Why I hate Nexus

Sorry but this is a better version sound cloud made my music loop sound weird …





Free large file hosting. Send big files the easy way!





Thats the same track Mp3

[quote]lorddarthfader (07/03/2011)[hr]I hate Nexus because it’s full of trance presets[/quote]



I love Nexus because it’s full of trance presets

[quote]UnitedVision (07/03/2011)[hr][quote]willidaniel (07/03/2011)[hr]this might be off the topic a little bit but i was kind of curious about you wrote in the ableton 9 thread.



i too am wondering about what’s going to be new in ableton 9.



you wrote that it will have a 64 bit support. does this mean more cpu usage??



[/quote]



I can answer this question because it is easy!



In layman terms…



Ableton 8 is only a 32bit application. This means that the application data pipeline that sends data to the CPU can only accept 32bits at a time. A 64bit application utilizes a 64bit pipeline that sends data to the CPU and accepts 64bits at a time.



So basically a 64bit application uses a bigger data pipeline to the CPU which allows for bigger & faster calculations from the CPU, which leads to higher performance…



People will often confuse the memory consumption of a 32 bit operating system vs 64bit…



To clarify… a 32bit OS like windows XP can only use up to 4 gigs of RAM in the pc.



a 64bit OS like Windows 7 can use up to 16gigs of RAM in the pc.



The RAM benefit is the big thing for switching to a 64bit OS. More ram = faster computer.



BUT… when referring to 64bit applications versus 32bit… They are talking about the data pipeline between the application and the CPU.



Hope that helps!

[/quote]



got it!!



thanks for taking the time and answering my question!!

[quote]willidaniel (08/03/2011)[hr][quote]lorddarthfader (07/03/2011)[hr]I hate Nexus because it’s full of trance presets[/quote]



I love Nexus because it’s full of trance presets[/quote]



I don’t have Nexus :stuck_out_tongue:

[quote]UnitedVision (07/03/2011)[hr]People will often confuse the memory consumption of a 32 bit operating system vs 64bit…

To clarify… a 32bit OS like windows XP can only use up to 4 gigs of RAM in the pc.

a 64bit OS like Windows 7 can use up to 16gigs of RAM in the pc.

Hope that helps!
[/quote]

Actually 64bit OS can, in theory, access 16 Billion GigaBytes of memory but in practice artificial limits are imposed by the operating system.

Eg:

Windows 7 Home Premium = 16GB

Windows 7 PRO and up = 192GB