Forum Coordinators: RedPhantom
Poser - OFFICIAL F.A.Q (Last Updated: 2024 Nov 18 10:25 pm)
Not sure about the technicalities of it but apparently it is something that photoshop needs and if it's on the same disc as the install it can stop responding.
I have my ps7 on "C" and the scratch disc is on "D" which is a partition drive of "C"
I don't know why you have a slow down though, mine works fine with this set up!
Injustice will be avenged.
Cofiwch Dryweryn.
The scratch disk is where photoshop temprarily stores the image you are working on. I had to move mine to a seprate drive because i didn't have enough room on the original drive to be able to cope. I never encountered any problems with the move though. Use the help file in photoshop and follow the instructions... i'm not sure, but i think you have to change the path and tell photopshop whre you put it, otherwise it just creates another scratch disk in the same location and not resolve anything. Hop that helps.
Jack
This is directly from the Photoshop 7 help file.
When your system does not have enough RAM to perform an operation, Photoshop and ImageReady use a proprietary virtual memory technology, also called scratch disks. A scratch disk is any drive or a partition of a drive with free memory. By default, Photoshop and ImageReady use the hard drive that the operating system is installed on as its primary scratch disk.
You can change the primary scratch disk and, in Photoshop, designate a second, third, or fourth scratch disk to be used when the primary disk is full. Your primary scratch disk should be your fastest hard disk, and should have plenty of defragmented space available.
The following guidelines can help you assign scratch disks:
To change the scratch disk assignment:
This is what i did and didn't have any further problems. My take on the above though is that if you just reinstall Photoshop itself, it will still create the scratch disk on the drive with windows on it.
Jack
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.
I posted this over in the PS forum, but sometimes it takes awhile to get any comments so decided to post it here too in case somebody knows the answer.
I've just encountered a new problem in Photoshop7...something about a scratch disk and performance of the program. I started getting a message a couple of days ago when I open PS. Something about scratch disk being on the same drive as windows and that I should move it to another drive if possible so the performance wouldn't be compromised. So I moved it to the D drive and PS is soooooo slow for me now. I moved it back to where it was, but still the program is slow moving. I've never even heard of a scratch disk until this came up. Why is this happening and can I fix the problem? I think it started around the time I had a particularly big render in Poser and the message came up in Poser that Window's was doing something with the virtual memory. Could this have caused it and again, can I fix it? Any help would be appreciated.
My idea of rebooting is kicking somebody in the butt twice!