another, possibly stupid xp question
Really sorry as this has prob been discussed a million times but i am nervous and need help!
I currently have a PIII 750 with 512Mb RAM Pulsar II card cubase VST 5.1. My windows 98 system is giving up the ghost and i want to upgrade to xp.
1. I have SFP, but do i install earlier versions before reinstalling SFP on to XP?
2. I have backed up everything to my second hard drive, but is there anything else i should be doing?
3. I am running Cubase VST 5.1 r.1, ReCycle 1.7, Wavelab 2.02, Rebirth-338 2.0 does anyone know of any issues with these
apologies for the amount of questions!
sorry if you have seen this type of post loads, but thanks in advance!
Kalinski
I currently have a PIII 750 with 512Mb RAM Pulsar II card cubase VST 5.1. My windows 98 system is giving up the ghost and i want to upgrade to xp.
1. I have SFP, but do i install earlier versions before reinstalling SFP on to XP?
2. I have backed up everything to my second hard drive, but is there anything else i should be doing?
3. I am running Cubase VST 5.1 r.1, ReCycle 1.7, Wavelab 2.02, Rebirth-338 2.0 does anyone know of any issues with these
apologies for the amount of questions!
sorry if you have seen this type of post loads, but thanks in advance!
Kalinski
Hi Kalinski,
No you're not being really stupid, you just need to spend some time reading the posts that interest you here at Planet Z.
When you install XP as a clean OS it will let you choose how to format your C drive. Choose NTFS, and let it format your drive. Take all your cards out prior to install so that it installs the windows drivers only. When installed do the tweaks mentioned in the tips and tricks section. Then install your CW cards, then other cards. Windows XP will tell you that the CW drivers are unsigned, just press 'install anyway'. Don't install SFP until you have all your other audio software installed.
NTFS handles large files better than FAT32 and offers higher encryption.
There are a number of posts here that will answer your questions.
No you're not being really stupid, you just need to spend some time reading the posts that interest you here at Planet Z.
When you install XP as a clean OS it will let you choose how to format your C drive. Choose NTFS, and let it format your drive. Take all your cards out prior to install so that it installs the windows drivers only. When installed do the tweaks mentioned in the tips and tricks section. Then install your CW cards, then other cards. Windows XP will tell you that the CW drivers are unsigned, just press 'install anyway'. Don't install SFP until you have all your other audio software installed.
NTFS handles large files better than FAT32 and offers higher encryption.
There are a number of posts here that will answer your questions.
R
This might be a bit of a spanner in your works, but I don't think I would trust a 750Mhz PIII machine to run XP efficiently.....XP is optimized for PIV.
I might be totally paranoid, but I for one waited till I upgraded my whole system before turning to XP.
Also if you do use XP, make sure you install it in Standard PC mode rather than the default ACPI mode.....I found Scope just doesn't work properly unless you do this (Everybody....please correct me if you've had it working in ACPI) but believe me, this had me scratching my head for many hours.
You will need to reinstall a hell of a lot of stuff as well, so BE CAREFUL.
I have to say, XP (if you do get it working) is a great deal more stable than 98SE and I haven't looked back once, but I'd recommend getting as powerful a machine as you can afford.
I might be totally paranoid, but I for one waited till I upgraded my whole system before turning to XP.
Also if you do use XP, make sure you install it in Standard PC mode rather than the default ACPI mode.....I found Scope just doesn't work properly unless you do this (Everybody....please correct me if you've had it working in ACPI) but believe me, this had me scratching my head for many hours.
You will need to reinstall a hell of a lot of stuff as well, so BE CAREFUL.
I have to say, XP (if you do get it working) is a great deal more stable than 98SE and I haven't looked back once, but I'd recommend getting as powerful a machine as you can afford.
check out the thread in tips and tricks for the order things should ne installed in.when done right,the os is optimized for the tasks it needs to perform. the reason for removing the cards is the same.it is not absolutely nessessary,but doing it right makes fewer chances for problems.
definitely,use 3.1c!
definitely,use 3.1c!
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Hi Kalinski
Which motherboard are you using? Does it offer you the choice of APIC?
My 2p on this whole question:
Windows 2000
------------
Install in standard PC mode (no ACPI)
Disable 'plug & play OS' in BIOS
Disable 'APIC' in BIOS
Use the middle PCI slots for the Creamware card(s) and set their IRQs in BIOS
Windows XP
----------
If motherboard supports APIC, install XP in ACPI mode, enable plug & play OS in BIOS and enable APIC - allow the system to set the IRQs for the creamware card(s) (again, use the middle PCI slots).
If not, install as for Windows 2000.
In both cases, disable USB2 if your motherboard supports this interface.
Preferably, do not use any other PCI cards (other than your Creamware or Audio I/O cards). Disable any unused motherboard devices (e.g. on-board LAN).
Always use an AGP graphics card, never a PCI one.
Lastly...do not use a VIA chipset motherboard. For pentium-based PCs, use an intel chipset motherboard to guarantee good PCI bus bandwidth.
Royston
Which motherboard are you using? Does it offer you the choice of APIC?
My 2p on this whole question:
Windows 2000
------------
Install in standard PC mode (no ACPI)
Disable 'plug & play OS' in BIOS
Disable 'APIC' in BIOS
Use the middle PCI slots for the Creamware card(s) and set their IRQs in BIOS
Windows XP
----------
If motherboard supports APIC, install XP in ACPI mode, enable plug & play OS in BIOS and enable APIC - allow the system to set the IRQs for the creamware card(s) (again, use the middle PCI slots).
If not, install as for Windows 2000.
In both cases, disable USB2 if your motherboard supports this interface.
Preferably, do not use any other PCI cards (other than your Creamware or Audio I/O cards). Disable any unused motherboard devices (e.g. on-board LAN).
Always use an AGP graphics card, never a PCI one.
Lastly...do not use a VIA chipset motherboard. For pentium-based PCs, use an intel chipset motherboard to guarantee good PCI bus bandwidth.
Royston