Sun, Feb 2, 3:47 PM CST

Renderosity Forums / Poser Technical



Welcome to the Poser Technical Forum

Forum Moderators: Staff

Poser Technical F.A.Q (Last Updated: 2024 Dec 04 2:47 am)

Welcome to the Poser Technical Forum.

Where computer nerds can Pull out their slide rules and not get laughed at. Pocket protectors are not required. ;-)

This is the place you come to ask questions and share new ideas about using the internal file structure of Poser to push the program past it's normal limits.

New users are encouraged to read the FAQ sections here and on the Poser forum before asking questions.



Checkout the Renderosity MarketPlace - Your source for digital art content!



Subject: "Not enough quota to process this command"


ghoyle1 ( ) posted Sun, 29 December 2002 at 6:39 AM ยท edited Sun, 02 February 2025 at 3:24 PM

I've been getting the above message when working in Poser lately; it's only been happening the last week or so, and I'm assuming it's some kind of memory problem. But I have 512 megs of RAM on my computer, and the file in question is only about 64 megs (I've worked with much larger files before). I'm using Win2K with an 800 mHz Athlon CPU, 512 megs of PC-133 RAM, and have a 120 GB hard drive. Has anyone had this problem before, and found a way to correct it? Thanks, Guy Hoyle


jobcontrol ( ) posted Fri, 03 January 2003 at 4:51 PM

Guy, AFAIK, you can assign "quota" for memory usage and/or hard disk space to a user in Win2k. I've read also that you have to run Poser as an admin-user (a user with administrator rights), because it does some things only an administrator can do. Furthermore, do you run Poser with the same user, you've installed it? Willy


ghoyle1 ( ) posted Fri, 03 January 2003 at 5:04 PM

Hi Willy, I'm the only user on this computer, so I guess I'm the admin. Any clues about how much memory/hard disk space I should assign? Or how to actually assign them? I've created 400 meg files with very little problem before (except for taking 20 minutes or so to load), but now I get this message on 60 meg files. Thanks for the response, Guy


ghoyle1 ( ) posted Fri, 03 January 2003 at 5:12 PM

Very strange. I went and checked the quota setting on my computer, and found out that the quota option wasn't even set, so I'm not sure why I was getting that message. Guy


jobcontrol ( ) posted Sat, 04 January 2003 at 2:40 PM

Well Guy, I'm lost on that sigh. I pointed you in this direction because the message used this quite unusual term. Willy PS: Maybe you can find out about this kind of message when you search the microsoft databases at www.microsoft.com


jobcontrol ( ) posted Sat, 04 January 2003 at 2:53 PM

Attached Link: http://support.microsoft.com/default.aspx?scid=kb;en-us;260241

Hm, maybe, it's this one? I did a search in the English knowledge base (reachable through the microsoft home page) with the word "quota": The problem arises with registry operations (additions?). I'm in the dark why Poser would do registry operations, but who knows? "Microsoft has confirmed that this is a problem in the Microsoft products that are listed at the beginning of this article. This problem was first corrected in Windows 2000 Service Pack 2." They mean WIN2K-Server, Win2K-Professional and Win2K-Advanced Server. I guess, you're using Win2k-Professional ?!? Willy


ghoyle1 ( ) posted Sat, 04 January 2003 at 3:04 PM

Yeah, Win2K Professional. I guess I need to get Service Pack 2. Thanks! I should've thought about looking for it at microsoft myself. Guy


jobcontrol ( ) posted Sat, 04 January 2003 at 10:59 PM

No problem, Guy. As you can see from my posts the idea came to me very slow, too. ;-) It had to ripen, I guess. Willy


ghoyle1 ( ) posted Sun, 05 January 2003 at 5:23 AM

I also just realized that my second hard drive is formatted as FAT32, not NTFS. I'm converting that over now; maybe that will make a difference. Guy


Privacy Notice

This site uses cookies to deliver the best experience. Our own cookies make user accounts and other features possible. Third-party cookies are used to display relevant ads and to analyze how Renderosity is used. By using our site, you acknowledge that you have read and understood our Terms of Service, including our Cookie Policy and our Privacy Policy.