Harry, rather good guess :-) Not Firewire. AudioTrak Prodigy HD2, PCI. It has been extremely well-behaved. In your opinion, what is the advantage of the Firewire approach? Cabling? Replaceability? Ease of multitrack functionality? The Firewire daisychain capability (does it still exist)? I just checked out the Pure::Dyne web site. Very promising and up-to-date, not like I last saw it a while back. Questions: 1. Does it install onto hard drive reasonably easily? I noticed that that page in the wiki isn't there yet, just a title/placeholder. Can it do RAID-1 without terrible pain? 2. If it's designed explicitly for DVD/USB use (and it looks like it is), is that how it's updated? In other words, can I expect to just update my system device and it will use an existing older-version profile reliably? This would be a very good way to keep a production machine. 3. Does it include thorough current compilation capabilities? J.E.B. On Sat, 2010-07-10 at 18:35 +0100, Harry Van Haaren wrote: > Hey Johnathan, > > Mind expanding a bit on what soundcard your using, kernel version, > jack frames & period? > > If im to guess, you're not on a firewire card, usually the -RT is > really nessiary to ensure > no XRuns.. > > Maybe you are though.. that's when I'd be really intrested! -Harry > > PS: I'm not on Fedora at the moment, running Pure::Dyne latest stable. > Very good -RT performance > on this laptop with that kernel & firewire stack. :-) > > On Sat, Jul 10, 2010 at 6:28 PM, Jonathan E. Brickman > <jeb@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > I was very surprised to see Jack2 working well set to realtime > + soft mode, with a normal (non-rt) kernel, giving me 2.67 ms > stated latency without kernel crashes in Fedora 13. > _______________________________________________ Linux-audio-user mailing list Linux-audio-user@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.linuxaudio.org/listinfo/linux-audio-user