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Hello - HebRob - 12-08-2024 [attachment=4265] [attachment=4264] I live in the Outer Hebrides, Scotland. Been a Fedora Linux user since Fedora Core 3, which was released in 2004. I have a music library of some 15,000 tracks, around 40% being Classical. Already have a Pi4b running mpd (Bookworm os), outputting "bitsteam" to an AVR. I bought a Pi5, cooling, NVMe HAT and HifiBerry DACx8. Now I want to understand Camilla DSP. The ultimate aim is to get rid of the AVR because it's too ugly but in the meanwhile I'm going to bi-amp my front speakers with better quality amps and use camilla to make a crossover if I can work it out. Later, I hope to connect my centre and rear speakers and look into room correction. I've installed Moode and Bookworm/Camilla on different SD cards and intend to experiment with them and if one is a better solution than the other. Still waiting for the NVMe drive to be delivered. RE: Hello - TheOldPresbyope - 12-08-2024 (12-08-2024, 11:39 AM)HebRob Wrote: I live in the Outer Hebrides, Scotland. Hi, and welcome to the Forum. I'll let the Camilla DSP experts speak to crossover design but it certainly sounds doable. I may have you beat in the Linux department; I started with the first broadly distributed kernel, back when Internet at home was a pipedream and folks like Walnut Creek were distributing SlackWare Linux and tons of other software on CDROM. In my day job, I had a lab full of workstations running competing flavors of Unix.They weren't the focus of my work but my work depended on them. Had to depend on a Walkman for my music fix. Regards, Kent RE: Hello - HebRob - 12-08-2024 (12-08-2024, 11:56 AM)TheOldPresbyope Wrote:Never been a computing professional. Nearest I got was the person troubleshooting problems with people's tech before calling the help desk, weekly/monthly back-up onto tape as part of my job. When I started work my job was calculating payments manually and preparing data-types for other people to use to punch paper tape and feed them into a transmitter to send to the mainframe computer in another city. This was early 80's and we were a bit behind the times. The next installation of IT put us on the cutting edge, input with green screen monitors, which only took a few years to become outdated. Things went a long way in a very short time. Pace of change has slowed considerably now.(12-08-2024, 11:39 AM)HebRob Wrote: I live in the Outer Hebrides, Scotland. |