On Sat, 2005-07-30 at 16:04, hanaghan@xxxxxxxxxxxx wrote: > To the current Linux audio devs...Muse, Jack, Ardour, Rosegarden, Csound, > Wired, etc all and any...what motivates you to create these apps? Surely > it's not money? :) So what is it? Are you genuinely magnanamous? Did you > have a need for yourself and decided to share? Are you a visionary? Do you > do it just 'cause without need for acknowledgement?? This is not a > judgemental statement on my part. If you will indulge me, I want to know > what makes you spend the time you do on this stuff so guys like me can > pilfer legally and freely your hard works and then subsequently bitch at > random about how it doesn't work! :)(tongue in cheek bit). If you had > your druthers and were tasked with organising one desktop dev group, along > with the full crew of audio related devs and any other individual or > clustered components needed (RT capable kernels, file systems, etc), how > would you propose it be done. What parts might you organise and others > leave as is? Is doing this in Linux a mutually exclusive based wall that > was never intended to be scaled? > One of the reasons that I started working on JAMin with Steve, Jack, et al is that I was using Ardour. I had tried to contribute to Ardour at first but it was too far along in development for me to jump in and easily get acclimated. I didn't have the time to spend to get up to speed. I felt that I owed something back to the community (and Paul in particular) for the work that had gone in to the applications that I was able to "pilfer legally and freely". As far as playing nicely together is concerned, that's why we used JACK. JAMin was actually designed to be the mastering backend to Ardour. I have to admit that once I got started working on JAMin it was a hell of a lot of fun ;-) It seems to me that some of the best ideas come from those who "bitch at random". -- Jan "Evil Twin" Depner The Fuzzy Dice http://myweb.cableone.net/eviltwin69/fuzzy.html "As we enjoy great advantages from the invention of others, we should be glad of an opportunity to serve others by any invention of ours, and this we should do freely and generously." Benjamin Franklin, on declining patents offered by the governor of Pennsylvania for his "Pennsylvania Fireplace", c. 1744