That's interesting. Maybe combined with this: http://www.cs.columbia.edu/~le... - it could provide what's needed. What I need in my case is good handling of TCP and UDP, anything else isn't relevant. Maybe I should try creating some sort of virtual network card that handles TCP and UDP, and hands the rest over to a real network card?
A couple of milliseconds extra for all traffic doesn't matter. The point is to avoid those short spikes in network latency that get me kicked from online servers..
Yeah, Ardour looks like a viable alternative. I'm getting to old to play around with a lot of different stuff, so I hope what I learn on one system is also possible on the next, even though the approach may be different.
I'm mostly running Windows now as I enjoy playing Battlefield, so maybe running a VirtualBox instance with Linux and Ardour is a viable option, not sure if there will be lagging in recording audio and so on though.
You need to also ask yourself if you're really ready to release this as an open source project. I don't mean literally under an open source license, like you have done. I mean, are you ready to let a community of developers and users take control of your project and take it in directions you may have not considered?
It's been my pet project for quite a while now, and yes, I'm ready to let go and let it grow up. I guess one of the things I should do is make it more accessible to developers, but noone has really asked me yet, for developer access. Maybe that's a chicken and egg situation..
Whatever floats your boat dude;)
Personally I think Thunderbird is quite good, and it will get a lot better, improving faster than any other email client out there, thanks to the community effort. Might as well switch now...
OK, CEO emailed me with a free trial and link to a new beta, giving it a go.
Tried it, looked sucky. ;)
That's interesting. Maybe combined with this: http://www.cs.columbia.edu/~le... - it could provide what's needed. What I need in my case is good handling of TCP and UDP, anything else isn't relevant. Maybe I should try creating some sort of virtual network card that handles TCP and UDP, and hands the rest over to a real network card?
A couple of milliseconds extra for all traffic doesn't matter. The point is to avoid those short spikes in network latency that get me kicked from online servers..
Yeah, Ardour looks like a viable alternative. I'm getting to old to play around with a lot of different stuff, so I hope what I learn on one system is also possible on the next, even though the approach may be different. I'm mostly running Windows now as I enjoy playing Battlefield, so maybe running a VirtualBox instance with Linux and Ardour is a viable option, not sure if there will be lagging in recording audio and so on though.
It was a different post and got edited a bit. :)
I prefer cross-platform, but if it's only available for Linux, that's OK too.
I don't see any good reasons why this piece of software is better than Xen, except that it can run Windows. Big deal.
It's been my pet project for quite a while now, and yes, I'm ready to let go and let it grow up. I guess one of the things I should do is make it more accessible to developers, but noone has really asked me yet, for developer access. Maybe that's a chicken and egg situation..
Anyway, good thoughtful comment. Thanks.
"At the meeting place demonstration of various travelling and jump was done"
And later, all the base was belong to them.
Whatever floats your boat dude ;)
Personally I think Thunderbird is quite good, and it will get a lot better, improving faster than any other email client out there, thanks to the community effort. Might as well switch now...
We're running a series of Thunderbird articles, the latest article explains how to migrate from other clients. Send this link to your friends!
Well, let's see if the slap some encryption on it, and protect it via the DMCA..
There are other, very good reasons for open sourcing software as well, besides idealism.
Damn the torpedoes!