Questions regarding audio account set up in Windows 7

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Questions regarding audio account set up in Windows 7
Posted on: 13.08.2012 by Josef Modine
Hi guys, I took a couple of years off of deejaying when my son was born but it is itching it's way back into my life
So i am now trying to set up my new HP pavilion i7 machine for traktor pro 2 and ableton to run with my mpd24 and hercules RMX.

The thing is....
I used to run all this first on a windows xp (which worked great) and later on a vista machine but i got so tired of messing with vista (drop outs and spikes) that i stopped completely. So now i have this new machine and i want to set it up good and propper so i don't look like a tool performing with driop outs and such, so i figured i need to make a seperate account for my audio.
I already got the tutorial from the NI site to make my laptop audio friendly but
Things i'd like to know now are:

is it possible to make a seperate (sub) account that has no windows updates, internet or unneccesary programs running, and a lot of the laps hardware turned of while still maintaining full functionality in my normal account? i have a network set up at home for streaming and such and i don't want to be manually activating or deactivating stuff constantly.
I know i would be better of with a seperate laptop but finances atm make this impossible
I just figured that maybe if i made seperate accounts i could just have my audio account start up with traktor running and no hassle?

thanks in advance for your time and thoughts on this
If there is already a thread covering this please just direct me to it and close this one
thank you
Josef Modine
13.08.2012
Hi guys, I took a couple of years off of deejaying when my son was born but it is itching it's way back into my life
So i am now trying to set up my new HP pavilion i7 machine for traktor pro 2 and ableton to run with my mpd24 and hercules RMX.

The thing is....
I used to run all this first on a windows xp (which worked great) and later on a vista machine but i got so tired of messing with vista (drop outs and spikes) that i stopped completely. So now i have this new machine and i want to set it up good and propper so i don't look like a tool performing with driop outs and such, so i figured i need to make a seperate account for my audio.
I already got the tutorial from the NI site to make my laptop audio friendly but
Things i'd like to know now are:

is it possible to make a seperate (sub) account that has no windows updates, internet or unneccesary programs running, and a lot of the laps hardware turned of while still maintaining full functionality in my normal account? i have a network set up at home for streaming and such and i don't want to be manually activating or deactivating stuff constantly.
I know i would be better of with a seperate laptop but finances atm make this impossible
I just figured that maybe if i made seperate accounts i could just have my audio account start up with traktor running and no hassle?

thanks in advance for your time and thoughts on this
If there is already a thread covering this please just direct me to it and close this one
thank you
Josef Modine
14.08.2012
ok i will try that, thank you for the swift reply!
Melinda Wubben
14.08.2012
Absolutely, try the easiest way first! Windows 7 is much improved over Vista when it comes to audio performance. A lot of the performance is up to the audio interface drivers - in my case, M-Audio was a total no-go with anything but XP, but my Focusrite Saffire and Numark 4Trak both work wonderfully under Win7 x64 without any additional tweaks. I run them on ASIO with ~7.5ms total output latency, and I've got a relatively ancient Core 2 Quad.

Also, note that a lot of the "audio optimization" guides floating around the net are based on 2000/XP-era information. Things such as switching processor scheduling to background tasks usually make things worse for audio on Win7, not better!
Josef Modine
14.08.2012
do you mean i should just try it as it is? won't the hardware and updates cause spikes and drop outs?
Melinda Wubben
13.08.2012
That's not quite possible, since Windows update, networking etc are system services instead of account specific settings. The traditional method is to have a dual boot install, with a barebones OS for audio work and a regular one for everything else. I'm not sure how it's done in 7, and to be honest I've been perfectly happy with its audio performance without any specific tweaks.

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