From: "Jean-Michel Pouré" <jmpoure@free.fr>
To: alsa-user@lists.sourceforge.net, alsa-devel@lists.sourceforge.net
Subject: Re: Cheap USB audio card with phantom
Date: Sun, 28 Jan 2007 09:55:25 +0100 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <1169974525.4788.13.camel@localhost> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <Pine.LNX.4.64.0701271424130.27182@info.physics.ubc.ca>
Thank you for your answers:
> Not sure what you want-- that may be why you get no response. By two
> channels in, do you mean a single stereo channel in? What do you mean
> by
> "two xlr entries" or "preamp"? sound cards tend not to be mixer
> boards, and
> especially not cheap mixer boards. Why not buy a cheap usb soundcard
> (I
> like the maudio transit-- under $100-- it has a standard stereo in)
> and add a preamp if that is really
> what you need.
>
> Why do you need XLR connectors and a preamp for Internet Podcast?
I need a professionnal voice microphone, like in a normal radio.
Therefore, I need XLR entries.
> I have an Edirol UA-25. I don't know if it's fully supported, but as
> far
> as I can tell, it works perfectly. It records and plays in all the
> bitrates etc.
> it's supposed to, and the MIDI interface works as well.
> That doesn't mean that every Linux program works well with it, since
> some of them
> e.g. Audacity seems to assume that it should have mixer controls,
> which
> it doesn't have, since those are on the box. But I've used it with
> Jack, Ardour and
> Rosegarden without any problems at all.
I phone people using SIP protocol.
The SIP phone (Twinkle) needs a mixer.
At the same time, I record my voice at high rate.
Then I mix the result in Audacity, but I will soon switch to Ardour.
This is only ONE need, I have other needs ...
I also produce short films shot in DV.
I need to record voices with good quality.
> I've also tested the M-Audio MobilePre, and it also seemed to work
> well. It has
> mixer controls and knobs on the box, which is kind of confusing. I
> haven't tested
> it a lot though. There's some info about needing to load firmware to
> the MobilePre,
> but I didn't need to do that. I think they come in different versions
> without
> changing the name. But there is a firmware loader for it if it's
> needed, but
> if they keep changing it without letting people know about it, I
> wouldn't
> bet on buying one without testing it first.
>
Th M-audio Pre is a suitable solution.
I was wondering about the new TASCAM US-122L.
It is very cheap (159 €) and quite popular.
Do you think it is supported by Alsa?
More generaly, are there established standards in audio?
What are theses acronyms: ASIO, ASIO2, GSIF2, WDM, CoreAudio, CoreMIDI,
kernel streaming, etc...
I will create a page on the unofficial Alsa wiki.
> Well, a USB audio interface hardly qualifies as a sound card, either.
> There are quite a few USB and Firewire interfaces that have preamps
> with XLR inputs, largely because that's what microphones (in a
> broadcast
> or recording context) use.
>
> Finding such a device that works with Linux could be a challenge
> though.
> I got the impression from a quick look at the M-Audio web site that
> most of their USB devices listed on the ALSA matrix have been
> discontinued. Is a Firewire device with jackd and libfreebob not
> an option?
If there is a cheap (< 200€) Firewire card with two XLR entries, please
let me know. I am interested.
Kind regards,
Jean-Michel Pouré
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next prev parent reply other threads:[~2007-01-28 8:55 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 11+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
[not found] <1169882126.3763.5.camel@localhost>
2007-01-27 21:15 ` [Alsa-user] Cheap USB audio card with phantom Jean-Michel Pouré
2007-01-27 22:30 ` Bill Unruh
2007-01-28 0:42 ` John Rigg
2007-01-29 13:46 ` Matthias Koenig
[not found] ` <1170078899.13908.1.camel@localhost>
2007-01-29 14:37 ` Matthias Koenig
2007-01-28 8:55 ` Jean-Michel Pouré [this message]
2007-01-28 16:30 ` Pieter Palmers
2007-01-28 17:03 ` Michael Gerdau
2007-01-28 17:50 ` Jean-Michel Pouré
2007-01-28 19:36 ` John Rigg
2007-01-28 1:22 ` Robert Emil Berge
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