
crosstudio
New member
cakewalk boost
1. even if you have AGP sometimes having your graphics acceleration turned up can cause problems so move graphics acceleration all the way to the LEFT.
2. set your virtual memory (SWAP SIZE) to be 2.5 times the size of your ram. letting windoze funk with your virtual memory while your recording is bad news.
3. if you have a network card or modem, then set up a seperate windows profile for when you are doing music. in your music profile keep all the un-needed cards disabled.
4. turn off read ahead for your hard drive (although this is slowly going out of vogue, i still swear by it).
5. turn off windoze findfast.
6. turn off CD recognition.
there's more but i'm not on my box, i'm on the laptop.
i use a self-built amd 450mhz with 384m ram, a 9gig mecropolis scsi-uw i use for audio, and a 9gig IDE drive i keep my programs on. i'm using the frontier design wavecenter/tango 24bit card and breakout rack (8 tracks). i also use a sony dtc-a7 DAT as my monitor for previously recorded tracks. without eq, and compression on each track i get no less than 16 tracks at 24/48.
while tracking i use the slowest mix latency. when mixing i use the fastest mix latency.
BTW, since I have my virtual memory (SWAP) hard set, i'm going to create a partition just the right size and use it for my SWAP, then i shouldn't have to defrag so much. oh yeah. make sure that you defrag after any heavy session. run scandisk first before you defrag, and don't forget to backup your work before you do anything. i let you know how the partition trick does. or i'll wreck my machine... not for the first time.
1. even if you have AGP sometimes having your graphics acceleration turned up can cause problems so move graphics acceleration all the way to the LEFT.
2. set your virtual memory (SWAP SIZE) to be 2.5 times the size of your ram. letting windoze funk with your virtual memory while your recording is bad news.
3. if you have a network card or modem, then set up a seperate windows profile for when you are doing music. in your music profile keep all the un-needed cards disabled.
4. turn off read ahead for your hard drive (although this is slowly going out of vogue, i still swear by it).
5. turn off windoze findfast.
6. turn off CD recognition.
there's more but i'm not on my box, i'm on the laptop.
i use a self-built amd 450mhz with 384m ram, a 9gig mecropolis scsi-uw i use for audio, and a 9gig IDE drive i keep my programs on. i'm using the frontier design wavecenter/tango 24bit card and breakout rack (8 tracks). i also use a sony dtc-a7 DAT as my monitor for previously recorded tracks. without eq, and compression on each track i get no less than 16 tracks at 24/48.
while tracking i use the slowest mix latency. when mixing i use the fastest mix latency.
BTW, since I have my virtual memory (SWAP) hard set, i'm going to create a partition just the right size and use it for my SWAP, then i shouldn't have to defrag so much. oh yeah. make sure that you defrag after any heavy session. run scandisk first before you defrag, and don't forget to backup your work before you do anything. i let you know how the partition trick does. or i'll wreck my machine... not for the first time.