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- ======================================================================
- Cakewalk Professional for Windows Demo
- Installation Guide
- ======================================================================
-
- $Date: 12 May 1992 14:45:22 $
-
- Information in this document is subject to change without notice and
- does not represent a commitment on the part of Twelve Tone Systems,
- Inc.
-
- Copyright (c) 1992 by Greg Hendershott. All rights reserved.
- Program Copyright (c) 1991 by Greg Hendershott. All rights reserved.
-
- Cakewalk, Cakewalk Professional, and Cakewalk Professional for
- Windows, Twelve Tone Systems, and the Twelve Tone Systems logo are
- trademarks of Twelve Tone Systems, Inc.
-
- Microsoft, the Microsoft Logo, and MS-DOS are registered trademarks
- of Microsoft Corporation. Windows is a trademark of Microsoft
- Corporation.
-
- Other names are trademarks or registered trademarks of their
- respective owners.
-
- Mailing address:
- Twelve Tone Systems, Inc.
- P.O. Box 760
- Watertown, MA 02272-0760
- United States of America
-
- Technical support: (617) 273-4668, 1 PM to 6 PM (EST)
- General information: (617) 273-4437, 10 AM to 6 PM (EST)
-
- ======================================================================
- ****************************** IMPORTANT *****************************
-
- This file is for users downloading the Cakewalk Professional for
- Windows Demo from a BBS.
-
- To use the demo, you must have an MPU-401 or compatible, Music Quest,
- or other MIDI interface or sound card with a Windows Multimedia
- Extensions driver.
-
- The demo requires Windows 3.1.
-
- The demo lets you load and play files, but is limited in that you
- may not save files.
-
- The demo may be copied and distributed for free, but not resold.
- This demo software is provided for promotional purposes only, and
- under no warranty of any kind.
-
-
- ======================================================================
- PREPARING AN INSTALLATION DISKETTE FROM THE .ZIP FILE
-
- To make downloading easier and faster, all of the installation files
- are packed in a single .ZIP file. Use PKUNZIP to unpack the files to
- a diskette. The diskette must be a 720K, 1.44 MB, or greater
- capacity floppy; a 360K diskette will NOT work.
-
- When the instructions below refer to the Cakewalk Professional
- diskette, use the diskette you created.
-
- IMPORTANT: The diskette will contain the SETUP program and a variety
- of compressed installation files. These files are useless by
- themselves. You must run SETUP so that it can uncompress the files,
- copy them to the correct locations on your hard drive, and perform
- other important installation tasks. Please do not try to uncompress
- or copy files yourself; let SETUP do this.
-
- == Using a directory of your hard drive instead of a diskette
-
- We recommend that you make an installation diskette as just
- described. If you want to create a directory on your hard drive for
- the SETUP files, you may do that, but please read these instructions.
-
- You will want to delete the directory after you are done, because you
- won't want the installation files and SETUP lying around. So we
- recommend that you (1) make a new directory, (2) unzip there, and (3)
- be sure to tell SETUP to install to a DIFFERENT directory than the
- one where you unzipped. That way, after a successful SETUP you can
- delete the temporary directory containing the unzipped installation
- files. Step (3) is important because you don't want to end up with
- the uncompressed files and the compressed installation files all
- mixed up together. SETUP proposes that the demo be installed in
- C:\WINCAKE, so if that's fine with you, create your temporary
- installation directory with some other name and you'll be all set.
-
- ======================================================================
- INSTALLATION
-
- Installing and setting up the Cakewalk Professional Demo is easy, but
- it is important that you follow these instructions completely or the
- program may not operate correctly.
-
- Please print these instructions so that you may more easily perform
- the installation.
-
-
- === 1. INSTALL WINDOWS 3.1 CORRECTLY
-
- Before installing Cakewalk Professional, you should make sure that
- you've correctly installed Windows 3.1.
