My apologies for ignorantly stating Guenter as the author of the Hammerfall driver, I was incorrectly informed (seems like he did some kind of work [or at least was planning to] on the native interface, or something like that, so I mixed it all up in my head... DOH!). So again, my apologies.
Ico Bukvic, composer http://ping.ccm.uc.edu/~ico/ [EMAIL PROTECTED] ============================ "To be is to do" - Socrates "To do is to be" - Sartre "Do be do be do" - Sinatra "Just do it" - NIKE -----Original Message----- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of Paul Davis Sent: Monday, October 15, 2001 9:03 AM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Re: [linux-audio-dev] is there a hammerfall dsp driver in the works? In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>you write: >Does anyone know whether Gunther Geiger (the author of Hammerfall driver), >or anyone else for that matter, working on the RME's Hammerfall DSP (pcmcia Gunter is not the author of the hammerfall driver. Winfried Rietsch wrote the original "native" driver; I wrote the ALSA driver (which has more support for the capabilities of the card). I am not at liberty to forward you the precise information I got from RME, but suffice it to say that the RME Hammerfall DSP is not yet shipping, despite appearances to the contrary. I do not yet have h/w or datasheets from them that would permit me to start working on the driver. You are encouraged to write to them to ask that this happens ASAP. >version for laptops) driver for linux at this time? If not, what are current >available solutions for the intel/amd laptops in linux as much as the >low-latency multichannel audio hardware is concerned? There are none. The VX Rocket is the only PCMCIA device that could be considered a serious audio interface, and it supports only 2 channels. --p
