5/26/2023 0 Comments Claviatura midi usb![]() I was looking for this solution for a LONG time… I tried to use an iPad with some apps on it, looked for a sound module or even considered replacing my entire keyboard to a new one just to add sounds… And you don't have to pay $30 every time you want to try a different amp model.You have no idea how I was excited to see you guys pulled it off!!! This is because it has multiple ways to emulate a particular amp, from software models to IR, as well as a "tonestack" type module, and you can use any one of the three types of sim, or all of them, or none of them, as well as being able to independently mess with power amp valve models (or bypass them completely) plus 3 or 4 different ways to simulate cabinets, plus both mono and stereo effects, some of which work better before the preamp stage and some that work better after the cabinet stage. Guitarix for example is markedly better than most if not all other guitar sim software, but it also has a learning curve that many people are willing to put the time into. And some of the software we have on Linux these days is far beyond what windows can do, often for free and open source. It just takes a little bit of learning, a little bit of configuring and a willingness to RTFM. ![]() Haha I kid, but seriously, if you can read english and follow basic instructions, you can get an Audio setup that will outperform Windows on the same machine. I'll hand in my badge on the way out.īoo! JACK rules, ALSA is perfect and also Boo! ![]() If you do go down the jack route, then good luck to you, and in theory at least any midi keyboard should work because it's midi, but my experience is that this is probably one of the very few areas where windows is actually preferable to Linux. It's so much easier, even if I hate windows as an OS, and you've got way more chance of finding a tutorial on how to make music using software on Windows than you have doing it on Linux. I've been using Linux as my primary os for over 20 years, I've written code that is used by multinational organisations on a daily basis, I open source a huge amount of the code I write, and I even provide Linux consulting services as part of my day job, but the whole JACK experience is just not user friendly, so I now have a "small" (it's still 150GB, because windows is bloatware) windows partition and I do all my music in there instead. Unpopular opinion (and yes, I'm aware this is r/Linuxaudio): dual boot into windows, install cakewalk by bandlab and the VST's from Spitfire audio labs (both are free of charge), don't worry about midi compatibility ever again. ![]() No one who has actually done audio on Linux would warn you away from it because of midi compatibility concerns, it's just a non-issue. The Linux audio ecosystem has a pretty high barrier to entry in general and it sounds like they never climbed it to be able to do the basics. If you were asking about audio interfaces or commercial plugin support I could see griping about compatibility, but midi-over-usb just works. I have no idea what the other comment in this thread is on about. Like, you'll be able to ship notes and other midi data to Linux, but if it bundles some synth or soundpack or something that's Windows software junk and either won't work on Linux or will require some advanced Wine setup. When looking at product features, you need to be able to recognize what features are delivered as Windows software. But my recommendation is to use a dedicated audio install like Ubuntu Studio or KX Studio which will preconfigure everything so midi over USB is plug and play. This looks to be a solid guide on setup/debugging. It's one of the big weighted ones which makes it pricey, but Akai makes small desktop boards in your price range.Īs always with Linux, YOUR COMPUTER may not currently be configured to support USB over midi. If it works with Android, it will work on Linux.įor a specific recommendation. The feature you probably want to look for is Android compatibility. So you should be able to buy any board and have it be plug and play. the latter of which is kind of a death sentence for entry level products. I've never seen a reputable board use any other protocol and if they did they would also break the USB device support on hardware like this and would fail to work on Android. There's an open standard called midi over USB and Linux supports it perfectly.
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