Welcome to one of the most active flamenco sites on the Internet. Guests can read most posts but if you want to participate click here to register.
This site is dedicated to the memory of Paco de Lucía, Ron Mitchell, Guy Williams, Linda Elvira, Philip John Lee, Craig Eros, Ben Woods, David Serva and Tom Blackshear who went ahead of us.
We receive 12,200 visitors a month from 200 countries and 1.7 million page impressions a year. To advertise on this site please contact us.
I migrated to Linux a couple of years ago. I use TuxGuitar for tabs. I know it can play gp files. I am not sure if it plays tabledit files. Audacity can slow down files without changing pitch. Not sure about your sound card. I use an exteral firewire Presonus Firebox which works well with linux. As for a distro I would suggest Ubuntu Studio. It has a kernal optimized for low latency recording. I comes loaded with some cool programs such as Ardour2 (multitrack studio) and Hydrogen (programmable drum machine). Hydrogen is cool since it allows you to create your drumset. I recorded some cajon and palma samplas which I use to create my own solo compas tracks. The cool thing about Ubuntu Studio is that most of the Linux music software is already configured and installed for you. Previously you had to install and configure each program separately. I don't know if it can play wmv files but it can handle wma files. I think the wma files might need to be converted first but they are pretty easy to convert.
Hi, thanks for your reply! This Ubuntu Studio edition sounds very interesting - I checked out the website. Can you tell me what happens if you go to Ron's lazy pdl video post and what happens when you open it? This is a wmv file.
I've tried to migrate to linux (ubuntu) on a couple of occasions. But I've always ended up using windows again for some reason or other. I do plan to try again but as you said there are some functionality issues with drivers not being available etc. and both times Ive found myself getting as frustrated as I do with Windows.
I had a dual boot setup running for sometime so I could choose which OS I loaded depending on what I wanted to do that day.
I would have though you could set up your soundcard ok but I definitely had troubles with GP5 running through a windows emulator. I'm glad to hear what guiro has to say about GP files and the studio edition of ubuntu.. I will look into this.
good luck, If ya need any help give me a shout and ill see if I can.
Stu
PS. You've got me thinking of linux now, may have to install again!!
Hey, my wife's Compaq computer hard drive just fried, we never made a recovery disk (my bad), the darn thing never came with a Windows XP installation CD cause Compaq was too cheap to give us one, so I have a XP licence but it will cost me $40 to get a new freaking recovery disk.
So I told Microsoft to take a hike (some guy in the Phillipines had to hear my rant) and Compaq that my only option was to throw the f-ing thing away as I wasn't going to spend more $$ when I already had a XP licence (regrets to the lady listening to that!) and I just spent the dosh on a new hard drive.
Well actually I had another option, so I loaded Ubuntu (the regular version) and after a half day of Internet searching and set-up my wife is now back up with the damn thing working on our wireless network! Internet, email, documents, DVD player, it all works. It wasn't totally easy (getting wireless to work) but it wasn't that hard either. Plus I don't have a third party virus protection and can't get hijacked internet surfing! And it doesn't take 3 minutes to start-up like Windows.
So there you go! Exitao, if you are listening there is another option...
Yeah I use ubuntu studio too - hydrogen and audacity are really useful. As is Gtick, which is a nice programmable metronome.
When you have got your head round installing new software packages on ubuntu I think you can install ubuntustudio-desktop (or something like that) to go from normal ubuntu to the studio version.
Today I am viewing the forum running OSX Leopard(MAC) on my WIndows machine. Since MACs are now using intel CPUs it is now possible but not usually easy. OSX is UNIX based so if you can do LINUX command line stuff you can probably get around the setup issues pretty easily.
I have both... a mac and a windows pc... I like windows much more. I don't like it when they hide all detailed options which you have in windows... MacOSX is too idiot-proof IMO. Ok.. it also has a bright side! So I use both. IMO windows on a mac is not close as good as on a windows only computer. Its only conformable if you need to use programs fro windows and for mac on the same PC. For example at work I need many custom programs and programs for research. The mac-market didn't come very far on this field till now. So,.. I use a mac at work on which I can use windows via parallels. But its ****ing slow and some programs simply don't start coz of lack of memory. We also have some custom programs which only run on linux or (unix??) well... we emulate it on a fast windows pc. ... But the informatics use it a lot. Its too complicated for my taste and almost nothing works on it.
have both... a mac and a windows pc... I like windows much more. I don't like it when they hide all detailed options which you have in windows.
I too have both. I grew up with DOS but I prefer MacOS. What opiton do you mean? I find things a lot more straightforward on the Mac. What's hidden? It's all there, and a lot easier to find then in the f... registry ....
I use the pc XPPro and XPhome for a few progs that aren't (or weren't) availabe for the Mac; but that's weird stuff like astronomical image processing ...