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Post by Lowkey on Jan 22, 2008 20:02:50 GMT
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Post by Lowkey on Jan 22, 2008 20:06:56 GMT
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Post by Uncle Bob on Jan 24, 2008 2:11:17 GMT
Dude, you need to clear some concepts first. Jack is for intended for the same purpose than ASIO, and if you software supports Jack, then chances are that it doesn't need ASIO for anything. What do you want to do exactly?
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Post by mots on Apr 6, 2008 16:30:26 GMT
wrong jack is no driver. it's a toolkit to route audio and midi. moreover, jack CAN use asio (or alsa, or some other driver types) as a backend. so you can indeed (not tested though) run jack on top of asio4ALL
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Post by Michael Tippach on Apr 8, 2008 2:30:50 GMT
wrong jack is no driver. it's a toolkit to route audio and midi. moreover, jack CAN use asio (or alsa, or some other driver types) as a backend. so you can indeed (not tested though) run jack on top of asio4ALL You are absolutely correct! This looks like a spillover from KVR and I already made an attempt to set the record straight over there. Jack is no replacement for ASIO4ALL - or any other ASIO driver for that matter. It does other things well, but this thing it originally does not even claim to be able to do.
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Post by Uncle Bob on Apr 10, 2008 6:20:09 GMT
wrong jack is no driver. it's a toolkit to route audio and midi. moreover, jack CAN use asio (or alsa, or some other driver types) as a backend. so you can indeed (not tested though) run jack on top of asio4ALL Hum, I know it's not a driver, but please correct me if I am wrong: if an app has jack support, can't it write its audio output directly to a running jack server?
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Post by mots on Apr 14, 2008 10:42:06 GMT
you're right.
but then jack server has to write the audio to something. either coreaudio, asio, MME, alsa, directx.
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Post by Uncle Bob on Apr 14, 2008 23:15:27 GMT
So, in windows, it's jack that has to support asio, for low-latency output. (i believe it does already). What apps could do was having jack support. In Linux, is the otherway around... wine(asio) must support jack, since jack supports alsa and can already write its output with low-latency that way. But please correct me if I'm wrong.
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