This document provides release notes for multiple versions of an emulator plugin. The key points summarized are:
- Version 1.65 fixes black areas in some NTSC games and removes a game fix option to improve compatibility.
- Version 1.64 improves graphics by fixing unwanted texture shaking and adding optional 2xSaI texture filtering to sharpen textures, though it can cause glitches in some games.
- Version 1.63 automatically handles bad dmachains to improve compatibility for several games, fixes texture and frame issues, and adds a new framebuffer rendering mode for slower GPUs.
This document is an instruction manual for the game Chasm: The Rift. It provides information on system requirements, installation instructions, how to start a new game, gameplay instructions including controls and menus, multiplayer and network options, saving and loading games, and troubleshooting tips. The manual describes fighting mutant creatures that have come through time rifts and infiltrated the present day.
This document provides steps to resolve an issue in Rise of Kingdoms where a champion is not returning from a march due to an old Facebook session. It explains that old Facebook sessions can cause this problem and provides 8 steps to end all Facebook sessions on devices to force the game to start a new session and return the champion. The steps include accessing the Facebook security settings and tools page to view and end all logged in sessions on devices. Refreshing the game after ending all sessions should return the stuck champion.
pSX is a PlayStation 1 emulator that runs under Windows and Linux. It emulates most aspects of the PlayStation and allows users to play PS1 games by loading various disc image file formats. The emulator is designed to be easy to use with minimal configuration required. It supports features like save states, memory cards, and compressed disc images to provide an authentic PlayStation experience.
The document provides an overview and instructions for using PowerBot+, an all-in-one script for Kingdom of Camelot that combines various scripts, tools, and features into a single interface. It discusses installing PowerBot+ and configuring various settings like general preferences, game features, chat settings, and individual tab functions. Screenshots are included to illustrate the user interface, such as the dashboard, powerbar for accessing tabs, and options for configuring alerts and notifications.
This document provides a parts list and requirements for building a mid-range gaming PC. It includes the motherboard, CPU, RAM, graphics card, case, cooling fans, power supply, hard drive, optical drive, keyboard, mouse, monitor, and operating system. Pictures are included to show how to install the components. The total cost of the parts listed is $1286. The computer is designed specifically for gaming and to provide high performance.
This document provides an introduction and overview of batch file programming in Microsoft Windows. It discusses how batch files work, the different modes (interactive and batch), and how to create a basic "Hello World" batch file. It also covers internal and external commands, common run line commands, operators used in batch files like arithmetic, logical, and redirection operators. The document aims to provide novice to advanced programmers an understanding of batch file programming concepts.
This document provides instructions on how to build a basic computer. It outlines the key components needed which include a case, power supply, motherboard, processor, heat sink and fan, RAM, hard drive, optical disc drive, graphics card, modem, and sound card. The motherboard serves as the central component that hosts all the other hardware. Together, these parts allow the computer to power on, process commands, store and access data, display graphics, connect to the internet, and produce sound.
This document is an instruction manual for the game Chasm: The Rift. It provides information on system requirements, installation instructions, how to start a new game, gameplay instructions including controls and menus, multiplayer and network options, saving and loading games, and troubleshooting tips. The manual describes fighting mutant creatures that have come through time rifts and infiltrated the present day.
This document provides steps to resolve an issue in Rise of Kingdoms where a champion is not returning from a march due to an old Facebook session. It explains that old Facebook sessions can cause this problem and provides 8 steps to end all Facebook sessions on devices to force the game to start a new session and return the champion. The steps include accessing the Facebook security settings and tools page to view and end all logged in sessions on devices. Refreshing the game after ending all sessions should return the stuck champion.
pSX is a PlayStation 1 emulator that runs under Windows and Linux. It emulates most aspects of the PlayStation and allows users to play PS1 games by loading various disc image file formats. The emulator is designed to be easy to use with minimal configuration required. It supports features like save states, memory cards, and compressed disc images to provide an authentic PlayStation experience.
The document provides an overview and instructions for using PowerBot+, an all-in-one script for Kingdom of Camelot that combines various scripts, tools, and features into a single interface. It discusses installing PowerBot+ and configuring various settings like general preferences, game features, chat settings, and individual tab functions. Screenshots are included to illustrate the user interface, such as the dashboard, powerbar for accessing tabs, and options for configuring alerts and notifications.
This document provides a parts list and requirements for building a mid-range gaming PC. It includes the motherboard, CPU, RAM, graphics card, case, cooling fans, power supply, hard drive, optical drive, keyboard, mouse, monitor, and operating system. Pictures are included to show how to install the components. The total cost of the parts listed is $1286. The computer is designed specifically for gaming and to provide high performance.
This document provides an introduction and overview of batch file programming in Microsoft Windows. It discusses how batch files work, the different modes (interactive and batch), and how to create a basic "Hello World" batch file. It also covers internal and external commands, common run line commands, operators used in batch files like arithmetic, logical, and redirection operators. The document aims to provide novice to advanced programmers an understanding of batch file programming concepts.
This document provides instructions on how to build a basic computer. It outlines the key components needed which include a case, power supply, motherboard, processor, heat sink and fan, RAM, hard drive, optical disc drive, graphics card, modem, and sound card. The motherboard serves as the central component that hosts all the other hardware. Together, these parts allow the computer to power on, process commands, store and access data, display graphics, connect to the internet, and produce sound.
If you are facing problems while playing Mortal Kombat X, then it can be fixed by performing few manual steps. If the error still persists then it can be fixed by PC Repair Tool software.
This document provides information on the key components needed to build a computer, including the case, power supply, motherboard, CPU, memory, video card, storage, and optical drive. It explains that the motherboard, CPU, and memory are the three most important components, with the motherboard requiring a compatible CPU socket and chipset. Brief definitions are given for each component, such as the motherboard serving as the main circuit board that connects other components, the CPU performing instructions, and memory storing programs and applications. The document recommends purchasing components from Newegg and concludes by thanking the reader for learning about how to build a computer.
This document summarizes the specifications of a Dell rackmount server. It includes an Intel Xeon E3-1220 quad-core 3.1 GHz processor, Intel 3420 chipset, 8GB of DDR3 ECC RAM, two 300GB 15K RPM SAS hard drives configured in a RAID array, integrated graphics, dual Gigabit Ethernet, various expansion slots, and a 345W power supply. The server has a 3-year warranty and is priced at 19,250,000 Indonesian Rupiah.
The use of the tabs in the game makes bot a lighter program that uses fewer computer resources. You can select which tabs you want active. WARNING: DO NOT USE THEM ALL!
Guide to Build A High-Performance Custom Gaming PCMemory4 less
This document discusses the essential computer parts for building a custom gaming desktop PC from scratch, including a Cooler Master HAF 912 computer casing, Intel Core i7-6700K quad-core processor, Artic Freezer 13 CPU cooling fan, Gigabyte GeForce GTX 1060 graphics card, MSI Pro Series Intel Z270 motherboard, Samsung 8GB DDR4 RAM, Samsung Spinpoint F1 1TB hard drive, and Cooler Master Elite V2 power supply. It provides the pros and cons of each part and recommends using the memory4less configurator tool and build guide to select suitable components and learn how to assemble the custom gaming PC.
The Ring programming language version 1.9 book - Part 80 of 210Mahmoud Samir Fayed
The document discusses Ring documentation and provides examples of using Qt classes and events in Ring. It includes:
1) A table listing Qt classes and their associated methods for using default events, such as QPushButton's setClickEvent() and QTimer's setTimeoutEvent().
2) An example of a cards game application developed in Ring using Qt classes like QPushButton, QPixmap, and QTimer. The game displays cards, tracks scores, and declares functions for game logic and events.
3) Screenshots of the cards game running on desktop and mobile that demonstrate gameplay and event handling during runtime.
The document provides an overview of the progress made on a space shooter video game created using the Construct 2 game engine. Key points:
- The game allows the player to equip different modules for their spaceship between levels to provide benefits.
- The developer began by placing basic placeholder assets and coding movement and shooting mechanics. They switched engines from GameMaker to Construct 2 for better coding interfaces.
- Various enemy AI behaviors were implemented, such as circling the player before attacking. Level switching was problematic and eventually each level was made significantly larger.
- Health systems, damage calculations, and a shield power-up module were added. The project involves both programming and asset creation by two collaborators.
