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Audiobus as an open platform...
I was thinking how cool it would be if the Audiobus community and developers started an open platform not dependent on the iPad...Maybe on Raspberry Pi or something open format... What say you? It would be great to have a stable platform...
Comments
$60 touch screen...
I've eyed a config with a different screen myself to prototype:
Previous screens were capacitive touch, and lacked resolution.
I've been looking for more specs on the touch technology of this screen
@johnfromberkeley , I'm not sure on this particular screen. I have one on order...I'm prototyping some hardware devices and cases. I would collaborate with others for creating a new platform.
are thinking a general-purpose computing device based on linux, and tweaked for music?
p.s. i wonder about forking ubuntu?
https://ubuntustudio.org/
Interesting. Similar to:
http://www.bandshed.net/AVLinux.html
http://kxstudio.linuxaudio.org/
no need to fork ubuntu, someone already did
And it runs BitWig quiet good.
Z-DSP : http://www.tiptopaudio.com/zdsp.php
This seems like an amazing Platform...
Raspberry Pie will run Non DAW and other apps, but trust me when I say that you will spend more time reading and learning and troubleshooting than making music by going that route. I don't think no that is the way forward. I believe the Audiobus team are going in the right direction. We just need to stick with them.
Besides, Jack owns that realm. Why reinvent the wheel?
No need. Ubuntu Studio exists for that. AVLinux and KXLinux as well.
Whoops! I didn't read to the bottom to see that what I was going to suggest has already been suggested.
I'm a long-time Linux user, programmer, administrator - since '93 - and love Linux. It's my main desktop platform. BUT - I've tried the various studio offerings on Linux - including Ubuntu studio and the latest Ardour for example, - even building some of those programs and kernels to support real-time audio from scratch from source - and nothing matches the flexibility and breadth available on either MacOS or Windoze. Wine-based plugin hosts don't cut it in my experience to fill the pretty huge gap in plugin availability (and I've been using Wine too on and off since it was created) and I would miss those commercial plugins.
So, as I say, I love and use Linux all the time - I'm typing this message on Linux right now ! :-) - but I do not see it competing for my time as a serious competitor to MacOS or Windoze for studio production - not because there aren't DAWs - Tracktion, Ardour (the latest one isn't bad), BitWig as was mentioned, LMMS - and some of those are very good, but the lack of native plugins available is a big downside for me to compete in a studio setup.
Can Linux be used for audio - sure! But not in the same way.
Very well said! I agree completely!