- cross-posted to:
- linux@programming.dev
- cross-posted to:
- linux@programming.dev
Wine fans have a reason to smile today. Wine 11.0 is finally here, and it is a big deal for anyone running Windows software on Linux. After a full year of work, more than six thousand code changes, and hundreds of bug fixes, Wine is moving forward in a way that feels like a turning point. This release tightens up major subsystems, improves performance, expands hardware support, and carries a big win for compatibility. If you have been waiting for Wine to feel smoother and a little less fussy, 11.0 might be the moment you jump back in.



apparently renoise doesn’t allow values less than 5ms… which also seems to work just fine, huh.
ASIO doesn’t seem to want to work, and it doesn’t do anything for me anyway, I’ve been more than kontent with the DirectSound (I have no idea what wine 9/10/11 does with it under the hood, plays fine through pipewire & my virtual devices) - and renoise isn’t really a traditional daw anyway, it can record instruments for sure, but it’s more of a old-skool tracker with vst/vsti and daw-like automation.
edit: “kontent”… my kde-isms peaking through. heh.
edit2: ffwiw: when I last used renoise on this same machine on win10, I absolutely could not have set the latency below 20ms, even a single instrument of any kind would immediately crackle.
I imagine some vsts do not play nice with low latency but I use low latency piano vsts (kontakt, Ravenscroft 275)
In pipewire I had to use Jack to lower the latency as pulse and alsa were too laggy for playing instruments