unsuscribe
And talking with two friends, I think the evidence points there. Two
friends had blown Athlons after one month. Both had fan problems, one
quit altogether and burned it out within minutes. (Smoke) Second I
think the fan was just not cool enough.
Rick
Wednesday, June 05, 2002, you wrote:
BC
With Athlons in my experience (including the XP) it's not that they
all generate more heat, it's the speed at which they burn out if your
fan dies or isn't cool enough. I know more than 5 people who have
lost athlons to heat, 2 of them to fans that were not cool enough, and
the other 3 or 4 to
Does anyone have any experience with the flower fans from QuietPC? I
am getting sick and tired of the jet engine noise in my studio and
before I go spending thousands of dollars on a quiet rack, I would
rather do what I can in the computer first. I built a vocal booth to
cut down on the noise
and the silent towers
SM I tried previously!
SM Hope this helps...
SM Sebastien
SM - Original Message -
SM From: Rick Burnett [EMAIL PROTECTED]
SM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
SM Sent: Monday, June 03, 2002 2:08 AM
SM Subject: [linux-audio-dev] OT CPU Fans
Does anyone have any experience
I think you might be missing Paul's point. While yes I use KDE on
both the Solaris side and the Linux side everyday, not everyone does.
By using the KDE libraries you lock yourself into someone using a
system that has KDE. If I were building a standalone system that only
did music applications
RB I think you may be missing my point, namely that without a
RB tidy, integrated package of development libraries occasionally
RB projects just might never happen. As an application programmer
RB I don't want to always be fighting an uphill battle against shifting
RB or underpowered APIs - to
Linux is not an operating system for simple users.
RB Can I pin this one on the wall?
If someone came to me and said 'I am looking to get into computers,
what should I get?' Last on that list would be Linux. It's too much
of a leap for people unless they will have someone knowledgeable
around
Yes, the update did the trick. Let me point out that this wasn't a
linux machine. I was only mentioning it because many people were
unaware of it and knew that it was so incrediblt bad that many other
people might see it. Even though I am going to stick with the board,
the Intel chipset for is
Haha, well that can be dangerous ;) Seriously though it might be
better to do some reading on the crystals. It could be potentially
harmful depending on the chip. Let's say for instance the the voltage
is diffent on both cards, now you have an extra load on that pin.
This could cause timing
I like Jack myself, its got a simple direct name.
Rick
Saturday, July 28, 2001, you wrote:
How about this one:
PAUL - Paul's Audio Universal Linker.
Incorporate's the name of the inventor and is (sort of) recursive.
PD I'm not the inventor.
PD LAAGA represents the accumulation of 2 years of
I like the idea of completely remapable hot-keys. My example because
of a lack of any better would be quake/unreal/tribes, all of which
have remapable keys. If you ever watch people who play these games
(as I do) you will see an incredible amount of diversity in
keystrokes. I watch some people
I guess I do not understand *why* we would need some sort of generic
property mechanism. If it was found out that additional properties
were needed to be queried or changed in the future, you will still
have to put in the appropriate 'glue' code between the audio engine
and the audio drivers,
My only two problems with Java are:
1. The GUI code DOES NOT work the same across all platforms.
2. Large data arrays don't seem to work to efficiently.
Other than that I like the concepts and structuring.
Rick
Sunday, June 10, 2001, you wrote:
SH On Fri, Jun 08, 2001 at 04:08:31PM -0700,
I just don't see the point in creating an 'abstraction' in C. Maybe
its just me, but the whole object scheme seems the logical way to do
things ESPECIALLY for something like this. I used to dislike C++
about four years ago, then I spent a great deal of time reading and
understanding OOP, and
If I am not mistaken, I thought that lately we have been working on
standards and interfaces across platforms, LAAGA and LADSPA do just
that. I would like to point out that a majority of the applications
that get started in linux don't ever go to completion. Everyone and
their grandma
I think that a calculation of 32-Bit float to 32-bit integer would
make more sense. Why go to 48-bit when a power of 2 puts you to
64-bit.
Rick
Friday, May 25, 2001, you wrote:
JS There is interesting papers at
JS http://www.sonic.com/sshd_otherinfo.html
JS Including
JS48-Bit Integer
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