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<div>Audacity works fine with jack, tested it this way a few days ago (I normally run ALSA directly). It passed through a time when it did not work with jack, maybe wasn't being compiled with jack support, maybe a bug, but if you start jack, then start audacity, you can select jack in preferences. Just remember to set it back unless you always use jack and audacity together..</div><div><br></div><div> Interestingly, on my netbook, with pulseaudio not installed, jack is the only way to play a mono file in audacious, due to the lack os hardware support for mono on that soundcard. That means some kind of sound mixer is a must on all OS versions, and jack just works so much better than pulseaudio, even if it is not so user-friendly.</div><div><br>> <br>> ------------------------------<br>> <br>> Message: 2<br>> Date: Mon, 19 Dec 2011 10:32:58 +0100<br>> From: Ralf Madorf <ralf.mardorf@alice-dsl.net><br>> To: Ubuntu Studio Development & Technical Discussion<br>> <ubuntu-studio-devel@lists.ubuntu.com><br>> Subject: Re: pulse audio<br>> Message-ID: <1324287178.8628.4.camel@localhost.localdomain><br>> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="UTF-8"<br>> <br>> Try Jack. I agree that PA is a PITA, anyway, Audacity should work with<br>> Jack using ALSA as backend, even if PA is installed.<br>> <br>> <br>> <br>> <br>> ------------------------------<br>> <br>> -- <br>> Ubuntu-Studio-devel mailing list<br>> Ubuntu-Studio-devel@lists.ubuntu.com<br>> Modify settings or unsubscribe at: https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-studio-devel<br>> <br>> <br>> End of Ubuntu-Studio-devel Digest, Vol 56, Issue 21<br>> ***************************************************<br></div> </div></body>
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