On 1/18/23 18:35, Luke A. Call wrote:
On 2023-01-18 16:51:28+0100, Brian Durant
wrote:
On 1/18/23 11:46, Abhishek Chakravarti wrote:
Brian Durant writes:
The only disadvantage that I can see at this point, is that what I am
describing would require a number of open terminals on the
On 2023-01-18 16:51:28+0100, Brian Durant
wrote:
> On 1/18/23 11:46, Abhishek Chakravarti wrote:
> > Brian Durant writes:
> > > The only disadvantage that I can see at this point, is that what I am
> > > describing would require a number of open terminals on the desktop,
> > > which can be
On Wed, Jan 18, 2023 at 04:51:28PM +0100, Brian Durant wrote:
> Record audio from USB sound card:
> $ aucat -o /home/user/Music/set/1 - ?.wav
>
> Playback audio file:
> $ aucat -i /home/user/Music/set/1 - ?.wav
You might want to specify the encoding and other parameters rather than rely
on the
On 1/18/23 11:46, Abhishek Chakravarti wrote:
Hello!
Brian Durant writes:
The only disadvantage that I can see at this point, is that what I am
describing would require a number of open terminals on the desktop,
which can be confusing to sort through, particularly during a live
performance.
Hello!
Brian Durant writes:
> The only disadvantage that I can see at this point, is that what I am
> describing would require a number of open terminals on the desktop,
> which can be confusing to sort through, particularly during a live
> performance.
Although not a direct answer to your
Is there a script launcher that can be used for basic scripts to
facilitate live (or close to live) music performances with OpenBSD? One
of the reasons that I am a proponent of using OpenBSD with music, is the
fact that much can be done simply, from the command line. Recording
audio from a USB
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