Well This 24+ Year Linux Vet Just Got Impressed by AVL Mx Edition 23.2
Posted: Wed Jul 16, 2025 2:21 am
Title says a lot but I'd like to explain how and why. I'm really ancient, been in the Music Biz for well over a half century and a proud Slackware Linux user/admin for over 23 years. I'm also a long time multibooter from even back in DOS days. My first GUI aside from DOS Shells was OS/2 2.1. Later with OS/2 Warp 4 I got introduced to Linux when emx runtimes made it possible to substitute the Enlightenment DE for IBM's Workplace. I've not only multibboted forever but kept up with Enlightenment even though I gradually began to prefer KDE.
Because I am a musician/engineer who has been involved in recording since ~1970 and evolved into digital recording around 1998 and shortly wanting desperately to dump Windows, I worked to learn the earliest ALSA system and installed Ardour when it was pre Alpha, before it had install instructions. This worked quite well for me until Pulseaudio invaded. Hey if you like it no biggie but I despise pulse. I was cautiously enthusiastic when Pipewire began to shove an elbow into Pulse's ribs. Pipewire recently has gotten quite good but when I upgraded from my PCIe Essence II card to an external Focusrite USB DAC/Mixer I began a long wrestling match with Pipewire and especially complicated by wanting DaVinci Resolve to work properly with Pipewire and USB Audio, I've been fighting this losing battle for months.
Initially I had a few minor hiccups with AVL like ancient Nvidia drivers. Today I purged the old drivers and ran the Nvidia-575.63-foo.run installer and it was a piece of delicious cake. Then to my utter shock, with zero Preference adjustments and zero Wireplumber or Jack routing tweaks DaVinci Resolve not only ran fine but all appropriate Audio and Video just ran perfectly!!! This is on the Free version which all but requires .mov format. I've wanted to buy a license for Full Studio version but past experience made me wait until I could confirm it worked properly on Linux. That time is TODAY! and I couldn't be more impressed and happy.
Many thanks to the devs who built AV Linux Mx Edition.
Because I am a musician/engineer who has been involved in recording since ~1970 and evolved into digital recording around 1998 and shortly wanting desperately to dump Windows, I worked to learn the earliest ALSA system and installed Ardour when it was pre Alpha, before it had install instructions. This worked quite well for me until Pulseaudio invaded. Hey if you like it no biggie but I despise pulse. I was cautiously enthusiastic when Pipewire began to shove an elbow into Pulse's ribs. Pipewire recently has gotten quite good but when I upgraded from my PCIe Essence II card to an external Focusrite USB DAC/Mixer I began a long wrestling match with Pipewire and especially complicated by wanting DaVinci Resolve to work properly with Pipewire and USB Audio, I've been fighting this losing battle for months.
Initially I had a few minor hiccups with AVL like ancient Nvidia drivers. Today I purged the old drivers and ran the Nvidia-575.63-foo.run installer and it was a piece of delicious cake. Then to my utter shock, with zero Preference adjustments and zero Wireplumber or Jack routing tweaks DaVinci Resolve not only ran fine but all appropriate Audio and Video just ran perfectly!!! This is on the Free version which all but requires .mov format. I've wanted to buy a license for Full Studio version but past experience made me wait until I could confirm it worked properly on Linux. That time is TODAY! and I couldn't be more impressed and happy.
Many thanks to the devs who built AV Linux Mx Edition.