![]() Here’s how I prepared Wine: Setup A Wineprefix On Ubuntu 18. ![]() Some of the features of Soundcard Oscilloscope that I wanted: Xoscope turns any Linux PC into a digital oscilloscope for analyzing sound waves. Here’s a self reminder to document these sorts of things. I had used this program before on Ubuntu, and didn’t recall having issues, or if I did, I forgot what the fix was. Failing with xoscope I tried a familiar built-for-windows application instead. Understanding that, Linux as a desktop is awesome, there’s lots of developer tools, different distributions, active communities, lots of free and open source software, the price is right, and if something doesn’t work and you have the time and motivation, there’s a solution.Īt first I tried xoscope but couldn’t get it to work with my sound card’s mic input. Linux as a desktop sucks, it always seems to bite me when I just want to use it, install a tool and use it. ![]() There’s probably a native Linux sound card oscilloscope application that would do everything I wanted, and bonus points if it works out-of-the-box. I wanted to do some work with audio signals, and redo and improve a college project of mine. More information about XOscope is available here. Soundcard Oscilliscope In Wine July 5, 2019Ī sound card oscilloscope application is useful for viewing and analyzing low frequency signals (20Hz - 20KHz). The latest version of XOscope for Linux is now available.New features in xoscope 1.10 include COMEDI support, improved X Windows performance, an improved BitScope GUI, a more modular internal organization, and support for using the parallel port for digital acquisition (via COMEDI and RTAI).
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