On Saturday 30 July 2005 06:31, Charles Samuels wrote: > > 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. ALSA is proving to be a fine audio driver system and especially so because it NOT part of the kernel. alsa-lib is a wonderful design feature, not a flaw. Other inferior operating system have no choice but to embed their audio handling systems into their respective kernels. > 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. Is that a good justification for not getting the best out of what we have to work with! > 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... http://www.steamballoon.com/wiki/Rlimits --markc _______________________________________________ kde-multimedia mailing list kde-multimedia@kde.org https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/kde-multimedia