So You Wanna Go Digital - Common Sense for the Computer DJ

So You Wanna Go Digital - Common Sense for the Computer DJ

This zine explores all the various fun (and not so fun) aspects of being or becoming a disc jockey who uses computer technology. Whether you are a seasoned professional or the freshest newbie, technology is constantly changing and it... [more]

This zine explores all the various fun (and not so fun) aspects of being or becoming a disc jockey who uses computer technology. Whether you are a seasoned professional or the freshest newbie, technology is constantly changing and it takes effort to stay current with the latest trends. Whether you are a music-only DJ or you are interested in learning more about adding karaoke, music videos, intelligent DMX lighting control or a host of other applications, software packages, hardware controllers, etc. - where do you turn for an honest, no BS assessment? Whether you are a Club DJ or a Mobile DJ, the question is no longer a matter of "IF" you will use a computer eventually, rather it is a question of when!

Tips N Tweaks 3

wrenchSince we covered some stuff with hard drives in the last article, I thought adding another tip about hard drives would be in order for this installment.  Specifically I mentioned placing the VM on its own partition, all by its lonesome.  I’ll take that one step further and say that it should be on its own partition on another drive rather than the boot drive or the drive that has the operating system (OS) is on.  But those poor souls using a laptop do not really have this option unless they set it up each time they boot their laptop up. 

What is the benefit of placing the VM in its own partition on another drive?

Well when the system does have to use the VM, by placing it on another drive, it will not slow the system down as it reads and writes information from your main boot drive.  Performance can be even improved slightly when you from an IDE/EIDE drive to a SATA/SATA II drive!  Even better performance can be gained by using a striped or RAID 1 volume to place the VM on as it reads and writes from two or more hard drives.  Add it all up and you have a cumulative effect of boosting system performance, especially when you are are using several programs at the same time, or rendering high quality video and so on.

While my articles and books are specifically geared towards disc jockeys, these simple tips apply to anyone wanting to get better performance out of any computer and even laptops.  Anyone who does a lot of photo editing, video editing, music mixing/editing, graphics intensive video games and so on have found my simple tips to work rather well for them too.

If you are interested in learning more about VM, hard drives, RAM and so much more, I highly recommend reading my latest book Introduction to Computer DJing & CPS.

Tags: computer dj, cps, digital dj, hard drive partition, Introduction to Computer DJing & CPS, laptop dj, raid 1, striped volume, vm

This entry was posted on Thursday, April 9th, 2009 at 16:24 and is filed under Computer DJing. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

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