On Tuesday 22 February 2005 04:38 am, Steve Harris wrote: > Yes, ecpect that for real time apps and latency, its the worse case thats > important, not the average case. > > - Steve I wouldn't expect a lot of packet routing to be happening. Curiously enough, I was wondering what would happen if the dlapdspa sliding windows transmission dealie was ported to a jack framework. I need to look at jack.plumbing. -ramble- It could be feasible to use an OSX Mac and jack as kind of a bridge to whatever they use to route audio... for integration purposes. I'm assuming the proprietary Mac stuff doesn't support jack, but that doesn't mean the converse is impossible. > > On Tue, Feb 22, 2005 at 09:09:55 +0000, Jamie Bullock wrote: > > It depends on how many nodes the traffic has to go through, and how much > > latency each node introduces. You can measure udp latency in relation to > > your own system using lmbench. I think it's available on bitmover. > > Thanks and `apt-get install lmbench`worked ;) > > > > Jamie > > > > On Mon, 2005-02-21 at 20:56 -0500, John Check wrote: > > > On Monday 21 February 2005 05:07 pm, Marc Lavall?e wrote: > > > > Le 21 F?vrier 2005 16:53, Unifr a ?crit : > > > > > After searching the web, I couldn't find any software that could > > > > > connect 2 (or more) computers (through jack would be kind of > > > > > perfect!). Well, I got only one yet but I plan to get a laptop soon > > > > > and it would be good if could use both at the same time. > > > > > > > > > > Any of you have heard of a soft like that on GNU/Linux? > > > > > > > > jack.udp : http://www.alphalink.com.au/~rd/sw/jack.html > > > > - > > > > Marc > > > > > > Interesting.. I'm wondering about the latency numbers.. Must compare > > > with dladspa > > > > -- > > Regards, > > > > Jamie