Hello Reuben,
I have been talking to a Intel guy at the last AES convention and he told
me they are supporting AVB (maybe he's reading this list as well). Another
strong signal regarding AVB not dead. We were specifically talking about
audio networking and multimedia.
Best
--
Leonardo Gabrielli
On Sun, Jun 7, 2015 at 10:15 AM, Len Ovens wrote:
> I was "listening in" on a IRC conversation about the differences between
> ALSA and Core audio and why Core audio "does it right". The difference ends
> up being this HW clock. That is ALSA is build the way it is because the PC
> requires it to
Just out of interest: why are you trying to run jack as root?
Gerald
On 06.06.2015 23:08, Tito Latini wrote:
> On Sat, Jun 06, 2015 at 03:35:16PM +0100, Harry van Haaren wrote:
>> On Sat, Apr 4, 2015 at 8:13 PM, Adrian Knoth
>> wrote:
>>
>>> Not enough information. I recommend starting jackd with
On Mon, Jun 8, 2015 at 10:18 PM, Gerald wrote:
> Just out of interest: why are you trying to run jack as root?
$ whoami
root
I am root, a user who likes to run JACK for audio :)
Cheers, -Harry
PS: Yes I'm aware of security concerns etc
--
http://www.openavproductions.com
_
On 06/07/2015 07:15 AM, Len Ovens wrote:
...
Why is this? Linux is based on lowest common denominator hardware... we
call it the PC. The Linux world has gotten much better preformance out
of this box than it was designed for. But, in the case of audio, the HW
does limit performance at least with
Sounds awesome Fernando.
I have a few of the XMOS AVB endpoints I am not using if anyone wants one.
On Mon, Jun 8, 2015 at 7:14 PM, Fernando Lopez-Lezcano <
na...@ccrma.stanford.edu> wrote:
> On 06/07/2015 07:15 AM, Len Ovens wrote:
> ...
>
>> Why is this? Linux is based on lowest common denomin