Is there anything that can be done about connecting 32bit apps to
instances of Jack running on 64bit Ubuntu?
As an example - Renoise , which is a wonderful tracking program (sadly
its not open source) but it becomes limited when run
on a 64bit OS.
N.
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Ubuntu-Studio-devel mailing list
On Mon, Sep 1, 2008 at 7:45 AM, Janne Jokitalo [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Sun, Aug 31, 2008 at 06:18:04PM -0400, Cory K. wrote:
Недко Арнаудов (nedko) is a JACK dev that has been working wonderfully
with us. He has an interest in getting his packages (for his JACK apps)
is great shape for
Lately with working on some of our BZR branches I've noticed that there
is some work we could do to get them up-to-date with the most recent
BZR/LP changes.
So I'm thinking right after release we have a massive review of it all
and we do some cleanup. Sound good?
-Cory K.
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On Mon, Sep 1, 2008 at 3:30 PM, Cory K. [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Lately with working on some of our BZR branches I've noticed that there
is some work we could do to get them up-to-date with the most recent
BZR/LP changes.
So I'm thinking right after release we have a massive review of it all
Hello all. This is going out to a couple of lists so I can get as wide
an opinion as I can. I'll correct any inaccuracies as this discussion
progresses.
Quick intro: I'm Cory K. Lean on Ubuntu Studio. Hi :)
So here's the pickle we're in as I understand it.
The way the kernels are now managed in
On Mon, 1 Sep 2008, Cory K. wrote:
we're looking at these options:
* Shipping the -generic kernel with this 8.10 release of Ubuntu
Studio and let people compile their own -rt kernel. With a latter
PPA release of -rt for testing as upstream support happens.
* Ship a
Marc R.J. Brevoort wrote:
On Mon, 1 Sep 2008, Cory K. wrote:
we're looking at these options:
* Shipping the -generic kernel with this 8.10 release of Ubuntu
Studio and let people compile their own -rt kernel. With a latter
PPA release of -rt for testing as upstream support
On Mon, Sep 1, 2008 at 12:56 PM, Cory K. [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
snip
Make no mistake. This is a major issue that *could* make us skip a
release. In the end, it might be the way to go rather than ship a
release we're not proud of.
My first reaction to reading this conversation is that
Eric Hedekar wrote:
On Mon, Sep 1, 2008 at 12:56 PM, Cory K. wrote:
snip
Make no mistake. This is a major issue that *could* make us skip a
release. In the end, it might be the way to go rather than ship a
release we're not proud of.
My first reaction to reading this conversation is that