True. But if you have limited computing resources you can first export your project to a 32/24 bit wav file. Then you can use something like rezound to play the wave and direct that through jamin for mastering. And, as far as I understand, jack is very efficient. A standalone mastering software would have do the audio i/o inside one thread, disk i/o under another one. This is not that different from having jack running audio i/o, rezound disk i/o and jamin mastering. Posix SHM does wonders for process to process communications. Sampo On Mon, 2004-08-09 at 14:31, David Baron wrote: > On Monday 09 August 2004 11:33, linux-audio-user-request@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx > wrote: > > The second stable release (0.9.0) of JAMin - the JACK Audio Mastering > > interface is now available for download. > > Problem with Jamin is that is a process to process thingie. Another program, > eating precious CPU cycles, must be playing and pre-processing the audio to > feed Jamin. I just do not have the CPU guts to run this way. Under that other > OS, I can run this type of software as a standalone (file-to-file) or DX/VST > plugin OK. The three-process (playing app, jack, Jamin, jack) system is just > not efficient. > > A standalone or LDASCP Jamin would be worthwhile for those of us with older > equipment.