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This is beyond real. A motherfucker sitting there every day scratching lotto tickets while people donate more and more money. I hate not being an entrepreneur. Like he went from 420 to 615 and then bought more. Wtf? You pay me to sit around scratching lotto tickets drinking and getting high?
moving far away from GA was a blessing but knowing one of the few things that helped me get through some of the darkest years of my life will be put down tomorrow with no way of saying goodbye is super depressing.
Last Edit: Jun 23, 2017 23:22:25 GMT -5 by rdk - Back to Top
moving far away from GA was a blessing but knowing one of the few things that helped me get through some of the darkest years of my life will be put down tomorrow with no way of saying goodbye is super depressing.
moving far away from GA was a blessing but knowing one of the few things that helped me get through some of the darkest years of my life will be put down tomorrow with no way of saying goodbye is super depressing.
Post by Fozzie Bear on Jun 24, 2017 21:34:41 GMT -5
Anyone computer-savvy here? My desktop is stuttering modern games to hell and back, and after trying to replicate the issue at a computer repair shop and failing, I can't figure out what the heck is the problem.
Anyone computer-savvy here? My desktop is stuttering modern games to hell and back, and after trying to replicate the issue at a computer repair shop and failing, I can't figure out what the heck is the problem.
What graphics card are you running? What games and what graphics settings?
Anyone computer-savvy here? My desktop is stuttering modern games to hell and back, and after trying to replicate the issue at a computer repair shop and failing, I can't figure out what the heck is the problem.
What graphics card are you running? What games and what graphics settings?
Nvidia GTX Geforce 1060 dual fan 6GB. I was running pretty much all games on high/ultra up to this week.
Took my rig to a computer repair shop, games run flawlessly and no signs of overwork on a stress test. Took it back home, back to stuttering. Took it back to the computer repair shop, systematically added all my peripherals (Cooler Master keyboard, Red Dragon mouse, my monitor, my Xbox controller wireless adapter) and no stuttering whatsoever. Repair shop recommended looking into power generation at my apartment.
Took it back to my apartment, same stuttering with three different outlets. Apartment maintenance came and tested the power, no dips. Trying to take it to a friend's house today to see if it stutters or runs fine.
Well we did it! Our first album is finally out. The album release show was a great night and I couldn't be happier with how it all turned out. If you like some good old plain rock music give it a listen. If you're feeling charitable you can buy it here, or if you're a cool kid you listen to it on spotify!
What graphics card are you running? What games and what graphics settings?
Nvidia GTX Geforce 1060 dual fan 6GB. I was running pretty much all games on high/ultra up to this week.
Took my rig to a computer repair shop, games run flawlessly and no signs of overwork on a stress test. Took it back home, back to stuttering. Took it back to the computer repair shop, systematically added all my peripherals (Cooler Master keyboard, Red Dragon mouse, my monitor, my Xbox controller wireless adapter) and no stuttering whatsoever. Repair shop recommended looking into power generation at my apartment.
Took it back to my apartment, same stuttering with three different outlets. Apartment maintenance came and tested the power, no dips. Trying to take it to a friend's house today to see if it stutters or runs fine.
Damn that sucks. It seems like the only variable is your apartment. Unlikely but is it unusually hot in your apartment? Does your PC have sufficient room around it for airflow, like you aren't stacking stuff on top of it or to the side of it?
Nvidia GTX Geforce 1060 dual fan 6GB. I was running pretty much all games on high/ultra up to this week.
Took my rig to a computer repair shop, games run flawlessly and no signs of overwork on a stress test. Took it back home, back to stuttering. Took it back to the computer repair shop, systematically added all my peripherals (Cooler Master keyboard, Red Dragon mouse, my monitor, my Xbox controller wireless adapter) and no stuttering whatsoever. Repair shop recommended looking into power generation at my apartment.
Took it back to my apartment, same stuttering with three different outlets. Apartment maintenance came and tested the power, no dips. Trying to take it to a friend's house today to see if it stutters or runs fine.
Damn that sucks. It seems like the only variable is your apartment. Unlikely but is it unusually hot in your apartment? Does your PC have sufficient room around it for airflow, like you aren't stacking stuff on top of it or to the side of it?
Is it possible that the power supply is overheating after prolonged use?
Edit: Check PS intake. I'm sure this has already been done, but those fuckers have a way of getting nice and gunked up.
Nvidia GTX Geforce 1060 dual fan 6GB. I was running pretty much all games on high/ultra up to this week.
Took my rig to a computer repair shop, games run flawlessly and no signs of overwork on a stress test. Took it back home, back to stuttering. Took it back to the computer repair shop, systematically added all my peripherals (Cooler Master keyboard, Red Dragon mouse, my monitor, my Xbox controller wireless adapter) and no stuttering whatsoever. Repair shop recommended looking into power generation at my apartment.
