Mathieu, thanks for all the tips. I will try these out later this week on site.
In regards to your question about vline~, I was currently just using the line object to turn up and down the clip volume. All the best, Julio On Mon, Jul 5, 2010 at 9:10 AM, Mathieu Bouchard <[email protected]> wrote: > On Mon, 5 Jul 2010, Julio Terra wrote: > > The crash often happens all by itself (e.g. no input is being processed by >> the patch at the time of the crash). >> > > The video you are playing is a kind of input in some manner (though it's > also useful to know that you're not having any other input than that). > > First, check out the Load Meter patch (in the Media menu) and make sure > that the number doesn't increase over time. (though usually, it wouldn't > make the sound disappear suddenly) > > Then, there's a system programme that allows you to check how much RAM the > programmes (.app and others) are using. PureData is represented by two > entries. Make sure that there isn't one that inflates like crazy over time. > Also make sure the CPU doesn't grow over time (Load Meter only reports one > of the CPU values and doesn't tell you about the other entry). > > Then later, check whether it makes a difference whether the result of > [pix_film] is used at all : try disconnecting [pix_texture] but keep > [gemhead] active. > > If you still don't find a difference, try the [pix_film] test with a > reencoding of your video file in a different codec. > > Do you use [vline~] at all, in your audio part ? > > > _ _ __ ___ _____ ________ _____________ _____________________ ... > | Mathieu Bouchard, Montréal, Québec. téléphone: +1.514.383.3801 >
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