Am 12.02.2011 11:07, schrieb Robert Jonsson:
> 2011/2/12 Hartmut Noack<zettberlin@email-addr-hidden>:
>> Am 12.02.2011 00:12, schrieb Ken Restivo:
> <...>
>>>> Seq24 fits your description 1:1.
>>>
>>> Thanks. I used it successfully for years on a 64-bit 2.33Ghz Intel PC with
>>> 2GB RAM, but it is unusably slow on a 1.6Ghz 32-bit Intel PC with 1GB RAM.
>>
>> No offence ment but what 1.6 GHz/1GB RAM machine is that?
>>
>> I had Seq24 running on a Toshiba Laptop with 1GHz PIII and 256RAM and it was
>> running perfectly OK. A collegue used it professionally on a 800 MHz Celeron
>> with 256 RAM.
>
> I'd have to agree with that, most old sk00l linux sequencers should
> really have no problem on an 1.6Ghz machine.
Now I remember: I had it even running in a usable manner on my archaic
Dell Latitude with 500MHz PII/128 RAM.
Gave my very first public talk on Jack with introducing Rezound and Muse
with that Laptop ;-)
> This thread woke old memories of trying to create music in a linux
> environment ten years ago and the trials and tribulations you had to
> go through.
I also check the Jazz++ Site from time to time to see if there is
something new.
Anybody out there remembering Slab?
http://www.llornkcor.com/SLab/SLab.html
> We've definitely come long way, though there is always ways to go.
> I recall having a Pentium II Celeron 300A (likely overclocked) at that
> time which I was running MusE under, midi was never a problem, could
> only run a few audio tracks though.
>
> Regards,
> Robert
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Received on Sat Feb 12 16:15:03 2011
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