Hi,

[EMAIL PROTECTED] skrev:
On Tue, Jan 30, 2007 at 09:18:06PM +0000, Bob Ham wrote:
On Tue, 2007-01-30 at 21:05 +0000, Bob Ham wrote:
On Tue, 2007-01-30 at 09:03 -0800, Michael Ost wrote:
Can anyone suggest ways to compare audio/midi performance between Linux
and Windows that ... make Linux compare favorably?
I work for a company that sells a Linux based piece of hardware that
plays windows VSTs.
The word "FUD" comes to mind.  No idea why.
Further to that, something constructive: perhaps you could try telling
your customers why *you* chose linux, rather than trying to find reasons
to tell them *they* should.

the customers dont notice. they still use windows or no computers at
all.

it looks rather like a question from the management.

Whatever the reasons, it's a valid and interesting question. In truth Linux is often touted (not the least with respect to audio) as a better performer than Windows. Though I can't say that I have personally experienced this. It is hard work getting a Linux system "tuned", I have actually never succeeded without some drawback that have forced me back to generic configurations.

Not that I complain, my current (k)ubuntu kernel performs "good enough"tm, but I am certain it would be no problem getting equal performance under Windows. My choice of using Linux has more to do with the freedom of opensourceness (it's a word!..now atleast).

Steve's idea with a vst timing plugin sounds very interesting. One using LADSPA would be equally interesting for comparing Linux to Linux. Are there other performance measurements that would be nice? xruns under load I suppose.
Having a test suite for system performance would be great!

I would not rule out that Linux is found to perform worse under some circumstances. But that is ok. Adaptability is one of the strong points of open source, once we know the problems we can start fixing them.

Regards,
Robert

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