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Comments

  • @Sebastian said:

    @brambos said:
    As with anything in the music software scene, this is going to be driven by indie developers who are not in it for making a living

    The opposite is true. We made Audiobus and keep pushing it because it's our full time Job. If you want to look at projects that don't go anywhere because they're a side project that nobody really depends on:

    OSC, Android's low latency audio framework, Android's inter-process-audio framework, Samsung's professional audio framework, JACK on iOS, I could continue this list if I wanted to.

    I take your point but gotta say including JACK on iOS in your list isn't exactly fair. It is indeed his full time job best I know (well, Ardour+Jack). They had it working and the Apple API changed, as it does. AB already had the traction and it was basically pointless to try to re-engineer Jack atop the new API (considering that it's F/OSS).

  • edited July 2016

    @syrupcore: Paul Davis (the guy behind Ardour and JACK) is not the main person behind JACK for iOS. Also JACK for iOS never got much traction for entirely different reasons and then didn't put effort into moving from Mach Ports to IAA when they had to.

    The guy behind JACK for iOS makes a few other apps and probably works on non-iOS stuff as well and did back then.

    I know it's hard to keep track of this because it's impossible to know what's going on behind the scenes but I thought I'd clarify.

  • @Sebastian Fair enough. I saw some comments from Paul here and there that made it seem like he had more to do with the iOS port but like you say, hard to know from this side of the app store. And no doubt, I was probably projecting on the reason behind not updating it to work with IAA (AB's rapid adoption would get me to throw in the towel).

  • @Sebastian said:
    @syrupcore: Paul Davis (the guy behind Ardour and JACK) is not the main person behind JACK for iOS. Also JACK for iOS never got much traction for entirely different reasons and then didn't put effort into moving from Mach Ports to IAA when they had to.

    The guy behind JACK for iOS makes a few other apps and probably works on non-iOS stuff as well and did back then.

    I know it's hard to keep track of this because it's impossible to know what's going on behind the scenes but I thought I'd clarify.

    I think the developer that was behind JACK for iOS it's the same that's in charge of isymphonic orchestra, oriental strings, icathedral organ, CMP grand piano and heavy brass. JACK its still listed as one of his apps, of course now it's useless post iOS 6.

  • Yep, https://www.crudebyte.com/

    I didn't realize he'd taken an unnecessary pot shot at AB in his "why jack is dead" post https://www.crudebyte.com/jack-ios/ios7/. Meh.

  • This thread is great, reminds me of when the VST standard arrived, and it was patently obvious that it was the future (Proven to be true) but there was one or two developers who bitched moaned and whined, claimed it to be a dead standard as soon as it arrived, strange, non of those developers are around any more, but VST still is.
    Here's a reality check, AU is the standard that will continue on and on and on, it is the closest thing to desktop plugin formats and will be supported more and more in time.
    Will it replace everything else, nope, should it replace everything else, nope, should every synth/effect developer embrace it, yep.

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