Martyn wrote:Mesmer wrote:Linux guys, I feel you.
I really consider myself part of OSS/GNU movement whatever....
Look, sorry to break it to you:
Linux is not ready yet (driverwise).
It's marketshare is very limited.
If you need convincing, study that blazing multi-mega-bucks industry called _Linux_Gaming.
(For those not in the know,
Here's_Gaming_onLinux_Platform | Here's_a_Bunch of_zeros)
Look, the battle's already won, with big bad evil empire closed sources defeated ... All of this seems like Dancing Ewoks time, to me, really.
Don't you think Ableton Developer's have more than a few Linux boxes and servers for the coding...
Right tools for the right job, remember?
feel, you ok. Love you. Just let this go.
-h
You're talking absolute bollocks mate.
Utter utter shite. Running it now, been running it for over a year in the same manner, and i'm no expert! You obviously live in cloud-cuckoo-land or have some sort of gripe with it all.
Gaming? who gives a fuck about that? That's what games consoles are for. There are games available if you take the time to look and what there is runs very well indeed, the only reason there arn't more is that games (and audio apps) developers keep believing bullshit of the sort that you are dishing out.
Oh, and the driver thing is just a supply and demand situation, they won't bother until the demand grows, as soon as the penny drops that more hardware will sell, the drivers will appear as if by magic. (I have a reliable 64 samples of latency on my hardware thanx

)
No, I don't think we'll see an Ableton Live Linux version either, but that doesn't change the FACT that more and more people are using it, liking it and SWITCHING every day now.
Negativity like yours is the problem.
Negativity huh? Funny no one ever mentioned that; must be I recant the GNU evangelism everywhere I turn. The _Fact_ is Gaming has a much wider audience than audio hobbyist/professionals, and the _Fact_ that plenty enterprises have tried to develop, port, market and sell games for the Linux platform and failed sends a strong message to other companies in related fields. Gaming (serious gaming) requires specialized hardware peripherals, controllers and display options. My heart goes out to you if you can't see the relaionship.
Seems to me you don't even understand the economic dynamics of the Linux movement. Drivers must surely appear because the pro bono developer writing in his spare time _has_ to develop for the hardware you're looking for, right? and the quality of this driver is? and support for it? yea, I hear you ... the strength of the community, yes I hear you the community. Well let me tell you one thing about that community: they know their way around a CLI console, package managers and fill_in_the_blanks documentation. Also, they don't feel it's a waste of time to join the project's mailing list and contribute to constructive discussions. That's beautiful man, I am there. Problem is, 3/4 of the people here just want to make music.
You still beg to differ? consider this: plenty of Windows user's here complain about how unbecoming or ugly it can get to make you controller (MIDI or otherwise) integrate well into their other grab-bag-assortment rig. At least twice a month we get an interesting show-and-tell supported by advice composed mostly of trickeries and hacks that makes novation_SL work alongside the padKontrol inside Battery3 routed to reason rewired to Live out through an Mbox whatever. This is in Windows. You think a Linux experience must be better somehow?!
These have to be the logical steps, as I understand them:
1. Get together a Linux Desktop that excels as a home/office easy-to-use, solid distribution OS. This is the foundation.
2. Sit a layer of pro-audio everything on top. (The layer for pro-graphics has been inplace for quite a while, this is commendable. That is the way to go. Still this is a direct consequence of the cost benefits of having a Linux servers rendering farm vs. some other propietary OS's farms. Can you say a demand in high-profile producers for cost benefits in audio rendering / production / post productions exists?)
I guess soon we'll be at 1. Before you jump the gun, remember where talking about grandma's usability here, not yours or mine. 2 will certainly come from the works of the foundation currently being laid. I applaud their efforts, it might pay big time in the future.
I share your optimism. It's focused on the GNU philosophy not the Linux kernel distributions. But please, fan-boyism helps nobody; and dreaming about Live in Linux is just snorting some sort of highly improbable (although achievable) dreamy dream. And why be so nearsighted? With the awsome tweakability, openness and wheer breadth of cultural diversity in the codebase, why not dream of some other _equally_magnificent_and_brilliant app? Wouldn't that killer app warrant more switchers? Those switchers willing to pay a little yet less than what they are used to?
Can't apologize, as, bursting your bubble was kind of fun.
Linux For Ever
-h