You missed something. The kernel is a low-latency one by default. Perhaps that is useful for sound/video recording/editing. And changing the kernel is not exactly the first thong an editor would do
the realtime kernel is crucial for input devices. that can be anything, I sometimes wonder if running the realtime kernel is also good for gaming, as your mouse and keyboard are also operating in low-latency
@@sykoben Not only that, but also "Studio" does not necessarily imply an editing studio. It could very well be about a TV studio, focusing on live transimission.
Reviving my 2016 i5 6400 CPU desktop with Ubuntu studio, I could now render video,though not blazingly fast but doable. Not to mention low-latency kernel with Jack audio helps with my audio recording. Ubuntu studio has been heaven sent for me! Glad I did the research and found it.
I think you've missed the point of Ubuntu Studio. It's not about the graphic package, which is still included for convenience. It's all about the low latency kernel and JACK being preconfigured out of the box, for audio production. I used Ubuntu Studio extensively back when it was still using xfce, you install it and get into producing audio without even thinking about it. Is it hard to install a low latency kernel and configure JACK perfectly? Not particularly, at least for me, but it's still a mess for a complete noob
@@manankataria You still need to configure JACK inside of pipewire. Back when pipewire wasn't a thing, they preconfigured JACK and the pulseaudio-jack bridge (this component is not necessary under pipewire)
I used Ubuntu Studio LTS on XFCE a couple of years ago on an old laptop to record the jams from my garage band. Eventually we made a whole album on the machine. Despite the crude setup it turned out great! 🎸🤟
Its perfect not just for a beginner, but also for getting a full fleshed out studio pc immediately without bothering with alsa jack pipewire and isntalling the low level kernel. Just get a mini pc or cheap thinkpad and throw this on and you're ready to go.
What's the best way to build your own Ubuntu based distro? For me as a dev, it's always going to be base Ubuntu because it's so familiar, then install a bunch of stuff including: VS Code IntelliJ Toolbox GitKraken Chrome Docker & docker-compose Postman VMWare Workstation sdkman nvm etc. I'd like to be able to bank this setup as an installable ISO, I could also just put this in a bash script but it'd be interesting to spin your own custom Ubuntu ISO
Should have a custom kernel and some tweaks done to lower audio latency. Idunno, I'm just looking to show someone else. I haven't seen a good alternative for their ancient copy of Reason yet though.
Distros to examine: - Tuxedo OS (plasma 5.27) - Nitrux 2.8 (plasma version and Maui version) - FerenOS (latest) - Spiral Linux KDE... but only when Bookworm is released!
Hmmm.. this kinda gave me an idea. I think i am gonna dig in all the flavours and fedora spins and see what kind of apps they use for which pourpouse. With that i can actualy make list of software i wanna have on my custom distro image to make myself sort of all in one system so i can do what i want literary because lately i've seen how much i don't know about FOSS and what kind of monster of a system you can create with everything you have avaliable for linux. I did little bit of a digging into everything and came to conclusion that linux gives you tools to do virtualy everything using open source software in exact same manner you do with paid stuff but it involves sacrificing little bit convenience but that can be fixed. When it comes to convenience i have no intention spend a lot of money just for it because i beleive that going for convenience even paying for it is right thing to do only when you can get true benefits from it that and when what you get justifies price you pay for it.
Thanks for this. I am currently creating a USB iso to test on a unused... well just Intel i3 ... to see how it goes on a wiped HDD. This laptop actually is faster than another one I have even on windows. I have taken windows HDD out - obviously! I am trying as many do, to get off Windows slow messy system and create a Media only laptop I wish to use with my music, images, videos etc.. If all works well, I will get a powerful Laptop and get a large screen = job done for the future! I am also curious to see how BitWig performs!
They use a low latency kernel, which is particularly useful for audio and video production. He skipped that part of Ubuntu Studio, and it's actually the key feature.
I use Fedora personally for programming, video editing, and daily driving and it’s great! But if you mean something which is specifically ‘made’ for programming, maybe ArchCraft Linux is it (I’ve never used it though, so I’m not sure)
Pop!_OS targets "STEM and creative professionals", so the default install might have what you're looking for. Fedora also offers Labs that include packages focused on specific uses, like "Scientific" and "Python Classroom".
You missed something. The kernel is a low-latency one by default. Perhaps that is useful for sound/video recording/editing. And changing the kernel is not exactly the first thong an editor would do
the realtime kernel is crucial for input devices. that can be anything, I sometimes wonder if running the realtime kernel is also good for gaming, as your mouse and keyboard are also operating in low-latency
@@sykoben Not only that, but also "Studio" does not necessarily imply an editing studio. It could very well be about a TV studio, focusing on live transimission.
Reviving my 2016 i5 6400 CPU desktop with Ubuntu studio, I could now render video,though not blazingly fast but doable. Not to mention low-latency kernel with Jack audio helps with my audio recording. Ubuntu studio has been heaven sent for me! Glad I did the research and found it.
I think you've missed the point of Ubuntu Studio. It's not about the graphic package, which is still included for convenience. It's all about the low latency kernel and JACK being preconfigured out of the box, for audio production.
I used Ubuntu Studio extensively back when it was still using xfce, you install it and get into producing audio without even thinking about it.
