I'm sure Ardour is worth it, but I disagree with the phrase "small 
amount of time" to get used to it. It think it is very complex software 
and not at all easy to learn unless you're already an audio engineer.

steve conrad wrote:
> Thanks for the info.
> 
> I'll have to set aside some time to figure out ardour.
> 
> On 3/19/11, Al Thompson <[email protected]> wrote:
>> On 03/20/2011 01:07 AM, steve conrad wrote:
>>
>>> In the end, I just stuck a jumper cable from my headphone jack to my
>>> line in and dumped it onto an RG audio track. But surely there's a
>>> more elegant solution available.
>>>
>> Use qjackctrl to do this.  In the patchbay, connect RG's master outputs
>> to two RG inputs, and enable those to record.
>>
>> Learn Ardour.  It's well worth the small amount of time it takes to get
>> used to it.  It was actually far more intuitive to me, since it is based
>> much more closely on an actual audio mixer/recorder.  I actually sync
>> Ardour and RG together using the jack transport and do all of my audio
>> stuff in Ardour, while using RG as a sequencer and synth host.  I've
>> found this to be the best of both worlds for me, and the best workflow.
>> I greatly prefer to mix in Ardour anyway, and by doing it this way, all
>> of the audio is already there and a rough mix is done.

-- 
David
[email protected]
authenticity, honesty, community

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