
good driver gadget image

supermario
I get the following message while trying to run Gizmos & Gadgets:
"The MIDI driver for your sound card could not be found. Make sure that the correct sound card drivers are installed before restarting Gizmos & Gadgets. Consult your sound cards's documentation for additional information."
It won't let me run the program without it. What should I do?
Answer
hi, guess you need a correct a sound driver. hope this link can help you:
http://www.drivers-updates.net/drivers/sound-card-drivers-download.html
good luck
hi, guess you need a correct a sound driver. hope this link can help you:
http://www.drivers-updates.net/drivers/sound-card-drivers-download.html
good luck
Why is Linux the operating system of choice for so many electronic gadgets?

ibmxx187
i need to know why Linux is the operating system of choice for so many electronic gadgets?
Answer
DavoJo has a good answer, but I'm going to go a little further and mention that embedded developers have the freedom to easily compile in only the features they need, which results is a fast-booting, bloat-free, lean operating system that is still as feature-rich as they desire.
Adding drivers for specialized hardware is easier than with other systems (Greg Kroah-Hartman and his team of volunteers will even write the drivers for you if you just provide specs), so hardware compatibility is a non-issue. With the abundance of Unix and portable C software available, software compatibility is also good.
Finally, Linux is free and easy to license, as long as you don't blatantly violate the GPL. (As of now, Linux is still licensed under version 2 of the GPL, so you still have a good number of options as far as how you use it and what you use it with.)
DavoJo has a good answer, but I'm going to go a little further and mention that embedded developers have the freedom to easily compile in only the features they need, which results is a fast-booting, bloat-free, lean operating system that is still as feature-rich as they desire.
Adding drivers for specialized hardware is easier than with other systems (Greg Kroah-Hartman and his team of volunteers will even write the drivers for you if you just provide specs), so hardware compatibility is a non-issue. With the abundance of Unix and portable C software available, software compatibility is also good.
Finally, Linux is free and easy to license, as long as you don't blatantly violate the GPL. (As of now, Linux is still licensed under version 2 of the GPL, so you still have a good number of options as far as how you use it and what you use it with.)
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