To restore a project from a tape archive:
Flame starts restoring the project. The actual duration of the archive process depends on the size of the project. You can cancel the process at any time by clicking anywhere on the screen: you cannot use the application for anything else while Flame restores your project. Once restored, you can switch to the restored project using .
To restore project setups from a tape archive:
Flame starts restoring the project. The actual duration of the archive process depends on the size of the project. You can cancel the process at any time by clicking anywhere on the screen: you cannot use the application for anything else while Flame restores your project. Once restored, you can switch to the restored project using .
To restore material from an archive on a tape device:
Material you drag and drop appears greyed out in the Media panel, and is not restored until you click Restore.
The length of the restoration process depends on the size of the material being restored. You cannot use the application for anything else while the material is restored. Cancel the process at any time by clicking anywhere in the MediaHub.
When creating large archives, you can use multiple volumes to store one archive. By splitting the contents of one archive onto separate tapes, you can keep similar types of material together in the same archive.
You can open material on any tape in a multiple tape archive but you need the last tape in the multiple tape archive sequence. The last tape contains necessary header information for locating the material you want to restore.
To open material from a multi-tape archive:
You can now restore a project or any part of the archived material.