Mmmm you're talking about key resellers. A full retail version costs $150. Keys from key resellers are notoriously unreliable. It might work forever, or it might stop working a week after you authenticated. It's more or less a gamble.
Great if it works for you, sucks if someone just wasted money (however little) on something that'll stop working - especially if it's grandma's machine.
Also, hedge your bets a little better, buy the ones that cost $10 or even $15. Historically speaking those are a safer bet.
Fair enough. Checked out the issue tracker and it seems they are in the middle of rebasing the entire project, after reorganizing - which they finished earlier this year.
Can't wait to see where they go with it! We need more innovative DAW's on the Linux desktop. But basics like Wayland and PipeWire should be a priority. Seems like most people just default to JACK2 bridge, which is understandable - because PipeWire isn't that easy. But that seems to be an ignored issue. They also seem to be ignoring Flatpaks, which is a mistake imho.
Also, scaling is an issue since 2016. So it won't change until the new version is released, whenever that will be.
This is why celebrity couples are not real couples. Most likely it's about necessity. It's like monastic or aristocratic coupling. It's not a real relationship per se. It's a front, to keep up appearances. We see how well that went.
I'm Norwegian and even though the Saami have their own government within the nation state of Norway there are still plenty of people in denial of the apartheid that was done against them. For each year the Sami government is delegitemised and it's done through nationalistic fervour.
Nationalism and intellectual suicide go hand in hand.
Wow, and they get to come back when? When all the land has been seized, if they can prove they are Palestinians, which will be hard once public records get burned to the ground because of an accident or "extremists who acted on their own accord".
"Social democrat" is just capture of socialistic values, dispersed under the umbrella of liberalism. Social democrats still support new public management, "global markets" and privatisation of everything. In effect they relish in the slavery that these markets impose, a race to the bottom where human life is worth nothing, while pretending they are doing something different.
Debian is LTS in your traditional sense, so it doesn't have the full Mutter feature set that current GNOME has. So X11 is probably your best bet if you're running Debian 12.
Also, judging by this article article Wayland is on by default.
A way to check this is to find the About pane on the GNOME Settings window to see if it's running under X11 or Wayland.
It seems LMMS hasn't been updated for two years, which might imply it has become abandonware. This is bad, because it means it's not built to use modern libraries, which features updates to things like fractional scaling and cross-display scalability. You can still use it with PipeWire (the new audio server for Linux that's replacing JACK2 and PulseAudio), but it's not a "first class citizen" in that regard.
Before reading my huge aside, have you tried setting scaling factor as a launch variable? Here's a StackOverflow answer that shows you how.
In any case, I could recommend some alternatives since LMMS does seem to be abandone, PipeWire is the new shiny and that people are generally sunsetting X11.
Ardour is probably the most accessible of the open source DAW's, but it does not have a pattern sequencer that you find in LMMS. But, learning how to edit MIDI and using keyboard shortcuts will help you to compose more easily.
MuSE was originally a tool made for composition and orchestration, but blossomed into a fully featured DAW. It's written in QT, so it should be blazingly fast.
Traction is semi-proprietary, in that the engine itself is open source, but the applications are not. Traction Waveform Free is available though and it's gotten quite polished over the years.
Zrythm is the "new kid on the block", but has blossomed into a fully fledged DAW. It's GTK based, so if you're using GNOME it'll work nicely with Wayland. It's also copy-left, so there's little chance it'll go down the Audacity route (traitor!)
Bitwig is proprietary, but a fantastic fully featured option. It comes with a slew of MIDI effects, audio devices, synthesises, samplers and samples. Similar to LMMS it comes with a built-in sequencer that allows you to create loopable clips instead of copying and modifying MIDI clips all the time, which you play and record into arrangement. If you'd like to use your DAW in performances, this is probably the best option. Essentials cost $99, producer edition costs $199 and the full studio edition $399. It may seem expensive, but Bitwig is a professional DAW with all the bells and whistles. They to provide a demo for you.
I'm sorry if this was a bit of a sidestep from your issue, but the alternative of course is that you can try to contribute back to the GitHub repo or fork the LMMS project to add the features or fixes you want. That being said, Wayland is usurping X11 and soon both GNOME and Plasma will be going Wayland only. So I'm throwing a bone here more or less. At some point you will be forced to make the switch, or adhere to outdated software.
This is a farce. Big corporations and their lackey interest organizations employ armies of lawyers all the time to get their way. To then say it shouldn't be a matter of law to prevent monopoly is at the least hypocritical, at the most an over reach of power and influence.
The motive was clear, and that was to delegitemise other more balanced political groups from Palestine. He basically propped up Hamas because he knew what their intentions were.
Unfortunately. Gamed from the inside, gamed from the outside. The defeatist mentality, the feudalism, foreign interests taking advantage, it all comes together as the most desperate condition in the entire world.
Thanks! Will bookmark this :)