Thank you, Laurent, for making Jamulus OS available so nicely packaged for the USB drive. My musician friends and I have been using it very successfully to skirt the problems associated with trying to use Jamulus in Windows.
I downloaded and installed the "new" version of Jamulus OS - namely, Ubuntu Studio - this week without realizing that it didn't contain Jamulus itself. I had overlooked the readme.txt. So, being a regular Ubuntu Linux user, I went back to the Jamulus Linux installation instructions at jamulus.io and followed the section for Debian and Ubuntu. Specifically, I downloaded the .deb package and installed it using the instructions. Then I started Qjackctl, put in the correct settings for my audio interface, started Jack, and started Jamulus. Voila, I was in business.
I know you have developed a nice process for probing one's interface, determining the settings to use, and so on, but that was a bit of overkill for my purposes. I just wanted to chime in about the seemingly simpler process I used that might be helpful to others already familiar with Ubuntu.
Edwin
If you would like to refer to this comment somewhere else in this project, copy and paste the following link:
Thank you, Laurent, for making Jamulus OS available so nicely packaged for the USB drive. My musician friends and I have been using it very successfully to skirt the problems associated with trying to use Jamulus in Windows.
I downloaded and installed the "new" version of Jamulus OS - namely, Ubuntu Studio - this week without realizing that it didn't contain Jamulus itself. I had overlooked the readme.txt. So, being a regular Ubuntu Linux user, I went back to the Jamulus Linux installation instructions at jamulus.io and followed the section for Debian and Ubuntu. Specifically, I downloaded the .deb package and installed it using the instructions. Then I started Qjackctl, put in the correct settings for my audio interface, started Jack, and started Jamulus. Voila, I was in business.
I know you have developed a nice process for probing one's interface, determining the settings to use, and so on, but that was a bit of overkill for my purposes. I just wanted to chime in about the seemingly simpler process I used that might be helpful to others already familiar with Ubuntu.
Edwin
Nice,
Laurent