Hi Mike,
I am running the Premium version. I have it set up to run at night after my backup completes.
Denny
They give you premium for a month free, you can decide at your leisure.
Using MC 23.12. Win 22H2 Avid FX6.4, Vegas Pro 22/ DVD Architect 6pro, DVDit6.4proHD, CCE Basic, TmpGe Express4, TmpGe Authoring Works 4, DVDLab-Studio. Sony EX-1R, Canon XH-A1, GL2, GL1, Canon EOS 60D
Thanks guys for the info.
Regards
Mike
Marianna:Let us know how it goes... and what file it turns out to be......
I ran Malwarebytes over the system, and it reported zero problems - which given the levels of security that I run, I'm glad of. So I then replaced stonedog.dll on the W7 system with one from a W8.1 install, and rebooted the PC.
This time the same dialog box came up, but with no entry for any suspect file. After "File path:" it was saying absolutely nothing. I shut everything down and went away for a little head scratching time.
This morning I booted up again and now the W7 PC appears to be working. To be safe I ran Malwarebytes again, and everything came up clean.
So I'm stumped.
jwrl...
I am always stumped... :) That file is part of Marquee and is a dynamic link library file. Did you have any crashes when using Marquee?
Thats weird.... but I think you are right that somehow it got corrupt and replacing it fixed the issue.
Sorry I dont have any words of wisdom on this one....
Marianna
[email protected]
Simply copying and replacing a .dll does not work. You must re-register the dll. This may have happened automatically on the next re-boot.
See this link
John
Can we go back to the way audio nodes used to be selected? Please? ie if you have audio nodes at the same time on selected tracks; then selecting 1 audio node selects them all at that time. Having to shift select nodes or add an in and out is time consuming and counter productive. At least make it an option.
I did. I didn't feel that it was necessary to spell it out. And it shouldn't automatically repair the registry on re-boot.
jwrl: I did. I didn't feel that it was necessary to spell it out. And it shouldn't automatically repair the registry on re-boot.
No problems - but unless you unregistered the previous dll before removing then it wouldn't be fixed until the next re-boot. Registering and unregistering a dll loads them into memory, not just the windows registry. But I reckon you'd know that already :)
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