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Re: Good notation program for linux



Music is one of the things that keeps Windows on my machine at home. I
use a marvelous program called NoteWorthy Composer
(http://www.ntworthy.com/). it's a shareware program ($39) that produces
excellent output, both visual and aural. It has lots of nice features,
and the interface is (imo) nicer than the other more expensive products.
I should start bugging them for a Linux port...

I have to agree with Hamish, except there IS a reason to buy a Mac: it's
a cool Linux box!

Hamish Moffatt wrote:
> 
> On Mon, Apr 05, 1999 at 06:04:02PM -0400, DTR wrote:
> > OK at risk of getting my ass flamed off here...
> >
> > I believe in using the right tool for the job.  If you are serious about
> > your music, buy a mac and cubase or some similar package.  If you are just
> > playing around, might as well go the cheapest route and pick up some
> > shareware package as has already been suggested.
> 
> That's a bit of an outdated approach. There is really zero reason to by
> a Mac especially for music. Cubase, Encore, whatever else you want to run
> are almost all available on the PC.
> 
> Unless things have changed recently, stock standard Cubase is mostly
> sequencing, not notation anyway (I think there is a separate Cubase Score for
> that).
> 
> Then there's Sibelius, which you can only get on ARM (I think) and Windows.
> All of Passport's stuff runs on Mac and PC, for example. Same for all
> the other manufacturers, like Musicware, MIDISOFT etc.
> 
> Disclaimer: I get paid to write music software on Windows
> (not notation, mind you).
> 
> Hamish
> --
> Hamish Moffatt VK3TYD.
> CCs of replies from mailing lists are welcome.
> 
> --
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-- 
eric Farris  eafarris@bigfoot.com  www.bigfoot.com/~eafarris
Microcomputer Support Specialist
Academic Computing
Frostburg State University  www.frostburg.edu

This message composed in an MFCE (Microsoft Free Computing Environment)

We all had delusions in our heads
We all had our minds made up for us
We had to believe in something...
   So we did.


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