Does anyone know a trick to run the SCOPE software, whitout the Hardware installed?
So I don't need sound, but just to run the software to explain the IDEA, on for example my laptop.
THNX!
TOM.
run SCOPE software WHITOUT hardware
- next to nothing
- Posts: 2521
- Joined: Mon Jul 29, 2002 4:00 pm
- Location: Bergen, Norway
That would be an idea, but I hoped for some solution I can use this sunday 
So than this would not only save myselve lots of work, but also lots of time...
There should be a way to just change some settings in a INI file or something...
When I just start the software now, it says:
HARDWARE VERSION 16 INSTALLED.
You will need an update to run blah blah...
And when I just try to install a driver the whole computer will crash!?
Grtz Tom.DJ

So than this would not only save myselve lots of work, but also lots of time...
There should be a way to just change some settings in a INI file or something...
When I just start the software now, it says:
HARDWARE VERSION 16 INSTALLED.
You will need an update to run blah blah...
And when I just try to install a driver the whole computer will crash!?
Grtz Tom.DJ
don't believe your eyes only - think about what's behind those pictures... 
it IS a matter of fact that the software CANNOT RUN without the card, because what you see on the screen is the flow of data and control in between certain blocks of DSP code.
Represented on screen in those lines and boxes, but actually uploaded to the chips of the card. As soon as you add an item, the loading process is started, vice versa if you remove something - there are certain situations where the DSPs are initialized and all these have result codes to check if anything went wrong.
No end user system will have a 'debug mode' that low implemented, and even on a developer's machine it wouldn't make sense - except in the very, very early stages of the design process.
cheers, Tom

it IS a matter of fact that the software CANNOT RUN without the card, because what you see on the screen is the flow of data and control in between certain blocks of DSP code.
Represented on screen in those lines and boxes, but actually uploaded to the chips of the card. As soon as you add an item, the loading process is started, vice versa if you remove something - there are certain situations where the DSPs are initialized and all these have result codes to check if anything went wrong.
No end user system will have a 'debug mode' that low implemented, and even on a developer's machine it wouldn't make sense - except in the very, very early stages of the design process.
cheers, Tom
Flash is one idea...or you can take video footage of yourself using various tools (snagit32) or even automate the flash creation with stuff like robohelp. Beware most of the more automated apps are very limited & tedious for lengthy pieces...you'll save time preparing a script because editing is nearly impossible in many cases.