Thank you!
Thank you!
Shades and Shade Toolhttp://www.sentinelmusicstudios.com/rml_studios.html
Each setup is different... the options exist so you can fine tune each system... some systems will be fine using 4, 6 or 8 cores... others will do better with one or two cores.
All you can do is try the different options while stressing your system with loaded down sessions and see what combination of settings gives you the best results.
Bob L
Great work - thank you Bob
Denis Hillman
Queensland
Australia
Bob, honestly I'd really like to know how you set up the LTSC systems so that it's as stable and free of slipped buffers as we know it from the XP installation.
What do you do differently from us?
I followed all the tweaks from the helpfile. But there are between 250 and over 600 slipped buffers over a period of 5-6 hours. Not as long as I sit in front of it, but during the time the system "plays alone".
Walter
SAC Host: i5-660, 3.33GHz, 12GB RAM, Win10 LTSC, (2) RayDAT, (3) Behringer ADA8000 modded, (4) Behringer ADA8200, 26" TFT
kabelwalter,
A few things....
1. Can you send us your general system specs, Mobo, CPU, RAM and I/O should do.
2. On all of my testing with WIN10 LTSC, for the most part, all that I have done are three main things:
a) Enabled Force Single CPU
b) Force RealTime Priority Class
c) System Properties > Advanced > Settings > i) Enable only, Show shadows under mouse pointer, ii) Smooth edges of screen fonts, and iii) Use drop shadows for icon labels on the desktop
...and this is pretty much that!
The SAC64 User Manual v1.1, 3.1.6 Tweaking Windows For Better Performance, Page 18, 25 to 35 has more tweaking information for you to consider - which look to be already completed by you?
Lastly, to have that many slipped buffers indicates to me that there is something else going on.
PS: Can you email me a snapshot of your desktop please? email_me
Win 10 is definitely not as stable and solid for realtime usage as XP... but its all we have at this time... it is definitely a challenge to keep it from randomly sipping buffers because there sre so many background processes interfering all the time.
Many factors are involved... including the motherboard chipsets... the video drivers involved... the soundcards... the software installed on the system besides SAC and SAWStudio... etc...
It can get the job done... but not as easily as an XP system.
Bob L
For me, as long as I can source the hardware, it's xp for live sound. I find windows 10 great for home and office but for live sound work it's xp. I just find it less complicated and it feels safer. It kinda never misses a beat, but, I guess, each to their own.
I watched the overview for the new Behringer WING mixer. Their engineer referred to their "realtime OS" inside the mixer. It's too bad that Microsoft can't have some setting or settings that can reconfigure Windows to operate as a "realtime OS" for audio, video and gaming applications vs. mining for various esoteric hidden tweaks.
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