Growing quite tired of this... (pg. 3)
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Eric J |
In Logic, you have to change a setting to get the button to show up.
1. Right-click any track in the Arrange window and choose Configure Track Header
2. A dialogue will appear, place a check next to the Freeze option. It is a green square with an asterisk (*) in it.
3. Press close and you'll see the freeze button appear on each track.
When you freeze track(s) in Logic, you press the button to choose which tracks to freeze. Then you have to hit Play to begin the freeze process. Once a track is frozen, the only settings that can be changed are Volume, Mute, Solo, and Routing. |
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meriter |
quote: | Originally posted by Eric J
In Logic, you have to change a setting to get the button to show up.
1. Right-click any track in the Arrange window and choose Configure Track Header
2. A dialogue will appear, place a check next to the Freeze option. It is a green square with an asterisk (*) in it.
3. Press close and you'll see the freeze button appear on each track.
When you freeze track(s) in Logic, you press the button to choose which tracks to freeze. Then you have to hit Play to begin the freeze process. Once a track is frozen, the only settings that can be changed are Volume, Mute, Solo, and Routing. |
This is enormously helpful, thank you. |
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Fledz |
quote: | Originally posted by meriter
I'll have you know that I'm running Logic 8 on a dual 1.0 ghz PowerPC G4 with 1 gig of Ram. This comp was new in 2000. I'm amazed at how well it does actually. I feel like a crybaby for posting this thread now that I put things into perspective. |
I made that comment with a lot of tongue in cheek ;) |
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LoveHate |
my sole purpose for buying a macbook pro was so these problems wouldnt occure..now im not sure.. |
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wrzonance |
Yeah... at least Logic gives you a nice reminder. Cubase tends to just peg that CPU and turn the audio to absolute rubbish.
At least Apple is nice enough to tell you can't continue! |
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jupiterone |
:stongue: :stongue: |
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SDM |
quote: | Originally posted by ********
What is your credit card number?
Are you over 19 I can get a vampire to suck your blood and pay for your new mac!
As an alternative you can watch that biggie smalls video
and sling crack on the street and spit gansta rap
it could something like this..
i spit two ticktacs on the main street so i can buy my mac to compete
this ain't a big mack just a side track not running others tasks just waiting for the next train to hit my rack
theres no comeback when I hit the attack
got fierce decay like a I was toothless after too much sugar ray
compete like meat in your noodle if you think thats gay it just might well shoot you
reboot too while your at it I'm a trance addict and I've got more than one nasty habit, and I like a rabbit, and I'm archtype to your mum and the madhatta
shabba
shada
bladder past full my livers perserved like I was a british club chav
been so high god told me to rabbi mahadev de meshiah, if i got you better start buying this good like american apple pie ... etc.. etc.. just to sex
bleh. |
:wtf: |
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RichieV |
somebody's on drugs |
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DigiNut |
quote: | Originally posted by RichieV
somebody's on drugs |
The question is, which drugs?
I vote sherm. |
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Prototrance |
Not a Mac user but I have long struggled with this issue (haven't we all?) Some things that have worked for me:-
- Bounce anything you can to audio and re-insert into the mix. Do your automation and fx prior to bouncing then turn off the synth and all fx once re-inserted as audio. Sometimes doing the automation / fx prior to bouncing isn't possible / practical for the sound so you may have to re-apply your fx etc to the audio - but at least you will save some CPU by not using the synth.
IMPORTANT!!! Keep your midi data, automation and fx settings after you have bounced the audio. You will inevitably want to tweak and need to re-bounce.
- Get some hardware - offload some of your processing into an outboard synth or fx units. |
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