
But actually I tried WineASIO a long time ago and it didn't work for me I got unacceptable amounts of xruns and hangs and freezes and cursor playback errors and FL Studio crashing. Use WineASIO which directly puts audio into JACK, so it skips pulseaudio and you get better performance and latency overall.Īnd btw, I moved this post to Marketplace, since it is not "*Linux* Music News" at all. Using ASIO4ALL or FL ASIO is not really a good idea on linux.

Though now they have a real native macOS application. FL Studio ASIO helps much as the audio driver.įalkTX wrote:FL Studio tried to do a wine version with codeweavers (for macOS), so I guess some of that work benefits using it on Linux. I am using MX Linux 17 (Horizon) with an AMD/GPU-compatible RealTime kernel from AVLINUX(?).Īs usual, I just use a tweaked PulseAudio instead of JACK. I can finally use the program for more than just the step editor! This time around, I don't get dropouts and error glitches when playing the demos. You don't have to just use it with FL Studio.įL Studio 20 runs very smoothly on my system!įor the first time I can actually finally comprehend and use the FL Studio workflow.īefore, I couldn't properly overdub without timing errors and enough frustration to quit.Īlso, they made switching screen modes easier and more intuitive. On my system, using WINE of course (and tweaked PulseAudio), FL Studio ASIO works better than ASIO4all or other workarounds for getting programs like EnergyXT and Reaper to work. It's much easier to assign step parts to the mixer, and some of it is automatic now, so it's less tedious.

So I downloaded the demo, and as far as I can tell, it runs more smoothly than the predecessors.Īlso the workflow ergonomics have been improved.
