On Sat, 23 Feb 2013 21:53:22 +0100 Nils Gey <[email protected]> wrote: Unvisible to most people in here there was a brief discussion in IRC, plus the replies here already, that made me realize some points I had not considered. I agree that two lists are not that much and there are probably good reasons to keep them seperate. (But crossposting is annoying anyway, in most cases.)
But my other points remain: > Just to be clear: > I am a friend of diversity and seemingly "redundant" applications and > projects. There cannot be enough sequencers, samplers, synthesizer, notation > programs etc. > But when it comes to infrastructure and core building blocks I see no sense > in seperation. This is the strong point, compared to other > operating/eco-systems. We may friendly compete on a musical or feature basis, > but there is no need to border a program just to make it harder for the users > to use the program of the "enemy" (from a Windows/OSX POV). > > In a Linux-Audio world of diversity and individuality, it is good to have > central places and instances. We can do whatever we want but unlike the > closed source world we have no need to create factions and standards that > rival with each other, creating artificial gaps. > > The most successful of these instances is JACK itself. A centralized audio > server, hailed and praised by everyone. > > And since I am writing this mail already, my personal wish list: > Please join the two blog/RSS planets as well > (http://www.planet.linuxmusicians.com/, http://linuxaudio.org/planet/ ) > Merge Yoshimi and ZynAddSubFx, the JACK versions and experimental forks, the > session managers/protocols and a few audio distributions which have not > enough manpower and that can be used to boost the other distributions. > "Joining/Merging" also can mean for one side to step down honorable and > retire the project. _______________________________________________ Linux-audio-dev mailing list [email protected] http://lists.linuxaudio.org/listinfo/linux-audio-dev