-
- Try some of the sample programs that come with Windows. If you
- experience any problems, try to resolve them through Microsoft
- Technical Support before proceeding to install Cakewalk Professional.
- Generally, it is easier for you to solve one problem at a time, and
- it will be much easier for us to help you if you have a reliable
- Windows installation.
-
- Avoid Windows 3.0 video drivers: You should use the latest Windows
- 3.1 version of the driver for your video adapter. Most 3.1 drivers
- are faster, which makes all Windows programs faster. More
- importantly, some 3.0 video drivers may cause problems when used with
- Windows 3.1. For example, if you click on a button in Cakewalk
- Professional or some other application, and the application crashes,
- the problem might be a Windows 3.0 video driver.
-
-
-
- === 2. RUN CAKEWALK PROFESSIONAL DEMO SETUP
-
- 1. Start Windows.
-
- 2. Insert the Cakewalk Professional disk 1 in the drive, and close
- the drive door.
-
- 3. From Windows Program Manager, open the File menu and select the
- Run command.
-
- 4. In the dialog box, type A:SETUP, and press ENTER.
-
- Note: If you put the installation disk in drive B:, then of course
- you need to enter "B:SETUP". Or, if you made a directory on your
- hard drive for the installation files, enter the pathname to SETUP.
- For example, if you made a C:\INSTALL directory for SETUP and the
- other installation files, enter "C:\INSTALL\SETUP".
-
- Note: The SETUP program may take up to two or three minutes to load
- from the floppy disk.
-
- 5. Follow the instructions on the screen.
-
-
- === 3. READ README.WRI
-
- Cakewalk Professional SETUP installs an icon for the README.WRI file.
- Double-click on this icon to run Windows Write and load the Cakewalk
- Professional README.WRI file. This file contains important
- information about changes or additions after the documentation went
- to press. Please read it!
-
-
-
- === 4. INSTALL A DRIVER
-
- If you've already installed Windows 3.1 multimedia MIDI or sound card
- drivers, you may skip this section.
-
- Cakewalk Professional uses the Multimedia Extensions in Windows 3.1
- to talk to MIDI interfaces and sound cards. The Multimedia
- Extensions provide a way for applications to talk to different kinds
- of MIDI interfaces and sound cards through drivers. For Cakewalk
- Professional to work with your device, you must install a driver.
-
- Use one of the drivers that is included with Windows 3.1 (for
- example, MPU-401 or Sound Blaster), or, install a driver that is
- provided by the manufacturer.
-
- 1. Run the Windows Control Panel program.
-
- 2. Double-click on the "Drivers" icon.
-
- 3. Press the Add button.
-
- 4. Select a driver from the list. If your MIDI or sound card device
- came with a diskette containing a Multimedia Extensions driver,
- select "Unlisted or Updated Driver" and insert the driver diskette
- when prompted.
-
- Note: The Cakewalk Professional diskette may include one or more
- drivers. Please see README.WRI for up-to-date information.
- (README.WRI was just discussed in the previous section.)
-
- 5. The driver will probably present you with a dialog box in which
- you need to give it information about how you've installed the
- device. (This is the same dialog box that you can access in
- "Drivers" by selecting the driver and pressing the Setup button.)
- Please consult the manufacturer's manual for the correct device
- settings. If you haven't changed the factory-default settings on the
- device, then you probably don't need to change the default values
- proposed in the dialog box.
-
- 6. Press OK to finish configuring the driver. At this point, you
- should restart Windows for your changes to take effect.
-
-
-
- === 5. CONNECT YOUR MIDI EQUIPMENT
-
- If you are using a MIDI interface (like an MPU-401, Music Quest card,
- or Sound Blaster MIDI option) with an external MIDI keyboard, then
- you need to connect the equipment using MIDI cables.
-
- It is possible to connect your equipment in some pretty complex ways
- that may cause problems. We recommend the following methods, which
- are simple. In fact, if you call for technical support with a
- problem where equipment doesn't seem to be responding, most likely
- we'll suggest that you reconnect things this way before exploring the
- problem further.
