Arch linux pulseaudio
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#ARCH LINUX PULSEAUDIO PRO#
It's one of the very few commercial pro applications available for Linux, so it received my (almost) instant (monetary) support as well. It's a full-fledged, professional, modern DAW and it has native Linux support. If any of you are looking for a Linux DAW take a look at Bitwig! It's awesome.So if Pipewire is what I think it is, then I absolutely welcome it!! Sound on Linux/Arch is a bit messy and unprofessional at the moment.When researching Pipewire it sounded like it will fully replace JACK but only partially replace PulseAudio? Is that correct? And if it is: Why not fully replace PulseAudio as well? What are the thoughts behind this?.If PulseAudio uses ALSA to play sound, then why is there a package like pulseaudio-alsa.
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![arch linux pulseaudio arch linux pulseaudio](https://forum.manjaro.org/uploads/default/original/2X/3/3f0a0884bdb936f20d1936804eb8ee9e6ffaeb2d.png)
It sounds like it's supposed to make things easier for developers/apps when it comes to accessing/mixing/playing/etc sounds on Linux.
#ARCH LINUX PULSEAUDIO DRIVERS#
It's basically the sound card drivers and that's why ALSA lives/happens/works in the kernel/as kernel modules. Of course I consulted the Arch wiki, but I still have a few open questions. And while doing so I noticed that I'm not really that familiar with how sound works in Linux/Arch. I recently purchased Bitwig Studio 2 and this was the first time I really had to tinker around with sound servers (jack2 in my case) on Arch.