No sale in Canada, like usual.
Account Details | |
---|---|
SteamID64 | 76561198028750428 |
SteamID3 | [U:1:68484700] |
SteamID32 | STEAM_0:0:34242350 |
Country | Cyprus |
Signed Up | July 21, 2012 |
Last Posted | November 17, 2017 at 10:06 AM |
Posts | 1535 (0.3 per day) |
Game Settings | |
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In-game Sensitivity | 1.4 |
Windows Sensitivity | 7 |
Raw Input | 1 |
DPI |
1150 |
Resolution |
1920x1080 |
Refresh Rate |
120hz |
Hardware Peripherals | |
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Mouse | |
Keyboard | |
Mousepad | |
Headphones | |
Monitor |
Posting the solution here
In the Xonar DSX Audio Center disable the GX button. Problem solved.
http://i.imgur.com/aMKCTM6.png
Solution and description was found here
https://v1.xsplit.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=92&t=16453&p=65689#p65689
Hello,
I'm having an issue with my sound card, and streaming with it as my audio device. My sound card functions more or less perfectly from my end. Everything I should be able to hear, I can hear just fine.
However, the problem is using the device for streaming. For some reason it won't push through any game audio. When I open up my windows volume mixer, it shows the games but it doesn't show the audio level going above 0 ever. I can hear the audio perfectly fine, however.
I've tested multiple games, and it's the same for all of them. It is perfectly fine with audio from foobar2000, my browser, etc.
-My sound card is an ASUS Xonar DSX.
-My drivers are updated
-The sound card is set to default device
Feel free to add my if you think it would help troubleshoot.
Thanks.
RIP HRG. Any information on the reason for dropping?
I don't think much is known about main yet, until the moveups happen. Then we can see roster changes and who is still alive.
renxzeni too watch vods of my favorite pocket
http://www.twitch.tv/platinumtf2/profile/pastBroadcasts
Did you even read a post in this thread?
OP, I have the same issue as you.
Was it the server being DDoS'd, or the players?
In the case of servers, yes it's on ESEA to do something about it.
In the case of players, well then it's up to the players to do something about it, not ESEA. There has been threads about how to prevent yourself from being DDoS'd, so someone should probably find those once again.
To answer the original question, I don't think casters should talk about it for 2 reasons.
1) It gives the DDoSer the satisfaction of everyone knowing about what he did
2) It educates potential future DDoSers to the fact it exist. The less people who know about it, the more it will go away.
While I found the stats in the articles cool, and I'm grateful someone put them together, the things they manage to deduce from the data is nonsense or really awkwardly shoe-horned in 90% of the time.
Quit being a bitch there is plenty of room
If anyone is casting and needs a camera, I can do it. I have like 9up at school so I'm all good.
Unless TFTV is doing it already, I'd rather get drunk.
A few days ago it would take 10 seconds before the page would start loading, every other site was completely fine.
aimpot is my dad
pot took my dad
I play both.
In MGE, I'm able to smooth my aim out, because I have one person to focus on. So when I translate it to a real game I panic with so much going on, and don't remember to take my time with my aim.
If I remember to smooth my aim out in DM, it translates a lot better to games.
I guess it depends how good your focus is.
I just actually looked at your OP now a well, I might have to recommend against the PSU unless someone can attest to it. A PSU that goes wrong can wreck your entire build, and for that reason I generally wouldn't buy anything other than big name brands on the PSU.
Also, you may want to consider posting this to /r/buildapc, it won't take much effort, but it provides some extra eyes and someone might find something better than what you are looking at currently.
(that is of course, if you don't get more help here, I'm not up to date with some modern parts so I don't want to try and help).
I use a 64GB SSD, with Windows and TF2 installed on it. I also install my most frequent lightweight programs on like foobar, hexchat, notepad++, mumble, obs, steam, etc. After all that, it still leaves me with about 10GB of space in case I really need it.
You can change your browsers default download directory to your harddrive.
I recommend leaving some space on the SSD, because some steam games don't let you install to your harddrive if steam is on the SSD, and you have to move it after downloading with Steammover or something.
Really, 64GB is manageable, and I don't really ever regret not spending more money on a 128GB or something.
(If you get it, and notice for some reason it's filling up, make sure you are emptying your recycle bin).