Tampilkan postingan dengan label best external hard drive pro tools. Tampilkan semua postingan
Tampilkan postingan dengan label best external hard drive pro tools. Tampilkan semua postingan

Senin, 17 Februari 2014

external hard drive question?




thehottest


say if I get a 1TB external hard drive to back up my current drives. I have 2 hard drives on my pc... I want to get a new mother board an cpu etc. I kno that I have to wipe out the main drive of my pc an reinstall windows. so if I move all my programs documents an etc to the external hard drive and install new mobo, will all my programs work they way it did when the mobo and cpu is installed with fresh new windows? meaning will they openin up with out giving me errors? I'm a music producer so I'm mainly talking about fl studio, plugins, and pro tools etc. what do you think?


Answer
A program "installed" into Windows has tentacles down deep within it, and so can't simply be copied from drive to drive. It actually has to be installed...

...that is, unless it's "portable." That's what "portable" apps means: The app can be manually copied into a manually-created folder in the "Program Files" folder, and it will run... even without having far-reaching tentacles.

But the apps you mention... they're so tightly integrated into Windows, once they're installed, that you can't just copy back and forth.

Now, if you "image" drive C: to an external drive, then you can re-deploy that image back to the new hard drive, and it will boot right up, and your apps will work...

...except for one thing: The new drive will be in a new computer, the drivers and other Windows internals for which will not be right. So you'll have a hugely error-infested, crippled, godawful boot-up.

It's a better idea, believe it or not, to just back-up your entire drive C: as files, not as an image. Let's say that the external drive is drive F:, then the ROBOCOPY command to just copy all of C: over to F: would be:

robocopy c: f: /e copy:dat /a-:sh /xj /r:0 /v

It will take some time... maybe hours. Go get coffee or sleep or something.

Then just make sure that you have all of your original software installation CDs or DVDs (or that the downloaded installers were successfully copied over to F:) and that you have all the serial numbers.

Then rebuild the machine; install Windows and make sure that all drivers are working, that all Windows updates are applied, and that you have a pristine version of Windows. That, right there, would be the time to make the one-time set of backup CDs or DVDs so you could restore the system to that point at some point in the future, if you ever needed to.

Then re-install all your software and plugins.

Then copy all your data files and emails (in your user directory and sub-directories) back over onto C:.

At that point, if you think about it, you'll be back in perfect shape...

...and even though it will have seemed like more work to some who would counsel you to use the imaging approach...

...it will, I promise you, not actually be. It will, in fact, be far, far cleaner, overall.

Then, once you've got that all set up, you need to use that nice new external drive for routine imaging and backup. You would image the whole hard drive C: periodically to one partition on the big external drive that's sized so it's about five percent larger than your drive C:; and you would do ongoing synchronizing (or just periodic incremental backups) to another partition that's about five percent larger than your drive C:

That way, if you ever needed to wipe the drive again, as long as all the rest of the hardware was unchanged, you could just restore from the image, then touch-up subsequently updates files from the sychronized or incremental backup.

A third partition on the big external drive would be for archived music and other files... stuff that would add-up and just fill your dive C: in no time.

That's PRECISELY how I do it. I've been in IT for 32 years, and I've never lost a single BYTE of data. Not one. Ever. In all that time.

Hope that helps.

How do I run Pro Tools LE off of an external drive instead of the computer's internal hard drive to save space?




g.majorbea


I already told pro tools to install into the external, but it still installed into the internal hard drive as well. Killing my space. Now I can't do anything. I wanted to delete the file from the internal but keep the external. I think this is a bad idea. I just wonder what I should do. I have 0 space on my internal hard drive, but about 930gb on the external. :(


Answer
I'd go with a second internal as opposed to an external as SATA is faster then any means of external connection. But in answer to your question in pro tools menu go - windows>show workspace. then on the workspace it should show all your hard drives. Change your internal to playback or transfer not record, and your external to record, this is done by clicking the t's, r's or p's on the right side of the workspace window.




Powered by Yahoo! Answers

Kamis, 02 Januari 2014

Can I run a Pro Tools LE session from a USB drive? Is it the same as running it from an external hard drive?

best external hard drive pro tools on ... Pro 2.5 Portable USB 2.0 Hard Drive : External Hard Drives
best external hard drive pro tools image



blakbird


In other words, if I have a Pro Tools LE session saved on a USB drive (aka "flash drive"), will I have any processing problems if I try to run it (versus running the session from an external hard drive)?


Answer
A USB drive is a an external drive... BUT, it depends on what version of USB it is. Most of the flash drives are a little slower than the external drives which operate on USB 2.0 - so you may experience some latency. If you're running Pro Tools, the ideal way to record your sessions is to put it on an external drive through FIREWIRE instead of USB - since firewire is faster and more dependable.

