Hello Taylor, Thursday, June 19, 2003, 10:23:36 AM, you textually orated: TF> I am sailing to the Carribean for up to two years. I am publishing a TF> musictravelog at musicvillage.com. I want to dedicate a Micron 300Mhz TF> Pentium laptop to the task. I need feedback on the best way to go. I TF> will probably never record more than 2 96K audio channels at the same TF> time. I would like to be able to monitor, and add effects to recorded TF> tracks that playback. My only experience so far is w/Cakewalk Sonar TF> 1.1. Please let me know as soon as possible, as I am scheduled to sail TF> around the 4th of July. If your planning on being in Key West during TF> the summer, email me. Maybe you can go sailing on the Jenneau 46' sloop TF> I'll be living on. Also, I'm looking for contributing editors to TF> publish stories at musicvillage.com, a sort of serial publication, trade TF> magazine. The benefits are numerous. I have talked to several software TF> and hardware companies that would be willing to send any type of product TF> imaginable, if you can! write a good "field test review" of their TF> product.
This site will give you everything you need to know about audio, midi and everything sound on Linux. http://linux-sound.org/ A particularly easy (and cross platform) sound editor that is very nice and I use it in both Linux and Win. http://audacity.sourceforge.net/ If you want a distribution (RedHat or Debian based) that is already optimized for sound use and includes a ton of sound packages, go here. I tried this ~6 months ago and it was quite nice. http://www.agnula.org/ Have fun, -- _________________________________________________________________ Brian Ashe CTO [EMAIL PROTECTED] Dee-Web Software Services, LLC. http://www.dee-web.com/ ----------------------------------------------------------------- -- redhat-list mailing list unsubscribe mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/redhat-list