[12:20] hello [12:20] i cant install linux-lowlatency-pae [12:20] libffado1 [12:20] gstreamer0.10-plugins-ugly-multiverse [12:21] and gstreamer0.10-plugins-ugly-multiverse [16:29] Anyone knows about an implementation of Ubuntu Studio true audio bypass and the best form to achieve less than 5 ms latency in real-time applications? [16:34] andrericss: What do you mean by "true audio bypass"? [16:35] less than 5 ms latency depends on a lot of things. Audio interface, CPU, irqs, kernel, etc [16:36] Also, which latency? Some people think latency is one way through jack others measure from audio in to audio out. [16:37] So if you are going audio in to audio out, probably a USB device will have trouble making it. [16:42] OvenWerks: I'm programming a guitar tuner to be used live. I refer to true bypass to the bypass from the P2 input to the P2 output without any type of computer software entering on the computer. I already had a USB soundcard but it is broken. What is the best approach to reduce latency by software? [16:48] if you want a true bypass in the guitar pedal sense, it would have to be hardware outside of the audio interface. [16:49] however, if all you are doing is using the computer for tuning, why does latency matter. Use a Y and send guitar straight to where ever and just use the audio input for the computer for tuning rather than going all the way through. [17:04] OvenWerks: The constarint is that I want a like a foot pedal behaviour, when activated the tuner mutes the guitar audio (breaks the audio chain) and when deactivated the tuner behaves as true bypass. [17:23] OvenWerks: Maybe an A/B selector can resolve. [17:44] Yes, it would act like a nice mute too if setting the guitar down [17:54] OvenWerks: Thank you very much! [18:03] no problem [19:16] I have a 2TB USB key. I can't recall if it was a USB 3.0 or a USB 2.0 key. Is there a way to test it to know which technology? === udoprog_ is now known as udoprog