Quentin Harley wrote: > fred wrote: > >> Quentin Harley a écrit : >> >>> Ralf Mardorf wrote: >>> >>>> For on-board graphics it might help to reduce the frame buffer by >>>> the BIOS settings, to get some more RAM. >>>> >>> This makes a huge difference. As a matter of fact, disable on-board >>> GPU and use an AGP or PCI-e graphics card. >>> >>> >> Just to be sure : I have to enter the BIOS and find "frame buffer" to >> reduce it, OR change parameters in kernel and recompile it ??? >> >> > > > BIOS. It is sometimes referred to as "Shared video memory" > > I had major problems with my on-boards graphics card, and after I > replaced it with the cheapest nVidia card I could find at the time > (Geforce 6200) my problems went away.
Just to be sure that there's no misunderstanding. ONLY graphics that are integrated to the mobo share memory from the RAM, as Quentin mentioned, AGP and PCIex graphic cards do have their own memory. It might be that a lot of memory is wasted for an on-board graphics. I installed hwinfo and if I run 'hwinfo --memory' I got 'Memory Size: 1 GB + 896 MB', because I've got 1024MB + (1024MB - 128MB for frame buffer). I guess that I'm not using the smallest frame buffer, but if you only have 1GB you should try to set it as small as possible, 32MB or similar. IMO mixing down tracks, before the complete mix is done, isn't a satisfying solution. Another multi band compressor, without graphical EQ, instead of using JAMin for the stereo sum would be a solution. Unfortunately I don't know any compressor that is good enough to replace JAMin, resp. I know one VST multi band compressor, but it didn't run on my 64 Studio. _______________________________________________ 64studio-users mailing list [email protected] http://lists.64studio.com/mailman/listinfo/64studio-users
