I just bought a pioneer DDJ-SB3 for the house yesterday but I also have a HP Chromebook I bought in December that I planned to use it with. I noticed a high-pitched noise and "downsampling" grainyness when running Ubuntu from a loopback USB drive using A&H Zed10FX via USB audio out on a PC normally running Windows Vista 64-bit (quad-core 2,4GHz Q6600/4GB RAM) downloading the source code and installing the program using the command line with "make build" etc like in Linux) but instead the developers included a wizard to do all the install parameters like source/destination folders for you.ĮDIT : Linux has very different audio drivers btw and most likely you'll run into compatibility issues with interfaces supported by Win/OS X. The good thing with Windows operating systems is you rarely have to build anything from source (ie. The Chrome OS is a different animal because although Unix-like it could have compatibility issues with WINE, the program I googled was CrossOver (technically Chrome is closer to Unix/Linux, not OS X which is close, but not Windows)Īs how to run Linux/OS X programs on Windows is another thing. WINE ran nice on Ubuntu and openSuse back in 2007 or so on Windows Vista. you're basically hanging on to volunteer software engineers porting programs for free, it's fairly stable and has a database where you can check the compatibility which ranges from unchecked to bronze-gold depending on how well the ported software installs&runs. I've used WINE and, although it had it's quirks ie. WINE is a virtual desktop for Unix like systems (probably doable in Linux, I think Chrome OS is Linux kernel-based) and Parallels is for running Windows programs on OS X that aren't supported by Apple (I had it, never used it in practice though but OS X/MacOS is a hybrid kernel based on BSD/Unix much like Linux, and Chrome)
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