|
Post by gymdan on Jan 17, 2009 0:24:20 GMT 1
Hello, I have been trying everything to get LJP to run on my Palm Centro. LJP 1.0 RC2 and below works fine, but I don't like not being able to use the keyboard in my games(very uncomfortable! hahaha). To be precise when I run the games it stops at 10% and my system either restarts or it pops up an error message(no code or anything, just say error running file or something like that). I was wondering if anyone else has fixed this. Edit: Oh, I almost forgot, UDMH DIDN'T work, don't tell me to use that. -Daniel See
|
|
|
Post by icefire on Jan 17, 2009 4:13:45 GMT 1
How DIDN'T it work? Just download it, install, and check enable.
|
|
|
Post by gymdan on Jan 23, 2009 17:09:02 GMT 1
I did that, I meant that it didn't fix the LJP problem, so it was useless. -Daniel
|
|
|
Post by gymdan on Jan 26, 2009 5:40:39 GMT 1
Hey, Well I deleted the ljp.ini file, But its pretty new, only a week and a half, why should I defragment that often? -Daniel
|
|
|
Post by _Em on Jan 27, 2009 2:25:28 GMT 1
See the NVFS thread; defragmenting memory isn't like defragmenting a hard drive; you can get fragmented memory after running 3 or 4 apps on a Palm; it all depends on what you have that loads at boot. Restarting your Palm will fully defragment your memory, but will also possibly refragment it, depending on what software loads and unloads from memory at startup.
Really, check the NVFS thread. NVFS-style Palms have storage memory (this is like an internal hard drive in your PC -- not an issue at all for LJP), SD card storage memory (think of it as an external hard drive for your PC -- not really an issue either, as long as your files can fit on your card), Dynamic Heap memory (must be big enough -- this is like RAM on a computer; UDMH borrows from the DB Cache memory to ensure you have enough), DB Cache memory (must have a large enough fragment to store the files you'll be accessing in the current program -- THIS is what must be defragmented), and ROM (unchangeable storage memory, like when you boot your PC from a CD/DVD). That simplifies the situation (there are more components and interactions), but is the easiest way to understand what might be wrong when something memory-related goes wrong on an NVFS Palm.
|
|