Am 03.03.2012 20:40, schrieb [email protected]:





________________________________
Von: Hartmut Noack<[email protected]>
An: [email protected]
Gesendet: 12:24 Samstag, 3.März 2012
Betreff: Re: (rant) Is there any hope

Am 03.03.2012 07:45, schrieb Jose H.:
So, if I ready correctly:

It would be much easier to find out, what it is, that you read, if you
would not top-post but point us to what you are talking about.


Ubuntu Studio is not, and will not be a productive audio recording and
mixing environment.
Why:
        1) kernel issues
        2) driver issues

All this applies to Ubuntu Studio in some cases with some combinations
of hardware. It does not apply to many other Linux-Variants, including
Ubuntu-derivates like KXStudio. And as far as I am concerned, it does
not apply to my setup, that simply works perfectly well with Ubuntu plus
the KX-Layer. And so does my Laptop. And my USB-interface and my
Firewire-interface.

Sorry folks, I really cant help but say: it works for me, just great.
It does for about 8 years now, with maybe a dozen different machines and
soundcards. And for some friends of mine it does so as well.



Options:
        1) Use a new distro that some say is great !  ( a new clone of
ubuntu/debian/etc.. ) - not really a good option

Fedora, Suse, Debian vanilla: I made music with all of them, with bands,
for video everything everybody does with music on computers, all did
work OK for me. And yes: some did work for setups Ubuntu failed to
support the same as good.

        2) Just install Windows and be able to do some of the stuff, maybe all
you need    - realistic option

Do, as thou wishest but please consider to accept, that Linux did not
work for *you* and *your* setup. It does work for many others.

        3) Wait until Linux has a decent Sound API           - unrealistic
option

I do not really understand, what you mean by "a decent Sound API"  Jack
and ALSA are consolidated and seam to work (last time I checked I found
a few hundred applications and devices that worked good with these
APIs). And everything else, that may exist in Linux regarding sound is
irrelevant for musicians (and it does not interfere anymore either).


Well, that conclusion is sound with my own experience.

*Your own* experience -- thanks for pointing to this.

Ubuntu/Linux is
supposed to be better than other OSs but definitely music production is not
one of those fields in which it gets even to the minimum expected.

In *Your own* experience it may be so. BTW: what other Linux-Variants
did you test? Fedora+CCRMA? Pure:Dyne? Suse?



Personally I think this is because we don't have a firm base to build. You
can't expect to have great user apps if you can't even have a good OS
layer. Even if you have great apps, for what if you can't get the OS to
work !?. We have ZynAddSubFX, but your sound card just doesn't work !

What if you have Logic on your IBook running MacOSX but alas! Your
interface does not come with a driver compatible to that version of MacOSX?

Try Google, chances are, you find more than one thread discussing such
issues, lesser chance though, that such threads end with the conclusion,
that MacOSX would be entirely unusable for musicians....


, why
?, maybe because pulseaudio, maybe because the driver, maybe because the
kernel or maybe because the modules you load ?, or maybe because you are
not tired of linux and you just want to play and forget about Ubuntu Studio.

I recommend indeed to abandon Ubuntu Studio and try Fedora or Suse.

best regards

HZN


Regards



El 18 de febrero de 2012 06:04, teza<[email protected]>   escribió:

Hi
Should try.Tango Studio
Regards
Teza.
Le 15 févr. 2012 05:11, "Rick Green"<[email protected]>   a écrit :

for Ubuntu Studio as a productive audio recording and mixing environment?

Four years ago, I bought a Focusrite Saffire Pro 26 firewire interface,
largely because it was listed as one of the best-supported by the ffado
project.  I loaded up a copy of UbuntuStudio 8.04LTS.  The clean install
wouldn't talk to the interface, but after I obtained a bleeding-edge copy
of the ffado source from one of the developers, and recompiled locally, I
was up and running.  I've used that installation for every recording I've
done since.  For the most part it's stable, and I've learned to work-around
its quirks
    When 10.04 came out, I thought I'd upgrade, thinking I'd like to see the
latest enhancements to Ardour, and it might be more forgiving of the order
I start up programs.  But 10.04 wasn't stable enough to run jack for more
than a few minutes before the xrun count went thru the roof.
    Since then, I've tried every new release, and the regressions are
stacking up faster than ever.

    I recently did a clean install of 11.10 (amd64), and tonight gave it a
first attempt with the firewire interface...

    With 8.04, I start ffado-mixer, and it automatically starts the
ffado-dbus-server.  With this one, it merely complains that the dbus server
isn't running, so I'm forced to open a terminal and start it, then when I
restart ffado-mixer, it tells me 'no supported devices found'.
    This isn't exactly true, for when I go to a terminal and run ffado-test
ListDevices, it clearly finds my focusrite pro26IO on node 1.

