> Things obviously change when you're a developer, > since you can bring the > open source solution up to, or beyond, the level of > the proprietary > solution. The question, then, is will you get more > pleasure out of > doing so than pain? I am an end user that started using Linux Audio tools in 2001. The first couple years were brutal. I spent alot more time bug reporting and interacting with developers than making music. The tools have become perfectly usable. I've made some good friends and learned alot about digital audio and derive a good deal of satisfaction from my efforts. However, I am not investing as much of my time into Linux Audio today as I have in the past. The reason is because I am musician, engineer and producer and I love making music. I need to produce music. That's where I am right now. I > really, really want > to get an album out --- and I also want it to be > really, really good. I > want to use the best tools for the job, and in my > evaluation, those are > proprietary tools. Anyone that can't produce great product using Ardour and JAMin can't produce great product. I assume the tools your not happy with are something else. I don't do alot of sequencing so I'm a bad judge but Rosegarden has been up to the task when I've needed it. I've probably only used it to produce a dozen songs. I don't do much with soft synths because the ones I tried were unstable and the one I want to try involves a bunch of stupid installation library compatibility bullshit. I don't use samplers for anything--not yet. Let us know how things work out with windows. lol j/k ron __________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? Tired of spam? Yahoo! Mail has the best spam protection around http://mail.yahoo.com