![]() I have to ask what might be an obvious question: If I installed the Windows 10 64bit version of Ardour instead will I have. Running Ardour on Linux is my preferred platform but I understand that Windows VSTs isn’t going to work on a Linux based version of Ardour. I have tried a number of plugins with Ardour 3 on Windows. I’m fumbling through this trying to understand what’s going to be needed or expect depending on what direction/platform I go with. I was hoping to have access to VST plugins like Spitfire Audio’s Abbey Road ONE Orchestral Foundation and BBC Orchestra. When you say “That usually ensures that plugins work if they also conform to the spec.” are you meaning for the Windows version only of Ardour or the Linux version also? Forgive my ignorance in this area. I’ll try things out but it seems that the Windows version of Ardour is going to be a better choice when it comes to the VST compatibility. You to not use vestige which is use when working with Windows VSTs which is not required because Pianoteq and a native linux VST. There are some tools to run Windows plugins on Linux, but if you need to use Windows plugins, you’re usually. Can anybody give me specific instructions on how to set this up because OOB it doesn’t work for me. ![]() But I’m so tired of always feeling like I’m messing with gear and have workarounds for this and that. Here under New Features it is explicitly stated that Ardour supports VST3 plugins accross all platforms, including Linux. ![]() I’ve used Linux professionally (business) since 2005 and was okay with relearning equivalent applications and making Linux work for me. So you need to just install the plugin wherever you prefer, then go to. Consistently replace colons in IO/Port names - allow colon as part of track names. On Windows, suggest WinMME as default audio backend and enable MIDI by default. This helps a lot when moving a dozen or so plugin windows to or from virtual desktops, minimizing, maximizing, toggling It also has possibility to remember size, placement, layer, decoration for each app. I’m sure you’ve been involved in Linux for a long time and with that means that it’s always an experiment or a “trail and error”. There is no standard location for VST plugins on Windows (or anywhere, for that matter). Pre-processor I/O plugins run before Ardour does any processing - you could use a plugin there to pre-process physical input, or to receive data over a network. It’s very encouraging that you had the chance to checkout the VST3 wit Spitfire Labs and it worked with Ardour.
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