Now it's Dane Scott's turn to be the one asking the questions. Over at
LeBuzz, Dane
interviewed Maurice, a member of the
Kaldience team, a
" multitrack audio software for music recording, mixing and composing" being developed for BeOS, which you can view
here. It's an interesting read, and Kaldience looks good, and will (oxalá) fill an important gap on the BeOS world.
Thanks to Konrad for pointing me to this one. Also, to the non-portuguese speakers out there, who can tell me what "oxalá" means? The context should be enough.