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Asio is a freely available, open-source, cross-platform C++ library for network programming. It provides developers with a consistent asynchronous I/O model using a modern C++ approach. Boost.Asio was accepted into the Boost library on 30 December 2005 after a 20-day review. The library has been developed by Christopher M. Kohlhoff since 2003.
Boost has been a source of extensive work and research into generic programming and metaprogramming in C++. [8] Most Boost libraries are header based, consisting of inline functions and templates, and as such do not need to be built in advance of their use. Some Boost libraries coexist as independent libraries. [9] [10]
The release of ASIO 2.0 in 1999 brought further enhancements such as ASIO Direct Monitoring, where an audio signal is monitored directly from the audio interface with basically zero latency, and ASIO Positioning Protocol, used to sample accurately synchronize a computer to other digital machines such as ADAT recorder or also other computers. [3]
Ubuntu 11.10 final release (13 October 2011) running Unity 4.22.0. The naming of Ubuntu 11.10 (Oneiric Ocelot) was announced on 7 March 2011 by Mark Shuttleworth. He explained that Oneiric means "dreamy". [112] Ubuntu 11.10 was released on 13 October 2011. It is Canonical's 15th release of Ubuntu. Support ended on 9 May 2013. [113]
tries to render any character using all the fonts available on the system so multilingual support is generally good. The default rendering engine can support complex script rendering. Some Linux distributions ship with a Pango -based rendering engine which also does, although this may currently cause some display glitches with justified text.
The scheduling requirements of JACK to achieve sufficiently low latencies were one of the driving forces behind the real-time optimization effort for the Linux kernel 2.6 series, [8] [9] whose initial latency performance had been disappointing compared to the older 2.4 series. [10]
Parallel Studio is composed of several component parts, each of which is a collection of capabilities. Intel C++ Compiler with OpenMP; Intel Fortran Compiler with OpenMP; IDE plug-in integration with Visual Studio, Eclipse and Xcode [2]
October 2009 — version 1.0.2 shipped with Ubuntu 9.10 (Karmic Koala) Introduced a new simple interface for locating, installing, and removing software, with better security based on PolicyKit instead of gksudo. [4] April 2010 — version 2.0.2 shipped with Ubuntu 10.04 (Lucid Lynx) LTS