No. It's directly related to the audio latency problem with Google's Android Linux OS.
I'll have to take your word for it since I haven't used Fruity Loops or any other trackers in about 10+ years. As you said, the problem is fixed with the newest revision of the OS.
Should I start complaining about copy&paste, decent notifications, voice-to-text, and a bevy of other features not being available on old versions of iOS?
Seems a bit silly at this stage, does it not? How is iOS 5 working out on iPhone 2, 3x? Could those phones run Fruity loops without latency?
Please let me know.
Try paring any Bluetooth keyboard with Google's Android Linux OS that is running HTC's Sense UI. Oops, can I say HID (Human Interface Driver) conflict? Don't forget, most Google Android Linux OS phones do not have full Bluetooth stacks, but limited stacks per carrier demands.
Then its a good thing that I have MotoBlur, TouchWiz, Vanilla android and whatever LG/Sony call their variants to choose from. What do you do when your iphone doesn't support a software feature? You grin and bear it, that's what.
That project isn't really quite working, yet. It hasn't been touched since 2010. It's 2012. Alas, that is why I posted what I did.
Its working, but not fully functional... which is my point. When someone gets an android itch, they are fully free to scratch it and distribute their fix on the web to anyone who wants it.
Apparently, there is very little demand for jack audio (or whatever it is you call it), which is why the project has been mothballed. If you want a more complete listing of open source android projects then here is one of many sites listing them:
http://www.aopensource.com/
I won't bother asking you for the iOS equivalent. iPhone gets a choice of what few jailbreak apps there are and then there isn't much available outside of that.
There is also the Ubuntu Linux project of
Ubuntu on Android phones, for some real open source goodness.
What are you trying to say here?
You don't like new competition to your stale fanboyism?
It's your opinion that Linux requires fiddling until it works. Regardless, I still can't install full Linux packages on Android out of the box. It would be nice to run standard Linux Ekiga on Google's Android Linux OS, but no. I have to use 3rd party apps that are only partly compatible and limited directly by Google's Android Linux OS, which means no texting or video compatiblity. Just an example of what Google's Android Linux OS cannot or more appropriately, will not do.
I am going to guess that you're ~22 yrs old or younger. Yes, certainuser-friendly Linux distros today have happy GUIs and pre-archived drivers that play nice with your plug and play hardware. Anyone who has been around the block once or twice doesn't have to think very far back to when burning an ISO of your distro was the first in a series of very long steps to configuring a usable linux machine.
You hunted down drivers (with a working machine), loaded them up and prayed that they would work without having to delve too far into a man page. Hand-held computing hasn't even reached that stage yet.... much less being the super-auto-configured, so-easy-your-aunt-sally-can-do-it computing platform.
Yeah, even if you know what you're doing (or are not smart/diligent enough to figure it out), then installing a new kernel on your smart phone is probably going to take some tinkering.
Even putting regular vanilla Android on a rooted phone often takes half a dozen steps and a couple of 3rd party desktop applications.....you really *are* new around here I guess.
Apparently you ain't too bright. Just keep drinking the Koolaide.
yes, i'm the dummy. Don't mind me, I have no idea about anything.