egards
Bernd.
- Folgende Nachricht wurde empfangen -
*Absender:* David Henningsson <mailto:di...@ubuntu.com>
*Empfänger:* bca <mailto:b...@free-artists.net>
*Zeit:* 2010-10-01, 09:25:27
*Betreff:* Re: [fluid-dev] Multi-kernel system test
On 2010-09-30 1
Hi David,
thanks for your interest. Our usage of fluidsynth is rather unusual, as
Bernds questions indicate. But it's great how everything works together.
In the next days I'll work on the debian package to sort out current
issues on Maverick.
Regards
Sven
On 10/01/2010 09:25 AM, David He
en -
Absender: David Henningsson
Empfänger: bca
Zeit: 2010-10-01, 09:25:27
Betreff: Re: [fluid-dev] Multi-kernel system test
On 2010-09-30 13:23, Bernd Casper wrote:
> Hi David,
> this is quite interesting.
It is.
> In a real-time scenario using two kernels *slows down* latency a
On 2010-09-30 13:23, Bernd Casper wrote:
Hi David,
this is quite interesting.
It is.
In a real-time scenario using two kernels *slows down* latency and
overall performance here, when using many programs simultaneously, while
seemingly increases polyphony performance at te same moment (persona
("average").
Regards
Bernd.
- Folgende Nachricht wurde empfangen -
Absender: David Henningsson
Empfänger: fluid-dev
Zeit: 2010-09-30, 08:12:22
Betreff: Re: [fluid-dev] Multi-kernel system test
On 2010-09-27 18:28, Bernd Casper wrote:
> Hi,
> I'm testing the activation of
On 2010-09-27 18:28, Bernd Casper wrote:
Hi,
I'm testing the activation of more than one processor kernels, at a
Dual-Core system.
Since I experience nothing when changing the number of kernels, could
you please point me to what kind of improvement I should expect, by
doing this.
Many thanks
Bern
Hi,
I'm testing the activation of more than one processor kernels, at a Dual-Core
system.
Since I experience nothing when changing the number of kernels, could you
please point me to what kind of improvement I should expect, by doing this.
Many thanks
Bernd.