There is a "basic" soundfont included though. The button didn't work and I can't find a way to get to this prompt again other than using the factory reset option. Then it gave me the option to download their sound library. When I opened it, it came up with setup dialog asking what what colour theme I want. I downloaded the Musescore4 alpha appimage to have a look. Killing JACK shuts the door to linux, at least partially, and it would be an excuse for the company that owns Musescore to say "There are now so few linux users, we can't afford to give a Linux version our valuable dev time, when we reach far more users in Win and Mac." If a user is setting up a serious studio, pulseaudio is unlikely to be part of that. I asked directly if JACK would be included, in response to the above statement, and have yet to get a reply. I hope i'm wrong, but the "we're still going to support Linux" line seems tired and predictable, and a throwaway to deflect having to release a statement. It seems inevitable Linux will be a lower priority. When they start pulling support for features from the Linux builds only then you know the slope is about to get slippery. are they on a throwback Thursday kick or what.? In what universe is SFZ in addition to Soundfont2 not a progressive step forward.? Especially to a big multiplatform Score Editor that wants to run with the big boys Maybe PipeWire too? (dunno, don't care to know yet)īut jeez, removing both VST and SFZ support. If you have a system with PulseAudio bridges working properly with JACK you could still route MuseScore 4 through an operating JACK setup though.
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