Hello, No I didn't get any answer on the Kmid program and why it doesn't give any sound even though it appears to be playing the file. Otherwise I got MIDI working very well with Timidity and Kmidi player. My experience is that there aren't many people on this list with particular interest in MIDI, and SuSE support will not give any help on this topic. I might try someplace else, the help-gnu-music list for example or some of the KDE lists. Cheers, ei On Monday 29 January 2001 10:27, Romain Boulanger wrote:
Hi, Did you have answers about MIDI with en1371? I quickly read the 257 mails of the week-end ans I haven't seen anything about it, but really read it quickly... Thanks, Romain
-- @~~ EagleIce ~ gnu4u@linux.nu ~~@ @~~ Running GNU/Linux & KDE ~~@
EagleIce wrote:
Hello,
No I didn't get any answer on the Kmid program and why it doesn't give any sound even though it appears to be playing the file. Otherwise I got MIDI working very well with Timidity and Kmidi player. My experience is that there aren't many people on this list with particular interest in MIDI, and SuSE support will not give any help on this topic. I might try someplace else, the help-gnu-music list for example or some of the KDE lists.
Cheers,
ei
On Monday 29 January 2001 10:27, Romain Boulanger wrote:
Hi, Did you have answers about MIDI with en1371? I quickly read the 257 mails of the week-end ans I haven't seen anything about it, but really read it quickly... Thanks, Romain
Well, you are more or less bound to use Timidity. As I understood the synth on most Soundblaster PCI-cards (en1371 or 70) is a "Windows-only" software synth. In practice Timidity does the same thing under Linux, but you can't use under all programs. cheers Niklas
If what you say is true Niklas (which I suppose it is), then I have one more reason to be upset about how SuSE treats what probably for them are 'small customers'. In the SuSE 7.0 Handbook's Index you don't find one word about MIDI. SuSE support gives you this: 'Your enquiry goes beyond the scope of our Installation Support.' On SuSE's web-sites I have never found anything on MIDI in SuSE. I have been in contact with a lot of people who have been struggling back and forth trying to get MIDI to work on their SuSE box, it would save a lot of us a lot of pain and effort if there was somewhere a notice or a piece of information on which soundcards do and which don't support MIDI in SuSE/Linux. Cheers, ei On Monday 29 January 2001 17:13, Niklas Huld�n wrote: [snip]
Well, you are more or less bound to use Timidity. As I understood the synth on most Soundblaster PCI-cards (en1371 or 70) is a "Windows-only" software synth. In practice Timidity does the same thing under Linux, but you can't use under all programs.
cheers
Niklas
-- @~~ EagleIce ~ gnu4u@linux.nu ~~@ @~~ Running GNU/Linux & KDE ~~@
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 P.L.E.A.S.E - get a life ! SuSE are a team of people busting their butt off putting together a system that each of us would spend unaccounted for manyears doing ourselves ! THAT is the value they provide. They are not that much into the "D" part of R&D except for the excellent Yast, SaX and their very nice init. What Linux is about is doing yourself what is needed, or stimulating the right parties that have both competense and time, to doi it for you. Nagging and bitching about missing features is windows-ism, and quite frankly not that popular. Having been a *nix system administrator both part-time and full-time for the last seven years, I know what a tremendous effort it is that the SuSE team has undertaken, and I really think that is something we should be greatful for, adn prout to be part of. Here is a bit bucket. Go spit. - -tosi Þann mánudagur 29 janúar 2001 22:23 skrifaðir þú:
If what you say is true Niklas (which I suppose it is), then I have one more reason to be upset about how SuSE treats what probably for them are 'small customers'. In the SuSE 7.0 Handbook's Index you don't find one word about MIDI. SuSE support gives you this: 'Your enquiry goes beyond the scope of our Installation Support.' On SuSE's web-sites I have never found anything on MIDI in SuSE. I have been in contact with a lot of people who have been struggling back and forth trying to get MIDI to work on their SuSE box, it would save a lot of us a lot of pain and effort if there was somewhere a notice or a piece of information on which soundcards do and which don't support MIDI in SuSE/Linux.
Cheers,
ei
On Monday 29 January 2001 17:13, Niklas Huldén wrote: [snip]
Well, you are more or less bound to use Timidity. As I understood the synth on most Soundblaster PCI-cards (en1371 or 70) is a "Windows-only" software synth. In practice Timidity does the same thing under Linux, but you can't use under all programs.
cheers
Niklas
- -- ______ /---------------------------------------\ \ | Þór Sigurðsson | Tor Sigurdsson | t | | Netmaður | Network Specialist | o | |-----------------------------------------| s | | tosi@rhi.hi.is | i | \---------------------------------------/_____/ -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.0.1e-SuSE (GNU/Linux) Comment: For info see http://www.gnupg.org iD8DBQE6dfrs6mRH+PEpr2YRAj9PAJ9OyM4Z6zRdpbGpTowqXuo6L5SRVwCdG8ad esfMQs/HGACsht4/aNzukJ8= =gMEV -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----
If its a creative labs card go to opensource.creative.com. Always go to the real source first if you need to, that is the manufacturer. Do not expect to get a fix right away, but your notes will be seen (and if enough of them they will take action). Its not the fault of SuSE (nor any other distro either) in anyway. In fact, just did a quicksearch on www.google.net and got 10 hits, one of them being on the www.alsa-project.org page. This is a hugely complex field and there really is only so much that one can give support to. Think about how many different combinations of hardware there are out there, and many needing different parts of software to work. Matt On Mon, 29 Jan 2001, Tor Sigurdsson wrote:
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1
P.L.E.A.S.E - get a life !
