On ons, 2004-05-05 at 10:05, Andrea Glorioso wrote: > >>>>> "Tom" == Tom Kerswill <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > > > As a musician and user of the software, I think that it is more > > important to get maximum useability and practicallity out of the > > software. At the moment most musicians are paying for Microsoft > > Windows software, because there is not an alternative that > > supports their hardware. That's the most pressing problem. If > > there are free alternatives in development, then use them, but > > if there is no alternative, then it is most important to support > > a wide range of equipment and reach as many potential users as > > possible. > > Tom, please notice that this is a matter of distribution. The fact > that A/DeMuDi doesn't come with the firmware doesn't mean the user > can't simply download the firmware itself (not that I particularly > like this solution).
Scenario "Meeting with the Producer" ------------------------------------ The producer shows up at his favourite caf� with a laptop, and together we borrow a USB keyboard from the nearby music-store. Installing Linux on his harddisk is out of the question, but the live-CD boots nicely into the familiar X Window System. - Wow, fantastic! I had no idea this was possible. - Now please show me whatever it was you had on your mind. - Just a minute, there is no sound yet ... There is no sound and there will never be, because his soundcard (listed as "Linux compatible") needs initialisation by firmware. The USB keyboard, as it happens also a common brand, needs firmware initialisation too ... - That's really an "impressive" little system you've got yourself there! - If you wan't to, you can borrow my Windows install CD? - Ehrmm ... yes, I know, but really, ehrmm ... How to explain ... - It worked at home! - Promise!! - We could try to fix it by connecting to the Internet, yes? - ??? End of session with free software. > > Of course this can't be done on the Live CD until you install it on > the hard disk (if you feel like doing it) but then again I very much > doubt you can do serious low-latency work directly from CD - anybody > correct me if I'm wrong. Once your setup is up and running, you won't need the CD very much anymore. Softsynths, sequencers and samplers lives on the heap. Data for configuration and saving your work, would probably live on a diskette or a USB drive. /jens > bye, > > -- > Andrea Glorioso [EMAIL PROTECTED] > AGNULA Technical Manager http://www.agnula.org/ > M: +39 333 820 5723 F: +39 (0)51 930 31 133 > "Libre Audio, Libre Video, Libre Software: AGNULA"
