, and works pretty well in my experience). > > cheers, > > dave > >
