Hi Allan, On Fri, 29 Jul 2005, Allan Sandfeld Jensen wrote: > The design is basically flawed for desktop audio since it delegates real-time > low-latency work loads through unix pipes to the audio applications. You > cannot expect all audio applications to run real-time and you can not expect > users to apply custom patches that allow jack to hand out real-time > privileges. > > And no matter what KDE does, a pretty GUI can not hide applying kernel patches > and a design that is just not suitable for desktop usage. Thanks for being intelligent enough to point this out. I hope that one day, the Linux kernel developers will take this suggestion as well. I have on numerous occasions said that Mixing belongs in the kernel. Until then, every solution will be sub-par. MacOS X does this, Windows XP does this (and has since '95 with directsound, if I understand correctly). The only OSes that don't do it are ones that are designed from the ground up to not be desktop OSes, like Linux. There was a reason, Allan, that I didn't reply to this guy's first email, and you'll just end up replying to uninformed comments until the end of time... -Charles _______________________________________________ kde-multimedia mailing list kde-multimedia@kde.org https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/kde-multimedia