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BobbyinTN wrote:I've got a question. I just upgraded my computer to VISTA. I was using Cakewalk Music Creator 4 and when I had XP I had no problems, now I'm having shitloads of problems. The playback is exaggerated and skippy. I can't record live vocals because they won't sync up. I can't find a driver online that works and support says the sound card should be working.
I bought Cakewalk Music Creator 4 because it was pretty cheap, about 40 bucks and easy to use.
Anyone know of a PC Studio that will work with VISTA and still be fairly easy to use and affordable?
Thanks for any help you can give me.
01-03-2009
Windows 7 leaked on torrent sites - so what's the good news?
A couple of days ago, the world wide web was abuzz with the news that beta copies of Microsoft's new operating system Windows 7 has been leaked on torrent sites. In development since 2007, Windows 7 was unveiled in October 2008 and the first beta was due to be released at the Consumer Electronics Show in January. But a leaked version is already in circulation.
Understandably, there is a mad rush to try out the latest offering. On a well known (and notorious) Sweden-based torrent tracking site, one copy of the file has nearly 5,000 seeders (those who have got the full file) and nearly 6,000 leechers/peers (those still getting it).
So what can you look forward to in Windows 7? Adrian Kingsley-Hughes, reviewing the leaked OS on his ZDNet blog says Windows 7 installs faster and is more stable than Vista or even XP, has a new taskbar and sports nifty features like snapping windows to size (Aero Snap). For more, see lifehacker's top 10 Windows 7 features. No doubt, as more details emerge in the coming days, we will have a much clearer picture and be able to decide better if we love or hate the new Windows.
While it's bad news for Microsoft that the new operating system has leaked on the internet ahead of its scheduled release, Windows sufferers may be letting out a collective groan over the fact that Microsoft is unleashing yet another windows update on millions of users, especially those still recuperating from the Vista experience.
But there may yet be some hope, for things are changing at Microsoft. William Henry Gates III is no longer at the helm and the new Magician In Chief is sending out very strong signals that things will be different at the Redmond headquarters under his rule.
Ray Ozzie, MS's new Chief Software Architect, is a low profile industry veteran (his Wikipedia entry is less than 250 words) with incredible geek credentials (the creator of Lotus Notes, he was handpicked for the role by Gates who described him as "one of the top five programmers in the universe").
Ozzie is making it abundantly clear that he will end the practice of rush releasing a new version of Windows every few years and shift the company's focus back to what the user really wants. Some of the more interesting things Ozzie and his team are working on include MS's "operating system in the clouds" Windows Azure, and Live Mesh which will allow PC and Mac users to synchronize all their files, photos, and music with all their devices.
Digidesign strives to support a wide variety of host computers and operating systems with our Pro Tools® product line, and we’re excited to support Windows Vista (32-bit) Ultimate and Business operating systems with Pro Tools LE® 7.4 and Pro Tools M-Powered™ 7.4 software. However, at this time Pro Tools HD® 7.4 software is not compatible with Windows Vista. Customers using Pro Tools HD 7.4 wishing to upgrade to Windows Vista should wait until support is officially announced.
BobbyinTN wrote:I've got a question. I just upgraded my computer to VISTA. I was using Cakewalk Music Creator 4 and when I had XP I had no problems, now I'm having shitloads of problems. The playback is exaggerated and skippy. I can't record live vocals because they won't sync up. I can't find a driver online that works and support says the sound card should be working.
I bought Cakewalk Music Creator 4 because it was pretty cheap, about 40 bucks and easy to use.
Anyone know of a PC Studio that will work with VISTA and still be fairly easy to use and affordable?
Thanks for any help you can give me.
T-Bone wrote:Loading up on memory for a 32 bit operating system means 3-3.5gb max. 32 will not acknowledge any more than that. If you have a Vista 64 bit OS, then you can add as much as you want.
Now, as far as your program goes, did you check to see if it was Vista compatible before installing ot or switching to Vista to begin with?
This may halp a little:
http://www.iexbeta.com/wiki/index.php/W ... ility_List
Rick wrote:T-Bone wrote:Loading up on memory for a 32 bit operating system means 3-3.5gb max. 32 will not acknowledge any more than that. If you have a Vista 64 bit OS, then you can add as much as you want.
Now, as far as your program goes, did you check to see if it was Vista compatible before installing ot or switching to Vista to begin with?
This may halp a little:
http://www.iexbeta.com/wiki/index.php/W ... ility_List
Yeah, that 4GB ram limit is ridiculous. I'm showing 3.25 of 4. I installed 64bit Vista on another partition just to see if it would work, and there are no video drivers that work well with my card. When I enable dual monitors, it goes haywire. I'm glad I tried it before I went out and bought it.
Rick wrote:T-Bone wrote:Loading up on memory for a 32 bit operating system means 3-3.5gb max. 32 will not acknowledge any more than that. If you have a Vista 64 bit OS, then you can add as much as you want.
