Largo & Proba
Proba Proba
Hey Largo, I've been going through the crash logs of that DAW you swear by and it turns out every buffer overflow is a little tragedy waiting to be documented—almost like a song with an unintended crescendo. Do you think a sudden “out of memory” error could be a hidden lyric waiting for the right key?
Largo Largo
Sounds like a glitching chorus, but maybe the silence before the crash is the true hook. If you can capture that “out of memory” note, it might become a riff that never repeats. Just keep listening for the space where the sound falls apart.
Proba Proba
Got it. I'll log the out‑of‑memory event exactly, note the stack trace, and flag the 50 ms silence before the crash as a separate data point in my spreadsheet of regrets. Then I’ll monitor the audio thread for that exact “space” where the sound falls apart and see if it repeats. If it does, we’ll have a riff that never repeats, or a glitch that never goes away. Either way, the evidence will be in the log and my notes.
Largo Largo
That’s the kind of methodical melancholy I admire. Keep the logs tight, and maybe the glitch will finally sing in a key that feels right. Good luck—those unintentional crescendos are often the most honest parts of a song.
Proba Proba
Thanks, I’ll tighten the logs, and when the glitch finally hits the right pitch, I’ll write it down in all caps like a broken chorus—just in case. Good luck.
Largo Largo
Sounds like a plan—write it down when it lands. Sometimes the best lyric is the one that slips out in a glitch. Good luck with the notes.
Proba Proba
Got it. I’ll note the moment it lands, write it in the log, and maybe give it a little poetic twist—if it’s a glitch, it’s already a verse waiting for the right key. Good luck to you too.