[00:39] hello! [02:34] ello ello all [03:58] alguien que hable castellano / español? [04:00] eu [04:04] danielchachapuma@gmail.com estoy probando ubuntu studio 12.04 me gustaria recibir ayuda en español para varios programas y configuraciones [04:04] gracias [05:46] alguien me puede echar una mano no logro ejecutar el sw de mixlr para transmitir radio online [05:46] si alguien tiene alguna solucion [05:46] me sera de granayuda [13:02] clean [18:27] XFCE 4.10 on ubuntu studio? [18:27] !info xfce [18:27] Package xfce does not exist in quantal [18:27] lol [18:28] !info xfce4 [18:28] xfce4 (source: xfce4): Meta-package for the Xfce Lightweight Desktop Environment. In component universe, is optional. Version 4.10.0 (quantal), package size 4 kB, installed size 31 kB [18:28] eeepc: ^^ [18:28] eeepc: its the same as main ubuntu... and xubuntu.. same repos [20:42] what do you guys think of soundhole pickups for guitar? [20:42] FloatingGoat: Never heard of them, but try #opensourcemusicians. There are a few guitarists on that channel who know their stuff [20:50] hi, is there a way to move down the upperpanel? [21:01] faLUCE, for any panel right click on it. Click on "Panel" then preferences. [21:02] uncheck lock and you should be able to drag it around [21:03] FloatingGoat, sound hole pickups are fine for stage work with a steel string guitar, they don't work for nylon. [21:03] Get one that is designed for acoustic sound or it will sound electric. [21:03] len-1304: I can't drag it. I unchecked lock but I can't drag it [21:03] len-1304: sorry [21:03] thanks [21:03] faLUCE, let me try. [21:04] len-1304: solved [21:04] thanks [21:04] with the panel preferences panel open try using the mouse to grab the panel right at the end. [21:04] faLUCE, ^^^ [21:04] yes you were right thanks [21:06] FloatingGoat, for recording, use a mic over _any_ pickup if you want an acoustic sound. [21:10] what do you think? [21:11] I agree on using a condenser mic when recording acoustic guitar. Can't beat that with any pickup [21:11] pickups are good for live use [21:12] i know for recordings. but what about realtime recordings [21:12] live recordings [21:14] cause i want to record guitar as well as [21:14] my voice at the same time [21:15] FloatingGoat, for live stuff, the guitar will not sound as good no matter what you do, but a pickup will allow better feedback control and keep the mic for guitar and voice from comb filtering. [21:16] Any time you have two mics close together, there will be comb filtering. [21:16] It will make your recordings sound hollow. [21:16] FloatingGoat: Depends. I haven't done that type of recording much. Of course, the vocals will leak into the guitar mic quite a bit, if you sing and play. [21:16] I think the sound hole pickup I have is a fishman [21:16] len-1304: Not if you do it right though [21:17] On stage? Is there a right? :) [21:18] The vocals will leak not only into the mic picking up the guitar, but it will also resonate some in the guitar itself [21:19] One will only know how it all sounds by trying different setups [21:19] The one thing you will notice with an in hole PU is that it does change the resonant frequency of the guitar body... generally lower. [21:19] zequence, yes [21:19] Best test is to record it and listen to the recording. [21:21] If it's a nice room, you could do a stereo recording. Two balanced cardoid condensers, close to each other, picking up opposite sides of the room. [21:21] The mics need to be good too [21:22] nice room to a hall owner = lots of seats in a small space... [21:23] Oh and still meats fire codes. [21:23] *meets [21:23] * len-1304 is feeling cynical today. [21:24] Most concert halls seem to suffer from that problem :) [21:24] I find the best halls are fairly small [21:25] And you enjoy being there more, if it's much less than packed [21:25] I have pretty much decided that the performer audience interaction is the most important thing. [21:26] Getting good sound is important, but there has to be something worth seeing/listening to.