-
- There are two basic methods. Pick one depending on whether your
- keyboard has:
-
- - all three MIDI jacks: IN, OUT and THRU.
-
- - only two MIDI jacks: IN and OUT.
-
- IF YOUR KEYBOARD HAS A MIDI THRU JACK
-
- If your keyboard has three MIDI jacks - IN, OUT and THRU -- then use
- the following check-list:
-
- Connect this to this
- ---------------------- --------------------------------
- Master keyboard OUT MIDI interface IN
- MIDI interface OUT master keyboard IN
- Master keyboard THRU another MIDI module's IN
- that MIDI module's THRU yet another MIDI module's IN
-
- and so on, repeating the last connection for each of your sound modules.
-
- If you are a more-advanced user working with a synchronization device
- that needs to be connected to the MIDI interface's In jack, then you
- should follow the instructions included with the synchronization
- device.
-
- Note: If your master keyboard now seems to double notes (they sound
- "thicker" or you can only play half as many at once) see
- "Trouble-shooting" later in this Installation Guide.
-
- IF YOUR KEYBOARD DOESN'T HAVE A MIDI THRU JACK
-
- If your keyboard has only two MIDI jacks -- IN and OUT -- use the
- following check-list instead:
-
- Connect this to this
- ---------------------- --------------------------------
- Master keyboard OUT MIDI interface IN
- MIDI interface OUT sound module IN
- sound module THRU master keyboard IN
-
- If you have more than one sound module, connect the additional sound
- modules in between the MIDI interface OUT and the master keyboard IN.
-
- Note: If your master keyboard now seems to double notes (they sound
- "thicker" or you can only play half as many at once) see
- "Trouble-shooting" later in this Installation Guide.
-
-
-
- === 6. START CAKEWALK PROFESSIONAL DEMO
-
- Cakewalk Professional SETUP installs a Program Manager icon for the
- program. To run Cakewalk Professional Demo, double-click on the
- icon.
-
- The first time you run Cakewalk Professional, it presents you with
- the same dialog box that the "Settings/MIDI Devices" command uses.
- This lets you select which MIDI In and MIDI Out devices you want
- Cakewalk Professional to use. Each item in the list is a driver that
- you've installed using Windows Control Panel (as explained
- previously).
-
- - You must pick at least one MIDI Out device.
-
- - You don't have to pick any MIDI In devices. Of course, if you
- don't pick any, Cakewalk Professional won't be able to record
- anything you play on your MIDI keyboard, which comes to the MIDI In
- port of the MIDI interface. So if your device has a MIDI In port,
- you probably do want to pick it.
-
- USING SETTINGS/MIDI DEVICES AFTER MAKING DRIVER CHANGES
-
- After first installing and running Cakewalk Professional, if you
- later add or remove drivers using the "Drivers" icon of the Windows
- Control Panel, here's how Cakewalk Professional will react:
-
- - If you Remove a driver using the "Drivers" icon of the Windows
- Control Panel, the next time you run Cakewalk Professional it will
- advise you that it can no longer open the device and present you with
- the "Settings/MIDI Devices" dialog. Any remaining devices that had
- been selected before will still be selected, and you may simply press
- OK to confirm the situation. Or, you may pick different devices.
-
- - If you Add a driver using the "Drivers" icon, Cakewalk Professional
- will not automatically use it. You must choose "Settings/MIDI
- Devices" to add the new driver to Cakewalk Professional's list.
-
- REMEMBER THAT AFTER YOU ADD OR REMOVE A DRIVER IN CONTROL PANEL, YOU
- MUST RESTART WINDOWS FOR THE CHANGE TO TAKE EFFECT.