Took it back to my apartment, same stuttering with three different outlets. Apartment maintenance came and tested the power, no dips. Trying to take it to a friend's house today to see if it stutters or runs fine.
Damn that sucks. It seems like the only variable is your apartment. Unlikely but is it unusually hot in your apartment? Does your PC have sufficient room around it for airflow, like you aren't stacking stuff on top of it or to the side of it?
I took it to my friend's apartment today, same exact issues. It stays at 75 F in my place, and it has enough airflow.
Damn that sucks. It seems like the only variable is your apartment. Unlikely but is it unusually hot in your apartment? Does your PC have sufficient room around it for airflow, like you aren't stacking stuff on top of it or to the side of it?
Is it possible that the power supply is overheating after prolonged use?
Edit: Check PS intake. I'm sure this has already been done, but those fuckers have a way of getting nice and gunked up.
How do I check PS intake? The repair shop performed a stress test but didn't see anything out of the ordinary. I'm just trying to figure out how it stutters at my place and my friend's place but not their shop. It was only connected to keyboard, mouse and my monitor.
Damn that sucks. It seems like the only variable is your apartment. Unlikely but is it unusually hot in your apartment? Does your PC have sufficient room around it for airflow, like you aren't stacking stuff on top of it or to the side of it?
I took it to my friend's apartment today, same exact issues. It stays at 75 F in my place, and it has enough airflow.
Is it possible that the power supply is overheating after prolonged use?
Edit: Check PS intake. I'm sure this has already been done, but those fuckers have a way of getting nice and gunked up.
How do I check PS intake? The repair shop performed a stress test but didn't see anything out of the ordinary. I'm just trying to figure out how it stutters at my place and my friend's place but not their shop. It was only connected to keyboard, mouse and my monitor.
Because whenever you bring something with problems in to get fixed, the problems go away. It's like when you take your kids to the doctor and say they had a fever that morning, and boom, the fever is gone.
I took it to my friend's apartment today, same exact issues. It stays at 75 F in my place, and it has enough airflow.
How do I check PS intake? The repair shop performed a stress test but didn't see anything out of the ordinary. I'm just trying to figure out how it stutters at my place and my friend's place but not their shop. It was only connected to keyboard, mouse and my monitor.
Because whenever you bring something with problems in to get fixed, the problems go away. It's like when you take your kids to the doctor and say they had a fever that morning, and boom, the fever is gone.
Post by snowmanomura on Jun 25, 2017 22:46:34 GMT -5
I've been watching Kurt Vile live on kexp videos and I'm realizing I should have just gotten some dude to film us jamming in my basement when I was In college.
Post by Fozzie Bear on Jun 26, 2017 12:44:45 GMT -5
postjack and Tainted Opossum, new development: my computer stuttered when I brought it to a friend's house. But, brought it back to the computer repair shop and it went back to running as smooth as can be. At my wit's end trying to figure out how to fix this.
postjack and Tainted Opossum, new development: my computer stuttered when I brought it to a friend's house. But, brought it back to the computer repair shop and it went back to running as smooth as can be. At my wit's end trying to figure out how to fix this.
What are you plugging into at the computer shop? Is it some kind of special surge protector or regulator or something?
Has it ever NOT stuttered at your apartment? Like was there a time everything worked smoothly?
Are the games you are playing connected online in anyway? If so could the stuttering be caused by network latency issues that are present at your apartment and your friends place but not the computer repair shop?
I know this aren't the greatest questions, I'm just struggling to isolate the problem.
Speaking of hot garbage, I have been "gifted" a free VIP pass to the Vans Warped tour because I gave my precious O neg blood last week. This thing looks like something out of a drug and alcohol induced nightmare. Anyone want?
I got a taker for this. I'm expecting pics, photos, updates, and a call from a bail bondsman.
postjack and Tainted Opossum , new development: my computer stuttered when I brought it to a friend's house. But, brought it back to the computer repair shop and it went back to running as smooth as can be. At my wit's end trying to figure out how to fix this.
What are you plugging into at the computer shop? Is it some kind of special surge protector or regulator or something?
Has it ever NOT stuttered at your apartment? Like was there a time everything worked smoothly?
Are the games you are playing connected online in anyway? If so could the stuttering be caused by network latency issues that are present at your apartment and your friends place but not the computer repair shop?
I know this aren't the greatest questions, I'm just struggling to isolate the problem.
Just my desktop rig, my monitor, my keyboard and my mouse. I believe they plugged everything straight into a surge protector strip, that's the one thing I haven't tried at my apartment yet. Previously my rig was connected straight to the wall outlet.
It ran fine up to a week or so ago, for about a month up to that point.