When a FreeBSD system is powered on, it goes through several boot stages to initialize the kernel. The BIOS performs initial checks and loads the master boot record (MBR) from the boot device. The MBR contains the boot0 stage which initializes partitions and loads the boot2 stage. Boot2 loads the loader stage, which loads and passes control to the kernel. The kernel then performs initialization like setting up memory mappings and starting essential processes and daemons.
This document provides specifications for several HP laptop models, including the EliteBook and ProBook series. It lists the HP EliteBook 8440p and 8540w as high-performance workstation models. Key specs listed include processors up to Intel Core i7, discrete graphics cards including NVIDIA Quadro FX 880M, memory up to 16GB, display options up to 15.6" LED HD+, and solid state drives up to 256GB. The document also covers the ThinkPad T410 and ProBook T series models.
Dokumen tersebut merupakan jadwal materi pelatihan penggerak muda Bima selama 3 hari. Materi pelatihan meliputi evaluasi pembelajaran, calistung, MBTI, dimensi kepemimpinan, stakeholder mapping, pembuatan alat peraga, mendongeng, dan ice breaker. Tujuannya adalah melatih kapasitas penggerak muda dalam merencanakan, melaksanakan dan mengevaluasi pembelajaran serta memahami karakter diri dan kepemimp
The document discusses the effectiveness of mise-en-scene choices for a target audience. Audience feedback revealed that decisions like using relatable costumes set in a college building and including comedic aspects helped engage viewers as intended. Narrative elements like an engaging story left the audience wanting more, showing the mise-en-scene successfully captured their interest.
Este documento resume los tipos y efectos de los conflictos en equipos de trabajo, así como las actitudes y estilos para enfrentarlos. Explica que los conflictos son normales pero pueden tener efectos positivos o negativos dependiendo de cómo se manejen. Identifica cinco tipos de conflictos - funcional, personal, político y otros - y cinco actitudes - competitiva, evasiva, acomodada, colaborativa y de compromiso. Además, describe cinco estilos para enfrentar conflictos - competitivo, acomodaticio, evasivo, colabor
This advertisement from Yellow House promotes saving girls and celebrates International Girls Day. It highlights the interests of girl children and protests the need to protect girls' rights. The advertisement encourages viewers to leave feedback and like the Yellow House Facebook page if they found the ad informative.
This document discusses key standards for health information exchange and interoperability. It describes three stages of meaningful use that aim to improve healthcare quality, safety, and privacy. The document also presents a case example where a patient's medical history from one hospital was unavailable during an emergency at another hospital due to lack of interoperability. It proposes a PHIT application that would enable data exchange between different electronic health record systems using standards like HL7, FHIR, and SNOMED to address this issue.
Kuronuma Sawako introduces herself and says she will guide the reader on different types of conjunctions. She provides examples of conjunctions like "and", "but", "or", "either...or", "neither...nor", "yet", "otherwise", "both...and". She encourages the reader to look at pictures to understand the conjunctions properly. She then discusses more conjunctions like "till/until", "before", "after", "that", "so...that", "as", "as...as", "although", "though", "than", "if", "unless" with example sentences and references looking at related pictures. Kuronuma Sawako further explains conjunctions like "either...
Este documento resume los tipos y efectos de los conflictos en equipos de trabajo, así como las actitudes y estilos para enfrentarlos. Explica que los conflictos son normales pero pueden tener efectos positivos o negativos dependiendo de cómo se manejen. Identifica cinco tipos de conflictos - funcional, personal, político y otros - y cinco actitudes - competitiva, evasiva, acomodada, colaborativa y de compromiso. También describe cinco estilos para enfrentar conflictos - competitivo, acomodaticio, evasivo, colaborador y
Accountable Care Organizations (ACOs) are groups of health care providers that work together to coordinate high-quality care for Medicare patients. The goal is to ensure patients receive the right care at the right time while avoiding unnecessary duplication of services and medical errors. There are several Medicare ACO programs that reward providers for reducing costs and meeting quality standards. Quality measures assess areas like communication with patients, use of electronic health records, and appropriate treatment of conditions like heart disease. Studies show ACOs have improved quality scores and achieved reductions in hospital-acquired conditions, patient harms, and health care spending. However, some questions remain about the long-term sustainability of the ACO model.
El documento describe los diferentes tipos de chocolate y cacao. Explica que el chocolate se obtiene de mezclar azúcar con pasta de cacao y manteca de cacao. Luego detalla los principales tipos de chocolate como el amargo, blanco, con leche y de cobertura. También habla sobre el cacao, su origen como fruta tropical y los tipos de plantas de cacao como el forastero, criollo y trinitario así como los principales países productores.
This document provides examples and explanations of various English prepositions through pictures and sentences. It begins by introducing prepositions like behind, under, on, in front of, beside, between, and near. Then it discusses other prepositions like after, from, before, since, until, at, on, by, for. Examples are given showing how to use these prepositions properly in sentences. More prepositions are introduced like round, about, towards, at, to. Finally, the document provides a test for the reader to fill in blanks with the correct prepositions, and concludes by thanking the reader for learning about prepositions.
Grand Theft Auto: Vice City readme document provides system requirements and installation instructions. It outlines that the game requires Windows 98 or newer, a minimum of 128MB RAM, 32MB video card and at least 915MB of hard disk space. The document provides details on installation, configuration, known issues and extras available for the PC version.
If you are facing problems while playing Mortal Kombat X, then it can be fixed by performing few manual steps. If the error still persists then it can be fixed by PC Repair Tool software.
This document provides information on the key components needed to build a computer, including the case, power supply, motherboard, CPU, memory, video card, storage, and optical drive. It explains that the motherboard, CPU, and memory are the three most important components, with the motherboard requiring a compatible CPU socket and chipset. Brief definitions are given for each component, such as the motherboard serving as the main circuit board that connects other components, the CPU performing instructions, and memory storing programs and applications. The document recommends purchasing components from Newegg and concludes by thanking the reader for learning about how to build a computer.
This document summarizes the specifications of a Dell rackmount server. It includes an Intel Xeon E3-1220 quad-core 3.1 GHz processor, Intel 3420 chipset, 8GB of DDR3 ECC RAM, two 300GB 15K RPM SAS hard drives configured in a RAID array, integrated graphics, dual Gigabit Ethernet, various expansion slots, and a 345W power supply. The server has a 3-year warranty and is priced at 19,250,000 Indonesian Rupiah.
The use of the tabs in the game makes bot a lighter program that uses fewer computer resources. You can select which tabs you want active. WARNING: DO NOT USE THEM ALL!
Guide to Build A High-Performance Custom Gaming PCMemory4 less
This document discusses the essential computer parts for building a custom gaming desktop PC from scratch, including a Cooler Master HAF 912 computer casing, Intel Core i7-6700K quad-core processor, Artic Freezer 13 CPU cooling fan, Gigabyte GeForce GTX 1060 graphics card, MSI Pro Series Intel Z270 motherboard, Samsung 8GB DDR4 RAM, Samsung Spinpoint F1 1TB hard drive, and Cooler Master Elite V2 power supply. It provides the pros and cons of each part and recommends using the memory4less configurator tool and build guide to select suitable components and learn how to assemble the custom gaming PC.
The Ring programming language version 1.9 book - Part 80 of 210Mahmoud Samir Fayed
The document discusses Ring documentation and provides examples of using Qt classes and events in Ring. It includes:
1) A table listing Qt classes and their associated methods for using default events, such as QPushButton's setClickEvent() and QTimer's setTimeoutEvent().
2) An example of a cards game application developed in Ring using Qt classes like QPushButton, QPixmap, and QTimer. The game displays cards, tracks scores, and declares functions for game logic and events.
3) Screenshots of the cards game running on desktop and mobile that demonstrate gameplay and event handling during runtime.
The document provides an overview of the progress made on a space shooter video game created using the Construct 2 game engine. Key points:
- The game allows the player to equip different modules for their spaceship between levels to provide benefits.
- The developer began by placing basic placeholder assets and coding movement and shooting mechanics. They switched engines from GameMaker to Construct 2 for better coding interfaces.
- Various enemy AI behaviors were implemented, such as circling the player before attacking. Level switching was problematic and eventually each level was made significantly larger.
