On Thu, 2003-02-06 at 20:20, Darren Landrum wrote: > Two little things to tell everyone. > > First, I finally got my copy of the February issue of Sound on Sound. > The Linux article is there, and I was very impressed with it. Plus, > this issue has a great how-to on micing drums for studio recording. > > The surprise was the copy of Home Recording I picked up on a whim > today, because it has an article on DIY surround sound. In the back, > under the Computer Central heading, is an article called "The Other > Operating System," by Thad Brown. I'll give you three guesses which one > he's talking about. :-) > > It's a very positive article, saying that he ultimately thinks that > Linux will be a serious competitor to MS and Apple for music > production. The article also mentions a company called Digigram who has > released drivers for their audio hardware under an Open Source license > (does anybody know anything about Digigram?). He does say, though, that > there seems to be no real replacement in the works for the likes of > ProTools and Cubase, so I think somebody needs to point him to Ardour > and Rosegarden. > > Just thought you all would like to know. :-) I read somewhere that this works pretty well under wine. {As well as cubase and sound forge} http://www.cakewalk.com/Products/Project5/default.asp Personally, I think the important thing would be to come up with a killer app like Nuendo or just a nice stable, emacs style, extensible sequencing environment {Or, maybe convince Minnetonka {Their surround sound thing would be an excellent base.} or Cakewalk to port} Plugins and VST/VSTi are most important in my mind... that's the strongest, most rapidly progressing thing on windows... It follows UNIX philosophy... makes even more sense in linux {consider the type of development that goes on in linux as well {windows users have done wonders with vst.}} It'd be great to get a sort of generalized plugin based environment along the likes of Creamware's stuff going. {like the functionality of pd/gem with a timeline and softsynths/ladspa/vst plugins. ...That, being open source, could be remade in the image of whichever artist wishes to move into it. It's an environment...} I think linux's real strong point is all of the bizarre research environments and experimental software that's available. I also think that's {coding sound} going to become much more important. It makes for a good artistic environment at any rate. Considering the fact that the development trend seems to be towards crossplatform/platform independent stuff... the idea that OpenStep and OSX seem to be getting along so brilliantly {I do wish they'd port final cut pro or avid dv}, that there's a VST server, LADSPA and so many really nifty projects going... I think the difference amongst platforms in the future is... there won't be any {platforms} that everything will be modular... more unixy... built out of plugins and tools and scripts and the internet. :} My advice... buy Redhat. {Maybe FCP... Avid.} -- Rick Taylor <ricktaylor@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> The Dispossessed