http://www.lionstracs.com/
--
Matt Gerassimoff
gentoo. It's great. It takes a little more to install on the front end,
which will be taken care of on the next major release (due Aug 5), but
it's worth it because of the ease of maintainance.
Matt Gerassimoff
On Wed, 23 Jul 2003, Ismael Valladolid Torres wrote:
Matt Gerassimoff escribio el 23/07/03 19:46:
Try gentoo. It is the reasons you describe why I switched. I get the
latest updates as soon as there available. Sometimes, I can't wait and
just update the ebuild scripts (you'll read
On Wed, 16 Jul 2003, Dave Phillips wrote:
Greetings:
I couldn't find the answer to this one on Google, so:
Which Linux distributions include wxWindows in their default
installations ?
gentoo has wxGTK which is the wxWindows version using GTK. It also has
wxPython available.
card from the
other?
Is there a good web page to find this information? Should there be one?
A nice page describing various setups for different levels of pro to
semi-pro audio systems would be handy.
What do you guys suggest?
Thanks,
Matt Gerassimoff
What about csound? This is a command line and text based program for
handling synth stuff. Check out http://www.csounds.com
Matt
On Tue, 5 Nov 2002, Mario Lang wrote:
Hello.
I'm a blind Linux user since 1997, and I'm also
interested in doing music on Linux.
Since I'm the
You could also try keykit which has both a GUI and non-GUI interface.
It's at http://www.nosuch.com/keykit
Matt
On Tue, 5 Nov 2002, Mario Lang wrote:
Hello.
I'm a blind Linux user since 1997, and I'm also
interested in doing music on Linux.
Since I'm the synth-type-of-guy, I'd really