GTP4 - Found innocent of all charges
I thought you guys might be interested in my experiences so far with GTP4. A long story but stay with it.
When GTP4 was released it was like a wish-list come true for me - everything I'd been looking for in DAW, and with an attractive upgrade price it was just too good to ignore.
The trouble was the specs required to run it - the minimum requirements were way over my computers specs. Well, I reasoned, most of that extra grunt is probably needed just to run Vista, it'll probably run ok on my current computer; if it doesn't then 'what the hell' I'm due an upgrade sometime soon anyway. So I ordered the software.
Delivery was prompt and I enthusiastically set about installing it on my old machine.
Cakewalk detected my previous version of GTP3 and decided that my new files had to go on the same drive as the previous software had used - despite the fact that you can choose which drive you install the 'program' to it then dumps all the demo material and StudioInstruments on your 'C' drive - you don't get a choice. Not good when, like me, you choose to run a relatively small boot drive. Even more annoying when you have a huge amount of capacity on an adjoining partition!
So I contact Cakewalks support - they were prompt enough in getting back to me, but again frustrating mainly due to the time difference between the USA and Australia - each communication was in effect taking 2 days to get to me. But I soldiered on.
"Why not install GTP4 without the sample media and without StudioInstruments" suggests helpful Cakewalk Support "and here's a link to a stand-alone version of StudioInstruments that you can install anywhere you like."
Great solution, just what I'd hoped for. So still fired with enthusiasm I downloaded the linked files.
Hmmmm - that downloaded rather quickly for files that were so big they were the cause of my installation problems. Oh I see - they haven't linked me to StudioInstruments but to some Sonar documentation!!!!
After another 2 days waiting came the apology and the link to the correct download for StudioInstruments.
No worries - at last I can try this new GTP4 version out. I download StudioInstruments - everything went smooth. Went through the installation procedure - you need a serial number (not surprisingly - the one that came with GTP4 didn't work on this stand alone version of StudioInstruments)
Another 2 day wait - (well 4 I think allowing for the weekend) - another apology from support and at last the correct serial number. YAY!!
Again went through the installation procedure - (by now I was getting pretty good at it) and was able to select that big vacant drive I wanted to use - sweet.
Except that the stand alone version of StudioInstruments insisted on dumping it's huge data files back on the 'C' drive irrespective of where you install it's program file.
Stuff it, by this time I'd had it. I decided to resize my boot drive to accommodate GTP4's rather unforgiving installation requirements (support suggested some registry tweaks to get the files to go where I wanted them but by this time I was starting to suspect information that came from Cakewalk Support and the volume resize seemed like the easier option).
OK - the boot drive was resized without incident. FINALLY managed to do a full install of GTP4. It ran but I could see my old processor was struggling. Trying to run a midi file at the same time as a wave file was too much for the old girl. Well, no complaints from me at this point - the specs said that you needed more grunt (though what the hell the software needs it for I don't know).
Sooooo - I went and got myself that new computer I was due for - My first laptop. An HP Core 2 Duo T9400/2.53 GHz Centrino 2, 4GB ram & 250GB hard drive. That'll work fine for sure?
Software loaded fine without incident - played a few sample files. All worked great.
Finally I was ready to actually record - I started with a basic midi drum track, edited it to what I wanted, cool..... then the midi slowed down as I was recording - stuttered and then the damn computer $hit itself and crashed!
Computer errors soon followed - including one that is usually associated with a lack of resources that stops Task Manager from popping up.
So I hunted around for all the little tips on how you set up your computer - disabled the built in soundcard; disabled power saving on the USB hubs. Set the drivers to ASIO instead of MME.
Rolled the system back 2 weeks using system restore - things seemed to settle down.
Tried another recording - dropout after about 40 seconds - more tweaks.
Finally managed to get the thing stable enough to record about 4 minutes of guitar over a midi beat without dropouts only to find that I can't save to Drive - disk full (250GB DiskDrive & one song, I don't think so).
I'm not beat yet - before I do a full re-install of Windows and GTP4 I thought I'd post this sorry tale for you guys to peck over.
Surely it shouldn't be this hard to record on a computer.
This software is going to be the death of me - I just know it!!
post edited by FingerBone Bill - 2009/08/09 22:37:00