E-Mu SP-12 Bedienungsanleitung Seite 22

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Messages And Errors SP-12 Librarian User’s Manual
Page 22
Water’s Edge Software
Reading was terminated. I/O error.
The SP-12 had to stop reading the sound or song file because a serious
disk error has occurred. Your disk, or disk drive could be damaged.
Quit the SP-12 Librarian and restart the Macintosh. Try the same
operation again. If you can’t reproduce the problem, it was probably just a
temporary glitch. Keep your guard up in case it happens again.
If you do reproduce the problem, or if it comes up again at another time,
suspect the disk first. For floppy disks, use The Finder to copy valid files to
another floppy. Don’t back up the floppy, since you may back up the fault
with it. Discard the bad floppy disk. With hard disks, remove all your valid
data, re-format the hard disk, then copy your files back onto the hard disk.
If the problem persists on a specific drive, have it checked out by a service
technician.
Replace existing File Name sounds in the catalog?
This message is displayed to warn you that existing entries in the Sound
Catalog are about to be replaced by new ones with the same file name.
Yes and No buttons let you make a choice. For more details, see the
Catalog menu’s
Add Sounds To Catalog
command.
Saving songs.
The SP-12 is busy saving its sound data to a file on the Macintosh.
Saving sounds.
The SP-12 is busy saving its sequence data to a file on the Macintosh.
Song file reading completed.
The SP-12 has completed reading a sequence file from the Macintosh. It
could have finished loading the entire file, verifying the file, or loading
individual segments, depending on which command was entered into the
SP-12.
Song file was saved in File Name work file.
The SP-12’s sequence data was too big to fit into the existing sequence
file, so it was saved in a work file whose name is indicated by
File Name
.
You should quit the SP-12 Librarian and locate the work file. It will be a
sequence file located on either the same disk and folder as the original
file, or on your startup disk. Delete your original sequence file, then
rename the work file and move it to the disk where your original file was
located.
Song file was saved.
The SP-12 Librarian has successfully completed saving the SP-12’s
sequence data in a Macintosh file.
Sound file reading completed.
The SP-12 is completed reading a sound file from the Macintosh. It could
have finished loading the entire file, verifying the file, or loading individual
sounds, depending on which command was entered into the SP-12.
Sound file was saved in File Name work file.
The SP-12’s sound data was too big to fit into the existing sequence file,
so it was saved in a work file whose name is indicated by
File Name
.
You should quit the SP-12 Librarian and locate the work file. It will be a
sound file located on either the same disk and folder as the original file, or
on your startup disk. Delete your original sound file, then rename the work
file and move it to the disk where your original file was located.
Sound file was saved.
The SP-12 Librarian has successfully completed saving the SP-12’s
sound data in a Macintosh file.
SP-12' s MIDI data was interrupted or is unreadable.
This error indicates that the MIDI data coming from the SP-12 was
interrupted, or it doesn’t make sense to the librarian.
Here are some potential causes:
• pressing “No” on the SP-12 control panel (aborting the operation)
• pressing the SP-12’s drum pads
• MIDI data from other keyboards or devices
• a bad connection on a MIDI cable
• a damaged MIDI cable
• EMI or RFI (Electromagnetic or Radio Frequency Interference)
• SP-12 malfunction
• Macintosh’s MIDI interface malfunction
The first three items are the most likely candidates. For more information,
read
MIDI Problems
in the “Behind The Scenes” section.
If you are using a Macintosh 512KE or a Macintosh Plus and you are
using floppy disks, then you may occasionally get this error when saving
sounds or sequences to a new file (because the floppy disks are so slow,
the Mac might miss some incoming MIDI data). If you do get this problem,
just try saving the information again.
Unlock the Disk Name disk.
The disk, whose name is indicated by
Disk Name
, must be unlocked. Quit
the SP-12 Librarian.
If a floppy disk is write protected, first eject the disk then slide the write-
protect tab on its back so that you can’t see light through it. If a hard disk
is write protected, consult your hard disk’s manual.
Unlock the File Name application and the Disk Name disk.
The file, whose name is indicated by
File Name
, and the disk whose name
is indicated by
Disk Name
, must both be unlocked. Quit the SP-12
Librarian.
In The Finder, click the locked file and select
Get Info
in the File menu.
Click the “Locked” box to remove the “X”, thereby unlocking the file. The
file is now unlocked.
If a floppy disk is write protected, first eject the disk then slide the write-
protect tab on its back so that you can’t see light through it. If a hard disk
is write protected, consult your hard disk’s manual.
Unlock the File Name application.
The SP-12 Librarian must be unlocked to operate. First, quit the SP-12
Librarian.
In The Finder, click the SP-12 Librarian icon and select
Get Info
in the File
menu. Click the “Locked” box to remove the “X”, thereby unlocking the file.
The SP-12 Librarian is now unlocked.
Waiting for commands from SP-12.
The SP-12 Librarian is waiting for commands from the SP-12 to tell it what
to do. Use the SP-12’s Cassette/Disk module to issue commands. Note,
however, that the first digit of each operation is a “3” instead of a “2”. See
the Windows menu’s
SP-12 Link
command for more detail.
Writing was terminated. I/O error.
The SP-12 had to stop writing the sound or song file because a serious
disk error has occurred. Your disk, or disk drive could be damaged.
Quit the SP-12 Librarian and restart the Macintosh. Try the same
operation again. If you can’t reproduce the problem, it was probably just a
temporary glitch. Keep your guard up in case it happens again.
If you do reproduce the problem, or if it comes up again at another time,
suspect the disk first. For floppy disks, use The Finder to copy valid files to
another floppy. Don’t back up the floppy, since you may back up the fault
with it. Discard the bad floppy disk. With hard disks, remove all your valid
data, re-format the hard disk, then copy your files back onto the hard disk.
If the problem persists on a specific drive, have it checked out by a service
technician.
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