Hello, all. It's been about three decades since last I laid my paws on a Mg modular. Even if this one's an emulation, it brings back fond memories and provides a welcome creative blast from the past.
True, it's not quite the same as the semi-updated III-C I used to play. But for the money it can't be beat. Add in polyphony, patch storage and retrieval, reliability, compactness, low power requirements... well, this old progger is moderately pleased. Congratulations to the Arturia team!
To the matter at hand: I run MMV 1.1 on a Sony Vaio (1.7GHz P4). When I first installed and ran it, many of the included preset patches wouldn't run for me. As soon as I selected one of the offending patches, the CPU meter would go to 100% -- before I (or the sequencer) even played a note.
Here's how I'm getting around it.
First, I looked at my hard drives. Not a lot of spare space, so I deleted some old files. The unused space was scattered in tiny pieces all over the drive (it was fragmented), so I ran "Speed Disk" from Norton Utilities to defrag. Recent versions of Windows have their own defragger; you can use that if you haven't got Norton. After hard disk cleanup, I could load most of the patches that gave me trouble before.
Next I turned off a program that I usually forget about: the SETI@home client. It uses the floating point processor, just as MMV does. It's never given me any difficulty before but MMV makes far heavier demands on the processor than any other synth I have, so I gave SETI a Ctrl-C for the time being.
Now I'm able to load all of the patches, though a few of the particularly CPU-hungry presets still run the meter nearly to 100% before I start the sequencer or play a key. On two or three of the toughest nuts, one note is all I can play without getting that horrible overload breakup noise. But it's a start.
Another thing that might be giving trouble: I have just 256Mb of RAM. Must buy another 512 meg! No idea whether that will help the MMV but it couldn't hurt and it will definitely be good across the board.
Anyone else got effective ways of jazzing up less-than-state-of-the-art computers to run Mg Modular V? I'd be interested in hearing other users' war stories.
Thanks,
Meffy