Movie Studio 10.0 Plat Won't Install. Help

warcrime wrote on 8/5/2011, 5:47 PM
I just got a new desktop and MS10P won't install. I use windows 7 just like my old laptop but it installed on that fine a few months ago. I tried Installing it off the disk I bought from Sony and it asks for permission to allow changes, click yes and it freezes and nothing pops up. I also tried downloading from the site and same thing but it locks up my browser. What can I do?

Comments

Steve Grisetti wrote on 8/6/2011, 7:12 AM
Have you manually gone to Windows Update and ensured you have all of the latest updates? You may have to make several trips to get them all. Brand new computers can be months out of date.

Also, have you ensured you have the latest version of Quicktime?

Have you defragmented your C drive? Launching a computer can leave junk and fragmentation all over the drive. In fact, I recommend running the free program Advanced System Care to clear off the junk files and tune the registry. It's fixed many installations issues for me.
http://www.iobit.com/advancedsystemcareper.html

You might be surprised how much is fixed with a little cleaning and tuning.
100andthirty wrote on 8/8/2011, 1:44 PM
If you've set up a User account, I suggest you try installing from an Administrator account.
Chienworks wrote on 8/8/2011, 5:31 PM
I'll disagree a bit and say that defragmentation never helps and never accomplishes anything beneficial, and are a lot of unnecessary wear and tear on the drive.

Registry cleaners often do more harm than good, since they really don't know what's actually supposed to be in the registry or what is safe to remove.

Yes, sometimes you might just happen to have good things happen with them, but the norm is that they do nothing useful and are potentially harmful. You'll accomplish a LOT more good simply by rebooting.
wmgeorge wrote on 8/8/2011, 5:43 PM
If you delete a large number of files or otherwise defragmentation really helps to speed up your HD access time. Been doing this long enough to know, since a Radio Shack Model One anyway.
Registry editor or tune up. I agree unless you really know what you are doing it can screw things up big time. Use with caution.
Chienworks wrote on 8/8/2011, 9:48 PM
Actually it doesn't help. Not at all.

Lots of real drive speed tests have been done over the past couple decades comparing fragmented vs. non-fragmented drives in all sorts of situations. Not once has a defragmented drive ever been shown to perform significantly faster. In fact, in almost all cases there was no measurable difference in speed at all. There are so many other factors in play besides moving the head around that have a much larger effect on drive speed that fragmentation doesn't even register. The only reason that some folks think they've had an improvement is because most of them have done a reboot afterward, or have shut down other programs that had been running.

I've also proven at length before that in a typical AV media editing scenario a defragmented drive is actually LESS efficient for file access than a randomly fragmented one.

In short, defragmenting is a myth and potentially harmful. Just forget about it and don't do it.
wmgeorge wrote on 8/9/2011, 4:10 AM
Don't have a clue as to your source but anytime a drive head has to jump all over the disk to get info slows it down.

Microsoft link> http://windows.microsoft.com/en-US/windows-vista/Improve-performance-by-defragmenting-your-hard-disk

Another > http://www.diskeeper.com/defrag/impact-of-disk-fragmentation.aspx


Another source> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Defragmentation

Yet another, and reference to PC Magazine which I have stacks and stacks of stored in my basement that I have read but hate to throw out : )
> http://www.toejumper.net/maintain4/defrag4.htm

Just do a Google and read.

And on and on. aside from your tests what are your sources??

I may be new to this forum but not to computers.