SuSE are a team of people busting their butt off putting together a system that each of us would spend unaccounted for manyears doing ourselves ! THAT is the value they provide. They are not that much into the "D" part of R&D except for the excellent Yast, SaX and their very nice init. What Linux is about is doing yourself what is needed, or stimulating the right parties that have both competense and time, to doi it for you. Nagging and bitching about missing features is windows-ism, and quite frankly not that popular.
Having been a *nix system administrator both part-time and full-time for the last seven years, I know what a tremendous effort it is that the SuSE team has undertaken, and I really think that is something we should be greatful for, adn prout to be part of.
Here is a bit bucket. Go spit.
- -tosi
�ann m�nudagur 29 jan�ar 2001 22:23 skrifa�ir ��:
If what you say is true Niklas (which I suppose it is), then I have one more reason to be upset about how SuSE treats what probably for them are 'small customers'. In the SuSE 7.0 Handbook's Index you don't find one word about MIDI. SuSE support gives you this: 'Your enquiry goes beyond the scope of our Installation Support.' On SuSE's web-sites I have never found anything on MIDI in SuSE. I have been in contact with a lot of people who have been struggling back and forth trying to get MIDI to work on their SuSE box, it would save a lot of us a lot of pain and effort if there was somewhere a notice or a piece of information on which soundcards do and which don't support MIDI in SuSE/Linux.
Cheers,
ei
On Monday 29 January 2001 17:13, Niklas Huld�n wrote: [snip]
Well, you are more or less bound to use Timidity. As I understood the synth on most Soundblaster PCI-cards (en1371 or 70) is a "Windows-only" software synth. In practice Timidity does the same thing under Linux, but you can't use under all programs.
cheers
Niklas
- -- ______ /---------------------------------------\ \ | ��r Sigur�sson | Tor Sigurdsson | t | | Netma�ur | Network Specialist | o | |-----------------------------------------| s | | tosi@rhi.hi.is | i | \---------------------------------------/_____/ -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.0.1e-SuSE (GNU/Linux) Comment: For info see http://www.gnupg.org
iD8DBQE6dfrs6mRH+PEpr2YRAj9PAJ9OyM4Z6zRdpbGpTowqXuo6L5SRVwCdG8ad esfMQs/HGACsht4/aNzukJ8= =gMEV -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----
-- To unsubscribe send e-mail to suse-linux-e-unsubscribe@suse.com For additional commands send e-mail to suse-linux-e-help@suse.com Also check the FAQ at http://www.suse.com/support/faq
EagleIce wrote:
If what you say is true Niklas (which I suppose it is), then I have one more reason to be upset about how SuSE treats what probably for them are 'small customers'. In the SuSE 7.0 Handbook's Index you don't find one word about MIDI. SuSE support gives you this: 'Your enquiry goes beyond the scope of our Installation Support.' On SuSE's web-sites I have never found anything on MIDI in SuSE. I have been in contact with a lot of people who have been struggling back and forth trying to get MIDI to work on their SuSE box, it would save a lot of us a lot of pain and effort if there was somewhere a notice or a piece of information on which soundcards do and which don't support MIDI in SuSE/Linux.
does this answer your question /usr/share/doc/packages/alsa > less SOUNDCARDS
Cheers,
ei
On Monday 29 January 2001 17:13, Niklas Huldén wrote: [snip]
Well, you are more or less bound to use Timidity. As I understood the synth on most Soundblaster PCI-cards (en1371 or 70) is a "Windows-only" software synth. In practice Timidity does the same thing under Linux, but you can't use under all programs.
cheers
Niklas
-- @~~ EagleIce ~ gnu4u@linux.nu ~~@ @~~ Running GNU/Linux & KDE ~~@
-- To unsubscribe send e-mail to suse-linux-e-unsubscribe@suse.com For additional commands send e-mail to suse-linux-e-help@suse.com Also check the FAQ at http://www.suse.com/support/faq
-- Togan Muftuoglu
On Tuesday 30 January 2001 00:45, Togan Muftuoglu wrote:
EagleIce wrote:
If what you say is true Niklas (which I suppose it is), then I have one more reason to be upset about how SuSE treats what probably for them are 'small customers'. In the SuSE 7.0 Handbook's Index you don't find one word about MIDI. SuSE support gives you this: 'Your enquiry goes beyond the scope of our Installation Support.' On SuSE's web-sites I have never found anything on MIDI in SuSE. I have been in contact with a lot of people who have been struggling back and forth trying to get MIDI to work on their SuSE box, it would save a lot of us a lot of pain and effort if there was somewhere a notice or a piece of information on which soundcards do and which don't support MIDI in SuSE/Linux.
does this answer your question
/usr/share/doc/packages/alsa > less SOUNDCARDS
It depends on what the difference is between MIDI, SYNTH and SYNTH_MIDI, the file doesn't explain that. But if MIDI means 'some' but not 'all' functions then it confirms what Niklas said in an earlyer mail. ei -- @~~ EagleIce ~ gnu4u@linux.nu ~~@ @~~ Running GNU/Linux & KDE ~~@
participants (5)
-
EagleIce
-
Matthew
-
Niklas Huldén
-
Togan Muftuoglu
-
Tor Sigurdsson