No, it isn't. Go to Windows Explorer. Choose the letter of the
drive your audio files are on. Press alt-enter for
properties. Press control-tab once. First run check disk. Then
defrag your drive.
At 01:45 PM 10/2/2006, neville wrote:
No I can't say I have done that. So I guess that cleaning my audio folder is not the same as defragging it?
thanks much
----- Original Message -----
From: <mailto:kevjazz@xxxxxxx>Kevin L. Gibbs
To: <mailto:ddots-l@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>ddots-l@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Sent: Monday, October 02, 2006 1:06 PM
Subject: [ddots-l] Re: I didn't have this problem in Sonar 4
Have you defragged your audio drive?
K.
-----Original Message-----
From: <mailto:ddots-l-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>ddots-l-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:ddots-l-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of neville
Sent: Monday, October 02, 2006 9:51 AM
To: <mailto:ddots-l@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>ddots-l@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [ddots-l] I didn't have this problem in Sonar 4
Well I tried to do the lead vocal again today. unfortunately I'm having the same problem. My audio is skipping and when I try to record I get a dropout and a message saying that Sonar can't save my recording and that my disk may be full. I know my disk isn't full. As I said before, most of my projects are on an external hard drive and I just cleaned my audio folder on Friday. Before my audio was skipping on the down beet of every 2 bars or so, it's still doing that but now it's also skipping randomly and dropping out randomly as well. Does any one have any suggestions?
No virus found in this incoming message. Checked by AVG Free Edition. Version: 7.1.407 / Virus Database: 268.12.11/460 - Release Date: 10/1/2006