RTaylor wrote: > (Oberon and PM4) via jack_fst (separate instances) then drive them > with a MIDI sequencer (Sequencer Plus Gold) running under DOSemu. Very > strange to see an MS-DOS MIDI application driving two VSTi plugins > while in Linux. ALSA + JACK + Linux rocks *hard* ! Response from the > plugins was fine, with no latency issues. One thing I noticed: after > some time the plugins stopped > Anyone got ideas as to what older {or obscure} dos or windows > sequencers might work well in linux? Not that it's really necessary > these days... It's just sort of an interest. :} Sure thing. Under DOSemu I've run the following applications with various success: Sequencer Plus Gold (MIDI sequencer, now available as freeware) Sideman D/TX synth editor Drummer rhythm programmer RAVEL C-like MIDI programming language Music Printer Plus notation app Mbox general purpose experimental MIDI environment (very weird interface) M/pc starts but doesn't work (mouse problem) Sound Globs starts but won't produce output Under Xsteem (an Atari ST emulator) I've run these apps: Master Tracks Pro sequencer Cubase sequencer (MIDI-only) Autobusk M Tunesmith Schoenberg many others from Tim's Atari MIDI World... Most of those work well, but some Atari MIDI apps have given me problems. YMMV, as usual... And under UAE (an Amiga emulation) I've run a few trackers and synth editors, such as Octamed and Protracker. Performance seems best under Xsteem and DOSemu. Depending on environment settings, performance under DOSemu can be very good. Sequencer Plus remains my favorite sequencer. I haven't tried Texture or the old DOS Cakewalk, but if anyone happens to have them laying around I'd like to see whether they'll run in the emulated environment. I've also not got very far with MIDI and sound apps running under WINE, though there are some notable successes. Obviously realtime performance is the "gotcha", but it might be possible to tweak WINE for enhanced audio performance. Btw, the Linux soundapps pages include a section on emulation software, with a short list of apps known to run under them. Best regards, dp