koranek wrote:Also. several crashes/freezes on quit. This is new for me in this version.
Thanks for your input. Unlike some, I won't try to convince you that it's your fault.
koranek wrote:Also. several crashes/freezes on quit. This is new for me in this version.
I'm also on the buggy boat of ableton live 9.1.6, like too many, it is sad.kb420 wrote:koranek wrote:Also. several crashes/freezes on quit. This is new for me in this version.
Thanks for your input. Unlike some, I won't try to convince you that it's your fault.
The releases are not betas. There's a specific open beta channel of Live at ableton.centercode.com. I find the 9.1.x betas surprisingly stable and the Ableton bug team active on Centercode site very responsive and to the point. I've found the 9.1.x releases to be incrementally better, faster and more stable than what was before, which is how it should be.Hermanus wrote: I'm also on the buggy boat of ableton live 9.1.6, like too many, it is sad.
if it doesn't crash at least once a day on the first launch of a set, it is a little miracle for the day.
I'm tired since a few months to send bug reports and crash files without getting any valuable answer at all, not to say NONE.
SO no don't ask me to send bug reports. I'm not using ableton live for that purpose guys, I use it for composing music.
I'm not blaming ableton here for the beta politic, some other companies have also jumped on this new cool way to publish software nowadays... BETA is good if the release candidate is rock solid.
agreedStromkraft wrote: Ableton should really consider to make all previous incremental updates available at your Ableton account. How is it in their interest to make it hard for their users to downgrade when they encounter issues after an update?
I'm glad it worked out for you. Didn't you give me some diet advice when I as well as others suggested that it could be, umm, "memory related"?kb420 wrote:I solved the problem on my own. Tech support said that the crash logs indicated it was a problem with memory. So, I did the only thing I could do. I upgraded to a 64 bit laptop with 16 gigs of ram. No more problems.
You must love the diet advice I gave you because you keep coming back for more. And you still can't seem to understand that the same set was created with 9.1.5 on the very laptop that wouldn't load the set with 9.1.6.Stromkraft wrote:Didn't you give me some diet advice when I as well as others suggested that it could be, umm, "memory related"?kb420 wrote:I solved the problem on my own. Tech support said that the crash logs indicated it was a problem with memory. So, I did the only thing I could do. I upgraded to a 64 bit laptop with 16 gigs of ram. No more problems.
I'm sorry but If I have to eat limp shit — and I don't — I prefer Noodles.kb420 wrote:
You must love the diet advice I gave you because you keep coming back for more. And you still can't seem to understand that the same set was created on the very laptop that wouldn't load the set with 9.1.6.
I know it makes a difference. I have a x64 desktop, and it definitely outperforms my 32 bit laptop. I honestly didn't want to spend the money on a high performance laptop, but the time has come.eyeknow wrote:kb420: Now remember.......the next time someone moans because they are talking about x64, make sure you politely remind them that having extra ram DOES INDEED make a difference in how hosts work
Funny that the Ableton people recommend using 32 bit Live for stability.kb420 wrote:I know it makes a difference. I have a x64 desktop, and it definitely outperforms my 32 bit laptop. I honestly didn't want to spend the money on a high performance laptop, but the time has come.eyeknow wrote:kb420: Now remember.......the next time someone moans because they are talking about x64, make sure you politely remind them that having extra ram DOES INDEED make a difference in how hosts work