From: D.B. M. <db...@ho...> - 2008-05-11 02:50:57
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G'day all, This is merely a short(?) email letting everyone know a little about myself, how I ended up here, and what I hope to accomplish in my time here. In case you missed it, I am an Australian. I am actually a qualified motor-mechanic, have tickets in quality assurance and control operations, and I like to study human sociology in my spare time. I've also worked in electronics R&D and production arenas. I am '50-something' years old (; It would be in the order of 10years or so ago that I first became interested in the jazz++ application, and about that time I also joined jazzplusplus-user mailing list. Myself being a linux user, the building of jazz++ all that time ago was...'difficult' to say the least. I was initially going to ask list questions about this very difficultly...right about the the time project itself was in decline. As Kevin C. and others will attest, the jazzplusplus-user list has been a very quiet place, for a rather long time. When Pete's request for power-users to test out new builds hit the list, I was actually in the throws of moving house...so I was a bit late getting onto that testing. However, I did get around to it, and I might say that I was both amazed and enthused to discover that everything compiled correctly. I sent an email to Pete recounting that very experience, along with a small critique of website instructions given to achieve this. Since then, Pete and myself have had a detailed private email discussion about the website content, documentation in general, and right about the time I thought 'can I help?' , Pete had a very similar notion...'would you like to help?'....and here I am! We have of course moved that private discussion onto the lists as we get things co-ordinated between us. Pete was hoping that I join the developers list as well as the users list, and I have now made that so. I will primarily be working on documentation generation & proofing tasks. If anyone has any comments or requests about this area of the project, feel free to raise a hand -- comments and critiques both good and bad very welcome. I can also do any (linux..) testing required on ix86 in both 32 and 64 bit flavors, using Debian 4.0 installations. I can also test on this station, a non-mainstream linux 64bit x86 with no 32bit-compat system. In a happy future where a sanctioned release of jazz++ becomes available, I could produce binary packages for Debian. Okay...what do I hope to accomplish in my time here? First off the rank, is to straighten and correct the jazz++ website texts. The aim is for correctness and clarity within the website. I believe this task is almost complete. Secondly...and as expounded to Pete in one of our private emails, users of jazz++ on the Windows platform have really got it easy. That is to say, no matter what soundcard hardware these systems have fitted, the user will have a MIDI 'softsynth' as part of that system makeup. Even the most inexperienced Windows user will have little trouble downloading and installing jazz++, and having it create sound first up 'out of the box' as it were. The linux experience is not so straight forward....in fact, getting and compiling jazz++ from svn is actually the -easy- part now. Getting it to actually make any sound, is another matter again, and unless the user has a hardware-based MIDI/synth soundcard (or 'real' MIDI hardware), then they will have to setup their own 'softsynth' implementation before they can hear the replay of.... ..ie; 'jazz.mid' (or any other MIDI track for that matter). I am of the belief that normal, average and inexperienced users of linux have no idea about such things - they expect their linux systems to have a builtin MIDI 'softsynth' just like a Windows system has. I am also of the belief that the lack of this 'native' MIDI 'softsynth' support in linux, has in some way been participle to jazz++ (and other linux/MIDI projects) falling by the wayside. Does anyone else share this belief? Ergo, I plan to create some documentation for inclusion on the jazz++ website, to explain these things to potential users who might not know about such things. I plan to write a set of instructions that hopefully enables such inexperienced/casual users of linux to build, install and setup their own 'softsynth' implementation as quickly and simply as possible. My aim here is to make the linux experience with jazz++ as closely akin to the Windows experience as possible -- the linux path might require a bit more work, but I want that work as easy as possible for (inexperienced) linux users to complete successfully. Beyond that, I want to test and document jazz++'s setup and interoperability with -other- linux MIDI based applications. Beyond that...(??)...who knows, but I'm always open to suggestions!! Finally, I wish to thank those jazzplusplus-user list members who responded to my call for a listening head-count -- it's comforting to know I'm not totally alone on that list!! Kind regards to all, Donald B _________________________________________________________________ Never miss another e-mail with Hotmail on your mobile. http://www.livelife.ninemsn.com.au/article.aspx?id=343869 |