On 2013-12-28 21:19, Alexandros Drymonitis wrote:
why don't you just use the puredata package that comes with ubuntu?
Also, an 'issue' I have is my firewire sound card, which I don't know how
to utilize without jack. Does the puredata package that comes with ubuntu
include jack?
the puredata
Following the FLOSS manuals, I'm trying to open Pd with the jack flag and I
get the 'usage:' message and jack is not included in the audio
configuration flags. These are the audio configuration stuff
audio configuration flags:
-r n -- specify sample rate
-audioindev ... -- audio in
On 2013-12-28 15:39, Alexandros Drymonitis wrote:
Following the FLOSS manuals, I'm trying to open Pd with the jack flag and I
get the 'usage:' message and jack is not included in the audio
configuration flags. These are the audio configuration stuff
this means, that the Pd you are using has
On Sat, Dec 28, 2013 at 5:32 PM, IOhannes m zmölnig zmoel...@iem.at wrote:
On 2013-12-28 15:39, Alexandros Drymonitis wrote:
Following the FLOSS manuals, I'm trying to open Pd with the jack flag
and I
get the 'usage:' message and jack is not included in the audio
configuration flags.
On 28/12/13 16:32, IOhannes m zmölnig wrote:
this means, that the Pd you are using has been compiled without jack
support.
BTW is there any good reason to not have `--enable-jack` by default?
cheers,
y
--
http://yvanvolochine.com
http://soundcloud.com/yvanvolochine
On 2013-12-28 20:08, yvan volochine wrote:
On 28/12/13 16:32, IOhannes m zmölnig wrote:
this means, that the Pd you are using has been compiled without jack
support.
BTW is there any good reason to not have `--enable-jack` by default?
my guess: jack is a dependency that cannot be expected
On Sat, Dec 28, 2013 at 5:32 PM, IOhannes m zmölnig zmoel...@iem.at wrote:
On 2013-12-28 15:39, Alexandros Drymonitis wrote:
Following the FLOSS manuals, I'm trying to open Pd with the jack flag
and I
get the 'usage:' message and jack is not included in the audio
configuration flags.
On 28/12/13 21:12, IOhannes m zmölnig wrote:
BTW is there any good reason to not have `--enable-jack` by default?
my guess: jack is a dependency that cannot be expected to be installed
on all (linux) environments, whereas ALSA can.
so if you want to produce a binary that will run