PowerPC G4 (2.1), 40 GB, 700 MHz, 256 MB, OS 10.3.2, iMovie 2 en 4
(Bewerkt door eric van de beek om 15:55, 26-08-2004)
Ik vrees dat dat niet aan de schijf ligt maar aan je computer!Ik heb namelijk de zelfde schijf met een Dual G5 en draait super!
greets danny
http://docs.info.apple.com/article.html?artnum=93296
en deze :
http://www.danslagle.com/mac/iMovie/iMovie4FixesIssues.shtml
(Bewerkt door ElectricCat om 16:16, 26-08-2004)
eric van de beek om 15:59, 26-08-2004Danny, wat heeft jouw computer wat die van mij niet heeft
Heb misschien je HD en je camera op dezelfde FireWire poort aangesloten?
Het moet de doorvoer snelheid zijn van de disk naar je Mac. Lees de link van ElectricCat anders eens.
Mijn LaCie-schijf heeft een rotation speed van 7200 rpm. Is dit de doorvoersnelheid?Ook heeft hij een seek time van 10 ms en een buffer size van 2MB.
(Bewerkt door eric van de beek om 18:35, 26-08-2004)
(afgezien van het feit dat 256 mb RAM in die machine wel een beetje aan de magere kant is.)
Important ConsiderationsDrive speed, bandwidth, and format are important when editing an iMovie project. Keep the following in mind when transferring a project to a volume other than the internal hard drive:Zip drives, floppy drives, hard drives connected via USB, and file server volumes are too slow to support direct editing of iMovie projects. These storage devices should only be used to back up and archive your projects.The drive must be formatted as Mac OS Extended (HFS Plus) or Mac OS Standard (HFS) format. Copying your iMovie project to disks that use DOS, UFS, or other formats may result in a project that is no longer useable in iMovie.When using drives connected to your computer with FireWire, connect the drive directly to the computer. If playback appears to stutter, or if iMovie indicates that the "disk responded slowly" consider disconnecting other FireWire devices.Disk fragmentation can cause playback issues within iMovie. If playback appears to stutter, or if iMovie indicates that the "disk responded slowly", consider defragmenting the disk using a defragmentation utility.
Drive speed, bandwidth, and format are important when editing an iMovie project. Keep the following in mind when transferring a project to a volume other than the internal hard drive:Zip drives, floppy drives, hard drives connected via USB, and file server volumes are too slow to support direct editing of iMovie projects. These storage devices should only be used to back up and archive your projects.The drive must be formatted as Mac OS Extended (HFS Plus) or Mac OS Standard (HFS) format. Copying your iMovie project to disks that use DOS, UFS, or other formats may result in a project that is no longer useable in iMovie.When using drives connected to your computer with FireWire, connect the drive directly to the computer. If playback appears to stutter, or if iMovie indicates that the "disk responded slowly" consider disconnecting other FireWire devices.Disk fragmentation can cause playback issues within iMovie. If playback appears to stutter, or if iMovie indicates that the "disk responded slowly", consider defragmenting the disk using a defragmentation utility.