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Old 10-23-2008, 02:55 PM   #1
Inspector Dryfish
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Join Date: May 2005

Posts: 18
pausing MA3 Beta3

This happened on both Beta 2 and Beta 3, so it's not new. Maybe my equipment is just not sufficient.

On a DELL GX280 with nVidia Quadro FX 1300 (128MB of video RAM), running two DELL 20-inch monitors, at 57fps, I get intermittent pausing. I haven't detected any pattern. It can be many minutes between events, or two-or-three within a few seconds. Duration is anywhere from a split second to a few seconds.

To minimize effects from other use of system resources, I just rebooted, so I have only the Windows XP Pro (32-bit) startup stuff. Nothing overt started yet. And the problem is apparent. It just went several minutes without me seeing a pause (though I've been typing at my other PC, so I might have missed some events...), then stuttered two or three times within a few seconds.

I usually have a couple of web browsers with multiple tabs, several Word documents, Madcap Flare (Help Authoring system), OpenOffice (again, usually more than one document open), Acrobat Pro, MKS (a version management system and trouble-ticket/issue tracking system), MS Outlook with ten or twelve e-mails open, four or five instances of Windows Explorer, a screen-cap utility, the GIMP and/or Adobe Illustrator... etc.

The difference between having all those things running or having just come from a fresh reboot is that the MA3 screen might show the freezing/pausing slightly more frequently when the system is working hard. But it's not a tremendous difference. In other words, it's not obviously a linear relationship to competing demands for system resources. BESIDES, I run MA3 only as a screensaver, not while I'm actively using the system. Therefore, all those programs - aside from tying up some system memory - would be mostly idle while MA3 is running. At worst, Outlook would be receiving mail from the server.

Other than that, I've had no problems.

One observation:
Many moons ago, I think I recall a thread where somebody suggested a peculiar fish (something-dragon-something that mimicked tattered seaweed?) and Jim said it was an interesting idea, but even though it might be "real" its very oddity would tend to break the aquarium illusion - people wouldn't believe it was a naturally occuring fish.

I recall that comment when I watch what the rippling light/shadow effect does when it hits that 'globe' of white coral on the left half of the tank. It might be an accurate effect, but somehow it seems kinda unreal. All the rest (aside from lack of coral movement with the current) is convincing... and this is really minor.

Probably just me; pay no attention. :-)


- Kevin (looking forward to that bezel fix)
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