Is it hard to install a low latency kernel and configure JACK perfectly? Not particularly, at least for me, but it's still a mess for a complete noob
Why jack out of the box 🤔. Wouldn't pipewire serve better now given it would let jack and alsa and pulse work or maybe I'm wrong about pipewire 🤷♂️
@@manankataria You still need to configure JACK inside of pipewire. Back when pipewire wasn't a thing, they preconfigured JACK and the pulseaudio-jack bridge (this component is not necessary under pipewire)
I used Ubuntu Studio LTS on XFCE a couple of years ago on an old laptop to record the jams from my garage band. Eventually we made a whole album on the machine. Despite the crude setup it turned out great! 🎸🤟
Your project piece was quite eye catching (lots of professional polish).
Good job!
Hope you scored well.
Slap this on a tall mini PC and you've basically got a Mac Studio
And spray paint a metallic color.
LOL. But the mini PCs from system76 looks better for me.
I got a 2nd gen lenovo m75q and i’m about to slap this on there😂
It's what I'm thinking about doing
I thought one of the big features of Ubuntu Studio was it also installs a "real-time" low latency kernel.
Its perfect not just for a beginner, but also for getting a full fleshed out studio pc immediately without bothering with alsa jack pipewire and isntalling the low level kernel. Just get a mini pc or cheap thinkpad and throw this on and you're ready to go.
For me it is perfect. I haven't used linux before and wouldn't even guess half of these programs are available. Thank you for the video!
Thank you very much for covering this
This a just good workstation no tinkering required more entry friendly than fedora workstation
What's the best way to build your own Ubuntu based distro?
For me as a dev, it's always going to be base Ubuntu because it's so familiar, then install a bunch of stuff including:
VS Code
IntelliJ Toolbox
GitKraken
Chrome
Docker & docker-compose
Postman
VMWare Workstation
sdkman
nvm
etc.
I'd like to be able to bank this setup as an installable ISO, I could also just put this in a bash script but it'd be interesting to spin your own custom Ubuntu ISO
did you figured something out? this is looks interesting :)
I use Ubuntu 22.04 LTS for my desktop PC, but this is my first time hearing of Ubuntu Studio. It looks a lot like Linux Mint.
Should have a custom kernel and some tweaks done to lower audio latency. Idunno, I'm just looking to show someone else. I haven't seen a good alternative for their ancient copy of Reason yet though.
I have actually been curious about this one.
Distros to examine:
- Tuxedo OS (plasma 5.27)
- Nitrux 2.8 (plasma version and Maui version)
- FerenOS (latest)
- Spiral Linux KDE... but only when Bookworm is released!
It reminds me of Zorin Pro, but I think I prefer Zorin’s implementation of this idea better.
Doesn't Zorin Pro only have additional customization?
@@user-tc9tb3a additional customization, and a lot of preloaded open source creative software as well.
Hmmm.. this kinda gave me an idea. I think i am gonna dig in all the flavours and fedora spins and see what kind of apps they use for which pourpouse. With that i can actualy make list of software i wanna have on my custom distro image to make myself sort of all in one system so i can do what i want literary because lately i've seen how much i don't know about FOSS and what kind of monster of a system you can create with everything you have avaliable for linux. I did little bit of a digging into everything and came to conclusion that linux gives you tools to do virtualy everything using open source software in exact same manner you do with paid stuff but it involves sacrificing little bit convenience but that can be fixed. When it comes to convenience i have no intention spend a lot of money just for it because i beleive that going for convenience even paying for it is right thing to do only when you can get true benefits from it that and when what you get justifies price you pay for it.
Thanks for this.
I am currently creating a USB iso to test on a unused... well just Intel i3 ... to see how it goes on a wiped HDD.
This laptop actually is faster than another one I have even on windows.
I have taken windows HDD out - obviously!
I am trying as many do, to get off Windows slow messy system and create a Media only laptop I wish to use with my music, images, videos etc..
If all works well, I will get a powerful Laptop and get a large screen = job done for the future!
I am also curious to see how BitWig performs!
Lightzone photo editor would be a nice addition
Dude, Krita is included along with other awesome apps.
Are you using EndeavourOS as your main distro? I just kind noticed it before you full screen the ubuntu. Can you tell me more about it?
I've never seen Kdenlive crash? Maybe I was just lucky with the versions I was using.
Wow. You really don't do much research😮
Wait, are you still in school? 1:22
Yeah I worked for 5 years after highschool now I'm finishing my BA. That's my capstone project, almost done with the degree.
@@TechHut good luck!
@@TechHut All the best...
student research and creative words symposium @Techhut is lecturer i guess
Just a student :)
How about Fedora DesignSuite spin? :)
but the fact is why i am going to install Ubuntu Studio .. we install these application manually
They use a low latency kernel, which is particularly useful for audio and video production. He skipped that part of Ubuntu Studio, and it's actually the key feature.
Lmms is essentially FL studio
Is there a distro similar to this but for programmers?
I personally love fedora
I use Fedora personally for programming, video editing, and daily driving and it’s great! But if you mean something which is specifically ‘made’ for programming, maybe ArchCraft Linux is it (I’ve never used it though, so I’m not sure)
Pop!_OS targets "STEM and creative professionals", so the default install might have what you're looking for. Fedora also offers Labs that include packages focused on specific uses, like "Scientific" and "Python Classroom".
👍Nice.
How to install Nvidia driver ?
It has a function for that built it, as in most DEB distros
Idk seems like an unneeded distro
Why? There's nothing else like it.
@markusluther7756 Spot-on! The concept is brilliant. And the actual execution, amazing.
Go Eagles, EWU
no sense distro
Bloat