On Thu, 2006-03-16 at 11:45 -0500, Paul Davis wrote: > On Thu, 2006-03-16 at 17:18 +0100, Frank Barknecht wrote: > > Hallo, > > lee@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx hat gesagt: // lee@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx wrote: > > > > > I have used Jack with two audio devices, a usb device for input and > > > a built in laptop device for playback. There were audible dropouts, > > > but that is because the built in device is poorly made. So using my > > > past experience, it would be possible to use a usb mic as input and > > > a second usb device for output, creating a self contained portable > > > studio. > > > > Could you elaborate a bit on how you're doing that? asoundrc-magic or > > is it just possible by starting jackd in some funky way? > > jackd -d alsa -P hw:N -C hw:!N Ah, I thought I remembered something like that. That would work great for me, the only thing I have plugged into the inputs on my soundcard is the sound from my TV card, and I usually don't want to record from that using JACK. How does it work internally? If one of the devices has a clock that is slightly slower than the other, will jackd resample the signal to make it as smooth as possible? Or will there be discontinuities when jackd has to skip forward or backward in one of the streams to catch up with the other? -- Lars Luthman PGP key: http://www.student.nada.kth.se/~d00-llu/pgp_key.php Fingerprint: FCA7 C790 19B9 322D EB7A E1B3 4371 4650 04C7 7E2E
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