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(USB-Midi Hardware)
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  0944:0117 KORG, Inc. nanoKONTROL2 MIDI Controller
 
  0944:0117 KORG, Inc. nanoKONTROL2 MIDI Controller
The Korg Setup software is an .exe, but works with wine
 
  
  
 
The Hungarian Pedal:
 
The Hungarian Pedal:
 
  http://www.ebay.fr/usr/guitar.fun.stuff?_trksid=p2047675.l2559
 
  http://www.ebay.fr/usr/guitar.fun.stuff?_trksid=p2047675.l2559
 
*is on the Linux-USB list of vendor IDs
 
http://www.linux-usb.org/usb.ids
 
as:
 
05e4  Free shared USB VID/PID pair for MIDI devices
 
 
and returns here as it should as:
 
  ID 16c0:05e4 Van Ooijen Technische Informatica Free shared USB VID/PID pair for MIDI devices
 
 
The short manual on the ebay page reads as follows:
 
Plug and play, no driver or installation needed. Just plug it into a free USB slot and your OS will recognize it.
 
Choose USB Midi device in your software settings and you're ready to go.
 
Two controller mode:
 
*  Mode 1: Changing whole presets. The controller sends program change messages.
 
The LEDs indicates which preset is working.
 
*  Mode 2: To activate this mode, press buttons 2&3&4. To change back to mode 1, press buttons 1&2&3
 
(All LEDs will blink for half a second to indicate this).
 
 
   
 
   
  In mode 2 the controller sends control change messages. It allows you turn functions/effects on and off individually.
+
  ID 16c0:05e4 Van Ooijen Technische Informatica Free shared USB VID/PID pair for MIDI devices
  The LEDs indicate their status.                   
+
  In mode 2, press a button for 10 seconds to switch to momentary mode. (All LEDs will blink for half a second to indicate this).
+
  It allows you to use non-on/off functions like 'previous/next preset', 'tape deck play' etc.
+
  The LEDs do not light up in momentary mode since it's unnecessary.
+
   
+
External pedal input. You can connect any standard pedal with a 6.3mm (¼ inch) stereo jack.  Using an “insert” or “Y-shaped” cable.
+
+
To use the full range of the pedal you may have to calibrate it.
+
Calibration: Step 1:turn the pedal to minimum position and press button 1 AND button 3.
+
              (All LEDs will blink for half a second to indicate this).
+
              Step 2:turn the pedal to maximum position and press button 1 AND button 4.
+
              (All LEDs will blink for half a second to indicate this)
+
              The device will save the calibration data so you only have to do it once.
+
 
+
 
+
More on Vendor IDs:  http://www.eevblog.com/forum/projects/usb-vendor-product-ids/
+
  
 
List of Linux-recognized VIP/PIDs: http://www.linux-usb.org/usb.ids
 
List of Linux-recognized VIP/PIDs: http://www.linux-usb.org/usb.ids

Revision as of 07:35, 15 June 2015

What do you want from a modern Linux on a decent machine??

-Roaming Network, with 3G, WiFi.
-Remote Desktop software to take care of the machine while away.
-Ability to sleep and wake-up... In the proper console.
-I know Bluetooth technologies are there - get your shit together!
-And with a Secure Shell too!
-Multimedia keys
-Obvious peripherals (nokia phone, Zen music player, iStuff)
-Nice interface, without rude consoles with lost of ugly warnings
-Compilers-ready
-VirtualBox capable
-And lots of available software at hand, of course, with a nice and easy installer.

Snippets, short stuff, Howtos && the e16-trsp tweak draft.

Unanswered questions

Contents

USB Midi

USB-Midi Software

Links:

https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/USB_MIDI_keyboards
https://bugs.archlinux.org/task/44286


 # modprobe snd_seq_midi


 # lsmod | grep usb


 $ lsusb
 $ amidi -l
 $ aconnect -i or aconnect lio 


 aseqdump -p ##

(where you should replace ## with the client number of your keyboard from aconnect -i)


 $ a2jmidid -e

(After starting jack)

USB-Midi Hardware

The Ubiquitous Korg:

http://www.korg.com/us/products/controllers/nanokontrol2/

0944:0117 KORG, Inc. nanoKONTROL2 MIDI Controller


The Hungarian Pedal:

http://www.ebay.fr/usr/guitar.fun.stuff?_trksid=p2047675.l2559

ID 16c0:05e4 Van Ooijen Technische Informatica Free shared USB VID/PID pair for MIDI devices

List of Linux-recognized VIP/PIDs: http://www.linux-usb.org/usb.ids

Pages

-> The infamous LiveUSB issue and check-list.

-> Inittab is dead, get upstart rolling.

-> Virtual machines: qemu+kvm on Arch notes.

-> e16 All page from /usr/share/doc/e16/e16.html

-> Screens & other related graphic stuff. Or not.

-> Networking Knowledge

-> Build a Realtime Audio Workstation on Slackware

-> Struggling RealTime

-> Memo on inittab - useful archive: the laptop's fedora9 xorg

-> Our blue tiny 248x170 Aspire One

-> Cambodia Special: Internet with HSDPA (aka 3G or 3.5G) mobile operator qb

-> Fucking RAID array

Distro things

Arch-Linux is arch-cool. Or is it?

Gentoo failed

Introducing Sabayon. Why not?

Welcome Debian.

Taming Slackware

All fedora 9 issues - but I run F10 now... Most of them are the same.

Fedora Laptops snd_hda_intel hack - fedora 9 powertop results (not bad)

ubuntu 8.04 issues (I don't use it anyway)

Fun with AlphaMIPS

links

Compile a Slacked Kernel: http://alien.slackbook.org/dokuwiki/doku.php?id=linux:kernelbuilding

Set proper permissions on webcam: http://forums.fedoraforum.org/showpost.php?p=1165063&postcount=2

USB, Permissions and VirtualBox: http://www.linuxquestions.org/questions/slackware-14/virtualbox-usb-permissions.-701934

http://www.linux-tips.org

http://lwn.net/Articles/283555/

http://www.mjmwired.net/resources/mjm-fedora-f7.html#yum

http://linux-tips.org/article/74/enabling-remote-desktop-on-a-virtualbox-machine link title

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