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Scream Alternatives
Similar projects and alternatives to scream
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InfluxDB
Power Real-Time Data Analytics at Scale. Get real-time insights from all types of time series data with InfluxDB. Ingest, query, and analyze billions of data points in real-time with unbounded cardinality.
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sonobus
Source code for SonoBus, a real-time network audio streaming collaboration tool.
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yabridge
A modern and transparent way to use Windows VST2, VST3 and CLAP plugins on Linux
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vendor-reset
Linux kernel vendor specific hardware reset module for sequences that are too complex/complicated to land in pci_quirks.c
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zfsbackup-go
Backup ZFS snapshots to cloud storage such as Google, Amazon, Azure, etc. Built with the enterprise in mind.
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WorkOS
The modern identity platform for B2B SaaS. The APIs are flexible and easy-to-use, supporting authentication, user identity, and complex enterprise features like SSO and SCIM provisioning.
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Vitals
A glimpse into your computer's temperature, voltage, fan speed, memory usage and CPU load.
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Gitea
Git with a cup of tea! Painless self-hosted all-in-one software development service, including Git hosting, code review, team collaboration, package registry and CI/CD
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ArchiveBox
🗃 Open source self-hosted web archiving. Takes URLs/browser history/bookmarks/Pocket/Pinboard/etc., saves HTML, JS, PDFs, media, and more...
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Mailspring
:love_letter: A beautiful, fast and fully open source mail client for Mac, Windows and Linux.
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openrazer
Open source driver and user-space daemon to control Razer lighting and other features on GNU/Linux
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scream reviews and mentions
- Is APTX LL the lowest latency we can get for wireless audio?
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Level of effort for maintaining VFIO?
How does connecting sound in pulseaudio compare to scream?
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Ask HN: What do you use VMs for regularly?
My main workstation runs Linux. It has a second GPU (NVIDIA RTX 2080 Super), USB 3.1 card, and an NVMe drive passed to a guest via PCIe passthrough.[1] I have a 2x2 DisplayPort 1.4 KVM to drive my monitors with the host GPU on one side, and the guest GPU on the other side. The peripherals are connected to the host through any open USB port, and the guest through the PCIe add-in card.
Audio is handled with Scream[2] mostly so I can get >65536Hz sample rate. (Really terrible things seem to happen if you try to boot a qemu guest w/ the emulated audio attached to pipewire-pulse when the DSP graph has a 96/192KHz sample rate. I've also had latency issues in the past w/ bonafide pulseaudio and the emulated audio card)
I do all my gaming and most of my browsing inside the Windows VM, which is bridged to my usual data VLAN. The linux host is where I do development work which lives on a separate experimental VLAN.
Other than that I run a few LXC containers for various services needed for running the LAN. (DNS, mail, VPNs, etc.) - I just want that stuff logically separated so that they can either (a) be moved to my new workstation in 2024, or (b) if one breaks it can just be rebuilt from scratch without affecting the others. It's also nice because I can use whatever distro works best for that particular package.
[1]:https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/PCI_passthrough_via_OVMF
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The year is 2022, on linux I can: browse the internet, open steam, discord etc. as native clients, adjust my room ambient lightning, play a current AAA title with a 1 click-tweak, edit a YT vector thumbnail and record & edit a video. Never would have dreamt leaving windows would be this comfy.
All you need is a second GPU (can be a crappy one). Google: qemu/kvm vga pci pass-through, use https://looking-glass.io/ for video/keyboard/mouse, use https://github.com/duncanthrax/scream for audio.
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I know this is Linux audio, but do any of the Linux audio systems capable of streaming work on Windows ? (Like pulse audio, JACK or pipewire)
I think this fits your criteria 100%, apart from compression
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Play sound form one PC on another
You've already tried Scream and SonoBus?
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NVIDIA now officially supporting GPU passthrough for Linux VFIO users, no more error 43!
Like you didn't even mention audio, but that varies too. You can use scream to route VM audio to pulse, which is what I"m doing now. But before that, I had the VM configured to send the audio from its virtual soundcard to pulseaudio directly. Some people use a USB sound card and pass that through. Others just use the HDMI output provided by the passed through GPU. And so on.
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Don't do VFIO to save money...or time (opinion piece)
However, once I got it working it stayed working for a long time. I briefly had it stop working when Windows fucked up the driver for the sound device, but that's not technically a VFIO problem it was a Microsoft problem. It's since been resolved and works again, but when that happened I switched to scream which just generally works better anyway, so fuck it.
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Stats
duncanthrax/scream is an open source project licensed under Microsoft Public License which is an OSI approved license.
The primary programming language of scream is C++.