- Health systems, damage calculations, and a shield power-up module were added. The project involves both programming and asset creation by two collaborators.
When a FreeBSD system is powered on, it goes through several boot stages to initialize the kernel. The BIOS performs initial checks and loads the master boot record (MBR) from the boot device. The MBR contains the boot0 stage which initializes partitions and loads the boot2 stage. Boot2 loads the loader stage, which loads and passes control to the kernel. The kernel then performs initialization like setting up memory mappings and starting essential processes and daemons.
This document provides specifications for several HP laptop models, including the EliteBook and ProBook series. It lists the HP EliteBook 8440p and 8540w as high-performance workstation models. Key specs listed include processors up to Intel Core i7, discrete graphics cards including NVIDIA Quadro FX 880M, memory up to 16GB, display options up to 15.6" LED HD+, and solid state drives up to 256GB. The document also covers the ThinkPad T410 and ProBook T series models.
Dokumen tersebut merupakan jadwal materi pelatihan penggerak muda Bima selama 3 hari. Materi pelatihan meliputi evaluasi pembelajaran, calistung, MBTI, dimensi kepemimpinan, stakeholder mapping, pembuatan alat peraga, mendongeng, dan ice breaker. Tujuannya adalah melatih kapasitas penggerak muda dalam merencanakan, melaksanakan dan mengevaluasi pembelajaran serta memahami karakter diri dan kepemimp
The document discusses the effectiveness of mise-en-scene choices for a target audience. Audience feedback revealed that decisions like using relatable costumes set in a college building and including comedic aspects helped engage viewers as intended. Narrative elements like an engaging story left the audience wanting more, showing the mise-en-scene successfully captured their interest.
Este documento resume los tipos y efectos de los conflictos en equipos de trabajo, así como las actitudes y estilos para enfrentarlos. Explica que los conflictos son normales pero pueden tener efectos positivos o negativos dependiendo de cómo se manejen. Identifica cinco tipos de conflictos - funcional, personal, político y otros - y cinco actitudes - competitiva, evasiva, acomodada, colaborativa y de compromiso. Además, describe cinco estilos para enfrentar conflictos - competitivo, acomodaticio, evasivo, colabor
This advertisement from Yellow House promotes saving girls and celebrates International Girls Day. It highlights the interests of girl children and protests the need to protect girls' rights. The advertisement encourages viewers to leave feedback and like the Yellow House Facebook page if they found the ad informative.
This document discusses key standards for health information exchange and interoperability. It describes three stages of meaningful use that aim to improve healthcare quality, safety, and privacy. The document also presents a case example where a patient's medical history from one hospital was unavailable during an emergency at another hospital due to lack of interoperability. It proposes a PHIT application that would enable data exchange between different electronic health record systems using standards like HL7, FHIR, and SNOMED to address this issue.
Kuronuma Sawako introduces herself and says she will guide the reader on different types of conjunctions. She provides examples of conjunctions like "and", "but", "or", "either...or", "neither...nor", "yet", "otherwise", "both...and". She encourages the reader to look at pictures to understand the conjunctions properly. She then discusses more conjunctions like "till/until", "before", "after", "that", "so...that", "as", "as...as", "although", "though", "than", "if", "unless" with example sentences and references looking at related pictures. Kuronuma Sawako further explains conjunctions like "either...
Este documento resume los tipos y efectos de los conflictos en equipos de trabajo, así como las actitudes y estilos para enfrentarlos. Explica que los conflictos son normales pero pueden tener efectos positivos o negativos dependiendo de cómo se manejen. Identifica cinco tipos de conflictos - funcional, personal, político y otros - y cinco actitudes - competitiva, evasiva, acomodada, colaborativa y de compromiso. También describe cinco estilos para enfrentar conflictos - competitivo, acomodaticio, evasivo, colaborador y
Accountable Care Organizations (ACOs) are groups of health care providers that work together to coordinate high-quality care for Medicare patients. The goal is to ensure patients receive the right care at the right time while avoiding unnecessary duplication of services and medical errors. There are several Medicare ACO programs that reward providers for reducing costs and meeting quality standards. Quality measures assess areas like communication with patients, use of electronic health records, and appropriate treatment of conditions like heart disease. Studies show ACOs have improved quality scores and achieved reductions in hospital-acquired conditions, patient harms, and health care spending. However, some questions remain about the long-term sustainability of the ACO model.
El documento describe los diferentes tipos de chocolate y cacao. Explica que el chocolate se obtiene de mezclar azúcar con pasta de cacao y manteca de cacao. Luego detalla los principales tipos de chocolate como el amargo, blanco, con leche y de cobertura. También habla sobre el cacao, su origen como fruta tropical y los tipos de plantas de cacao como el forastero, criollo y trinitario así como los principales países productores.
This document provides examples and explanations of various English prepositions through pictures and sentences. It begins by introducing prepositions like behind, under, on, in front of, beside, between, and near. Then it discusses other prepositions like after, from, before, since, until, at, on, by, for. Examples are given showing how to use these prepositions properly in sentences. More prepositions are introduced like round, about, towards, at, to. Finally, the document provides a test for the reader to fill in blanks with the correct prepositions, and concludes by thanking the reader for learning about prepositions.
Grand Theft Auto: Vice City readme document provides system requirements and installation instructions. It outlines that the game requires Windows 98 or newer, a minimum of 128MB RAM, 32MB video card and at least 915MB of hard disk space. The document provides details on installation, configuration, known issues and extras available for the PC version.
This document provides an overview and instructions for Project64, an emulator for playing Nintendo 64 ROM files on Windows PCs. It describes the emulator's key features such as recompilers for accurate CPU and RSP emulation. System requirements, instructions for use, configuration options for plugins, known issues and credits are also summarized. The document advises users to thoroughly read it before contacting the authors with questions.
This document summarizes Ange Albertini's talk on "Funky file Formats". The talk discusses how files can take on multiple formats by exploiting ambiguities and tolerance in file specifications. Examples are given of files that are valid images, archives, documents, and encrypted files simultaneously. The talk also covers steganography techniques like hiding files within other file formats by manipulating metadata or unused portions of file specifications. Overall, the talk illustrates the concept of "format polymorphism" where single files can masquerade as multiple file types to evade detection or trigger different parser behaviors.
PCSX2 is a PlayStation 2 emulator that allows users to play PS2 games on their computer by executing PS2 code. It was created by the same team that developed PCSX, a PS1 emulator. Over more than five years of development, PCSX2 has improved compatibility from just a few demos to many popular games being playable. Current versions include dual core processor support, improved graphics emulation, and full controller support. The project relies on volunteer developers and testers who work on it in their free time.
The document discusses some technical details about the Gateway 3DS, including that it allows playing game ROMs by forging them to appear as original versions without modifying the Nintendo console. It can currently only run one game at a time from an individual microSD card. There is also discussion around the possibility of Nintendo blocking it through system updates, limitations in playing games from other regions or homebrew, and concerns around saved game data and online play.
This document is a FAQ for burning game ISO images called "ISO Burning for Morons". It discusses various topics related to ISO burning such as file formats, software needed, and troubleshooting issues. Common questions are answered such as how to decompress RAR files, read NFO files, and use verification software. Tips are provided for burning PlayStation games slowly and making an image first before burning. Various websites for news, cracks, and links are listed. The author thanks those who contribute ISO releases and the creator of a similar PlayStation FAQ for layout ideas.
Parallel Graphics in Frostbite - Current & Future (Siggraph 2009)Johan Andersson
1. The document discusses parallel graphics techniques used in the Frostbite game engine, both currently and potentially in the future. It describes using job-based parallelism to utilize multiple CPU cores and the PS3 SPUs.
2. One technique is parallel command buffer recording to dispatch draw calls to multiple command buffers and scale linearly with core count. Another is software occlusion culling using the SPUs/CPU to rasterize a coarse z-buffer.
3. Potential future techniques discussed include deferred shading using compute shaders, with the compute shader culling lights and accumulating lighting per screen-space tile.
The document provides navigation and documentation for ZSNES v1.51, including an index of documentation files and FAQ sections. The FAQ addresses common questions about ZSNES, grouped by category into universal questions, Windows-specific questions, SDL-specific questions, and DOS-specific questions. Questions cover general usage, games, video, sound, input, and speed/performance.