Now, as far as your program goes, did you check to see if it was Vista compatible before installing ot or switching to Vista to begin with?
This may halp a little:
http://www.iexbeta.com/wiki/index.php/W ... ility_List
Yeah, that 4GB ram limit is ridiculous. I'm showing 3.25 of 4. I installed 64bit Vista on another partition just to see if it would work, and there are no video drivers that work well with my card. When I enable dual monitors, it goes haywire. I'm glad I tried it before I went out and bought it.
T-Bone wrote:Rick wrote:T-Bone wrote:Loading up on memory for a 32 bit operating system means 3-3.5gb max. 32 will not acknowledge any more than that. If you have a Vista 64 bit OS, then you can add as much as you want.
Now, as far as your program goes, did you check to see if it was Vista compatible before installing ot or switching to Vista to begin with?
This may halp a little:
http://www.iexbeta.com/wiki/index.php/W ... ility_List
Yeah, that 4GB ram limit is ridiculous. I'm showing 3.25 of 4. I installed 64bit Vista on another partition just to see if it would work, and there are no video drivers that work well with my card. When I enable dual monitors, it goes haywire. I'm glad I tried it before I went out and bought it.
What card? Video card I'm assuming? Have you tried either updating to the newest drivers or possibly going backwards to a previous driver set to see if they work better? I had that problem a while back with an ATI card. The newest drivers really screwed up a few of my games, so I went to a set that was 2 updates previous and it worked perfectly. Make sure you uninstall the drivers you have first by using the Cat-Uninstaller for ATI and whatever Nvidia uses depending on what brand you have.
Oh.... The OS doesn't acknowlede the extra memory above what it shows in properties, but aparently, the system does or is supposed to use it for video... My system is a dual boot XP Home and Vista Home Premium 64 bit. XP sees 3.25gb and Vista sees all 4gb. Oddly enough, I built almost the same system for a friend of mine but used the Q9300 processor for him and his XP saw 3.50gb for a while and now shows 3.25gb. That was odd...
Anyway, back to the program problem
strangegrey wrote:
Depends on the service pack for vista. If you're not running sp1, you wont "see" the full 4gb of ram. On my desktop, I have sp1 installed, and it most definitely 'shows' 4gb of ram when you pull up my computer. Whether or not the full 4gb is available to the pc is an entirely different story....it might just be that there's a workaround in sp1 that will display 4gb if that's what's plugged into the machine.
Rick wrote:T-Bone wrote:Rick wrote:T-Bone wrote:Loading up on memory for a 32 bit operating system means 3-3.5gb max. 32 will not acknowledge any more than that. If you have a Vista 64 bit OS, then you can add as much as you want.
Now, as far as your program goes, did you check to see if it was Vista compatible before installing ot or switching to Vista to begin with?
This may halp a little:
http://www.iexbeta.com/wiki/index.php/W ... ility_List
Yeah, that 4GB ram limit is ridiculous. I'm showing 3.25 of 4. I installed 64bit Vista on another partition just to see if it would work, and there are no video drivers that work well with my card. When I enable dual monitors, it goes haywire. I'm glad I tried it before I went out and bought it.
What card? Video card I'm assuming? Have you tried either updating to the newest drivers or possibly going backwards to a previous driver set to see if they work better? I had that problem a while back with an ATI card. The newest drivers really screwed up a few of my games, so I went to a set that was 2 updates previous and it worked perfectly. Make sure you uninstall the drivers you have first by using the Cat-Uninstaller for ATI and whatever Nvidia uses depending on what brand you have.
Oh.... The OS doesn't acknowlede the extra memory above what it shows in properties, but aparently, the system does or is supposed to use it for video... My system is a dual boot XP Home and Vista Home Premium 64 bit. XP sees 3.25gb and Vista sees all 4gb. Oddly enough, I built almost the same system for a friend of mine but used the Q9300 processor for him and his XP saw 3.50gb for a while and now shows 3.25gb. That was odd...
Anyway, back to the program problem
It's a Nvidia 7900 GT. I tried about 3 different drivers. One was still in beta, and it was the worst. I didn't try older ones though. If I ever install it again, which I probably will, I'll try that. Thanks.
StyxCollector wrote:The under 4GB limitation is purely a 32-bit one as T-Bone says. No 32-bit desktop version of Windows can basically access )meaning use) more than about 3.2GB of RAM even if there is more in the system.
StyxCollector wrote:You're wrong about ProTools. 7.4 does support Vista, so does 8.
http://www.digidesign.com/index.cfm?nav ... emid=28430 (7.4)
Ray Ozzie, MS's new Chief Software Architect, is a low profile industry veteran (his Wikipedia entry is less than 250 words) with incredible geek credentials (the creator of Lotus Notes, he was handpicked for the role by Gates who described him as "one of the top five programmers in the universe"). Ozzie is making it abundantly clear that he will end the practice of rush releasing a new version of Windows every few years and shift the company's focus back to what the user really wants.
