rvt optimization
Posted: 13 May 2019 12:16
after 2 years of intensive use, here's a few things that could make things really better & faster.
when generating a hook container on a RVT session, the software use the local hook mixing parmeters. it could be nice to choose from server or local hook mixing configuration.
when you record a VT over a hook container the local computer generates and download this container, but if you want to ad a new VT right after this container, the computer regenerate and redownload the same container. re use the same previous container would save a huge time.
and by the way, I still have a question about how to keep the overalys at the right time? when generating a remote session using overlays as embebded containers, those containers are going late from the previous overlay duration. that means if the first overlay is 2 mn long, the next overlay will be played 2 mn late, and the next one will be late from the lenght of the 2 previous overlays etc etc. We're still moving these manually at recording but for long sessions it's difficult to keep everything on time.
when generating a hook container on a RVT session, the software use the local hook mixing parmeters. it could be nice to choose from server or local hook mixing configuration.
when you record a VT over a hook container the local computer generates and download this container, but if you want to ad a new VT right after this container, the computer regenerate and redownload the same container. re use the same previous container would save a huge time.
and by the way, I still have a question about how to keep the overalys at the right time? when generating a remote session using overlays as embebded containers, those containers are going late from the previous overlay duration. that means if the first overlay is 2 mn long, the next overlay will be played 2 mn late, and the next one will be late from the lenght of the 2 previous overlays etc etc. We're still moving these manually at recording but for long sessions it's difficult to keep everything on time.