T
tsattler
New member
Greetings all.
I am trying to hook up an old Yamaha keyboard (non-usb) which has midi-in and midi-out ports, to my computer. I have an old "Cakewalk Music Connector 1" adapter, which has a usb connection on the other end and is designed to connect non-usb keyboards to a computer's usb port(hence the "adapter" name). This works under Vista (I booted Vista only to see if I could get it to work). It does not work under Fedora 11 Linux, which is what I run almost all the time. This is a very old adapter, and perhaps there is a more modern approach?
In trolling around the web, I have found references to the Edirol UM-1G (now rebranded as the Cakewalk UM-1G) which seems to be a more recent solution (and perhaps more standards-compliant as well). My question, I guess, is whether anyone has used this adapter? Or, really, if you've found any solution which will allow Linux to recognize an old non-usb midi keyboard.
Thanks in advance,
Tom
I am trying to hook up an old Yamaha keyboard (non-usb) which has midi-in and midi-out ports, to my computer. I have an old "Cakewalk Music Connector 1" adapter, which has a usb connection on the other end and is designed to connect non-usb keyboards to a computer's usb port(hence the "adapter" name). This works under Vista (I booted Vista only to see if I could get it to work). It does not work under Fedora 11 Linux, which is what I run almost all the time. This is a very old adapter, and perhaps there is a more modern approach?
In trolling around the web, I have found references to the Edirol UM-1G (now rebranded as the Cakewalk UM-1G) which seems to be a more recent solution (and perhaps more standards-compliant as well). My question, I guess, is whether anyone has used this adapter? Or, really, if you've found any solution which will allow Linux to recognize an old non-usb midi keyboard.
Thanks in advance,
Tom