![]() ![]() They might be great at everything else, but when it comes to the Linux port, they've made a huge cock-up. Still monstrously disappointed by the initial release of MS4 for Linux, and getting the feeling, from the way Marc Sabatella goes into defensive/adversarial mode when Linux issues are raised, that the MuseScore team is not competent to port their software to Linux. ![]() I'm glad you've got it working, but you must be some sort of dark wizard. The situation hasn't changed despite all my careful forensics, so I have to conclude that one's man's "working" is another man's "broken". ![]() In short, MS4 AppImage for Linux with muse-hub properly installed on a clean system is incapable of playback. "System default", the only choice in I/O, is meaningless and can't be changed. No joy.īecause MS4 doesn't expose any jack ports, I can't even check where MS4 is sending its audio. I don't run pulseaudio (don't need it, don't like it, have lived without it forever) but I have tried enabling it while struggling to get sound of out MS4 just in case. I do use pipewire, which works flawlessly (one might say miraculously) with every single audio-capable app on my system. I'm running Kubuntu 22.04, so I'm not using wayland (kde still prefers x11). My understanding from reading the forums is that MuseSounds works without the insecure background process running.Īll the files you listed are present, in the correct locations, with the correct privileges. I have subsequently disabled muse-hub from running insecurely as root in the background. The deb muse-hub package is installed and the whole MuseSounds library downloaded onto my system. There is no fuse2 currently available except the fuse2fs package, which I have (no doubt fruitlessly) installed. ![]()
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