On Mon, 2010-08-23 at 00:44 +0200, Gerhard Lang wrote:
> 
> Am 22.08.2010 19:12, schrieb Dennis Neumeier:
> > Hi all,
> >
> > I am facing a rather "problem-before-another-problem"-problem before I can
> > start to get into MIDI: I am using a M-Audio Delta 66 up to now that does 
> > not
> > have MIDI-Ports. Now, I was just one step before ordering the Delta 1010LT,
> > but it seems that his card does not have any settop-box like the Delta 66.
> > Now, I wonder how I connect a normal guitar/bass cable to the 1010LT and
> > that's where I see trouble coming up. So any recommandations for soundcards
> > would be nice.
> >
> > Greets,
> > Dennis
> >
> >    
> have e a look for an e-mu xmidi2x2, very reasobable price, good 
> reliability. It saved me some alsa, jack and ffado updates ago, when my 
> edirol fa101's own midi ports were not supported and now I like it as an 
> independent additional midi connector
> best regards
> Gerhard

Don't! Avoid USB MIDI, see the LAD archive for ALSA MIDI latency
(jitter) tests. By the way, I've got a Swissonic USB device, the jitter
test was ok, but listening isn't ok, anyway 2 of this, for USB good
devices, does cost less then one Edirol,
http://www.thomann.de/gb/swissonic_midiusb_1x1.htm.

Usually USB MIDI failed even the latency (jitter) test.
Always use a real gameport MIDI or the gameport MIDI supported by PCI
sound cards. One of the two Envy24's MPU (MIDInterfaces) is supported by
the Linux driver, resp. by usually by those cards, any Envy24 card
should be ok. If the sound quality isn't that important, you can get
several PCI cards at Ebay for less money and use them simultan, you only
need for audio, but MIDI, a more expensive sound device.

Run this test: http://github.com/koppi/alsa-midi-latency-test



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