Hi, As a sysadmin of several headless audio/video recording and streaming NUC servers working 24/7, I can say those machines are very stable. I use them with a custom RT kernel and jackd as a sound server daemon driving some various external USB pro sound cards (M-Audio, Focusrite, Lexicon, etc..) and USB webcams. The only pb I have is when micro power losses appear sometimes, but this is out of topic. Guillaume Le 21/12/2016 à 13:31, Iain Mott a écrit : > Thanks a lot Bengan, sounds very promising. I'll be running it headless, > although will need a screen to configure each device. Will check out your link. > All the best, Iain > > Em 21/12/2016 09:08, Bengt Gördén escreveu: >> Den 2016-12-21 kl. 10:48, skrev Iain Mott: >>> Hi list, >>> >> Hi Lain, >> >> >>> I'm researching a project that requires a light-weight computer and >>> I'm considering using something like an Intel NUC NUC5i7RYH with a low >>> cost stereo audio interface such as a Behringer UCA222. >>> >>> Will there be any issues running linux audio on NUCs such as this one? >> Can't say that you're not going to run into issues but from my testing >> with 2 NUCs they are fully comparable with a laptop (they're built with >> laptop technology) as a computer. I'm running openSUSE Tumbleweed/Leap >> now days on them and there is no issues. However. I would do a little >> more research about the graphics driver. I've got some issues in the >> past, but not now with Tumbleweed or Leap. Here's a link and the >> discussion for the graphic chip for NUC5i7RYH. >> >> http://www.linuxquestions.org/questions/linux-hardware-18/intel-iris-graphics-6100-driver-4175576581 >> >> >> Here's my two NUCs. Both have been tested with kxstudio just for the fun >> of it. I used a cheap USB-card for the sound at that point. It worked >> but I wouldn't do any serious audio with that one. >> NUC5i5RYB (Media player for my TV running openSUSE Tumbleweed) >> D54250WYK (small home server running openSUSE Leap 4.2) >> >> Another thing I would check is if you gonna use a USB sound card, is the >> interrupts. I recently purchased a Soundcraft Signature 12 MTK. It's my >> first "real" USB sound device. It was definitely not just to put it in >> and run it. I had to switch USB input so that It could be used with a >> low latency kernel and to get rid of all the XRUNs. Now I run it with >> 23ms. Not as fine and dandy as my old trusty ice1712 but it's ok. >> >> regards, >> > _______________________________________________ Linux-audio-user mailing list Linux-audio-user@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.linuxaudio.org/listinfo/linux-audio-user