Am 16.11.2010 um 19:32 schrieb Brian Lloyd:

> On Tue, Nov 16, 2010 at 10:26 AM, Jack Haverty <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
>> I use Debian, which I think is still the same genetic code as Ubuntu.
>> Debian has lots of 1394 software, for disks, video devices, etc.  None
>> of my Linux machines have a 1394 card, but that's easy to fix.  But if
>> "driver" means the code that connects dttsp to the kernel 1394 device
>> and knows the Flex language used on that device, it's quite possible
>> that hasn't been written.  But I think the kernel drivers are there.
>> 
>> I agree -- if anyone knows otherwise...
>> 
> 
> Has anyone considered the possibility that the kinds of DPC latency problems
> (which seem to be hardware related) might apply in Linux and other OS's when
> run on the same PC hardware?

Well, my experience is that you just don't have latency problems at the speeds 
(192kHz) FRS is using as a maximum. Iff you connect two or more FRS devices 
then the Mac Mini might get in trouble. That's what I see from using multiple 
professional sound interfaces and sequencer software on it - all running in OS 
X of course. Windows presents problems others simply haven't.

Cheers
 
   Frank


_______________________________________________
Flexedge mailing list
[email protected]
http://mail.flex-radio.biz/mailman/listinfo/flexedge_flex-radio.biz
This is the FlexRadio Systems e-mail Reflector called FlexEdge.  It is used for 
posting topics related to SDR software development and experimentalist who are 
using beta versions of the software.

Reply via email to