On Thu, Jan 13, 2011 at 9:18 PM, Ralf Mardorf <ralf.mard...@alice-dsl.net>wrote:
> On Fri, 2011-01-14 at 03:05 +0100, Ralf Mardorf wrote: > > On Thu, 2011-01-13 at 09:26 +0000, Yorvyk wrote: > > > On Wed, 12 Jan 2011 23:57:40 -0800 > > > Casey Forslund <cforsl...@gmail.com> wrote: > > > > > > > Hi all, > > > > > > > > Before I decided to switch over to Linux/Ubuntu, I was contemplating > an > > > > upgrade to a full 64 bit system. The one thing that stopped me was > the lack > > > > of native 64 bit software in the Windows world (lots could be run in > > > > emulation mode or whatever, but it wasn't true 64 bit). My question > is: How > > > > does the 64 bit transition work in Ubuntuland, i.e. will I be able to > use > > > > all of the programs that come pre-installed with Ubuntu studio, and > would > > > > they be true/native 64 bit, able to fully utilize 64 bit hardware > etc? > > > > > > > Everything in the Ubuntu 64 bit repo is 64 bit, so will utilise your 64 > bit hardware. The only area where 64 bit apps are occasionally missing are > proprietary drivers for some hardware eg some wireless card/dongles. These > are easily avoided though. Whether things will run faster/better is another > matter. > > > > > > > If this is the wrong place to discuss this, just let me know and I > can go to > > > > the forums with this instead. > > > > > > > > Thanks in advance, > > > > > > > > Casey > > > > > > > > > -- > > > Steve Cook (Yorvyk) > > > > > > http://lubuntu.net > > > > > > Yes, 64 bit on Linux is 64 bit and at least on my machine it has got > > advantages. JACK1 isn't ok on my 64 bit machine, hence I use JACK2. On > > 64 bit Ubuntu Linux you can run some 32 bit software in a 32 bit chroot > > or some other software by using a command to add 32 bit libs. On 64 bit > > Suse Linux the design is a little bit different, here it's able even to > > use some proprietary 32 bit drivers, e.g. the LightScribe drivers. > > I've got issues with VSTs on my 64 bit Linux, but on 64 bit wineasio I > > was able to run VSTs, while IMO wineasio is unusable regarding to > > jitter. I'm not missing VSTs, but it's because I don't need a lot of > > virtual stuff. > > If you need some loudness war FX, real vocoders, Auto-Tune, perfect ARP > > synth emulations, a synth choir that will sing your lyrics, a classical > > orchestra, a superguitar FX rack and some other stuff and you shouldn't > > care about ethics, Linux isn't the right choice. At least the loudness > > war can be done with Linux too, by using JAMin, but JAMin needs a lot of > > resources, so this can become an issue. > > The only thing I'm missing on Linux is a soundfont and gig player with > > integrated editor and proper timing for external MIDI equipment and > > sometimes an orchestra emulation. I also won't do live recordings with > > Linux for money. > > At home I'm using Linux only, but even at home I do have a lot of > > external audio equipment. > > YMMV Ralf > > PS: > > Is professional audio/ video sync to external devices important for you? > Or poly-rhythm by a MIDI sequencer? This can't be done with Linux. > OTOH, on other OSs expensive hardware and expensive software is needed > to realise things that aren't able with Linux. Most of this stuff isn't > FLOSS or if you don't care for ethics, it's also not available as crack. > > > -- > Ubuntu-Studio-users mailing list > Ubuntu-Studio-users@lists.ubuntu.com > Modify settings or unsubscribe at: > https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-studio-users > the only software that i miss in my 64bit install is lightscribe. plenty of workarounds for that (chroot, VM, dual-booting, bothering the vendor til a native app comes while using lightscribe on another machine running 32bit)... would i install 64bit on that machine next time? i think so. -- MH http://opensourcemusician.libsyn.com/ http://wnclug.ourproject.org/
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