The document discusses the author's experience with malware and file formats over 13 years, noting how specifications are often outdated and incomplete which can lead to misunderstandings. It advocates for better tools to analyze, document, and validate file formats to improve understanding of their current usage and behaviors. The author has created several open source projects focused on file format analysis and validation.
The document discusses differences between console and PC game development. It provides overviews of the Xbox 360 and PS3 architectures, noting their CPUs, GPUs and memory configurations. Key differences are the fixed hardware of consoles, which makes optimization easier but limits technology updates. The PS3's Cell processor uses a unique parallel processing design. Developing games for consoles within Unity presents limitations like no just-in-time compilation, different APIs and requiring animation for loading/saving. Best practices include working at 720p resolution and accounting for memory usage.
This document provides release notes and documentation for Adrenaline v1.2.0, a multiplayer first-person shooter game. It includes sections on controls, chat commands, adding custom music, system requirements, frequently asked questions, credits, related websites, IRC support, and the license. The controls section outlines movement, weapon selection, chat, and other in-game controls. The chat commands section lists commands for changing teams, viewing stats, and other information. Custom music can be added by copying files to the music directory. System requirements and troubleshooting tips are also provided.
This document outlines the specifications and pricing for components for a high-end gaming and graphics desktop computer build. It provides details on the parts selected, including the ASUS Rampage IV Extreme motherboard, Intel i7-3960X processor, Corsair Dominator Platinum RAM, ASUS VH236H monitor, and other components. The total price for all parts is summarized to be $3469.22. Alternative pre-built options from Alienware and Acer are also presented costing $1500 and $299 respectively. The document concludes by reflecting on the large price of the custom build and how technology advances rapidly such that many current devices may decline in a few years.
This document outlines the specifications and pricing for components for a high-end gaming and graphics desktop computer build. It provides details on the components, including the ASUS Rampage IV Extreme motherboard, Intel i7-3960X processor, Corsair Dominator Platinum RAM, Zalman CPU cooler, Azza Titan power supply, AMD Radeon HD 7870 graphics card, Asus monitor, NZXT Phantom case, peripherals, and total pricing. The total for all components is $3469.22. Alternatively, a pre-built Alienware computer could be purchased for $1500, while the author currently has an Acer Aspire laptop that was $299.
The document describes a project to convert an old laptop into a digital picture frame by installing Damn Small Linux (DSL). It details the steps taken which include:
1. Partitioning the hard drive into several partitions and formatting them.
2. Installing DSL in frugal mode on one partition to act as the operating system.
3. Configuring the system to automatically backup and restore settings on startup and shutdown.
4. Installing software to display images in a slideshow and configuring options for delays and looping.
The individual then asks questions about wear on flash storage from frequent image changes, ensuring the file system is protected from power failures, and tips for remastering
Javier Ramírez will present "Fun with Ruby (and without r***s)" and teach how to program your own games with Gosu. The presentation will introduce Gosu, the game development framework, and Chipmunk, the 2D physics library. It will also cover game design considerations and components of a game development workflow. Attendees will learn how to package Ruby games into executable files using the rubyscript2exe tool to distribute their creations.
Unity optimization techniques applied in Catan UniverseExozet Berlin GmbH
In this presentation we make a summary of important optimization techniques that were adopted when porting Catan Universe to mobile. Most of them can also be universally applied in other Unity projects; let us know if they helped you.
Spyro the Dragon revolutionized 3D open world games on PS1 by eliminating fogging through an engine that reduced polygon counts at a distance. This allowed for greater landscape detail. Later games like GTA 5 still use fogging to reduce polygon loads and create a sense of depth. While 2D games don't need fogging, 3D open world games must consider hardware limitations through techniques like fogging or innovative engines to balance visuals and performance.
Allegorithmic developed Substance, a middleware for procedurally generating textures on CPUs to reduce texture memory and streaming bottlenecks. Substance uses a node-based graph to procedurally generate textures. It is designed to take advantage of multi-core CPUs through techniques like task parallelism, data parallelism, and lockless synchronization to efficiently generate textures across CPU cores in parallel. Testing showed Substance could utilize 4 CPU cores to generate textures 3.8 times faster than a single core, helping to maintain high framerates during texture streaming.
- Early 3D games like Spyro the Dragon and Turok: Dinosaur Hunter used "fogging" techniques to reduce polygon counts and render distances due to hardware limitations, which improved performance but reduced visual quality.
- Modern consoles have much more powerful hardware, eliminating the need for unnecessary fogging and allowing for higher levels of landscape detail and resolution in games. However, some fogging effects are still used for atmospheric purposes.
- The debate around differences in the Xbox One and PS4 versions of games like Call of Duty: Ghosts stems from the PS4's ability to output true 1080p resolution compared to the Xbox One's upscaled 720p, despite minimal visible differences.
A Comprehensive Guide to DeFi Development Services in 2024Intelisync
DeFi represents a paradigm shift in the financial industry. Instead of relying on traditional, centralized institutions like banks, DeFi leverages blockchain technology to create a decentralized network of financial services. This means that financial transactions can occur directly between parties, without intermediaries, using smart contracts on platforms like Ethereum.
In 2024, we are witnessing an explosion of new DeFi projects and protocols, each pushing the boundaries of what’s possible in finance.
In summary, DeFi in 2024 is not just a trend; it’s a revolution that democratizes finance, enhances security and transparency, and fosters continuous innovation. As we proceed through this presentation, we'll explore the various components and services of DeFi in detail, shedding light on how they are transforming the financial landscape.
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Monitoring and Managing Anomaly Detection on OpenShift
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The journey concludes with a reflection on the ever-evolving landscape of OS, underscored by the emergence of real-time operating systems (RTOS) and the persistent quest for innovation and efficiency. As technology continues to shape our world, understanding the foundations and evolution of operating systems remains paramount. Join Pravash Chandra Das on this illuminating journey through the heart of computing. 🌟
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Simplify your search for a reliable Python development partner! This list presents the top 10 trusted US providers offering comprehensive Python development services, ensuring your project's success from conception to completion.
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Version 1 65
1. --------------------------------------------------------------------------
05. August, 2002 Version 1.65
- Many users reported me wrong black areas in certain NTSC
games. Thanx to Cobra95, by using his Spyro3 save state I was
able to investigate and fix that issue.
- Lewpy suggested a small trick to prevent FF9 from crashing
when framebuffer access is activated. I have followed his
suggestions, but still I advise NOT to use the FA options with
that game (it will not crash anymore, but glitches in battle will
happen). Well, it's up to you :)
- I've removed the "FF9 mdec mask bit" special game fix, hopefully
now all mdec polygons and mdec texts will be fine without.
Thanks to Dimitri for reports and Yazoo for his save state.
- Since Lewpy did a very nice dynamic loading of the kernel funcs
for disabling screensavers/power saving modes in the P.E.Op.S.
soft gpu plugin, I couldn't find any more reasons against a
'disable screensavers' option (without Lewpy's piece of code such
an option would have crashed with Win95/WinNT in the past).
So, if you were tormented by suddenly starting screen savers while
playing a psx game before, you can now easily disable them in
the gpu configs.
- I've found a small bug in the D3D plugins with the "Unfiltered frame-
buffer updates - faster mdecs" option. I don't know what games
suffered by that bug, but I've decided to fix it nonetheless ;)
Oh, btw, I did notice that this option does not (and never will) work
right with emulating the psx mask bit. So, if you are seeing flickering
displays, or missing stuff, try to turn that D3D option off (OpenGL
will always be ok, though).
- Finally I was able to find out what was going wrong with the
'Monkey Hero' game (that one was really messed up with all
of my gpu plugins), and yeah, I've fixed it. Will be interesting
to see what other games will also run better because of the fix
(and I hope that speed will not drop much because of it... at least
on my system I didn't notice any slowdowns).
"Life is the future, not the past - it's the Wizard's Seventh Rule"
- "The Pillars of Creation" by Terry Goodkind
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
10. July, 2002 Version 1.64
- While the last releases were mainly bug fixes and compatibility
stuff, 1.64 has only one purpose: to improve the graphics
(yeah, we all love that :))
- Ok, the first change takes care about some unwanted texture
shaking that was happening in my hw/accel plugins. That
doesn't mean that now all psx texture wobbling is magically gone,
only some issues caused by the internal texture alignment has
been improved. Thanx to Shadow Lady for the 'shaking Lara'
save state :)
- And now for the real graphical boost (note: if you don't want to
read (maybe boring) background informations, you can skip this
part):
2. I was long time no friend to special texture filtering ideas. I always
did see big problems arise when the original psx texture data gets
changed by filters, and it's already hard enuff to render the original
unfiltered psx textures on hw/accel APIs without glitches.
