It feels weird to type this, but the interest in music-making on Apple
iPads has been good for Linux, in the sense that it seems to have driven
more manufacturers to provide truly class-compliant USB audio and MIDI
interfaces.  If you go to a site like https://www.sweetwater.com/shop/ios/,
find a device that meets your requirements and works on iOS, (in my limited
experience) it will work perfectly on Linux.

As for what I use...  I have a Roland sound module and a Korg keyboard,
both of which have USB connectivity that work for both audio and MIDI, so I
just use them as my audio interfaces for music making (using jackd).  For
other "casual" purposes, I let pulseaudio have its way with my computers
onboard sound card.

On Thu, Oct 30, 2014 at 8:12 AM, D. Michael McIntyre <
[email protected]> wrote:

> My computer started flaking out after running like a top for 6-7 years,
> and I decided to use that as an excuse to replace it.  I bought my first
> ever off-the shelf, big box retail machine.  The bright side is I put
> more gigas in my hertz, and I can boot from USB sticks now.
>
> It has a bunch of solder plugs where the PCI slot would have gone.
> Somebody decided to save $0.39, because nobody uses PCI anymore.
>
> That means the old mAudio Audiophile 24/96 (ice1712/envy24) joins my
> collection of obsolete and useless soundcards, and I don't presently
> have any way of getting the audio signal from my computer to my
> amplifier, as I was using SPDIF.
>
> Taking a quick look around, it appears to be the age of USB audio
> dongles.  This would be a good time to look at what I'm actually likely
> to do with my setup, and come up with one neat, tidy solution to replace
> the tangled morass of random bits of kit I accumulated over the years.
>
> I might record from two different microphones at once.
>
> I might record from two different line level inputs at once.
>
> I need a way to monitor the mix on headphones so I don't record the mix
> as background noise on subsequent tracks.
>
> I need coax SPDIF output (or possibly something else, and a new
> amplifier, as this thing is kind of limping anyway)
>
> I'm likely to continue with Ubuntu, so if the dongle I buy needs
> firmware, it should be something readily and easily available through
> Ubuntu.
>
> Anyway, I thought I'd see what more modern people are using these days,
> and fish for suggestions.
> --
> D. Michael McIntyre
>
>
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