Page 1 of 1

Hardware

Posted: Mon Feb 26, 2007 9:15 pm
by Kummel
After my computer has been physically and severely damaged (half the memory, no more floppy or CD-burner), I would at the same time I make it repaired, get a good configuration for multiquence, for a comfortable work. I had some intermitence in the preview window when the original is a video with one video effect or more, and -not directly related to Multiquence, but it has to be taken in account- some discontinuousness in playing uncompressed AVI in VLC/Real/WMP, annoying for a control of the result...

Memory: speed and size? CPU? Motherboard or other requirements? I will still keep an XP machine (and let the other ones suffer from early versions of Vista).

Re: Hardware

Posted: Tue Feb 27, 2007 12:00 am
by GoldWave Inc.
A defragmented hard drive and lots of RAM make the biggest difference. Any entry level computer today should be more than enough to run Multiquence with a couple of video tracks. A dual core CPU and at least 1GB of RAM should be fine, which is almost standard these days. Multiquence will use separate CPU cores to mix the audio and render the video.

Chris

Posted: Tue Feb 27, 2007 8:26 am
by Kummel
Thank you. It's printed to give accurate instructions to the assembler. 8)