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jack [2015/05/25 23:31]
slackermedia
jack [2021/06/03 19:48]
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-[[{arrowp.png|border:​0;​background:​none;​width:​0;​display:​inline-block;​position:​absolute;​top:​0;​left:​0;​}dep|]] 
  
-[[{arrown.png|border:​0;​background:​none;​width:​0;​display:​inline-block;​position:​absolute;​top:​0;​margin-left:​2.5em;​}sound|]] 
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-====== JACK ====== 
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-If you have any experience with traditional professional audio hardware (synthesizers,​ effects, mixers) or even professional networking gear (routers, switches, vlans), then you are accustomed to the notion that signals must be routed from one place, through a filter of some sort, to a target, and then perhaps through another filter, and then a final destination. 
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-[{{ jack_irlpatchbay.jpg?​700 |Patchbay by Pinnacle_College on [[https://​www.flickr.com/​photos/​pinnaclecollege/​14544012364|Flickr]].}}] 
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-JACK is an application that, once started, runs in the background and routes audio. 
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-There are three varieties of audio applications on Linux: 
-  *Those that do not and cannot use JACK (ie, it has not been programmed to use be "​JACK-aware"​). Usually consumer applications. 
-  *Those in which JACK is optional. ​ 
-  *Those that require JACK in order to run. 
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-Depending on what applications you want to use, you may or may not ever need JACK. It's not a bad thing to have available and isn't terribly big, so it is a recommended application for a Slackermedia system, but whether or not you use it daily or just once a year depends on what you do with your computer. 
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-===== JACK Versions ===== 
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-There are two concurrently supported versions of JACK.  
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-[[{arrown.png|border:​0;​background:​none;​width:​0;​display:​inline-block;​float:​right;​}sound|]][[{arrowp.png|border:​0;​background:​none;​width:​0;​float:​right;​}dep|]]