
FattMusiek
New member
Does anyone convert their wavs to any other format to conserve space? Is losslessly converting even possible?
Wave for a reason, no?
Wave for a reason, no?
Well no... all you can do to a WAV is apply lossy data compression to reduce its size. That's why we have MP3 formats in the first place (size constraints).... but you sacrifice audio quality for size of data.FattMusiek said:Is losslessly converting even possible?
As a default, Windows creates a swapfile, no matter how much memory you have in your computer and when your boot partition is almost full, the OS will try to find every free bit of hard drive space which will result in highly fragmented files.Scott Mellish said:I know it technically shouldn't; but do you guys find when the hardrive you're booting off gets close to its storage maximum that the system slows down??? or is that just me?
christiaan said:If you have enough RAM installed (At least 512 for XP) you may consider disabling the swapfile.
A cleanup and defrag would be better though.
Not disagreeing here.Ed Dixon said:I would recommend against ever turning off the OS swapfile. If your space is this low, you need to buy another hard drive.
Ed
Ed Dixon said:I would recommend against ever turning off the OS swapfile. If your space is this low, you need to buy another hard drive.
Ed
...all you can do to a WAV is apply lossy data compression to reduce its size.
Often stated, strictly speaking true but really for a lot of homereccers pretty academic. A one-drive configuration is still good for dozens of tracks.TimOBrien said:You should have 2 drives on your PC anyway, one for the OS & apps and the other just for data (you'll get more tracks in your projects if they are streaming off their own drive.)
TimOBrien said:With 80-120Gb drives running so incredibly cheap these days ($100US or less if you watch the sales), it's insane to think about compression. GET A BIGGER DRIVE.
You should have 2 drives on your PC anyway, one for the OS & apps and the other just for data (you'll get more tracks in your projects if they are streaming off their own drive.)
Blue Bear Sound said:Well, yeah - but it's usually an insignificant amount with respect the overall size of a 24-bit project... and it's rare that you even get 10% - more like 3-4% (at least, so I've found...)