Linux, as the 'poor' relation, never gets much more than the 'crumbs' of an afterthought. Windoze stuff seems to always get the lion's share of the development pie. (This is running under an external, sym-linked install of Wine 3.3 mikeslr's 'favourite', I believe, for just 'working'. Using this, I can just record whatever I want, whenever I want.and it always comes out sounding perfect. Which is why I was extremely pleased to find It doesn't matter what I use Audacity, mhWaveEdit, whatever.through these two inputs, the result is always the same. But for recording through the webcam, or recording from the system via 'dmix', it still comes out sounding all slow, and 'treacly'. I've largely got around the problem (certainly for doing tutorials) by using a Logitech USB headset with its own built-in sound card. I had no problems before that with Ubuntu, nor before that in XP. I've ALWAYS had issues with recording audio on the big old Compaq tower, since switching to Puppy. And it shows, I feel, the difference in the way that support is proffered to both Windows and Linux. I'm re-visiting because I just want to mention a PortableApp that's fixed a very long-standing problem for me. Whoa, it's been a looong time time since I last visited this thread. Hence the other version of the InfoCentral Menu pet I mentioned.īut like 't'other Mike suggests, if it works for you, why do something else? From time to time I consider just installing a wine-pet. Also kind of a lot if I had been using a SaveFile.Īlthough there are some Windows programs I run because I can, there's only one I actually need. At some point I measured the amount of programs installed into Wine-portable's false C:drive at 32 Gb. But since I had wine-portable setup I decided to see what "installable" XP programs could run. A version had been run under Ubuntu (Tahr?). I wanted to see if Dragon Naturally Speaking could be run under any Puppy. I started using wine-portable before SaveFolders existed. That may also apply to those working on updating Wine and whose work serves as a base for Version2013's wine pets. Slackware has the reputation of being more stable, conservative in its development, but with Ubuntu (and its spin-offs) being the most popular more applications are created with it (or its debian base) in mind. You might guess from my screenshot I venture into Slackopup64s only occasionally. My main Puppy now is Xenialpup64 and before that it was Tahrpup64. And your idea of putting wine-portable on the back-burner is probably what I would do if I were in your shoes. WinePortableSetupUnderSlacko64.png WinePortable Setup under Slacko64 (45.45 KiB) Downloaded 785 timesīasically, I agree with Mike Walsh. Note, for Puppies which lack Rox-App Right-click options, Wine-portable can be registered by browsing into the Wine-portable folder and executing "Register". In other words, for a portable windows program to function all 'the stars must align' - the PuppyOS, the 32-bit Compatibility layer, the version of wine, and the program. This version ran from 64-bit "Ubuntu" Puppies, and older versions of Avidemux ran, IIRC, from Slacko64. Among them was a new version of Avidemux portable. Some of the portable windows programs I "installed" to /mn/home/xp-apps ran. InfoCentral_portable is actually a pet which creates a menu entry under Wine_portable. The latter is how Puppies recognize wine-portable when you register them. Note that the 32-bit compatibility SFS is loaded and that wine-portable-0.1 has been "installed". The attached screenshot shows my loaded SFSes and Installed pets. In order to function under a 64-bit Puppy, you must load the appropriate 32-bit compatibility application and configure it (ldconfig).Įdit: I'm back after booting into Slacko64. Remember, all wine-portables employ 32-bit versions of wine. And before that I ran shinobar's original version, wine-portable-1.6.2-2 under Tahrpup64. Previously I ran under Xenialpup64 and Tahrpup64 a version of Wine-Portable I built using one of version2013's wine 2.16 pets. I think I've also run it under Slacko64 -but I'll boot into it and check. Patches, translations and even bug reports are always welcome.I'm still curious to know if Portable Wine is usable in a 64-bit Pup? David S. The program was written from scratch by Mean, but code from other people and projects has been used as well. Tasks can be automated using projects, job queue and powerful scripting capabilities.Īvidemux is available for Linux, BSD, Mac OS X and Microsoft Windows under the GNU GPL license. It supports many file types, including AVI, DVD compatible MPEG files, MP4 and ASF, using a variety of codecs. Avidemux is a free video editor designed for simple cutting, filtering and encoding tasks.
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