[PlanetCCRMA] which to use - RH9 or FC?
Josh Lawrence
hardbop200 at gmail.com
Tue May 10 15:17:01 PDT 2005
I suspect that I will install the FC3 base, then take the machine to
somewhere with an internet connection, as the DVD is just a bit big to
be downloading at work :) I've read through your instructions, and
they seem to be easy enough to understand. Is there a "gotcha" I need
to be aware of? I can always install RH9 if needed...
Josh
On 10 May 2005 15:10:56 -0700, Fernando Lopez-Lezcano
<nando at ccrma.stanford.edu> wrote:
> On Tue, 2005-05-10 at 13:43, Josh Lawrence wrote:
> > Well, the answer could not have come from a better source! Thank you
> > for your advice, I will try FC3.
>
> Ok... hmmm, the install instructions are not the best for fc3, there's
> always too much to do, are you planning on installing through the
> internet? Will you download the fc3 install cdroms or the dvd?
>
> -- Fernando
>
> > On 10 May 2005 13:39:42 -0700, Fernando Lopez-Lezcano
> > <nando at ccrma.stanford.edu> wrote:
> > > On Tue, 2005-05-10 at 12:53, Josh Lawrence wrote:
> > > > After (unsuccessfully) playing around with building apps from source
> > > > on a Slackware 10.1 system, I have decided to go with a "packaged"
> > > > multimedia solution. I've got Demudi working on one machine, and
> > > > praise the work that has been done there - it's wonderful. However, I
> > > > would like to try CCRMA as well, so I can make an informed choice
> > > > between the two. I've done some research in the mailing list
> > > > archives, and I can't seem to find any recommendations on which flavor
> > > > of RH to use for the Planet. I've seen only passing reference to RH9,
> > > > and the majority of the traffic deals with FC3. This would lead me to
> > > > think that FC3 would be the way to go, but I've also seen mention of
> > > > FC3 being really unstable (as well as FC2).
> > >
> > > At this point in time I would recommend FC3 as the base. The 2.6.x
> > > kernel is now in good shape for low latency work - but it may not work
> > > in all hardware configurations.
> > >
> > > If you have the bandwidth (a lot) and a way to make a dvd you could try
> > > the integrated fedora core 3 + planetccrma dvd, but the current alpha
> > > version is big (2.7Gbytes).
> > >
> > > -- Fernando
> > >
> > > > So which one should I go
> > > > for? Here are my (very flexible) requirements:
> > > >
> > > > 1. I want to install it and forget it. I don't want to have to
> > > > update every 10 minutes just to get a really stable working system. I
> > > > don't have a working Internet connection at home, so I'll have to do
> > > > the install at a friends house and take it home to use it. It's a
> > > > pain, I know...
> > > > 2. Large selection of applications.
> > > > 3. Fast, at least as fast as possible with my hardware.
> > > > 4. Supports my Motif Rack and M-Audio Keystation Pro-88. I've tested
> > > > both of these with Alsa 1.0.8, and they work there, so I'm assuming
> > > > that CCRMA should see them as well, given that they use that version
> > > > of Alsa.
> > > > 5. Stable, not bleeding edge (no crashes!).
> > > > 6. Fluxbox! (separate download, I'm assuming?)
> > > >
> > > > (I know what you're thinking - I don't ask for much, do I?)
> > > >
> > > > So I hope this helps. FYI, I'm using the above mentioned hardware
> > > > with a Delta 44 sound card. The processor is a 2.4 Ghz CeleronD with
> > > > 512 MB RAM, 40 GB hard drive.
> > > >
> > > > Thanks!
> > > >
> > > > Josh
> > >
> > >
> >
>
>
--
Bell Labs UNIX - Reach out and grep someone.
More information about the PlanetCCRMA
mailing list