Re: Resolume Arena 4.1.8 Crack Windows 8

0 views
Skip to first unread message
Message has been deleted

Aquilino Neadstine

unread,
Jul 12, 2024, 6:44:30 PM7/12/24
to abtvunesop

Here's a specific example.
I have a program (adobe Photoshop) which runs great on my computer. It renders fast, it has no lag, it exits quickly. The one thing it doesn't do is load quickly, it usually takes around... 8-10 min. I was wondering if there would be a way to capture an instance of Photoshop, running in ram (say, in a VHD or IMG file). Then load that instance back into RAM, instead of loading the programs' individual files and settings from disk.

Computers are state machines and progressing from one state into another may take some time. In general you can't just guess in which state the machine will end. Trust me, if it was possible in this specific case, Adobe would do it - they know that waiting for 10 minutes isn't fun.

resolume arena 4.1.8 crack windows 8


Download https://tinourl.com/2yN2jU



The actual problem you have to solve is find out what makes Photoshop start so long. Process Monitor may come in handy, but first I'd check if it's not due to third-party plugins, too many fonts installed etc.

If I may interpret your question, yes there is a way to accelerate your software and have things cached, if you are willing to allow for saved states, i.e. files under your control that merely need be opened upon user login and program settings that are always the same.

You can do this on a MacOS, Linux and Windows: Done correctly it can bring a great deal of system speed while reducing overall system temperature and extending useful media lifetime. There are several factors that will be important in deciding if this is good for your use case:

On user login, a startup-script automatically reserves a piece of memory and creates a symbolic link in the form of a directory: a ramdisk. Then all program files and data files are copied from the SSD to the ramdisk. Then, the programs in question are autostarted, using settings that you have prepared and open files that have histories in systems setup to autostart.

I do this for critical infrastructure on bare metal hardware during art installations and audio-visual performances. I actually did this recently on MacOS Sierra, in this case it was for a live video performance with resolume arena and screen capture with siphon.

In the Linux environment, Arch is a great platform where you can really keep your installation lean by only installing exactly what you need. In extreme situations, an engineer might choose to copy the entire system folder to the ramdisk (e.g. from a relatively low-spec read-only SD Card (to inhibit SD card corruption) or even from a network location. The code above should work with a few modifications.

b1e95dc632
Reply all
Reply to author
Forward
0 new messages