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Victory Road closed on January 8, 2018. Thank you for making us a part of your lives since 2006! Please read this thread for details if you missed it.
Just a little place to put little facts, things you've noticed, or anything else you want to discuss that you don't think is worth a thread.
Like just half an hour ago, I had a good scare. I was playing STALKER Call of Pripyat and it was stuttering a bit, which isn't normal at the settings I put it on (I always check BG programs beforehand and they were normal). Suddenly my computer BSOD'd. Nothing new. Reboots and GRUB loads all right the way it normally does. Choose windows and... A Disk Read Error Occured. Pres CTRL+ALT+DEL to Restart.
ZOMFG EVERYONE FREAK OUT.
Booting into Ubuntu gives 5 minutes worth of error messages, but it still works.
As I'm freaking out I remember that my 7 install disk comes with a repair thing and that works.
Hooray for anticlimaxes.
I little while ago I figured where to place the .minecraft folder to get Minecraft working at school. I'd actually known where to place it for a while, it was just the execution that was getting me. Then I figured it out. I may have found my way to Application Data via the search function in Windows Explorer (Which bypasses permissions for some reason), but our school network is so retarded to the point where you can't have any archives (That's stuff like .zips and .jars, the last of which is required for Minecraft). After playing around for a bit, I realised that our school files were actually migrated to the computer, and all files used are stored locally on the computer until you log out, when they're migrated back to the server again. Using this, and the Search function loophole, I put the .minecraft folder in C:\Documents and Settings\07HardyJ\Application Data, and finally Minecraft worked. The best part is, it can be run from any computer in the school. 'Cept those without OpenGL. Our school computers are so crap.
I've been wanting to upgrade my RAM recently (From 4GB to 8GB, the maximum my machine can handle), which should improve both performance and graphics performance (using some ATI wizardry). I doubt I'd have to get RAM sticks with heat spreaders, so I'm going to settle with these, which are DDR2 PC2-6400 like my current RAM (Heat spreaders are, like, another £5. What a waste. Geez). Hopefully I can get these soon unless one of the computer braniacs around here give me a valid reason why I shouldn't.
Well I feel stupid. I've been using the COPY command on my DOS computer for installing unpacked programs from CDs, and going through each sub-directory and COPY'ing it again, having to make the directory on the C: drive.
Well today I learn I could just use XCOPY and that'll go through all the folders for me.