Anyway, last week there was a small ngemu forum discussion
about filtering again, and to proove E}I{ wrong (who was telling
that 2xSaI filtering on textures should work well), I downloaded the
latest OpenGL plugin from NickK, to make some screenshots with
that texture filtering method.
NickK always is a pioneer when it comes to interesting new ideas
(like his full screen smoothing or... tada... 2xSaI texture caching),
but this time I wanted to use his plugin to show the various problems
which will occur with pre-filtered textures (shame on me ;))
Anyway, I've tried all kind of games with his plugin and 2xSaI textures,
and yeah, I did see glitches caused by the filtering, but strange enuff
not the problems I have expected to see (only some texture alignment
gaps and garbage, and big slowdowns, but not the expected texture
distortions... good work, NickK, btw :).
So of course I had to do two things:
a) to apologize to E}I{ for prooving _me_ wrong (tststs, ehehe), and
b) to drop a mail to Derek Liauw, the creator and copyright holder
of the 2xSaI algorithm, asking him for permission to use his func
in my (not GPLd yet) hw/accel plugins.
And yeah, Derek happily allowed me to use the 2xSaI func (since
he is enjoying epsxe and my plugins, too :)), and I have to admit it
wasn't difficult to add to my source... I had to change it somewhat
to handle my texture color depths and alpha values, and to avoid
problems at the texture area borders, but that was all...
- So, a new option in the gpu config is available, called "Hi-Res textures
(2xSaI)".
You can activate it with all available texture color modes, and
of course you can even combine it with filtering, smoothing,
whatever.
The option will improve the textures in many games, making small
fonts more readable, and most textures will look sharper. It even will
help the standard bilinear filtering, less 'blocky' look that way and not
much black borders. On the other hand some rendering techniques
(like multi-layered 2D backgrounds) will cause glitches (thin lines
appear, for example, or small gaps between textures), and that is
nothing I can fix!
So mailing me issues with FF7/8/9 or games using a similar rendering
style is useless and will get ignored (well, maybe I will flame a few
mailers, depends on my mood :))... and if you don't believe me, feel
free to code your own psx gpu plugin and add 2xSaI textures... good
luck :)
And also be aware of the following:
a) your gfx card has to be able to handle 512x512 textures. Otherwise
you will get no textures at all. So, for example, no Hi-Res textures on
V2/V3 cards and prolly some other older brands as well.
b) Hi-Res 2xSaI textures need 4 times as much vram as the 'normal'
textures. That means for example that your 32 MB gfx card can handle
the same amount of 'hires' textures as an 8 (!!!) MB gfx card with
'normal' textures. And that's not very much, and prolly will cause
slowdowns... users with 64 and 128 MB cards will not encounter much
speed problems, though... runs great on my 64 MB GF3 with most
games :)
Finally some tips for using my Hi-Res texture option, if you are having
speed problems:
- use a lower display resolution, for example 640x480 in 16 bit color depth
- use a lower texture quality mode, for example 4-4-4-4 or 5-5-5-1 textures
- turn off the 'mask bit' emulation option, that saves some vram as well
3. - don't use the 'screen smoothing' option, and absolutely turn off FSAA
in your display properties.
- I have seen strange autodetected vram size values in the DX6 plugin
with my nVidia GF3 card (I am absolutely sure that I don't have over
80 MB vram, ehe). The exactly same func reports the correct size in the
DX7 plugin, though. So maybe a generic advise is to set the 'vram size'
value manually to the correct value in all plugins, just to be sure.
On the other hand, maybe it will help if you set the 'vram size' option
manually to an higher value (for example to '64 MB' even if your card
only has 32 MB). Will depend on the game, your hardware and the phase
of the moon, though ;)
Have fun!
- btw, I've decided to keep the D3D-DX6 plugin alive. The 1.63 DX7
changes did help a lotta cards (thanx to all users reporting their results),
so the DX6 plugin isn't that necessary anymore, but I've nearly forgotten
the poor WinNT 4 users, who can't use anything above DX6... thanx to
DarkWatcher for reminding me :)
- Ah, and a final note: I've added an extra FAQ file with this release, covering
many standard questions. Check it out if you are having problems.
"Du musst glauben, du musst wagen,
denn die Goetter leih'n kein Pfand..."
ah, bah, enuff text for this release, listen yourself:
http://www.dhalia.de/musik/sounds/daten/sehnsucht_dhalia.mp3
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
23. June, 2002 Version 1.63
- The nicest change in 1.63 (imho): no more "short dmachain" game
fix, no more "Ignore dmachain 0" game fix... the handling of bad
dmachains is now done automatically without much speed loss.
That means you can now play Tekken3, Tekken2, Syphoon Filter,
Ghosts'n Goblins, Persona2, MetalSX and prolly some more games
without any special options. Ehe, I really like that :)
- Another internal change: correct support for write vram wrappings.
I've noticed missing textures in a soccer game (can't remember its name,
but the players looked funny without heads), that one at least is
fixed.
- And some more internal adjustments: I've was able to reduce the
garbage frames which can happen after/before a 24 bit mdec is
displayed. You can see that with FF9, for example.
- Also some flickering issues (for example in FF7 after a battle, or in
some Wild Arms1, BOF4 and Silent Hill splash screens) are corrected.
The same code will also help drivers which are doing page flipping
in fullscreen mode.
- Some additional splash screens/menus will get displayed with the highest
Offscreen Drawing setting. Still I suggest to use the highest setting only
if you are missing some gfx screens. Never use it with FF8/FF9 :)
- NTSC games can have a border at the top/the bottom of the display.
No, 1.63 can't remove that borders (as a matter of fact the borders are
right and needed), but 1.63 will now display the borders most times
correctly with a black color instead of a fancy color.
Thanx to Gary for some save states :)
4. - A new mode for the framebuffer texture option, called "gfx card buffer &
software". Framebuffer textures are needed to get some special effects
(swirls, motion blur) right, and they are harder to emulate in hw/accel
gpu plugins. The new mode (which is working like in Lewpy's Glide
plugin) will help users with slower gfx cards, still a lotta cpu power will
be needed.
For example the pure "gfx card buffer" hardware mode is much faster on
my GF3 compared to the new mode, but on other systems the results may
vary... try it yourself, and use the option which makes you happy.
Compatibility note: sometimes the new "gfx card + soft" mode will display
certain effects more correctly (for example blurring in ChronoCross, or
the "enter battle" effects in Legend of Dragoons).
- I've removed the the "framebuffer read" and "framebuffer read on move"
special game fixes, and combined them together with the old "Full vram
primitives" option into a new main option called "Framebuffer access".
That way you can control framebuffer effects more easily in the gpu
in-game menu. Otherwise the new option works exactly like the old
game fixes, use the framebuffer access only if it's needed (Xenogears,
for example), and turn it off if it causes problems (FF9 will crash, for
example)
- By removing the "framebuffer reads" and "dma chain" special game
fixes I've now some free slots for new fixes, ehehe. I decided to add
two fixes in that release: one for FF9 polygon mdecs (it seems that
the 1.62 mask bit handling can cause slight problems, so you can now
turn the special handling on/off with the new game fix), and the other
game fix is only for the bad polygons in ChronoCross Fort Dragonia
(thanx to Nave for a save state).
- Last but not least I've changed my texture handling in the DX7 D3D
plugin. It should now work fine with cards which needed the DX6
plugin in the past. So please: if you used the DX6 plugin, try the
new DX7 one, and mail me if it works correctly on your system.
If I don't get negative feedback for a month or so, I will stop the DX6
plugin, since it isn't needed anymore :)
"The maidens of beauty
and swains so forlorn
that carelessly wander
away from their home
I am off by the moonlight
and break of the morning
I'll be found in the mountains
of Dark Iniseoghain"
- "Dark Iniseoghain" by Dhalia/traditional
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
29. May, 2002 Version 1.62
- Most fixes and improvements in this version were only possible
because of nice feedback and save states from active psx
emu lovers. Thanx to all of you :)
- Black areas in Bloody Roar 2 are fixed (well, that means you
don't have to turn off Offscreen Drawing anymore to play
that game).
