Mon Jul 26, 2010 11:43 pm
gigagiggles wrote:After test2 was downloaded, I moved it to the Coollector directory. When ran, my protective creature swallowed it up because my external drives lit up with activity.
After freeing test2 from quarantine, it ran normally.
gigagiggles wrote:"Circus Kids" was selected twice at the beginning of test1. After twice crashing, I moved on to the rest of the China-filtered titles. Upon reaching the end of the list without a crash, I scrolled back to "Circus Kids" and its selection crashed.
gigagiggles wrote:"Purple Butterfly" had previously been added in test1. However, I missed all the signs of that and tried to add it. And it crashed.
"0_1_0" also crashed.
Tue Jul 27, 2010 4:27 am
Thu Jul 29, 2010 3:45 pm
(cool) Hector wrote:> I've found that for those titles that have
> only one icon x1, the original crashes, test1
> goes through the number sequence to 5 and
> allows additions, and test2 crashes, regardless
> to whether it has been added or not.
>
> For those titles that have more than x1, the
> original works, test1 goes through the number
> sequence to 3 and then loops back to the point
> before left-clicking the dvd icons, and test2
> is normal with the pop-up menu of the available
> dvd and blu-ray to select from.
Very good, at least it makes sense: as expected, Test2 works as badly as normal version; Test1 worked because displaying the test message prevented the bug.
I have created a Test3:
http://www.coollector.com/Coollector_Test3.exe
that won't display the numbers as messages, but instead will save them into the file "C:\Test3.txt". This way, the program will crash, and I'll know where by looking at the file.
1) go to "the Children of Huang Shi".
2) click the "existing videos" box (program will crash).
2) send me the resulting "C:\Test3.txt".
Best regards,
Hector.
Fri Jul 30, 2010 9:27 am
Fri Jul 30, 2010 10:08 am
Fri Jul 30, 2010 12:44 pm
gigagiggles wrote:As for the Coollector crashes in my original PC, I'm still puzzled. The obvious differences between the two PCs are the screen resolutions and months of changes to the first OS.