Open Octave Studio?
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- KVRer
- 11 posts since 31 Jan, 2012
http://www.indiegogo.com/OPEN-OCTAVE-ST ... -the-means new video posted!
Open Source (Free) Orchestral Composing and Film Scoring Software for Linux. (Windows/Mac support coming soon) One Click full orchestra!
http://www.openoctave.org
http://twitter.com/openoctave
info@openoctave.org
http://www.openoctave.org
http://twitter.com/openoctave
info@openoctave.org
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- KVRAF
- 6159 posts since 4 Dec, 2004
Thanks for taking my comment in the way it was intended.openoctave wrote:Thanks for your comments, we have always developed our application based on direct feedback and involve our community along the way. So it is much appreciated!
I don't personally use Linux DAWs so your product would be of no interest to me personally with it being on that platform, but it looks pretty good to me. Looks like it will be an excellent choice for people who compose on Linux... especially being open source and (I presume) free?
Props. As they say... "Nice piece of code, that..."
P.S. One additional tiny observation. The large logo in the panel seems a bit gratuitous... and just a bit of a waste of working space, to me, mmv. If you asked me for suggestions about the UI I'd say it looks great, but ditch the logo graphics and leave that space for more of the actual data.
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- KVRer
- 11 posts since 31 Jan, 2012
One of the primary point of the fund raising campaign is to bring the app to Windows and Mac.LawrenceF wrote:Thanks for taking my comment in the way it was intended.openoctave wrote:Thanks for your comments, we have always developed our application based on direct feedback and involve our community along the way. So it is much appreciated!
I don't personally use Linux DAWs so your product would be of no interest to me personally with it being on that platform, but it looks pretty good to me. Looks like it will be an excellent choice for people who compose on Linux... especially being open source and (I presume) free?
Props. As they say... "Nice piece of code, that..."
P.S. One additional tiny observation. The large logo in the panel seems a bit gratuitous... and just a bit of a waste of working space, to me, mmv. If you asked me for suggestions about the UI I'd say it looks great, but ditch the logo graphics and leave that space for more of the actual data.
Thanks for the pointer on the logo. I quite like it so I am not sure that will be changing but again thank you.
Open Source (Free) Orchestral Composing and Film Scoring Software for Linux. (Windows/Mac support coming soon) One Click full orchestra!
http://www.openoctave.org
http://twitter.com/openoctave
info@openoctave.org
http://www.openoctave.org
http://twitter.com/openoctave
info@openoctave.org
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- KVRer
- 11 posts since 31 Jan, 2012
When we get to Windows you will have to give us a shot, we have a unique tool-set that simply does not exist anywhere.LawrenceF wrote:Thanks for taking my comment in the way it was intended.openoctave wrote:Thanks for your comments, we have always developed our application based on direct feedback and involve our community along the way. So it is much appreciated!
I don't personally use Linux DAWs so your product would be of no interest to me personally with it being on that platform, but it looks pretty good to me. Looks like it will be an excellent choice for people who compose on Linux... especially being open source and (I presume) free?
Props. As they say... "Nice piece of code, that..."
P.S. One additional tiny observation. The large logo in the panel seems a bit gratuitous... and just a bit of a waste of working space, to me, mmv. If you asked me for suggestions about the UI I'd say it looks great, but ditch the logo graphics and leave that space for more of the actual data.
Open Source (Free) Orchestral Composing and Film Scoring Software for Linux. (Windows/Mac support coming soon) One Click full orchestra!
http://www.openoctave.org
http://twitter.com/openoctave
info@openoctave.org
http://www.openoctave.org
http://twitter.com/openoctave
info@openoctave.org
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- KVRAF
- 9521 posts since 6 Oct, 2004
I like the concept, and the ambition, and have a few questions.
1. Ardour3 alpha/beta have a simple binary installer, no packaging or
compiling needed, is this easy installation be implemented?
2. With linuxsampler under the hood, will one be able to simply
create a track, and drag/drop or menu-select a .gig or .sfz file,
and begin playing, then arm the track and be able to press a
'Record' button?
3. Ambitious linux apps requiring compilation, have a deadly failure
ratio, when not compiled on the authors hardware/software configuration,
has the linux version been packaged by anyone for .rpm/.deb in such a way, that
it will install and work correctly when system libraries are newer
than those now considered OOM dependencies?
4. Since linux audio distro basics require less than 200 meg, have you
considered using one as a host for OOM, so your team is in almost total
control of the operating system?
5. A business P.O. box for old-fashioned donations?
Good luck with this effort
1. Ardour3 alpha/beta have a simple binary installer, no packaging or
compiling needed, is this easy installation be implemented?
2. With linuxsampler under the hood, will one be able to simply
create a track, and drag/drop or menu-select a .gig or .sfz file,
and begin playing, then arm the track and be able to press a
'Record' button?
3. Ambitious linux apps requiring compilation, have a deadly failure
ratio, when not compiled on the authors hardware/software configuration,
has the linux version been packaged by anyone for .rpm/.deb in such a way, that
it will install and work correctly when system libraries are newer
than those now considered OOM dependencies?
4. Since linux audio distro basics require less than 200 meg, have you
considered using one as a host for OOM, so your team is in almost total
control of the operating system?
5. A business P.O. box for old-fashioned donations?
Good luck with this effort
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- KVRer
- 11 posts since 31 Jan, 2012
1. Ardour has always fought to have installs go through them, we are not like that we will just go with the distributions packagingglokraw wrote:I like the concept, and the ambition, and have a few questions.
