Thanks Mike,
in this particular application I am looking at anywhere from 4 up to
64 MIDI ins and outs and the entire product needs to be very robust
(to handle road trips and live performance conditions) and have as
near to zero latency as possible. I am not sure that USB is the best
way to reach those goals.
GCC sounds good to me although Eclipse is something I'm familiar with.
Thanks for your input.
Mike H.
--- In Mike Dodd <> wrote:
>
> > Oh how times have changed! [...]
> >
> > Does anyone know of a PC104 MIDI interface that is NOT based on the
> > MPU-401?
> > Does a PC104 serial card generally use the Intel 8250/16550 chip?
> > Has anyone done a clock hack on such a card in order to make it work
> > at 31.250Kbps? Does anyone know if Linux can set the card to
> > 31.250Kbps out of the box? Or will I need to hack it?
>
> Charging in from the periphery of MIDI.... Have you considered a USB
> MIDI interface? Seems like you could write a driver for one of these
> without much effort, or maybe Linux drivers already exist.
>
> > And finally, I am somewhat new to Linux application development so
> > would I be right in saying that gcc is my friend? Or what sort of IDE
> > would people recommend considering that I lived and breathed Borland
> > Turbo C++ about ten years ago (I am now a network engineer that only
> > dabbles in Java, VisualStudio, perl on MS platform but trust me, I
> > can't take MS any longer!).
>
> I do all my stuff in a text editor (on a Windows box; sorry), then
> compile at the command line with gcc on the 7250. If you have Linux
on a
> desktop, I believe KDevelop is a good IDE, and Eclipse is widely
used. I
> haven't found time to try either of them, though.
>
> Mike
>
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