Hi :)

I'm ambivalent if I should waste my time or the time of any Linux coder.

The latest mails I got offlist because of my unwanted suggestions on 
other mailing lists, e.g. JACK dev list, are not only discrediting me, 
but also MIDI. I wonder if developer of important basics, that means for 
the kernel, ALSA and JACK are interested in fixing Jitter. Another issue 
is, that they still deceive their self that Linux should be 100% 
professional for recording, mixing and mastering. Until now no OS or 
digital stand alone equipment is 100% professional, there are still a 
lot of studios using analogue equipment. Okay, I'm a blabber, but please 
take a look at Wiki, e.g. at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mastering:

"There are mastering engineers who feel that digital technology, as of 
2007, has not progressed enough in quality to supersede analog 
technology entirely. Many top mastering studios, including Bernie 
Grundman Mastering (which has mastered 37 Grammy-nominated albums), and 
Gateway Mastering, still embrace analog signal processing (such as 
analog equalization) within the mastering process. Additionally, the 
latest advances in analog mastering technology include 120V signal rails 
for previously unavailable headroom of 150dB as well as frequency 
response ranging from 3 Hz to 300 kHz.[citation needed] In order to 
duplicate this frequency response in digital domain, a sampling rate of 
at least 600 kHz would be required, by the Nyquist–Shannon sampling 
theorem. However, it is pertinent that the extremes in this frequency 
range (3 Hz - 300 kHz), are effectively inaudible, existing outside the 
range of both the human ear and most professional microphones."

This are the experiences I made when I was engineer for Brauner. I don't 
think it's relevant for home-recording and I guess most of us will do 
home-recording or semi-pro work, but facing the truth is important for 
progress.

Another issue that makes me feel pissed is, that it's not wanted to have 
many users, because Linux isn't proprietary, but not to have many users 
is the reason why hardware companies don't take enough care to fit to Linux.

I wonder if

1. there is an interest to include a working MIDI, even if MIDI is e.g. 
"anachronistische Sondermuell" (anachronistical hazardous waste) like a 
Linux coder wrote offlist.

2. there is an interest in facing the truth abaout digital recording and 
digital recording using Linux .

3. there is an interest in making Linux popular enough to make companies 
taking care about Linux, to get drivers.

*?*

Some people like e.g. Rui are interested in solving MIDI jitter, but I 
got more emails offline, that I'm not wanted and that MIDI per se is 
unwanted, they say e.g. jitter makes MIDI becoming more natural.

Is there a chance for Linux audio and MIDI?

By the way, I also get a lot of emails offlist from users who still use 
Linux for day-to-day work, but not for audio work any more, they changed 
to Apple or Microsoft.

Why is there the need to talk about that offlist and keep up appearances 
on the lists?

:(
Ralf

-- 
http://www.dailywav.com/1002/beginning.wav

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