- The radar in Ace Combat 3 is now visible. You will need the
'mask bit' option for it, though.
- In the Chrono Cross battle menu the small dots will blink again
5. (I screwed that somewhen in version 1.5x). Since the dots are
very small I'd never noticed the bug :)
- A new special game fix called "Ignore DMAchain '0'". The
dmachain address checks I've introduced in 1.60 worked
well with all of my games, but I got a big feedback from
"Persona2" lovers (sadly I don't have that game), because it
stopped to work with the new funcs.
So V1.62 is doing the same checks as the versions before V1.60
(that means that Persona 2 will work without any special option),
but if you want to get the "Ranma 1/2" menu screen right, you
have to enable the new game fix.
- When I played (and finished) FF9 with ePSXe one year ago,
I noticed that polygons which were drawn on top of mdecs looked
upsidedown. I always thought that it's prolly a main emu bug
(sending the polys in the wrong order to the gpu), but now
I've investigated the issue more closely, and actually found a
solution for it. Everything should look fine in V1.62, you simply have
to enable the 'mask bit' option to correct the problem.
- I've improved my Offscreen Drawing detections, many annoying
flickering effects (like in Rebel Assault 2, DW7, Jumping Flash)
are fixed by it (and I hope that speed isn't going down much).
- Speaking of Jumping Flash: that game was always really slow in my
plugins since it uses a (imho) stupid offscreen rendering technique
with lotsa repeated textures (aka texture windows). V1.62 is now
using my newest soft plugin functions (the same I've added to the
P.E.Op.S. soft plugin V1.6), giving a nice speed up in that game :)
- Last but not least: some new eye candy (if you like special screen
filtering effectst). "grahf" from the ngemu message boards suggested
to try a new filtering mode,and first I didn't like the idea (because I
usually see new problems arise with any filtering). But after I've
looked what the suggested "Monitor dot matrix" mode is exactly
doing (the Kawaks emu is offering such a mode, for example), I
didn't find it very hard to add it to my existing scanline functions.
So now you can enable it by turning on scanlines and setting the
scanline blending to "-1".
The best results you will get with 2D games, I think, but of course
it's just a matter of taste :)
Btw, I've checked the filter only with my GF3 card, hopefully other
cards will not screw the texel alignment (otherwise the filter will look
kinda distorted).
"Where do we go from here
There must be something near
Changing you, changing me forever"
- "Never Satisfied" by Judas Priest
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
28. April, 2002 Version 1.61
- I didn't had a lot of time for emu coding in the last weeks,
so V1.61 has just a few changes... nevertheless I think the
new code is worth an update, so try it and give me some
feedback.
Speaking about feedback: _don't_ try to send me emails with
attachments... I will not even see them. The latest email worms
were very annoying, so I use a filter right now, deleting every
mail with attached files. If you want to give me save states,
6. pictures or whatever, please send me a pure text mail first, asking
if I need the files, and I will reply how to proceed.
- The first change is the least important, imho, added on request
of some users: while the gpus are running they will prevent
the activation of screen savers. Seems to be needed when you are
using USB pads and an activated screen saver, since the pad
actions will not count as user input, and therefore the saver will
kick in after a while. I am using a different approach as syo's code
in the P.E.Op.S. soft gpu, we will see how it will work (I've checked
it on my Win98 and WinXP systems, and it's ok here).
- Re-coded some of my C texture caching funcs in pure asm. That
will squeeze out a few more frames per second, at least in games
using lotsa textures. Mmm... funny... I needed most of the time
for this new functions, but now I dunno what else to write about it :)
- The nicest feature in 1.61: I was able to remove the "Adjust extreme
coords" special game fix, replacing it with a much better detection
of weird running wild polygons (btw, big thanx to calb).
The new detection is enabled by default, you can turn it off by
activating the "Disable coord check" game fix if you are having troubles
(missing polygons, for example). But I checked a lot of games, and the
results were very good: no more big poly glitches in Metal Gear Solid,
Deathtrap Dungeon, Colony Wars, Timecrisis, Rally Championship,
Fighting Force 2, Lucky Luke, to name a few...
Well, there are still a few games with problems (like the big polys in one
level of Chrono Cross), but there has to be some work left for the next
versions, eh? :)
"Spark in the nothingness
Heat of creation
Make the ice start to melt
Life wake up in the void."
- "Ginnungagap" by Therion
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
31. March, 2002 Version 1.60
- Yeah, the easter release :) It contains mainly small fixes, correcting
all kind of gfx glitches with certain games (luckily no new config
options were needed for the fixes) and speed will also be more or
less the same.
A small config bug in the ogl plugin has been repaired (a wrong text
did show up when pushing the 'nice'/'fast' button in the gpu
config), and this time the linux archive _really_ contains the right
plugin version, thanx to everybody reporting that issues.
Ok, let us have a look at the fixed glitches:
- Support for "textured lines" (that means 1 psx-pixel wide textured
triangles). "Doom" will now look perfectly, and the water effect
in one stage of "Sould Edge" is now fine as well. Thanx to Lewpy
for infos and calb for the save states :)
- Improved dmachain checking. That will make the start menu of
"Ranma 1/2 Battle Renaissance" visible (thanx to tatunoko for the
save state), but I've noticed that now Tekken2 will need the "short
dma chain" special game fix (otherwise you will have to wait a long time
until the game starts up). Ah, and no, Tekken2 is not playable right
now (streched polys), but that's a confirmed main emu bug, the gpu
plugin can't repair it.
7. - Interesting internal adjust of Texture Window coords. That's needed
for some "Tales of Destiny 2" graphics, thanx to E}I{ for very helpful
infos and save states :)
- Improved sprite texture coord wrapping. That will fix garbage glitches
with "Tales of Destiny 2" as well, and the clouds in a special level
of "Wild Arms" are now fine, too.
- Faster sign checks, that will prolly not give a noticable speed up in
my hw/accel gpus, but it's looking nicer in my source code, ehe :)
Thanx again to E}I{ for suggestions.
- The "moon" symbol in "Devilsummoner Soul Hackers" (wow... what
a name...) is now displayed correctly, thanx to gunshinn for a save
state :)
"It's just the same as imaginary snow in summertime -
Never able to make winter come."
- "Isn't it?" by Wild Silk
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
23. March, 2002 Version 1.59
- First of all: the FF7 battle swirls are now working (they should have
been working in 1.58 already, but a last minute fix disabled them).
You have to enable the FF7 special text border fix, use the highest
Offscreen Drawing setting, enable the "gfx card" frame buffer textures
and the "Framebuffer read on move" game fix is also needed (oh my).
The performance of the effects will (as always) depend how good
your card is supporting framebuffer accessing. But it's fine on my
GF3 ;)
- The Lunar1 special game fix is now available in the hw/accel. plugins
as well. That will repair the black screens when entering a house or
a menu in the same way as in the P.E.Op.S. soft plugin.
Ah, and talking about special game fixes: I've decided to combine
the nVidia FSAA fix with the ATI subtract blending fix in the OGL
plugin. Since both issues are bugs in the drivers, (hopefully) fixed
somewhen with one of the next driver releases, I didn't want to waste
too much of my (up to 32) possible game fixes ;)
- A few games were showing wrong MDEC colors due to some lines of
code I've included for doing screen centering. None of my games had
shown that glitch, so I can't be 100% sure that this issue is completely
fixed, but there is hope ;)
- A new texture option, called "Faster palettized texture windows".
Well, texture windows (mostly used in psx games for text box background
gfx, or in some racing games) are having a separate cache in my hw/accel.
plugins, and that one is working fine for most games... I have seen only
one game (Ghost In A Shell) which is stressing the cache so much that
the game crawled at 40-50 fps on my system (quite unusual). The only
solution I've found for that game was using pal textures, causing a fine
speedup (2 - 3 times faster). So, if your card can handle pal textures
(like GeForce cards with newer drivers), you can safely enable the
new option, otherwise (TNT cards for example) you cannot use it at all
(a filled Smiley sign in my gpu menu will show you if the option is
working).
