![]() The latest AF2-10 does not work on my system. ![]() I believe that it is the way of dealing with Xorg and perhaps OpenGL and then graphic drivers that is the problem. (06-16-2016, 10:43 AM)Patrick Kox Wrote: Now I'm not an expert but as I understand the differences between most distro's it's the DE/WM choice/setup the settings and the package installer systems (APT vs RPM and such). so files (DYN5000.so) that are put into ~/vst (32 or 64 bit depending on your setup) so as I understand there is no version for any specific distro, just the x86 or x86-64 version. tar.gz tarball for installation without package management system. Now I'm not an expert but as I understand the differences between most distro's it's the DE/WM choice/setup the settings and the package installer systems (APT vs RPM and such). If you look at the most popular distro's (the various Ubuntu versions, Debian, Arch Linux, Fedora Core, AV Linux, 64 Studio, Drealstudio, KX Studio. Harrison / x42 (but as I understand all their plugins are build-in into mixbus so I didn't consider them "plug-ins, well 3rd party external plug-ins).Īs for their reason, I agree that it's an odd one. LinuxDSP -> OvertoneDSP (as I understand not all older LinuxDSP plugins were available from OvertoneDSP). My (short) list of commercial linux plugins included With the growing number of commercial music apps and plugins for Linux in mind, I find this reason a little bit odd.I didn't even know they stopped supporting Linux, thanks for the info ! I've seen in a forum that the reason for diminishing the Linux plugins is the diversity of the Linux distributions. I have to know that my system works as expected if I for any reason reopen an old project for further work. Linux versions are still included in their downloads, but I have decided to not use them anymore. They stopped it without any official notice, the penguin just disappeared silently from the home page. (06-16-2016, 09:42 AM)Jostein Wrote: Sadly, the OverTone plugins are not supported in Linux anymore. And almost every time I used a OverTone DSP plugin other that the reverbs, it was a life saver.įrom now on, I will probably stick to GVerb+ from Harrison and the excellent IR from Tom Szilagyi (a GUI for the convolution library made by the all mighty Fons Adriansen). I used the reverbs (sr2b and later rvb500) on almost every project since 2011 and the EQ af-210 has always been within an arm reach. It's a pity, because this plugins are truly excellent. With the growing number of commercial music apps and plugins for Linux in mind, I find this reason a little bit odd. ![]() Sadly, the OverTone plugins are not supported in Linux anymore. (04-25-2016, 10:20 PM)madmaxmiller Wrote: Overtone (ex LinuxDSP) (commercial) There are some more advanced spectral editors for sure, but for simple things where the pitch doesn't vary, the new functions in Audacity might be a good start. They're not free, either, but then again neither is Mixbus. While they're not plugins, DeNoise and ClickRepair both run on Linux and, in my opinion, are the best noise reduction tools available on Linux (they are cross-platform Java). IZotope's Spectron did something like that, but it's not Linux friendly. ![]() I would love to get that editing function back. With the Marquee editing mode in Audition, I drew a box around the PSK signal, hit delete, and it was unobtrusively gone. I used the Marquee editing once to pull out a rogue signal in a mixed-down two-track recording the signal was a hot water heater remote control signal, phase-shift keyed, and it was loud. ![]() One of the few things I miss about Adobe Audition is the 'Marquee' editing that looks a lot like what this ISSE does (or did). īTW the latest version of Audacity now has some basic spectral editing - in case that's what you are looking for. ![]()
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