Re: [orca-list] professional audio configuration tips for may be not only Archlinux users



The best test environment for these tips will be real hardware in which
two operating systems on two disks are available where the real hardware
can mount both hard drives.  One hard drive is the test drive and the
other is the work drive.  The work drive does not get modified at all.
The test drive is what can be modified to test these tips out.  When a
failure with one of these tips happens, the work drive will need to be
booted into rescue mode to revert the last change made to the test drive
and bring the test drive back to life.  My computer uses solid state
drives but only has capacity for a single drive.  Those Alien ATX cases
are very good for number of fans, but only make provision for a single
hard drive and that's the case on the current computer.

On Mon, 6 May 2019, Mgr. Janusz Chmiel via orca-list wrote:

Date: Mon, 6 May 2019 15:57:18
From: Mgr. Janusz Chmiel via orca-list <orca-list gnome org>
Reply-To: Mgr. Janusz Chmiel <janusz chmiel volny cz>
To: orca-list gnome org
Subject: [orca-list] professional audio configuration tips for may be not only
     Archlinux users

Dear users,
I have found very interesting article related to ArchLinux users.
https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Professional_audio
Very interesting would be to find out, if those configuration tips can be also
used for Debian based Linux distributions.
And if some configuration settings described in this article would be useful
for users of speech synthesizers. Sure, while making experiment of this kind,
it would be very good to use virtual machine, because wrong configuration
would lead to system instability and other sound quality problem.
Sure, virtual machine will never allow to test without problems, because
virtual computer will never have so much free resources as operating system
which run standalone and is not executed by using virtualization algorithms of
CPU.
Other option would be to create live system with persistent storage file, but
when booting with new kernel parameter, it would require to edit syslinux.cfg
when non live system will be executed.
May be, that those tips from his article would really improve speech
responsiveness. Sure, everything have its price. So when sound latency will be
very low, CPU and other chips will consume more energy. CPU FAN will rotate at
bigger speed.
I will try to experiment with some introduced configuration tips and I will
test what will happen.
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