Man, what I want to say is I can’t catch my breath since I found out that Linux can actually give Renoise TOTAL RESOURCE POWER of my computer, enabling a stand-alone session! It’s literally the old dream of having Renoise as an operating system came true.
(I could never dream of something like this in my winXP days. )
Man, this stuff rocks. Ubuntu Studio changed my life. First the liberation from viruses, malware and crapware, and now this. Simply awesome, man. Way to go Renoise team, and Linux community.
Been using linux for many-many years. And I often look back. VST plugins is one thing which makes me look back. But looking the rest of it (been using windows for over a year as secondary OS), I don’t want it. It only makes me wonder how to get this stuff working in my OS. And it’s all possible, just needs some work, and IMHO it’s worth it.
I’m thinking of going Linux on this old computer, but I have a little question before making the switch :
This computer doesn’t have a regular sound card, I use an M-Audio Fasttrack pro for audio in/out and midi in/out. Will this be compatible with Linux?
as long as your CPU supports SSE instructions, and P3 should, I think it’s fine to do it, as I’ve used Renoise1.5 on my old laptop, a P2 Celeron 766 with 192MB RAM under both Windows 98 and 2000. on Linux could just be better.
jonas the plugexpert: Eh, the processor would be a bit low for Ubuntu - it would run, but it wouldn’t do well. Xubuntu would be happy on it. Xubuntu doesn’t have a lot of the autoconfig Ubuntu does, but you can always google “Xubuntu 8.xx (problem here)” and get a commandline to copy and paste into terminal window.
Of course Puppy Linux would be blazing fast on that computer.
0l3ks4 is talking about bypassing gnome or fluxbox or any other window manager, by creating a X session with only Renoise running. You can do this with any distro. Quoting http://tutorials.renoise.com/Renoise/SettingUpLinux:
Well, if you need VST’s that badly, attach a Windows PC with VST plugins to your lan and then use MIDI2Net to attach your VST plugins to your Liunx Renoise session.
hmm… makes me think. This should work with a windows instance running in a virtual machine on the same system. Not that I’d need that (I never used a lot VSTs… ), but this tickles my nerdy “I have to try this” nerve. ^^