Ardour 3 piece travel set12/3/2023 ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() JACK connects to the driver for your soundcard (ALSA, FFADO, or OSS) and finally, the driver (loaded as a kernel module) actually controls the hardware. Ardour doesn’t interface directly with (or care) about your sound card, Ardour just connects to JACK as another client to the JACK audio server. I haven’t got my sound working yet in firefox so I’m guessing there’s some kind of Ubuntu-Studio setup that is defaulting to the onboard sound & causing Ardour want to over ride the Jack settings unless I start Jack I think its quite certain that the problem is not with Ardour (or JACK). I run qjackctl & in settings I set Frames/Period - 128, Sample Rate 44100, Periods/Buffer 2 & that puts my latency at 5.8 msĪrdour automaticaly starts Jack every time at start up so I haven’t figured how to start it without Jack though there probably isn’t a good reason to do it except for testing purposes. The M-audio is the only one that shows up in Alsamixer & I know the M-audio is what Ardour is recording & playing back with. M Audio Audiophile 24/96 at 0xb400, irq 18ġ : EMU10K1 - SB Live! Value Evidently all three sound sources are picked up because cat/proc/asound/cards yields:Ġ : ICE1712 - M Audio Audiophile 24/96 I’m using an M-audio audiophile 2496, but i also have a soundblaster live card installed & my onboard audio is turned off in the bios. My guess is that it has something to do with my second sound card or onboard sound that I think runs at 48K So really the only problem I have is when I open Ardour without opening up Jack first.Įvidently when Ardour opens up Jack it defaults to 48K. The good news is that I was only opening up the Jack Control before starting Ardour & not actually starting the Jack server so that’s why I was still getting 48k sample rate/ 21.3 ms.(My Bad) if I start jack first it shows its running at 44100 & then open Ardour everything works great showing 44100/2.9ms & no pops or clicks. A talented guy for sure and a trailblazer in his brave attempt to market a Commercial Linux Desktop DAW, Unfortunately his concept was a bit ahead of it’s time, I think the current hardware (tablet) market and the vast improvements in Apps like Ardour would make a standalone Linux based tablet DAW a more attractive proposition.Sorry I’ve been away for while but I really appreciate the help & I’ll try to answer a few things. Ron also did a great Ubuntu-based OS called ‘TransmissionOS’ but it stopped development a couple of years ago. If I remember correctly Ron was working on a much newer tablet running a Meego-based OS about the time his Mother fell ill. Ronald Stewart the Indamixx developer has been caring for his mother who is stricken with Alzheimers disease and in addition to an Indiegogo campaign sold off much of his Indamixx stuff including the remaining hardware units last year, I know they were on eBay but I’m not 100% sure if they had reserved bids on them, obviously they had a lot of R&D money invested and the units themselves were quite expensive and unfortunately they appeared pretty dated in the current tablet age. ![]()
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