A while ago I set (or thought I did) the OFX_PLUGIN_PATH to point at the folder where Natron keeps its OFX plug-ins. I was puzzled why I was never presented with those plug-ins in Vegas.
I have just noticed the reason: I had named the environment variable OFX_PLUGIN_PAH (which misses a letter), so I edited it to the correct name.
Then I opened Vegas Pro 14 (212), and clicked on the Video FX tab. Yes, it listed additional effects, but it also crashed. It still offered me to send a report, so of course I did.
I tried a second time, same result. So I deleted the environmental variable, and now Vegas loads fine as before. But it is rather disappointing it lets an OFX plug-in (whichever one it was) to crash it so majorly. Shouldn’t there be some kind of a try and catch in Vegas while trying to load a third-party plug-in, so it could just see one of them causes a problem, and should just give up on that plug-in and move on without crashing? I mean, this makes it so easy for hackers to crash Vegas and a non-programmer user will have no idea why it crashes (FWIW, I wonder how many of the threads started by people who cannot even start Vegas because it crashes are caused by some third-party plug-in that just happens to be on their system).