T-Bone wrote:strangegrey wrote:
Depends on the service pack for vista. If you're not running sp1, you wont "see" the full 4gb of ram. On my desktop, I have sp1 installed, and it most definitely 'shows' 4gb of ram when you pull up my computer. Whether or not the full 4gb is available to the pc is an entirely different story....it might just be that there's a workaround in sp1 that will display 4gb if that's what's plugged into the machine.
Service pack has nothing to do with it. It's entirely based on whether you have a 32 bit or 64 bit operating system. Vista Home Premium and Vista Ultimate both come in 32 bit and 64 bit versions. The differences are the fact that the 64 bit versions will unlock certain aspects of a 64 bit capable Processor Chip, where as a 32 bit OS will run as normal and use the 32 bit aspects only of the 64 bit processor chip. One of those aspects is the fact that a 64 bit OS will unlock the 64 bit processor and utilize and acknowledge more memory.
strangegrey wrote:T-Bone wrote:strangegrey wrote:
Depends on the service pack for vista. If you're not running sp1, you wont "see" the full 4gb of ram. On my desktop, I have sp1 installed, and it most definitely 'shows' 4gb of ram when you pull up my computer. Whether or not the full 4gb is available to the pc is an entirely different story....it might just be that there's a workaround in sp1 that will display 4gb if that's what's plugged into the machine.
Service pack has nothing to do with it. It's entirely based on whether you have a 32 bit or 64 bit operating system. Vista Home Premium and Vista Ultimate both come in 32 bit and 64 bit versions. The differences are the fact that the 64 bit versions will unlock certain aspects of a 64 bit capable Processor Chip, where as a 32 bit OS will run as normal and use the 32 bit aspects only of the 64 bit processor chip. One of those aspects is the fact that a 64 bit OS will unlock the 64 bit processor and utilize and acknowledge more memory.
You're missing my point...The point I said is that if you're running SP1, you *see* 4gb. In truth, a 32bit operating system will use 3 and change...but SP1 'presents to the user' a 4gb readout. Like I said, I'm fairly certain that it's just a work around so that they can reduce the amount of service calls of people going "hey, I have 4 gb in this machine, why is it only reading 3.78gb" or whatever...
Also, while the 64 bit OS will 'unlock' the extra memory, as you say...the underlying reason is that once memory is partitioned, there's a bit-length limitation that exists with 32 bits.
BobbyinTN wrote:I've got a question. I just upgraded my computer to VISTA. I was using Cakewalk Music Creator 4 and when I had XP I had no problems, now I'm having shitloads of problems. The playback is exaggerated and skippy. I can't record live vocals because they won't sync up. I can't find a driver online that works and support says the sound card should be working.
I bought Cakewalk Music Creator 4 because it was pretty cheap, about 40 bucks and easy to use.
Anyone know of a PC Studio that will work with VISTA and still be fairly easy to use and affordable?
Thanks for any help you can give me.
brywool wrote:BobbyinTN wrote:I've got a question. I just upgraded my computer to VISTA. I was using Cakewalk Music Creator 4 and when I had XP I had no problems, now I'm having shitloads of problems. The playback is exaggerated and skippy. I can't record live vocals because they won't sync up. I can't find a driver online that works and support says the sound card should be working.
I bought Cakewalk Music Creator 4 because it was pretty cheap, about 40 bucks and easy to use.
Anyone know of a PC Studio that will work with VISTA and still be fairly easy to use and affordable?
Thanks for any help you can give me.
BobbyinTN- I use CW3 but not with Vista. Check the Cakewalk MC forum. They're SUPER helpful over there.
http://forum.cakewalk.com/tt.asp?forumid=18
Oops, missed the last response. Anyway, they're great people over there to answer your CWMC questions.
BobbyinTN wrote:brywool wrote:BobbyinTN wrote:I've got a question. I just upgraded my computer to VISTA. I was using Cakewalk Music Creator 4 and when I had XP I had no problems, now I'm having shitloads of problems. The playback is exaggerated and skippy. I can't record live vocals because they won't sync up. I can't find a driver online that works and support says the sound card should be working.
I bought Cakewalk Music Creator 4 because it was pretty cheap, about 40 bucks and easy to use.
Anyone know of a PC Studio that will work with VISTA and still be fairly easy to use and affordable?
Thanks for any help you can give me.
BobbyinTN- I use CW3 but not with Vista. Check the Cakewalk MC forum. They're SUPER helpful over there.
http://forum.cakewalk.com/tt.asp?forumid=18
Oops, missed the last response. Anyway, they're great people over there to answer your CWMC questions.
LOL! Thanks Bry. I'm sure I've worried the shit outta those guys at Cakewalk support. LOL
BobbyinTN wrote:Thank you all VERY much. I figured it out last night, FINALLY. I'm WAY the wrong person to be working on these things, I like to point and click and get on with my day.
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