1. Ardour3 alpha/beta have a simple binary installer, no packaging or
compiling needed, is this easy installation be implemented?
2. With linuxsampler under the hood, will one be able to simply
create a track, and drag/drop or menu-select a .gig or .sfz file,
and begin playing, then arm the track and be able to press a
'Record' button?
3. Ambitious linux apps requiring compilation, have a deadly failure
ratio, when not compiled on the authors hardware/software configuration,
has the linux version been packaged by anyone for .rpm/.deb in such a way, that
it will install and work correctly when system libraries are newer
than those now considered OOM dependencies?
4. Since linux audio distro basics require less than 200 meg, have you
considered using one as a host for OOM, so your team is in almost total
control of the operating system?
5. A business P.O. box for old-fashioned donations?
Good luck with this effort
2. It is already one click to add instruments and synths. You should give it a try.
3. No sure I follow. Just try it out.
4. No time to make a distro, busy building tools.
5. We have a P.O. address for my wife's business that we could use.
If you are on Ubuntu we have the Beta ready to test, more builds coming soon:
https://launchpad.net/~kxstudio-team/+a ... openoctave
Thanks!
Open Source (Free) Orchestral Composing and Film Scoring Software for Linux. (Windows/Mac support coming soon) One Click full orchestra!
http://www.openoctave.org
http://twitter.com/openoctave
info@openoctave.org
http://www.openoctave.org
http://twitter.com/openoctave
info@openoctave.org
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- KVRAF
- 9521 posts since 6 Oct, 2004
Hi, 4. the distros already are made, dropping in your project and it's dependencies/accessories, then running a remaster script to createopenoctave wrote: 4. No time to make a distro, busy building tools.
3. No sure I follow. Just try it out.
If you are on Ubuntu we have the Beta ready to test, more builds coming soon:
https://launchpad.net/~kxstudio-team/+a ... openoctave
Thanks!
a live CD/DvD, is pretty easy. This could insulate you and your users
from some of the more moronic linux caveats and config nightmares,
that have sent so many curious windows users back
to the brink of insanity
3. lack of uniformity and coordinated system library releases among the plethora of
linux versions, has cost linux musicians countless hours spent sorting,
configuring, installing, reinstalling, making life more difficult for projects like yours, hence my suggestion 4.
Don't have a buntu, so I'll watch for more builds.
Cheers
- KVRian
- 1472 posts since 4 Apr, 2011 from Rio de Janeiro - Brazil
I bet the windows version will be available before the release of Bitwig Studio! 
- KVRist
- 127 posts since 24 Feb, 2012
Looks quite interesting.
Wish I could donate, but the Summer Months are setting in, which as DJ is not the best time of year financially.
I wish you the best with your development and you have a willing able tester when the Windows Beta rolls around.
Wish I could donate, but the Summer Months are setting in, which as DJ is not the best time of year financially.
I wish you the best with your development and you have a willing able tester when the Windows Beta rolls around.
Disco flangus shenanigans
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AstralExistence AstralExistence https://www.kvraudio.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=265049
- KVRAF
- 2276 posts since 19 Sep, 2011
aw gee, did there money run out from there less scam.
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- KVRer
- 27 posts since 10 Jul, 2012
1. Is this still going? I just heard about this project recently and wanted to check it out. Seems like the last version that came out was a few years ago. I haven't been able to find any recent news on this.
2. I managed to install this on Ubuntu. I can get the open octave studio to run but I wan't able to get open octave midi to work. When I tried to install one of the sample libraries that came with it, open octave studio would crash towards the end of the installation and when I checked the terminal I saw this.
"Qt has caught an exception thrown from an event handler. Throwing
exceptions from an event handler is not supported in Qt. You must
reimplement QApplication::notify() and catch all exceptions there.
terminate called after throwing an instance of 'std::bad_alloc'
what(): std::bad_alloc
Aborted (core dumped)"
o.O Did I do something wrong? I admit, I'm not familiar at all with Ubuntu. But I followed everything it said on how to install this software.
2. I managed to install this on Ubuntu. I can get the open octave studio to run but I wan't able to get open octave midi to work. When I tried to install one of the sample libraries that came with it, open octave studio would crash towards the end of the installation and when I checked the terminal I saw this.
"Qt has caught an exception thrown from an event handler. Throwing
exceptions from an event handler is not supported in Qt. You must
reimplement QApplication::notify() and catch all exceptions there.
terminate called after throwing an instance of 'std::bad_alloc'
what(): std::bad_alloc
Aborted (core dumped)"
o.O Did I do something wrong? I admit, I'm not familiar at all with Ubuntu. But I followed everything it said on how to install this software.
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- KVRAF
- 9521 posts since 6 Oct, 2004
Hi, you might check the qt libs that were standard at the
time of the last update, and install a linux of
that vintage.
I think one of the devs has an active twiiter account,
so maybe you can sleuth it out, and could ask about
the current status of the project.
I think they moved to Canada, probably career or family changes
diverted them away from the project.
Cheers
time of the last update, and install a linux of
that vintage.
I think one of the devs has an active twiiter account,
so maybe you can sleuth it out, and could ask about
the current status of the project.
I think they moved to Canada, probably career or family changes
diverted them away from the project.
Cheers