I'm working on very big files and for the first time my hardware can't keep up with them. (i7 272QM 2.2 MHz, Nvidia 460M, 12 GB RAM and SSD). The best solution I found was to disable "Play every frame". There is really a lot of difference to playback with or without this option, especially with many plugins. What does it mean to keep it disabled? (except for plugins that require it).
Andrea:
The best solution I found was to disable "Play every frame". There is really a lot of difference to playback with or without this option, especially with many plugins. What does it mean to keep it disabled?
I asked gg and he said that not playing every frame means that as it plays, if it can not keep up with doing all it has to do to change the frame into a vframe and then draw it, the program just notes that it is falling behind so skips frames to catch back up. It will not affect rendering though. I believe that IgorB uses Proxies for this very reason.
Someone may have a better user answer. gg/Phyllis
Andrea, like Phyllis wrote, my PCs are very old (dual core, two thread, 4GByte RAM), then I always use Proxy, with Scaler unchecked, and usually "Play every frame" checked. But your PC have to be very fast, I think. IgorBeg
Thanks Phyllis and IgorBeg. In this case I could not make a proxy because I wanted to record the screen for a tutorial. x IgorBeg: what software do you use for video capture? I like the way it shows the pressed keys.
Andrea, I use "recordMyDesktop" for the screencast at 15fps (unfortunately, less is better on my old Notebook), and "key Mon" for keyboard and mouse monitor in UbuntuStudio_16.04 (it use Xfce, alightweight desktop environment). Consider that my screen resolution is only 1280x800 pixels. IgorBeg Il 02/02/2019 17.21, Andrea paz ha scritto:
x IgorBeg: what software do you use for video capture? I like the way it shows the pressed keys.
participants (3)
-
Andrea paz -
Igor BEGHETTO -
Phyllis Smith