Setsul
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SteamID64 76561198042353207
SteamID3 [U:1:82087479]
SteamID32 STEAM_0:1:41043739
Country Germany
Signed Up December 16, 2012
Last Posted April 26, 2024 at 5:56 AM
Posts 3425 (0.8 per day)
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#42 Staff changes, Friday bans in News

#19
That system is completely useless.
It's like reverse music DRM. I generate the data so I can manipulate it. Instead of plugging your mouse in you just feed it data that is consistent with the manipulated packets. There are only two was to prevent that:
1. A tamper-proof mouse with authentification and that's not going to happen or
2. trusted supervision (e.g. LAN) and in that case and in that case the hardware becomes unnecessary.

About releasing evidence:
Who could benefit from it?
- All players not involved can't. No benefit.
- All cheaters with similar cheats are taught how to avoid detection. Bad.
- The AC team gets flooded with "proof" that x didn't cheat. No benefit if the AC team ignores it, bad if they have to look at it because it increases the workload significantly.

The only way a person could benefit is if:
1. X got wrongfully banned.
2. Y believes that person X got wrongfully banned.
3. Y is more knowledgable than the whole AC team combined.
4. Y has enough time to proof that the AC teams proof is wrong.
5. The AC team trusts Y more than themselves or Y's counter proof is so comprehensive and logical that they have to admit that they made a mistake.
6. Y isn't already on the AC team.

Even though Y would be a god-like AC admin, because they cared so much about anti cheat that they learned everything about it, they didn't care at all to help and join the AC team until person X got banned.
7. How did Y gain their reputation if they didn't do anything for AC so far (see 5)
8. Why did Y only start caring after X got banned?

Conclusion:
Y actually doesn't know shit about AC, Y is just another random friend of X who is 174% sure that X didn't cheat and 235% sure that they know all about AC. There will be dozens of people who think they are Y and bombard the AC team with messages. Meanwhile cheaters now have an easier time avoiding detection, the AC team is busy with the bullshit messages and can't focus on catching cheaters.
Result:
AC team mad and busy.
Friends of X still mad if not even more mad.
Cheaters are now less likely to be caught.
That's three reason totally in favor of releasing evidence.

posted about 9 years ago
#34 gaming pc in Hardware

#32
Searching for a good pre-built for 10 hours and realising there isn't one is surely the better option. After all it doesn't require standing up.

And no, since you didn't even bother to provide any information other than "which one is the best? to play gta 5 etc" no one is going to help you either.

If you don't put any effort into your questions, then you shouldn't expect anyone to put effort into their answers.

Right now you sound like you don't want to invest any time and instead expect others to do so for you.

posted about 9 years ago
#12 gaming pc in Hardware

There are no good pre-builts.

If someone who couldn't figure out which part was the CPU and which the GPU (even though it's printed quite clearly on the boxes) can build a pc with help via mumble, anyone can do it.

There's also quite a few people who'd be willing to build it for you. Some shops offer that service aswell.

posted about 9 years ago
#5 USB Devices not recognized in Hardware

I doubt his printer is USB powered.

posted about 9 years ago
#42 ESEA gives no fucks in Esports

Have you seen my mind?

It's like my room, only it doesn't follow the laws of physics. No one except me has ever found anything in there, sometimes I find things that I didn't know still existed.

posted about 9 years ago
#40 ESEA gives no fucks in Esports

#40
Security questions for password resets are also compromised if you set the answers while being watched.

If someone can watch you for the entire duration of the registration process everything is compromised.

Also e-mail: unencrypted and gets saved. Client: encrypted, and that page won't be saved.

Still not the best idea to print it, the only safe place is one's mind.

posted about 9 years ago
#21 Advice on headphones? in Hardware

#20
iirc the reasons quoted to get the m50 over the m50x were
-build quality (although I don't believe that one)
-price

If you want/need the cables it's a no-brainer.

posted about 9 years ago
#15 GPU idle temp in Hardware

80°C peak is completely normal on stock.

Keep in mind when running stability tests for overclocking that they push the CPU way harder than normal usage (~+10°C), so if you get <=85°C peak with the usual suspects (prime95, aida64) I'd consider the CPU cool.

posted about 9 years ago
#13 GPU idle temp in Hardware

#8
Stock or aftermarket cooler? Overclocked?
80°C is a completely safe core temperature.

#10
Tcase != core temperature.
Tjmax is 105°C on Ivy Bridge, up from 98°C on Sandy Bridge.

posted about 9 years ago
#6 GPU idle temp in Hardware

Was about to suggest the same as #5

It should definitely be lower if you didn't change the fan profile.

posted about 9 years ago
#398 PC Build Thread in Hardware

Uhm, there are two things I'd like to know, what are the current parts and what happened?
Are really all those parts broken? How did the motherboard and case survive? There's only two things I can think of that would kill the CPU, GPU, GPU fan, CPU fan and the CPU heatsink.
1. Someone threw the case around.
2. There was an explosion inside the case.

posted about 9 years ago
#393 PC Build Thread in Hardware

Talked to him on steam.
Better and stuff, yaddaddaa, might explain tomorrow in an edit, too tired now.
EDIT:
CPU: better and only 10$ more
Mobo: cheaper
GPU: better performance, lower power consumption
Case: dust filters ftw
PSU: cheaper

PCPartPicker part list / Price breakdown by merchant

CPU: Intel Core i5-4590 3.3GHz Quad-Core Processor ($189.88 @ OutletPC)
Motherboard: ASRock H97M Anniversary Micro ATX LGA1150 Motherboard ($68.98 @ OutletPC)
Video Card: MSI GeForce GTX 970 4GB Video Card ($329.98 @ NCIX US)
Case: Cooler Master N200 MicroATX Mid Tower Case ($43.99 @ Directron)
Power Supply: EVGA SuperNOVA NEX 750W 80+ Bronze Certified Semi-Modular ATX Power Supply ($39.99 @ Micro Center)
Total: $672.82
Prices include shipping, taxes, and discounts when available
Generated by PCPartPicker 2015-02-13 17:35 EST-0500

posted about 9 years ago
#391 PC Build Thread in Hardware

budget & goal?

Any specific reason for that motherboard?
Not to fond of the twin frozr on a 290 either. The 290 really benefits from the better (read: bigger) coolers. Tri-X or Windforce are only 10$ more.

Not sure what that PSU is supposed to do. Even in a worst case scenario (290 spiking to 400W) I can't see that pc using over 600W. If you're worried about that just get a 400W PSU for less than half the price and use the money you saved to get a 970 instead. Better performance and saves you money on the electricity bill. Can't be used as a furnace though, that's an AMD exclusive. That's a joke, I still remember "Thermi". Also competition -> lower prices.

posted about 9 years ago
#4 CPU help in Hardware

What's your motherboard/which one do you plan on getting?
I'm generally advising against overclocking right now, it's not worth it except in a few select cases.

posted about 9 years ago
#12 rsi in TF2 General Discussion

That's normal. I still get that sometimes.
You just need to take a couple of brakes, just a few minutes, instead of playing for 3 hours straight.

posted about 9 years ago
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