I launch qjackctl, open the setup window, and select the firewire driver,
accepting all the defaults for now.  When I attempt to start jack, it fails
with a 'cannot connect to server as client' message.

After many attempts and reboots, I discover that if I start qjackctl and
start jack without attempting to start ffado-mixer or ffado-dbus-server
first, then jack will actually start! (With 8.04, I HAD to start
ffado-mixer first.)
    I launch Ardour, open a new session, and start to record two tracks of
whatever audio happened to be playing on the stereo at the time.  About 24
minutes later, just as I'm getting complacent with no xruns recorded(!),
jack inexplicably dies, but qjackctl doesn't know it, so it is locked up,
too.  I ended up having to go back to the terminal and kill -9 everything
jack-related I could find, then power down my interface, and power it back
on, then restart qjackctl, and finally jack.  Only then could I tell Ardour
to reconnect and save the session, but for some reason Ardour's transport
was messed up.  I could move the playhead either directly, or with the |<<
button, but the 'Big Clock' still showed the time at the end of the aborted
capture, and the 'play' button or the spacebar had no effect.
    I closed Ardour, then went to stop jack and close qjackctl, and qjackctl
threw messages about a client still connected (Ardour was already shut down
at this point), and after I press the 'close anyway' button, then qjackctl
itself refuses to quit cleanly, and I get a 'program not responding'
message from the window manager, and I'm forced to go back to the terminal
and resort to kill -9 again.

    The developers are over halfway into the 12.04 cycle now, so I don't see
any point in submitting bug reports against 11.10 for all this.  Have they
gotten to the point of publishing any pre-builds of 12.04, and would it be
any help to install that and submit bugs against 12.04pre- instead?

--
Rick Green

"Those who would give up essential Liberty, to purchase a little
temporary Safety, deserve neither Liberty nor Safety."
                                    -Benjamin Franklin

"As for our common defense, we reject as false the choice between our
safety and our ideals."
                                 -President Barack Obama 20 Jan 2009

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Hello Hartmut,

could you post the setup of your systems that have always worked?

PC
with Asus-Board and IntelQuadcore
NVidia-Graphics(prop. drivers)
MAudio Audiophile 2496 (does not work well with PA, perfectly with ALSA and Jack. Since KXStudio bridges PA to Jack and starts Jack by default, this is no issue to be solved by hand anymore)) Presonus Firebox (trouble can be caused by some FW-Chipsets, works best with the built-in of the ASUS)
MAudio mobile Pre USB (Jack needs to be forced to use 16bit)

I use the MAudio mobile with a Thinkpad T60 also, works out of the box in Fedora+CCRMA and Suse

best regards

HZN




Maybe you have done that already and it is available somewhere in an archive or 
blog, please send me the URL. Thanks in advance.

On a different topic.
I was getting very tired of listening to the fan noise of my laptop. I had 
bought an external fan (ZALMAN) onto which I would place the laptop and it was 
working quite well, but still: noise. Maybe the open source graphics driver 
wasn't able to control the fan too well.
I looked for alternatives and considered several options e.g. server and thin 
client setup, with a server in a different room. Or a tower PC with extra quite 
fans.

For a couple of days now, working on the PC has become a new sensation. I found a completely 
fan-less system 
(http://www.caseking.de/shop/catalog/King-Mod-No-Noise-HTPC-Gigabyte-AMD-APU-E350::17711.html).
 I've added a Samsung SDD and a 21" LED monitor from AOC. Currently I am running xubuntu 
11.10.  I haven't tweaked it yet (e.g. 3D graphics drivers, desktop effects, etc.). I was 
looking for some nice temperature meter on the desktop for xfce, but I think I need compiz for 
desktop effects first. So far I have a terminal open with "watch sensors", that 
keeps me updated on the temperature of the system. On the average it is about 50 degrees 
Celcius, very similar to what I saw on my laptop with fans.
I learned that when using Gigabyte motherboards and trying to boot from USB 
sticks is not easily accomplished. But thanks to others sharing their solution, 
I was able to install xubuntu from a USB stick.
I am not sure whether the CPU power will be enough for more heavyweight kind of 
work (e.g. video encoding), but general applications (office, browser) are a 
breeze.
Standby and suspend worked out of the box. Apparently the network card: Realtek 
Semiconductor Co., Ltd. RTL8111/8168B PCI Express Gigabit Ethernet controller 
(rev 06) can have problems with dual boot Windows (where Windows puts it into 
sleep during shutdown and the linux driver not being able to wake it up again - 
or something). I don't have dual boot at the moment, so I cannot comment on 
that. But I have seen this behavior on a laptop (ASUS, AMD E450) with dual boot 
.
...
and still: no noise :)

Just wanted to share.

Cheers,
Stefan





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