- Biggest change: improved "texture garbage collection" option. When I
introduced that option in 1.58, I just did an easy approach to reorder
the internally used texture space, to check out if the function is working
8. okay. Well, the new version does a much more complicated job to
optimize the texture usage, we will see how that code will work on less
powerful cpus/gfx cards (it's very fine on my Athlon 1.2/GF3 system).
Still: the cleanup will only kick in, if it is really needed, most games
will not activate it anyway. Games needing the garbage collection
_may_ stall the game for a short time (while doing all the texture
optimizations), depending on your system's power.
"Sch ume nur mein wildes Herz, in des Zornes Wehen�
Bin aus leichtem Stoff gemacht, muss wie Luft vergehen
Ohne Schiffer treibt mein Kahn, auf des Meeres Spiegel
Niemals fesselt mich ein Band, riegelt mich ein Riegel
Suchte meinesgleichen, fand nur S nder ohne Z gel"� �
- "Lebensbeichte" by In Extremo
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
16. February, 2002 Version 1.58
- Damn, since the release of 1.57 I couldn't stop gpu coding...
so it took only two weeks for a new release this time.
Well, enjoy :)
- To help gfx cards with slow texture uploading speed and/or
a very limited vram size, I've coded additional functions which
will optimize the texture usage even more. Of course that will
mean a little bit more work for the cpu, but hey, somebody has
to do the job...
Ok, so, if you have encountered irritating slowdowns in your
game (caused by the gpu, NOT by cdrom accessing ;), you
should give the new "Smart texture garbage collection" option
a try... even my GF3 does like it in some games (well... it
doesn't matter much for me if a game runs with 100 or with
300 fps, but if it does help my system, it should help slower ones
even more).
Oh, and one more hint about the texture caching: some users
reported a big speed up by selecting "64" Mbytes vram on their 8
MB cards...
- Hurray, hurray... one "special game fix" has been removed:
The "no sprite transparency" one for the Oddworld games.
Those formerly "special fixed" glitches are now confirmed main emu
bugs, so the option will be useless with the next epsxe release
anyway.
And since that fix did cost a lotta additional testing in the
soft funcs, I've decided to remove it as soon as possible... and
that's now :)
- Hurray, hurrraaarrrggg: Oddworld fix is gone, and a new fix
has taken its place instead (in the OGL plugin).
nVidia is well-known for their good and fast OGL ICDs, but there
is a stupid bug (at least) in the W9X 23.51 drivers: if you are using
FSAA with OGL, the driver will reset the alpha testing state each
frame, causing black areas and other glitches in my OGL plugin.
Well, the 21.xx WinXP driver is doing FSAA fine, as far as I could
see, but if you want to use FSAA in W9x you should enable the
new special game fix... or pray to nVidia to release drivers without
that bug.
- Improved psx vram moves, that will fix glitches with a few special
effects in FF9 and BOF4 (seen in certain magic effects during
battles). Mmm... and most times "full vram prims" and/or a certain
framebuffer setting is needed to get such effects right.
9. - Wrapped sprites will work perfectly again (they were broken
in 1.57), so the glitches in (for example) Tales of Destiny 2 are gone
(thanx to expert464 for the save state).
- Oh my... some optimization I've done in version 1.20 (or so) of the
OGL plugin caused missing tires in "Driver", screwed hair in
"Blaze&Blade" and prolly it was responsible for some more screwed
textured polys. That issue is fixed as well.
- Improved the Offscreen-Drawing detections. Much cleaner now,
and as far as I remember the FF8 "distant hill flickering" will be
fixed by that... mmm... and the FF7 swirls should be visible
with hw/accel. FB textures, using the highest OD settings.
- And finally: screen smoothing. This new option will blur the
whole screen, so especially 2D games will look less pixelated.
It will need a good gfx card, though (something in the Geforce
class should do the job), and the higher the used resolution, the
bigger the slowdown with screen smoothing.
Activated smoothing will cost around 1.5 - 3 MByte vram (no big issue
with my 64 MB GF3, ehehe), and your gfx card must be able to use
textures bigger than 256x256 pixels (well, that means for example
no smoothing with 3dfx V2/V3 cards).
Anyway, if the option does work fast enuff on your system, and you
like the smoothed look, use it... if I did everything right, there will be
no emulation compatibility issues at all.
Oh, a small hint: of course you can combine the old texture filtering
with the new screen smoothing, the results are really nice most
times.
Oh, and another remark: yes, motion blur would be also possible.
But, no, I will not include it in my gpu plugins. I will leave that
effect to NickK's NextGL/Next3D plugins, his gpus are getting
better and better with every release, so go and check them out :)
"Those are the pictures
of what was
of what is
of what is to come
We are the people
the rolling people
the why people
the waiting people
the wanting people..."
- "Altamont" by Aphrodite's Child
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
04. February, 2002 Version 1.57
- Let's start with the biggest change: I did a big cleanup in
my texture caching code. Now you can't select between different
caching modes anymore, the plugin will work with a slightly
optimized "dynamic" caching method.
Still there is an option in the gpu plugin config window, which
is controlling the behaviour of texture caching:
"Gfx card vram size [MBytes]". Here you can select "Autodetection",
which will work without problems on nVidia cards, or enter the
size of your gfx card's ram manually (needed for example on 3dfx
cards in OpenGL mode, but prolly it's safer with other vendors
as well).
10. A wrong big value can cause heavy vram <> system memory swapping,
you will notice that when the game speed is slowing down without
a reason, and a much too small value can cause an heavier cpu
usage and constant texture uploading, so it's up to you... :)
Well, some examples:
- with D3D, all cards should be reporting the correct vram size,
so you can set it to "Auto" as long as you don't want to
make some experiments ;)
- with OGL, nVidia cards will report the correct vram size as well
(at least they did the last time I've checked it =), so you
can use "Auto", too
- Other vendors may need some tweaking in OGL:
Gfx cards with 64 MByte (or more) will always be fine, you can
set the vram size to "64", enable FSAA or whatever, and be happy.
With gfx cards less than 64 MBytes you should be more careful,
try first to enter your real gfx card vram size (for example 16),
and if you notice slowdowns you can try to lower the size (15,
14, 13...) to get better speed. Ah yes, and if you have an
onboard gfx card you can try to set a much bigger value to get
the best speed.
- OK, so the different caching modes are gone... no need to get sad,
though. With just one mode left, I was able to improve my texture
alignment further: now FSAA will work better, and some of the
filtered textures will not look as blocky as before (yes, there are
tile edges in the filtered modes, yes, I know, no, I can't do nothing
about it, sorry). Still some adjustments have to be done with textured
windows, ah, but that's for another day and release.
- Improved some dma chain checking, now certain games which were
showing black screens before will be running without problems
(for example The Mummy or T'ai Fu).
- Changed (again) my MMX palette code, finally it seems to be working
without any problems. For example the battle menus in FF4 are
ok, maybe even the red/yellow cards in Winning11 will be visible
again? We will see :)
- A new special game fix has been done as well, this time it's a goodie
for all Capcom 2D fighter fans: you can enlarge the screen area at
the right side of the display, and see all the background gfx without
any cut-off (well, glitches can happen, too, you are warned :)
- And some more small changes :)
"I've been searching everywhere
Looking for the final freedom
Where there are no boundaries
When you never need a reason
Well, it has been taking me some time
'Till I've got it what I've tried to find"
- "Welcome to the other side" by RAGE
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
06. January, 2002 Version 1.56b
- OGL/D3D plugins: the fullscreen/window toggle blending fix
screwed sometimes the transparency mode on startup.
Therefore version 1.56b fixes the fix :)
11. --------------------------------------------------------------------------
05. January, 2002 Version 1.56
- OGL/D3D plugins: New special game fix: "Adjust extreme coords".
It's the same fix I've included in the P.E.Op.S. soft gpu 1.3, it helps a
few games showing weird polygons running wild across the
screen. So, try to enable it if a game is having polygon troubles,
but don't use it as default setting (because games which doesn't
need that option might get screwed). And, no, it doesn't fix
Tekken 2.
- OGL/D3D plugins: I've also included all new soft funcs (for Offscreen
Drawing) which I've changed in the P.E.Op.S. soft gpu 1.3. Not a big
deal, though.
