@mario Problem is, it's an old MacBook Pro, EFI in those didn't follow the UEFI spec. There is a way to tell EFI not to initialize this GPU and it's enough to get Mac OS X and linux running, but Windows seems to ignore it and tries to init it anyway. I'm sure there is a way to do it, like booting in safe mode and disabling it in Device Manager, but I'm to lazy to do it π
Void Linux runs just fine and is very power efficient β which is a nice thing for a laptop.
@mario Sure! I've been using linux since my teenage years and I'm very comfortable with it. It would be nice to have a laptop capable of running Ableton Live though. So I could make music when I'm not at home. Newer versions of macOS won't run on this laptop, so maybe I should just run an older release, it's the system this laptop came with after all so it's probably a better choice than Windows anyway. I should just stay off the Internet with that out of date software.
@mario When you deal with audio, latency is very important, I think general purpose VMs are not up to task. On top of that, I'm fairly certain it's impossible to pass a Firewire device like my audio interface down to guest OS the same way you can with USB devices. I know for sure it wasn't implemented in Parallels Desktop because soon after VT-d was introduced which made something like that possible, Apple had released MacBook Air, which had no Firewire and no one cared about it anymore π
@EricZhang456 had been experimenting with running Windows DAWs in Linux using Wine and it worked quite well βΒ I think that is what I should try. Running Wine would be problematic because I'm running a musl flavour of Void, but having a glibc chroot would probably do the trickβ¦ All right, I'm just a lazy ass π
With tech, anything is possible, all the problems boil down to someone being lazy.
@EricZhang456 Exactly! Like Live in which UI was shuffled around a bit π
But they have definitely kept the session view that was groundbreaking for Live. Most music, unlike videos, does have a strong structure and that grid is a better representation of that than the timeline. Some use Live and only use arrangement view that is typical to all DAWs, never switching to session view βΒ well, their loss π€·
@EricZhang456 Sure, matter of habit. And other DAWs don't have anything like it so there is no way to get this habit elsewhere. But once you get used to it it gets fluent, you start thinking in terms of structuring your tracks this way and that is a huge boost to productivity, moving colored squares around is easier than moving waveforms around the timeline, adding another instrument part is a matter of couple of clicks and it's really hard to mess up this way.
@EricZhang456@pl.starnix.network @m0xee@social.librem.one @mario@hornyjail.pro
Both Ardour and REAPER don't come with instruments on their own
we have pacman -S pro-audio tho and it has absolutely everything (that's free as in freedom ofc)@mario Firewire used to be great for peripherals like audio interfaces and digital camcorders, it made possible for external devices to have direct memory access, which was questionable from security perspective but removed the latency entirely. Unfortunately, even when it was hands down better than USB in every way, it was only available in expensive devices and high-end laptops so remained fairly unpopular and was eventually taken over by USB when it achieved higher bandwidths.