I can't resist (just promoting the beauty of Ruby):
--8--
#!/usr/bin/env ruby
require 'ecasound'
e = Ecasound::ControlInterface.new()
e.command(cs-add jackmon)
e.command(c-add jacmon)
e.command(ai-add jack)
e.command(ao-add null)
e.command(cs-connect)
e.command(start)
loop do
$stderr JACK
Hi Jack!
I am in a very bad mood today, so I thought that it would be good for
you if I did some critisiscm of this draft.
Good news: No Hallelujas
Bad news: I might go over the top?
Nothing is personal. I just try to think from the perspective of the
gtk-team.
cheers // Jens M Andreasen
On
Hi all,
the following announcement gets sent to all of linux-audio-dev,
linux-audio-user and linux-audio-announce mailing lists in order to
reach as many interested parties as possible; I'm sorry if you
receive this twice or even more often.
I would be glad if we get a lot of participation
On Fri, Dec 12, 2003 at 10:56:17AM -0600, Jack O'Quin wrote:
If refusing to run with any privileges is their goal, then they have
failed completely. We do it all the time right now using JACK
capabilities, which bypasses their checks entirely, or by running as
root with `sudo' or `su'.
Jens M Andreasen [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
I am in a very bad mood today, so I thought that it would be good for
you if I did some critisiscm of this draft.
Good. Every project needs a curmudgeon. ;-)
On Fri, 2003-12-12 at 05:05, Jack O'Quin wrote:
Historically, many Linux audio
Am Donnerstag, 11. Dezember 2003 22:24 schrieb Uwe Koloska:
Maybe I am too dumb, but I can't make it work ...
At least for the convolution, I have managed to make it work.
The problem was with the attenuation. The values from Denis were not suited
for my setup. For the impulses I have