On tor, 2004-09-16 at 13:14, Juhana Sadeharju wrote:
> > "Pricing was not announced yet, but Cann says he will make his
technology
> > available for "far less" than the cost of professional studio DSP
solutions
> > which can run into the high five-figure range. He estimates the price
> > will be
From: Jens M Andreasen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: "The Linux Audio Developers' Mailing
List"<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "The Linux Audio Developers' Mailing
List"<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: [linux-audio-dev] Diode wave shaper (LADSPA plugin)?
Date: Mon, 16 Aug 2004 11:26:24 +0200
On mån, 200
From: "Andreas Kuckartz" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: "The Linux Audio Developers' Mailing
List"<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Stefan Nitschke" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
CC: "The Linux Audio Developers' Mailing
List"<[EMAIL PROTECTED]
I like this idea (particularly because accidentally downloading
proprietary garbage won't happen, *ahemRTSynth/digeridooahem*).
No problem, I canceled any support for Linux from now until ever.
bye,
Stefan
_
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BTW: There is a prefech bug on AMD processors - try to run it recompiled
with less optimization, newer kernels have workarounds.
Another thing to try is to run memtest86 (SuSE has it in Lilo menu)
let it run for a while (full night)
I solved the freezing problem by compiling jack to use a tmpfs
for
But you do have it recompiled for the right CPU architecture
and not only moved?
Yes of course.
BTW: There is a prefech bug on AMD processors - try to run it recompiled
with less optimization, newer kernels have workarounds.
I will try that... but I get the freezes only with jack. ALSA applikation
BUT, I think a userspace daemon that starts at boot time and protects
against lockups (rt_monitor) would be a very good thing to have.
Yes indeed, but on my XP machine which freezes after a few seconds
after a client had connected to jack even rt_monitor did not helped,
the machine keeped totally
yes, suse kernel (since 8.1) already includes most of the
necessary changes. some parts are missing but they are on
the rare code path, which has been not audited quite well,
anyway.
Well i do have a LL patch for the original SusE 8.1 kernel that comes
with the distribution, including the capabil
Hello,
the german magazine KEYBOARDS has answered a readers question about audio
and linux with tremendous ignorance. I think this is a good chance to push
linux to the attention of "the masses".
Here is the full text of question and answer (first in german, so anyone
can correct my errors ;-
AFAIK, Debian stable (woody) includes wxGTK 2.2.9.
Stefan
From: Dave Phillips <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: LAD Mail <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, LAU Mail
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: [linux-audio-dev] wxWindows and Linux distros ?
Date: Wed, 16 Jul 2003 11:33:10 -0400
Greetings
> Rtsynth has no source code. Kinda defeats the open-source philosophy.
True, but OS is not my philosophy ;)
Yes, true, it's a nice app still.
Thanks :-)
Stefan
_
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> On my asus A7V266-E board i had to set down dma mode from DMA100 to
DMA33
> get LL working fine. (<3ms)
That is very interesting information (I have the same board). Did you
discover
this by trial and error?
Yes and No ;) i had one "old" cable to disk2 and when i tried the latency
test
on t
From: Maarten de Boer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Wed, 20 Nov 2002 08:29:31 +0100
On 19 Nov 2002 15:29:19 -0500
jfm3 <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I'm running the low latency and preemption kernel patches on 2.4.19. I'm
> getting disk copy latency of around 10ms. Since I'm a real time person
> (acco
get the new "blue" version of rtsynth from:
www.linux-sound.org/rtsynth/
enjoy,
Stefan
P.S. An updated jackified version will follow as soon as i can
test it on my machine in RT mode.
_
Internet access plans that fit your
From: Fernando Pablo Lopez-Lezcano <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Is anyone out there trying out this combination?:
kernel 2.4.20-rc1
capabilities patch
low latency patch
preemptible kernel patch
almost current alsa cvs [20021028.170432 usa pacific time]
If I start jackd and then use the freqtweak
From: Steve Harris <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
On Tue, Oct 22, 2002 at 09:38:26 +0200, Tim Goetze wrote:
> the problem with converging IIR is that either the IIR or the
> converging algorithm or both don't like impulses that are too
> lively. the converger will simply fall dead when it sees an
> exponentia
It builds fine with gcc3 after a bit of auto* hackery (ran ./ltconfig
ltmain.sh, automake -a), but there is no UI yet, so you can't see what
you're doing.
I am not so lucky yet... anyway i saw that SC does use both C++ and ObjC.
I thought its not possible to mix them with gcc. Would be realy coo
are different versions of gcc3 ABI - compatible?
AFAIK all versions of gcc3 except version 3.0 which had a bug are
compatible.
- Stefan
_
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On Fri, Oct 18, 2002 at 06:47:15 +, Stefan Nitschke wrote:
> -O3 with C is broken, i got an endless loop!
What gcc version? What flags did you use with C?
I used gcc 3.2 that comes with SuSE 8.1.
Today i changed the initial values to a=0.5; b=0.001; x=0.1; and now
-O3 works!?? Here
erm, sorry, but why not use pointers?
Just out of couriosity i made a benchmark test between C and C++ with
gcc3. I dont have a clue abour x86 assembler so i made a measurement.
Here is the C code (not realy useful as real code would have a need for a
struct and a pointer operation to call the
From: Steve Harris <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Hmmm... My experiments with c++, dsp code and gcc (recent 2.96) did not
turn out very well. For some reason the optimiser totaly chokes on c++
code. I only tried one routine, and I'm no c++ expert, so its possible I
screwed something up, but it did not
>On Wed, 14 Aug 2002 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
> > I jsut went to finally give it a try, and found out there is no more
> > reborn, it has been shut down.
> > I wish I hade downloaded when I hade the time
>
>What? It's a shame he won't fight this. INAL, but isn't the user
>interface non-copyrig
>
>And I suspect that the app writer just didn't even realize what he did. He
>may have used another sound card that didn't even allow small fragments.
>
> Linus
Oh yes and i remember very well how you told us on kernel.org some time
ago that it is up to the user space application
> > BTW does someone here knows about a real good midi sequencer for my good old
> > NeXTstation (source would be best)?
>
>Maybe this URL can help:
>
> http://www.eecs.umich.edu/~mrozek/nextmusic/ProgramList.html
>
Thanks alot Dave!
this link looks like a good starting point for me :) ...
Hi,
in case you are still interested in getting a copy of clavier.. just drop me
a line and i will send you a copy.
Stefan
BTW does someone here knows about a real good midi sequencer for my good old
NeXTstation (source would be best)?
>From: CK <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTE
> >
> >its proven *extremely* problematic to use binaries of C++
> >libraries. C++ is much more susceptible than C to compile-time
> >conditions. in addition, the "dists" have become increasingly
> >incompatible due to compiler/library issues, and furthermore, they
>...
You can link a static ver
> > It is too bad festival is so far out of date it won't compile anymore.
> > Looks like it could have been a good program at one time.
>
>festival is available as a debian package, so someone is able to
>compile it...
>
>Simon.
I tried to compile it with gcc-3.0... no way all the stl stuff is b
>There is interesting papers at
> http://www.sonic.com/sshd_otherinfo.html
>
>Including
>48-Bit Integer Processing Beats 32-Bit Floating-Point for Professional
>Audio Applications
>
>The master brain behind the Sonic is James A. Moorer who developed
>digital audio workstations at Lucasfi
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