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Hi
I'll attempt to help here - but PC issues are sometimes a little difficult to resolve remotely.
A laptop is always a little less capable than its desktop equivalent - especially with celery in it . I noticed you are running XP, good - so am I.
just need to know a few things.
How much RAM have you got? -- How much virtual memory are you using? how big is your pagefile? - How much HDD space have you got free?
Does the software you are using allow you to adjust the amount of RAM the process takes?
I'm familiar with M-audio's breakout box -- but my PC is using a full ATX motherboard with M-Audio's PCi card slotted in, 2GB ram
The process is fairly RAM intensive
Trial version of a package called "Everest" which looks throughout your PC to check its settings and hardware
http://www.lavalys.com/products/download.php?ps=UE&lang=en
This may be helpful to understand your particular configuration
cheers
I don't know of any software that will automatically put in a marker with each new LP track - but such software may exist.
One thing you could try is to record with Window's little built in sound recorder. It is a small, simple application which does not take up much computer resources. Perhaps the software you were running is asking a bit too much of your computer.
Also try recording at 16/44.1 (if you are not already). 24/96 recording demands quite a bit of a computer.
I have an application that allows you to set automatic split points based on dB. I haven't used it for vinyl, though. Also, I have a mac.
Of course! This would work great.
I always thought of these features as a way to set the recorder up to automatically capture when someone is playing but obviously it work just as well for needle drops. <slap!> silly elk.
Thx for reply. I have 512MB of DRAM. Pagefile: 768MB. Disk is a 60GB disk w/ about 20GB free (I was nowhere near filling the disk when it crashed.)
I suspect I'm running out of RAM. I have a much more powerful desktop but it's not located where my audio system is. Hmmm. I may move my audio system and try it.
Running out of RAM is the most usual suspect - a nice juicy upgrade is no hard on the wallet - you should also notice a small increase in speed and load time.