-
-
-
- ======================================================================
- TROUBLE-SHOOTING
-
- === IRQ CONFLICTS
-
- Symptoms: Cakewalk Professional does not seem to record notes from
- your keyboard, even though you've double-checked your connections as
- described earlier. Or, the system locks when Windows starts (in
- Windows 386 Enhanced Mode) or when Cakewalk Professional starts (in
- Windows Standard Mode).
-
- Causes: This may be due to a conflict over the IRQ that the MIDI
- interface uses to alert the computer when incoming data arrives. The
- MIDI interface may be set to use the same IRQ number as some other
- device in your computer. Example of other things that may conflict
- with the MIDI interface include:
-
- - A Tandy hard-disk-on-a-card.
-
- - A bus mouse. (A bus mouse comes with a card that you insert in an
- expansion slot of your computer, in contrast to a serial mouse which
- simply plugs into an existing serial port of the computer.)
-
- - An EGA or VGA card set to generate IRQ 2.
-
- Test: If possible, remove the other device that may be causing the
- conflict, for example the bus mouse card. Try running Cakewalk
- Professional again. If the problem has disappeared, we're on the
- right track.
-
- Solution: The solution is to change the IRQ number of either the MIDI
- interface or the other device.
-
- If you change the IRQ of the MIDI interface, be sure to run Windows
- Control Panel, select the driver for the device, and press the Setup
- button. In the dialog box, enter a number to match the new IRQ
- number you have set on the MIDI interface. You need to restart
- Windows for your change to take effect.
-
- If you are confused about which IRQ numbers might be appropriate for
- your MIDI interface, the manufacturer of the device can provide
- suggestions. Please consult their documentation or call their
- technical support.
-
-
- === MASTER KEYBOARD NOTE DOUBLING
-
- Symptoms: When you play the keyboard, you can play only half as many
- notes at once as you can when you're not using Cakewalk Professional
- and have the computer turned off. Or, even if you seem to be able to
- play as many notes at once, each note seems "heavier" or "thicker"
- than usual, as if two notes of the same pitch were turned on when you
- press the key.
-
- Causes: Cakewalk Professional provides a MIDI Thru capability: the
- data arriving at the MIDI In of the MIDI interface is echoed to the
- MIDI Out. This makes it easy to control many sound modules from a
- single master keyboard. The "Connecting your MIDI equipment" section
- earlier recommended a system that works well with this.
-
- However, if the MIDI Thru is enabled, the master keyboard might turn
- on two notes for every key you press on its keyboard. One note comes
- from the keyboard itself when you press the key. The other note goes
- out the keyboard, through the MIDI interface, and back to the MIDI In
- of the master keyboard. In other words, there is an "echo."
-
- Various keyboards react to this echo in various ways: starting
- another note of the same pitch, re-triggering the original note, or
- something new and completely different.
-
- Solutions: Eliminate the doubling by removing one of the two sources.
- Choose one of the following:
-
- 1. Disable the master keyboard's control of its own sound circuitry.
- This is called turning "Local Control Off".
-
- Cakewalk tries to do this automatically when it starts by sending a
- special message to the keyboard. If this doesn't seem to work, make
- sure you turned on the keyboard before starting Cakewalk. If it
- still doesn't work, consult the keyboard documentation about how to
- set Local Control Off manually.
-
- The result is that, when you press a key, the keyboard sends that
- note message to its MIDI Out jack but doesn't start the note itself.
- However, the note message is passed through the MIDI interface and
- back to the MIDI In jack, at which point the keyboard turns on the
- note. You can think of this as splitting your keyboard into two
- distinct parts: (1) a keyboard controller that doesn't make any
- sound, and (2) a sound producing module, just like sound modules that
- don't have a keyboard.
-
- 2. Disable Cakewalk Professional's MIDI Thru feature: Choose the
- "Settings/MIDI Thru" command and pick "None".
-
- Recommended solution: If you have just one keyboard in your setup,
- the second solution is fine. But if you have one or more sound
- modules in addition to a keyboard, the first solution is much better.
-