I accidentally responded to this privately. Here was the response:
Hey Christoph,
On my current main computer I actually still run pulse + jack. I have
a netbook I use for fun to run pipewire on for testing. The reason I
haven't switched is because I need to be able to produce things
quickly for work and I have a little anxiety about pipewire being
slightly different. I like to lock the sampling rate when I'm doing
pro audio work, and I worry that I can't do the same in pipewire yet.
However, being able to use multiple sound cards at the same time is
probably going to eventually bring me over to using pipewire for
everything (and the video stuff too!).
I have a build of creative Intent's Temper on my machine from the Arch
repos, so there is a build of it on Linux already. Do you think it
would work if I sent it to you? I could also find the pkgbuild and you
could use that to build it yourself if you're interested.
Brandon Hale
On 10/30/21 04:08, soffioalcuore@xxxxxxxxxx wrote:
hi Brandon,
do you use pipewire already in your setup for daily things like
multimedia and pro audio work?
I found creative intent's temper. while being open source there's no
linux version of the plugin, right? we still can bridge it, I was just
wondering if there's a new offering for linux...
thanks!
have a good day
christoph
Am Freitag, dem 29.10.2021 um 10:51 -0400 schrieb Brandon Hale:
Pipewire is a BIG new addition. I was very excited to see I could use
two audio interfaces at the same time and route them wherever I want
with qjackctl! :) However
There have been some cool new audio plugins too. For instance,
Vitalium is an awesome synth that I've heard is comparable to MASSIVE
(I've never tried massive though). I've played around a little bit in
Vitalium and it is feature-rich.
I've gotten some new plugins from the Arch pro-audio group. For
instance, there are a couple of plugins I have not tried yet:
EasySSP
StereoSourceSeparation
Artican's TheFunction and ThePilgrim
Creative Intent's Temper
They have nice looking guis, but I haven't heard them yet.
There is also a new way to load Window's vsts: yabridge. It's been
getting a lot of attention on the Linux_Audio subreddit, but this is
another thing I haven't tried yet as I tend to use linvst for Windows
vsts, and I don't use very many.
Let me know if I missed anything. The Linux kernel itself is also
always exciting because new audio hardware tends to "just work". The
other day at work I was able to plug in and use a Scarlet 2i2 without
any installation of drivers or junkware. How nice is that?
Brandon Hale
On 10/29/21 05:53, Jeremy Jongepier wrote:
Hello Niklas,
On 29-10-2021 11:28, nik@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx wrote:
Hi,
I've basically been using the same configuration
(Arch/ALSA/Jack2)
for years now and it's stable
and everything, but I feel like I've been living under a rock
when
it comes to Linux Audio developments,
so I thought I'd reach out and ask if there's any current
developments that I should follow or toy around
with ...
PipeWire maybe?
https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/PipeWire
Best,
Jeremy
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