manual/include/why-is-it-called-ardour.html
Shamus Hammons dfec6899ef Initial cleanup of manual content.
This includes fixing em-dashes, badly spaced colons, various
misspellings, removal of spurious {% %} constructs, conversion of <br />
to <br> (still too many <br>s kicking around), and initial light cleanup
of a few sections that caught my eye.
2017-02-14 09:18:56 -06:00

31 lines
1.2 KiB
HTML

<p>
The name <dfn>"Ardour"</dfn> came from considerations of how to pronounce the acronym
<abbr title="Hard Disk Recorder">HDR</abbr>. The most obvious attempt sounds
like a vowelless "harder" and it then was then a short step to an unrelated
but slightly homophonic word:
</p>
<blockquote>
<p>
<dfn>ardour</dfn> n 1: a feeling of strong eagerness (usually in favor of
a person or cause); "they were imbued with a revolutionary ardor"; "he
felt a kind of religious zeal" [syn: ardor, elan, zeal]<br>
2: intense feeling of love [syn: ardor]<br>
3: feelings of great warmth and intensity; "he spoke with great ardor"
[syn: ardor, fervor, fervour, fervency, fire, fervidness]
</p>
</blockquote>
<p>
Given the work required to develop Ardour, and the personality of its
primary author, the name seemed appropriate even without the vague
relationship to HDR.
</p>
<p>
Years later, another interpretation of "Ardour" appeared, this time based
on listening to non-native English speakers attempt to pronounce the word.
Rather than "Ardour", it became "Our DAW", which seemed poetically fitting
for a Digital Audio Workstation whose source code and design belongs to a
group of collaborators.
</p>