Hi, The problem with this direction, I think, is that jack support for wine is probably very distant (alsa is not even there yet). So low latency work is impossible, ruling out many other types of work. Andr?s On Sun, 2005-08-07 at 01:42, davidrclark@xxxxxxxxxxxxx wrote: > Lee Revell posted: > > Wrong, obviously, the future of Linux music production is using native > Linux audio applications under Linux. > > ---------------------- > > Assuming that Linux music production actually has a future, one would > hope that this would be the case. Meanwhile: > > > As a demonstration of what can be done right now, here's something I did today > entirely with entry-level *Windows software running under WINE*, no plugins > involved (so I guess it's slightly off-topic), and *not* including CompMuzys: > > http://home.earthlink.net/~davidrclark/linux_audio_users/slow_rock.ogg > > Composition/edit -> MIDI edit and arrange -> Mix -> one-button record -> > WAV file. (Then Linux oggenc for publishing.) External synth. About > 90 minutes total. > > I believe that this is a realistic scenario for a music production person > in a hurry at a TV station, for example --- beyond the work process involved > with merely recording a guitar for a minute or two, but not CD production. > > Who knows what else those WINE guys might make happen? > > > Note: I did *not* use my Green's-function 3-D audio programs on this, so the > reverb doesn't sound like my normal stuff with headphones, in case anyone > notices. > > Regards to all, > Dave. > > > >