Freeze and ROM-plers and RAM
#1
Posted 02 October 2003 - 09:32 PM
I tried search with "freeze RAM" but found nothing useful. I'm sorry if my search was insufficient. I might have posted in audio instruments/ effects, but I posted it here, since freeze is specific to Logic 6. Feel free to move it (mods).
#2
Posted 06 October 2003 - 10:50 AM
Moved to soft instruments....I don't know how much memory Trilogy requires....so hopefully someone in the other sub-forum will be able to give you some info (or the Spectrasonics site).
#3
Posted 06 October 2003 - 08:03 PM
| QUOTE |
| oscwilde: While Freeze does make use of RAM, it isn't extensive, so 512 should be plenty for your situation. |
| QUOTE |
| oscwilde: I don't know how much memory Trilogy requires.... |
Oh, and thanks a lot! (Sorry for the wrong forum post)
#4
Posted 07 October 2003 - 01:25 AM
Re: your question of Ram and Freeze.
After a track is frozen, Trilogy will no longer need its Ram as the track has been transmuted into an audio track. That instrument plug-in is no longer playing your MIDI notes. It is simply an audio file on your hard drive.
I don't have any ROMplers here, but AFAIK the Freeze function will only help you.
best,
Logicat
#5
Posted 07 October 2003 - 08:15 AM
#6
Posted 07 October 2003 - 11:51 AM
| QUOTE |
| - That means the use of RAM is dependant on Logic and not the track that has been frozen? |
As the other guys suggest...a RAM based instrument (Trilogy, EXS24 etc.) will still have a sample loaded into memory - even after freezing.
The only way to "reclaim" this memory is to unload the instrument and use the frozen track (or to bounce it to an audio file).
Freeze is all about saving PROCESSING resources, not memory.
My comment above about Freeze making use of RAM is simply as a buffer, during the actual Freeze process....and a small amount of RAM as a playback buffer for the frozen audio track.
#7
Posted 07 October 2003 - 08:21 PM
| QUOTE |
| synthdogg: While the freeze function creates an audio track so the ROMpler is not actually playing when you play your track back, the ROMpler is still open with a sound loaded up, and therefore it still eats up the RAM needed to hold that sound in memory. The freeze function helps lessen the CPU load, but doesn't help so much in the RAM department. |
#8
Posted 07 October 2003 - 08:40 PM
| QUOTE |
| If I were to get Trilogy, I guess I would need to bounce the Trilogy tracks |
#9
Posted 08 October 2003 - 03:30 AM
| QUOTE | ||
david mondrup:
|
But I could allways eat cake instead. wink
#10
Posted 08 October 2003 - 07:32 AM
#11
Posted 08 October 2003 - 08:12 PM
#12
Posted 08 October 2003 - 08:52 PM
One word of caution; make sure the technician takes full responsibility before inserting the ram. If he refuses, go see another dealer - Oslo should be large enough to have several computer stores. I upgraded memory on my wifes Toshiba laptop a few weeks back. The first dealer I went to refused to install memory unless I took responsibility, as he foresaw having to give me a new laptop if the type off memory turned out to be wrong. When I told this to the next dealer, he laughed, promised me to take responsibility, installed 256 mb extra and it's working as fine as ever ...
#13
Posted 09 October 2003 - 12:34 AM
| QUOTE |
| david mondrup: Just noticed you're using a powerbook. That makes memory a little more expensive, but also easier to check. |
Oslo is big enough, and thanks for good advise!

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