On Wed, 1 Apr 2015 14:26:15 -0700, Mark Romero wrote:
> Thank you all for all your help.
>
> I have been soliciting advice from all sorts of Lightroom forums / adobe
> forums / Dell computer forums and other forums more specific to hardware
> and Lightroom, and they all ended up in a dead end.
>
Thank you Kess for the suggestions:
Number of photos per directory: I tried this but it seems to have had no
benefit. i went from 200 photos in one directory down to 50 photos in four
directories, and there was no change.
I will try your other suggestions (disable automatic re-catalogging and
that makes
a difference.
-Original Message-
From: sqlite-users-boun...@mailinglists.sqlite.org
[mailto:sqlite-users-bounces at mailinglists.sqlite.org] On Behalf Of Mark
Romero
Sent: Wednesday, April 1, 2015 3:17 PM
To: General Discussion of SQLite Database
Subject: Re: [sqlite] Did A Rece
On 2015-04-01 09:17 PM, Mark Romero wrote:
> Hello everyone and thanks for your replies (I am new to using a mailing
> list so I hope that everyone gets this response).
Everyone did. As to the question - as Simon mentioned, we are not aware
- but I am not a Lightroom or Win7 user, so I phoned
We can only answer your original question with a 'No'. We're not aware of any
dramatic SQLite slow-down with any recent Windows update, let alone W7
specifically. As Alex wrote, it's probably better if you ask questions on a
forum about Lightroom.
Simon.
You may or may not find this Adobe Lightroom thread helpful
(it winds up discussing critical sections and thread proliferation
-- which are not a SQLite issues):
https://forums.adobe.com/thread/1229203?tstart=0
Jim Callahan
On Wed, Apr 1, 2015 at 3:21 PM, Simon Slavin wrote:
> We can only
Thank you all for all your help.
I have been soliciting advice from all sorts of Lightroom forums / adobe
forums / Dell computer forums and other forums more specific to hardware
and Lightroom, and they all ended up in a dead end.
But seeing as though it DOESN'T look like a recent Win 7 update
Hello everyone and thanks for your replies (I am new to using a mailing
list so I hope that everyone gets this response).
- Viruses and Antivirus software:
I use Avast in real time and I have scanned my system several times and it
came up clean.
I installed malwarebytes shortly after Lightroom
Regarding: "... would love to see the SQLite schema Lightroom uses"
Hi, Rob
I am not a user of Lightroom, but there's a start at this link:
http://www.earthboundlight.com/phototips/querying-sqlite-lightroom-database.html
Hi Mark
I echo the suggestion that you make sure your HDD is working properly by
doing a disk scan of some sort. It's dangerous to start trying other
solutions if the drive is about to fail! While you're at it, it's probably
a good idea to make sure your backups are up to date -- and by backup
I have to challenge one of your statements. Adobe Camera Raw is not
nearly identical to Lightroom. ACR is Lightroom's editing engine.
When you are editing an image in Lightroom, you are using ACR. ACR
has no need for a database of any kind, unless the XMP file contains a
very tiny database.
Mark Romero wrote:
>
> A few months ago one of the programs that I use (Lightroom) started to
> have long periods where it would stop responding. It wouldn't crash,
> but it would just keep my CPU pegged at 100% and the program would stop
> responding. This would happen at random times.
>
When
On 03/31/2015 05:17 PM, Mark Romero wrote:
> Hey Everyone:
>
> Was there a recent Windows 7 64-bit update that affected SQLite?
>
> A few months ago one of the programs that I use (Lightroom) started to have
> long periods where it would stop responding. It wouldn't crash, but it
> would just
Hey Everyone:
Was there a recent Windows 7 64-bit update that affected SQLite?
A few months ago one of the programs that I use (Lightroom) started to have
long periods where it would stop responding. It wouldn't crash, but it
would just keep my CPU pegged at 100% and the program would stop
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