Revision [1899]

This is an old revision of WinXP made by admin on 2012-02-13 14:43:07.

 

Windows XP


Windows XP drivers were an initiative of Chuck Duffy's "ChunkWorks". The drivers themselves were written by ChrisThoman Chris Thoman. They are not officially supported, but many users report them stable and working well.

Advantages: the most modern OS Paris can run on - the advantages and features of a modern OS, including access to large array of new plugins.

Disadvantages: "tweak" to the setup; potential difficulties with WinXpAdat multiple ADAT i/o modules (8 - in and 8 - out of lightpipe); WinXpAdat see here for proposed workaround. JULY 31 2008: IMPORTANT UPDATE! MikeAudet Mike Audet is debugging the ADAT dll as we speak - check the PARIS NG for updates and a beta dll to try! It will be linked here ASAP. With any luck, *all* of these issues may be a thing of the past.

FURTHER UPDATE MikeAudet Mike Audet's fixes to the ADAT.dll are now part of his updated driver package.

ChrisThoman Chris Thoman has benchmarked the comparative performance of PcDriveFormat NTFS and FAT32 formatted audio drives under Windows XP. The verdict? No difference.


JohnBercik John Bercik has made copious notes on Windows XP tweaking for PARIS. Although originally intended to squeeze every ounce of performance possible from the computers of the day, many of these tips are good sense for DAW operation and can avoid problems.



Windows XP Driver Install Documentation


Make sure you check out the Paris' XP Driver WinXpDriverInstallDoc Install Documentation listed here!

In brief, the installation process is:

  1. run the setup app to install the scherzo drivers
  1. reboot
  1. install Paris
  1. reboot
  1. install the effects subsystem
  1. reboot.


Tweaking Your PC for PARIS under XP


from John Bercik's excellent PARIS Notes

Updated to add: please note that some of these tweaks are designed to squeeze maximum performance out of now-ancient computers, which have been greatly superseded in performance today. So some of these represent an ultimate streamlining that you may no longer fully need - or, in cases like USB or networking, you may no longer consider worth sacrificing functionality for. Still, it's a great repository and contains many non-obvious tweaks to consider.

Tips from musicxp.net

More detail on many of these processes follows below.




Additional tips


Restart your machine at this point in time. When you come back the first thing you should do is defrag the main drive even if it doesn't say it needs it. This way the swap file has been truly set and you're ready to continue.



Processor scheduling should be set to background services and not Programs.

Switch Off Desktop Background Image

Screensaver Off
Click on the Screen Saver tab, Set Screensaver to None, Press the Power button near the bottom

Disable Fast User Switching

Switch Off Power Schemes

Switch Off Hibernation

Disable System Sounds

Do Not Map Through Soundcard

Disable System Restore

Disable Automatic Updates

Startup and Recovery Options

Disable Error Reporting

Disable Remote Assistance

Disable Remote Desktop

Fixed Swap File (Virtual Memory)

Speed Up Menus

Disable Offline Files

Disable Internet Synchronise Time

Disable Hide Inactive Icons

Disable Automatic Desktop Cleanup Wizard

Disable NTFS Last Access Time Logging (NTFS Only)

Disable Notification Area Balloon Tips



Disable CDROM Autoplay


Method 1
Method 2
Method 3



Disable Disc Indexing





Additional tips Descriptions



Partitioning

A useful tip when configuring your audio disc is to split this into two partitions. Set up a smaller "audio scratch" partition - say 6GB of a 30GB hard disc. This partition will be used for the songs that you are currently working on. The benefit of a smaller partition is obviously quicker defragmentation. If you use the entire 30GB as one partition, then this will take ages to defragment. When you are finished with a song, transfer the audio files to the non-scratch partition, where disc I/O performance isn't so critical.

Messenger starts up at the windows load up but we can get rid of that in no time at all..


Also do this for the Start Menu

By default, selecting the Classic Start menu also adds the My Documents, My Computer, My Network Places, and Internet Explorer icons to your desktop.


Increase your IRQ priority

You can increase the IRQ priority of the real-time CMOS clock to gain some system performance by doing the following:


This can be un-installed should you need to by repeating the three steps above with a new file, except this time -



Disable Power Management
Power management can be disabled by -


Set graphic acceleration to full
You can do this by -


Disable background applications
Background applications start up when your computer starts up and can use up unneccicary resources. To prevent these from starting up -


Disable USB
If you do not have any devices actively using USB in your system (this includes dongles for your software), disable USB as it is known to sometimes cause problems in certain DAW configurations. Not only will this help to increase system performance, but it will also free up an IRQ.


Graphical window settings

Disable NTFS Last Access Time Logging (NTFS Only)

originally created by JohnBercik John Bercik. Edited and formatted by KerryGalloway Kerry Galloway, 04/08

Next step: setting up your ParisCfg paris.cfg (or application preferences) file
There are no comments on this page.
Valid XHTML :: Valid CSS: :: Powered by WikkaWiki