• etherphon@midwest.social
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    1 天前

    Thanks, interestingly Garuda was at the top of my list but maybe I’ll just stick to Mint and not be fancy. Bitwig always interested me and if I decided to go back to a DAW I’m definitely taking a second look because I have a tracker background from way back and the modularity and easy hardware integration look great. I’m not too concerned about the plugins so much as the hardware now, there is no official support for the Black Lion audio interface I bought but I’m assured it should work fine under ALSA and as I’m currently only needing it to record a stereo pair it should be fine. The plugins I use now are mainly compressors and EQs for some final mixing and “mastering” and there seems to be a decent amount of choices now for native plugins in those areas but I do have some favs I might need to bring over so I will check Yabridge. Look forward to getting my hands dirty again, hacking windows has just becoming getting rid of nuisances instead of customizing my computing experience.

    • pirat@lemmy.ml
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      19 小时前

      I mean I like Garuda, but I would say it has taken a bit more to set up. I think if you’re running AMD you’ll be fine, it just depends on how much tinkering you want to do. Honestly the biggest reason I switched was that I had moved to Debian and games were not working too well for me - gaming has been much smoother but my desktop environment is a bit glitchy and buggy (likely due to my nvidia / Intel stuff)

      Bitwig has better support on debian-ish distros, which mint kinda is (at least it is able to download and run .deb files).

      Bitwig has been my favorite DAW since I began using it more in 2019, and as my only DAW fully but EoY '19; I enjoy all the flexibility I have with modules and the like.

      I am unfamiliar with the Black Lion audio interface from what I’m reading it looks like they have class compliant interfaces so it should work with pipewire.

      Ubuntu studio with the audio suite may be a good way to go too.

      Depends on the total use case tho. I’m a newbie too in Linux but am happy to answer what I can

    • ProdigalFrog@slrpnk.net
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      1 天前

      If you’d be interested in a tracker-like DAW, Renoise has a native Linux version.

      For more traditional DAWS, Bitwig and Reaper are the two best Linux native options. Reaper is quite cheap, and also offers a trial version that just nags you like winrar.

    • Sonalder@lemmy.ml
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      1 天前

      hacking windows has just becoming getting rid of nuisances instead of customizing my computing experience

      I can totally relate to this! Perfectly sentenced.