stamkorg wrote:Even the right power plans?
One thing to note is that Linux Mint (and possibly other distributions) typically come defaulting to the "powersave" mode and without any obvious way to change that. The control panel "power management" window does not provide a way to directly change these. So by default Pianoteq on Linux will run under "powersave" (not Modartt's fault) and this can cause clicking and audio drop-outs and glitches !
"Powersave" and "Performance" are power management modes directly linked to the Intel CPU's power management model.
To add this ability using the Mate desktop you need to go into "Control Panel" and select "Startup Applications". From there look for the "CPU Frequency Scaling Indicator" and make sure it's selected to startup automatically. Using that widget you can switch between "power" and "performance" at will. For Pianoteq you want "performance" to avoid clicks and similar audio issues.
It may be necessary to install this widget using Synaptic. If that happens you want to install a thing called "indicator-cpufreq".
You may need to restart to get that up and running (can't recall exactly what I did at the time).
After that you'll have a small indicator on your desktop panel that you can switch between different power management modes.
Why Linux Mint Mate comes without this installed and operating by default I don't know, but it's a darn silly thing to leave out as it prevents Linux users getting max performance from their systems. In theory "powersave" should ramp up performance as required, but the problem is that in practice this leads to variable performance which causes issues.
StephenG