Also, you should seriously consider joining a community like http://www.audioneeds.com - it's a great forum filled with sound engineers that are always asking and answering questions and discussing techniques in mixing and recording. I think it'll help you a lot since you are interested in recording so much. :)

How do I access a partition on an external hard drive that I can't access?




sweetj6160


I have a 160gb external hard drive that only shows 31gb when I go to its properties. I have partitioned it out and still can't get all 160gb to show up.


Answer
Use XP's built in partition management

Using win xp pro , not sure if it works in home tho - Start - Control Pannel - Performance and Matience - Administrative Tools - Computer Management - under "Storage" select "Computer Management".

From there you can create or delete partitions and or logical drives etc till your heart's content




Powered by Yahoo! Answers

Jumat, 13 September 2013

What kind of external drive do you recomend for pro-tools.?

best external hard drive pro tools on ACD Systems International Online Store - ACDSee 2009 Photo Manager
best external hard drive pro tools image



2izz


firewire, or usb 2.0? or is an external hard drive even an option? and what is more compatible with pro-tools, if anyone knows of a great external HD, please let me know... thank you


Answer
I use a OWC Mercury Elite-AL Pro 500GB connected via firewire 800. You should pretty much just always use Firewire 800; 400 if you don't have an 800 port. I'm curious to see what the transfer speeds are like with USB 3.0.

I personally don't record to an external drive but almost everyone else I know does and I haven't heard of anyone having any problems. I know some people that record with a USB 2.0. Not sure what the results are. I'm guessing they're all right though as I really haven't heard complaints.

Hope this helped,
KDecka

EDIT: I did partition my system drive so that I'm not writing on the same drive that Pro Tools is on. Don't do that.

Is it safe to use my hard drive when I have a virus?




twb785


My computer is currently being attacked by Security Tools, Antivirus Vista and Your PC Protector. I'm pretty sure there's no fixing it at this point and I was going to clear the hard drive with the recovery disk. I have a lot of important work, school, picture and music files on my computer that I really don't want to lose. Would it be safe for me to get these files off my computer with my external hard drive or would the virus also infect that?


Answer
Those are rogues and the best way to get rid of them is to use either Malwarebytes or Hitman Pro. You don't need to reinstall Windows at all. And you don't need to go into safe mode either, as one person suggested.

You should also think about installing a different antivirus and for that I would suggest Norton 2010.




Powered by Yahoo! Answers

Rabu, 21 Agustus 2013

why won't pro tools recognize my hard drive?

best external hard drive pro tools on Linkt�r - Kedvenc linkek - K�rtyaj�t�k szab�lyok,[link]http://mek ...
best external hard drive pro tools image



ranell S


I just bought a new external hard drive, my book home edition 1T. When i go to start a new session on Pro Tools and save it to this external drive it wont let me. The only drive that remains an option is my hard drive. I see my external in the list but its in the gray and I can't choose it. What is going on? Have I wasted my money?


Answer
The Western Digital My Book drives use the Initio Firewire bridge chip, which doesn't meet the requirements for Pro Tools systems.. The requirement is an Oxford 911, 912 or 924 bridge chip..

That being said, the bridge chip is most likely NOT the cause of what you are describing. It is probably a file system/format issue.



Here are the format requirements for the current version Pro Tools 7.4:

Mac OS X = "Mac OS Extended (Journaled)" aka "HFS+"
Windows XP/Vista = "NTFS"
_____________________________________________________

You can check what format the drive is in by doing the following:

Mac OS X:
- Right click on the drive icon from the desktop and choose "Get Info" (You can also hold "command" key and click it)
- Under the "General" section it should reveal the format..

Windows XP/Vista:
- Click the start button and choose "My Computer" (or "Computer on Vista)
- Right click on the drive icon and choose "Properties", it should reveal the format..
_____________________________________________________
Most drives come out of the box formatted as "FAT 32", which on a mac might read as "MS-DOS".. this won't work without "re-formatting"


You can use either "Disk Utility" built into your Mac, or "Disk Management" built into your Windows machine to "re-format" the drive.


********** REMEMBER ***********
You will be ERASING and reformatting the disk, BACKUP all data from the drive first as it will be gone permanently.

what are the pros and cons for soft modding a wii and hardmodding?




ag1000


can you still use an external hard drive if your wii is hard modded ?!
i am currently deciding what i should do and i know its simply to soft mod and that it would be free obviously but at the same time i dont mind spending a little money for getting it hard modded.



Answer
As ivantop said, softmodding is a lot easier and has almost no risk of bricking your console providing instructions are followed correctly. My favorite tool is ModMii because it's the simplest to use and does the fastest work, allowing you to install homebrew, run games from a backup drive, and playback DVD's. Sure hardmodding can do the same, but it costs money, has its' risks of the chips not being soldered correctly, and is kind of pointless considering that softmodding does everything hardmodding does.




Powered by Yahoo! Answers