On Tue, 23 Feb 2021, lacuna_@xxxxxxx wrote:
- Firewire, but Firewire is dead.
After I aquired a FW device recently (no not new) and a PCIe card to make it work and then found out how stable it is with the ffado backend for jack... I would say go out and buy a used one and use it.
The ALSA firewire stack (at least for this interface) was not that great with kernel 5.4 (shakey at best) and now 5.8 - 5.11 doesn't work at all. I think maybe some of the network audio protocols might be better served by a jack backend than ALSA module. ALSA/PULSE/Pipewire are focused first on internal audio. Pipwwire of the bunch, looks the most promising but of course can be no better than ALSA it rides on. I don't know that ALSA development has a big focus beyond internal, bluetooth, and cheap USB 1.1/2.0 audio. The focus in Linux audio is making the desktop work well. Profesional audio is a vanishingly small part of the Linux world. For desktop work (including skype like applications) low latency is 30ms, Dante, AVB and AES67 all look for a maximum of 1ms (3ms by the time the computer can use it). So two different worlds.
So nobody that I know of makes new FW, but used ones are a better buy than almost any USB box. So dead? maybe not quite.
Perhaps there are boxes that are as good as fw boxes were and maybe when applying inflation they are similar prices too. So poor man's quality audio interface might be firewire. In my case add preamps for mics... and mics. Good preamps and good mics make the computer and interface look cheap. In the same way that the audio interface makes the computer look cheap. Might be why macs get used in proaudio as much as they do... compared to everything else they are still cheap. (as is the sw)
-- Len Ovens www.ovenwerks.net _______________________________________________ Linux-audio-user mailing list Linux-audio-user@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://lists.linuxaudio.org/listinfo/linux-audio-user