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Posted: Fri Feb 04, 2005 9:56 am
by petrol vendor
I had accidently uninstalled scope. After reinstalling scope4 and cubase sx there is no asio-scope driver in cubase anymore.
In my registry there is no entry about asio-scope driver (hklm/software/asio).
I had asked bevore, and thanks for your help, but I have to post this again. I hope someone has the solution.
tHANK YOU SO MUCH!

Posted: Fri Feb 04, 2005 10:08 am
by hubird
you don't have a folder named 'Drivers' in your Scope folder?

Posted: Fri Feb 04, 2005 12:31 pm
by petrol vendor
yes i do. it contains scope.sys, scopewdm.iff and Owscopeprop.dll.

Posted: Fri Feb 04, 2005 3:33 pm
by garyb
reinstall the driver in the device manager...

Posted: Sat Feb 05, 2005 4:29 am
by valis
Also its worth mentioning that WinNT (and thus win2000/xp) suffer from a '10 device' limit in the registry. This is explained here:

http://www.rme-audio.com/english/faq/10entrye.htm

Posted: Sat Feb 05, 2005 12:27 pm
by petrol vendor
Thank you, but it didn´t help. I did a lot of un/reinstalling these days, I deleated every file in the registry named scope, creamware or asio after uninstall. No use. do i need a new os?

Posted: Sat Feb 05, 2005 1:47 pm
by garyb
wow.
well you could certainly save a lot of time at this point by backing everything up and formatting your hd and starting over from scratch....

Posted: Sun Feb 06, 2005 11:31 am
by petrol vendor
You people are right. Thanks alot.

Posted: Sun Feb 06, 2005 11:53 am
by valis
This may not apply to you, but for those who do workk in a heavy production environment and have an extra harddrive laying about for data storage you might consider imaging your drive once u get a full stable install loaded with appropriate drivers, OS patches and base software. Its a great deal of help when things go awry to simply start again from that point and apply any upgrades that have since come out.

Posted: Sun Feb 06, 2005 12:27 pm
by petrol vendor
Sounds cool.
Houw do you image your hd? it can´t be just a copy paste thing. I got one hd with 2 partitions, the first containing only the Os. programs and audio are on the 2nd partit. Not very smart i guess...

Posted: Sun Feb 06, 2005 2:22 pm
by valis
You use an application like Acronis TrueImage. I don't recommend Norton Ghost anymore and there's another one called DriveImage that I've had 0 experience with.

As for your number of drives, personally these days I use 1 drive for OS/Apps/Swap, another drive for audio recording and a 3rd drive for data that only gets accessed when I'm not doing audio work (great place to store images and use a massive capacity harddrive). I think that actual configuration depends more on your work load than any single ideal configuration though.

Posted: Sun Feb 06, 2005 7:07 pm
by garyb
get another hd for your sound and midi files(virtual tape)...

Posted: Sun Feb 06, 2005 8:15 pm
by Liquid Len
On 2005-02-06 14:22, valis wrote:
You use an application like Acronis TrueImage. I don't recommend Norton Ghost anymore and
What are the problems with Norton Ghost? I'm considering getting a program to create drive images.

Posted: Sun Feb 06, 2005 11:39 pm
by valis
Well the new version of Ghost has different problems than the last version but mostly its considered bloatware. They apparently bought another company's product called Drive Image and modified it a bit to suit their needs. They also added DRM, it needs .NET installed to use and it will only create images from within Windows itself (the DOS boot options only allow restore). It also only uses boot floppies, the workaround to get a boot CD (dramatically faster than several floppies) is to create an image of all the floppies and burn it as a bootable cd from Nero.

TrueImage will create a bootable cd (or 6 floppies).

Neither of the above programs supports SATA raid well (both are presumably working on it) and always ALWAYS test the images you make before moving on.