Thor on 2/9/2010 at 17:25
making addiction based insults doesn't usually come out very rational...
Neb on 3/9/2010 at 05:05
Khad: Just a guess at your audio problem. Is there some kind of buffer setting for recording in Sound Forge? If it exists then try increasing it.
Khad on 3/9/2010 at 21:17
Quote Posted by jermi
I thought so too, but it turns out that Khad is unable to figure out how to
* record video
* edit video
It's not that hard!
Oh, right! Those two things are what give me problems. It has nothing to do with computer problems due to Fraps using too many resources for Soundforge to keep up. No sir it is because I don't know how to edit a video.
Mortal Monkey on 3/9/2010 at 21:44
Close Firefox next time, damn it.
Random_Taffer on 3/9/2010 at 21:59
Quote Posted by Khad
Oh, right! Those two things are what give me problems. It has nothing to do with computer problems due to Fraps using too many resources for Soundforge to keep up. No sir it is because I don't know how to edit a video.
When's the next part, man? FUCK!!!
Khad on 4/9/2010 at 05:14
Quote Posted by Mortal Monkey
Close Firefox next time, damn it.
I always do and anything else I can that is memory intensive, damn it.
Koki on 4/9/2010 at 07:15
Should've bought a Mac.
Azaran on 4/9/2010 at 08:11
The sound problem's not so bad. A bit of choppiness every few seconds, but you can understand pretty much everything he says.
DJ Riff on 4/9/2010 at 09:38
Quote Posted by Khad
Oh, right! Those two things are what give me problems. It has nothing to do with computer problems due to Fraps using too many resources for Soundforge to keep up. No sir it is because I don't know how to edit a video.
Khad: I have a suggestion for you. It may depend on your hardware, but it always work for me so I think I can be done in your system too.
Open the properties window of Windows Volume Control and enable the microphone playback regulator. Now you should hear yourself in headphones (better to use headphones so you won't have a feedback from speakers to microphone). Now set your FRAPS recording settings to "Detect best sound input". It should automatically find something like "Stereo mixer input". If it doesn't, set it to "Use Windows input", then open Windows Recording Control and choose Stereo Mixer manually. Now you'll be able to record both in-game sounds and your voice without using Sound Forge at all.
If this cannot be implemented (some soundcards don't have microphone playback feature at all), you may force Sound Forge to do the same thing for you. There's a checkbox called "monitor input" in the Record window. Adjust in-game volume and Microphone Recording volume to have both in-game sounds and your voice audible. This takes much less system resources than actual recording. If you have a dual-core CPU then it's better to set affinity of Sound forge to the second core while keeping Thief and Fraps on the first one.
If still prefer to use Sound Forge actual recording function, then make FRAPS and SF to write to different HDDs (physical HDDs, not partitions on the same HDD) and to use different cores of your CPU.