I disconnected the Internet at my place to see, didn't notice a difference. Then, didn't bring any Internet connectivity equipment to my friend's and had the same problem.
What are you plugging into at the computer shop? Is it some kind of special surge protector or regulator or something?
Has it ever NOT stuttered at your apartment? Like was there a time everything worked smoothly?
Are the games you are playing connected online in anyway? If so could the stuttering be caused by network latency issues that are present at your apartment and your friends place but not the computer repair shop?
I know this aren't the greatest questions, I'm just struggling to isolate the problem.
Just my desktop rig, my monitor, my keyboard and my mouse. I believe they plugged everything straight into a surge protector strip, that's the one thing I haven't tried at my apartment yet. Previously my rig was connected straight to the wall outlet.
It ran fine up to a week or so ago, for about a month up to that point.
I disconnected the Internet at my place to see, didn't notice a difference. Then, didn't bring any Internet connectivity equipment to my friend's and had the same problem.
Based on what you have said about the issue, it really sounds like some sort of power delivery issue, either to the PC itself or from the PSU to the internal components. Any sort of electromagnetic radiation can cause interference in your gear (for example, turning on a microwave can modulate your FM radio, or bog down your wi fi signal). So anything that generates EMI, or draws a lot of current can affect the quality of the electricity that is being driven at an outlet. For something like a PC, particularly a gaming PC with tighter voltage tolerances for max performance, you have to take the AC, convert it to DC, and then get all your components running. If some sort of EMI or high current appliance affects your RMS AC from the wall you could essentially see inconsistent power to the PSU, and votages falling out of range on your motherboard//gpu/etc. Power conditioners essentially smooth out the AC line so that you get a more consistent signal, and it isn't unheard for computer repair shops to run power conditioners when doing work, especially if they build PCs or overclock cpus or whatever. They are also used in high end Hi-Fi systems to get better sounding music. If you live in an apt, I'm sure your unit and all your neighbors are tied into the same mains coming from the street, ie: you probably see a lot of fluctuation in your AC delivery when everyone is home and running their stuff. All of this could be exacerbated by a bad PSU or bad temperature regulation. check that your cpu voltages are where they are supposed to be, and if they fluctuate when you run a game. I had a computer in my lab that ate power supplies because the motherboard had voltage leak and the thing was way out of normal range and the PSU just couldn't handle it.
Fozzie Bear have you tried wiring your car to your computer then driving past the old clock tower right as lightening strikes to get the power you need. Based on my calculations, this should provide you with 1.21 gigawatts, more than enough to run Crysis.
Just my desktop rig, my monitor, my keyboard and my mouse. I believe they plugged everything straight into a surge protector strip, that's the one thing I haven't tried at my apartment yet. Previously my rig was connected straight to the wall outlet.
It ran fine up to a week or so ago, for about a month up to that point.
I disconnected the Internet at my place to see, didn't notice a difference. Then, didn't bring any Internet connectivity equipment to my friend's and had the same problem.
Based on what you have said about the issue, it really sounds like some sort of power delivery issue, either to the PC itself or from the PSU to the internal components. Any sort of electromagnetic radiation can cause interference in your gear (for example, turning on a microwave can modulate your FM radio, or bog down your wi fi signal). So anything that generates EMI, or draws a lot of current can affect the quality of the electricity that is being driven at an outlet. For something like a PC, particularly a gaming PC with tighter voltage tolerances for max performance, you have to take the AC, convert it to DC, and then get all your components running. If some sort of EMI or high current appliance affects your RMS AC from the wall you could essentially see inconsistent power to the PSU, and votages falling out of range on your motherboard//gpu/etc. Power conditioners essentially smooth out the AC line so that you get a more consistent signal, and it isn't unheard for computer repair shops to run power conditioners when doing work, especially if they build PCs or overclock cpus or whatever. They are also used in high end Hi-Fi systems to get better sounding music. If you live in an apt, I'm sure your unit and all your neighbors are tied into the same mains coming from the street, ie: you probably see a lot of fluctuation in your AC delivery when everyone is home and running their stuff. All of this could be exacerbated by a bad PSU or bad temperature regulation. check that your cpu voltages are where they are supposed to be, and if they fluctuate when you run a game. I had a computer in my lab that ate power supplies because the motherboard had voltage leak and the thing was way out of normal range and the PSU just couldn't handle it.
Temps are fine, how can I check CPU voltages and PSU levels? The repair shop did consider the PSU issue, but did say that it could be potentially a waste to insert a whole new PSU in case it doesn't work. The PSU is from 2009 or so, so it could be going bad at this point.
Fozzie Bear have you tried wiring your car to your computer then driving past the old clock tower right as lightening strikes to get the power you need. Based on my calculations, this should provide you with 1.21 gigawatts, more than enough to run Crysis.