- OGL/D3D plugins: my texture caching on 15 bit psx textures had
a small bug, it wasn't caching the transparency bit. Thanx to
Matesic Darko for telling me about the problem.
- OGL/D3D plugins: smashed a sprite Offscreen Drawing bug which
has been crept in with version 1.54. The Medievil 1 gravestone menu
is now fine again.
- OGL/D3D plugins: repaired a small texture window sprite overlapping
issue. The Guardian's Crusade in-game menu is correct now.
- OGL/D3D plugins: improved my MMX color lookup table code. Some
color rotation effects (Vagrant Stories, Blaze&Blade water) are finally
working perfectly.
- OGL/D3D plugins: sometimes blending was screwed after toggling between
window and fullscreen mode. Thanx to JNS for kicking my ass until
I've fixed that ;)
"On the day of the night things were always well
But on the night of the light all night things fell"
- "Mystical End" by Iced Earth
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
02. December, 2001 Version 1.55
- The SOFT gpu has gone Open Source and is not part of
the archive anymore. You can find newer versions of the
soft gpu (renamed to P.E.Op.S soft gpu) at:
http://sourceforge.net/projects/peops
- OGL plugin: the "Framebuffer read" and "Framebuffer read
on move" special game fixes were giving a yellowish
display some times. That's fixed. Still my old advise:
activate the FB options only if you really need them, some
games (FF9 for example) will not work if the options are
turned on.
- OGL/D3D plugins: repaired a small scissoring issue and
coded a new special game fix... this time it's an option
called "Lazy upload detection", and it can be used with
Dragon Warrior 7, to repair the flickering effects with
text boxes in that game. It's not a 100% fix, since the text
boxes will not get semi-transparent if the fix is enabled,
and the bkg graphics will not be animated anymore, but
12. at least the flickering is gone... well, you can also turn off
the fix and turn on "Full vram primitives", if you have a
powerfull cpu, that will emulate the text boxes more
accurate, but the bkg gfx will get ugly low-res... well, it's up
to you :)
I only had a save state, not the full game, so I can't tell you
if there are more issues with DW7... but if the rest of the
game is coded like the text boxes (using a third display
buffer for uploads, bah), I am sure there will be more problems ;)
Oh, and the text boxes are using the psx mask bit as well
(sure... simple pseudo triple-buffering would be too easy ;)
So if you don't see any text boxes at all, try to turn off the
"mask bit" gpu option... that will help gfx cards which don't
like my mask bit emulation.
- OGL/D3D plugins: tadaaaa... two additional filtering modes...
most of you will know the problem with filtering pre-rendered
background graphics (the gfx will have a tiled look if filtering
is enabled).
Well, my advise in the past: use "filtering without sprites",
since most games are using sprites for the bkg scenes, and
personally I think it's better to have a pixelated display than
staring at annoying box edges.
My new advise: use "filtering with smoothed sprites" :)
Sprite smoothing will work fine with many games (yes, yes,
including FF9), and I hope it will not cost too much speed
on an average system.
Of course it will not help games which aren't using sprites
at all (for example Wild Arms), and it will produce glitches
with other games (like Legend of Dragoons or FF7). Still
it's a good choice for many sprite-based games and rpgs.
"Since we've reached the point of no return
We pray for starlight, we wait for the moon
The sky is empty
Alone in the unknown
We're getting nowhere"
- "And then there was silence" by Blind Guardian
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
04. November, 2001 Version 1.54
- All plugins: finally I have added psx polyline support
to the "WriteData" interface funcs. Polylines were
only supported in dma chains before, and, to be honest,
I haven't seen any game using them outside of dma chains.
Well, Matesic Darko's great GPU Test Windows application
is using polylines without dma chains, so I have used that
one to check if all is working fine.
Btw, you can get the GPU Test app at: http://mrdario.tripod.com
in the "Tools" section.
- OGL/D3D plugins: Xenogears... yup... well, that game is using
a hard to emulate framebuffer texture/framebuffer move
combination in cutscenes and transition screens, which only
could emulated properly by using "Full Vram primitives"
in my hw/accel. plugins before.
FVP tends to need a lot of cpu power, so I've looked if I could
do an option to let the gfx card do most of the work...
and there it is: a new special game fix called "framebuffer read
on move". Unfortunately reading the gfx card framebuffer is
also slow with most nowadays gfx cards, so I dunno how it will
13. perform on average systems. Speed is fine on my GF3 in OGL,
and kinda slow in D3D. So, my advise: use the new option only
in Xenogears, or if you want to try to remove similar glitches
in other games.
Btw, XG needs the new FBOM option with activated "gfx card"
framebuffer textures and don't use the highest Offscreen
drawing setting!
Oh, and I removed the special game fix for Tomb Raider 3... that
one only was needed in the old PSEmu Pro emu to repair some of
the GTE bugs, but since all newer emus can play the game
without the fix, I don't think that it is needed anymore.
- All plugins: the biggest change in 1.54: all software drawing
funcs have been redone (lotta work), and the new soft gpu is now
up to 20% faster than before. Therefore also the Offscreen drawing
and FVP options of the hw/accel. gpus have gained more speed.
Another nice thing with the new soft funcs: g-shaded quads are
now rendered in the real psx way, check out the quad polygon in
the first Sony BIOS screen (hi Galtor :)
On the other hand there is a very small chance that little g-shaded
textured quads get slightly distorted... during my tests I didn't
notice anything bad, but if you encounter some new glitches, drop
me a mail.
- OGL plugin: while adding the new soft funcs in the OGL plugin,
I've noticed that the D3D plugins had a bigger security psx vram
area, preventing nasty crashs. OK, now the OGL one has it, too.
- Announcement: 1.54 was the last release of "Pete's Soft GPU"!
Why? Well, I have done all I wanted to do with the soft gpu plugin,
and I think the time is right to go Open Source :)
So, in a few days the Windows & Linux sources of the soft gpu plugin
will be released, but what does that mean exactly to the users of the
soft plugin?
1.) the name of the plugin will change... not a big deal, I think, but
I don't want to label a plugin with "Pete's whatever" when (hopefully)
a lotta more people beside me are working on it.
2.) improvements in games I don't own myself... I can't investigate
some issues if I don't have the game, but now the chances will be
higher that another coder is able to fix the problem.
3.) more features I never cared about... maybe a smarter frame skipping?
or a native FPSE interface? some special gfx modes? Dunno :)
4.) the plugin will not get bundled in my "gpupete" archive anymore.
We will have to wait and see how often a new release of the OS soft
gpu is happening...
And what does it mean to the psx emu/gpu plugin coders out there?
There will be much informations in the source, for example the proper
usage of the gpu interface, fps handling and, of course, the soft drawing
funcs themselves. OK, so:
1.) the license will be GPL
2.) still I don't want to force any freeware coder to go Open Source
himself, if he is using parts of the soft gpu source in his work.
So, I will allow the usage of the soft gpu funcs in closed source
projects, too, if
a) the project is freeware
b) credits are given
c) any improvements in the open source funcs are reported back
to the Open Source project.
I hope that way everybody will be happy :) And if the OS way is
14. working well, chances are high that my hw/accel. plugins will go
Open Source, too :)
"Pissing in a river, watching it rise
Tattoo fingers shy away from me
Voices voices mesmerize
Voices voices beckoning sea
Come come come come back come back
Come back come back come back
...
Should I pursue a path so twisted ?
Should I crawl defeated and gifted ?
Should I go the length of a river,
(The royal, the throne, the cry me a river)
What about it, what about it, what about it ?
Oh, I'm pissing in a river."
- "Pissing in a river" by Patti Smith
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
07. October, 2001 Version 1.53
- All plugins: the 1.52 fps limitation bug fix for special chipsets
seems to work fine (thanx to all users reporting it), so
I've added the fix also to the displayed fps rate, and to the
'Use PC fps calculation' option.
- All plugins: added a "copy settings to clipboard" button
to the gpu config dialogs. A simple mouse click will now transfer
your current gpu settings to the clipboard, you can paste them
into bug reporting mails or forum messages.
Unlike Lewpy's similar func I don't include your cpu speed, OS, etc...
only the pure settings and the name of your gfx card.
- OGL/D3D plugins: again small adjustments in the screen upload
detection, for example the GT1 main menu will be fine now, the
Soul Reaver (demo) menu will get displayed and the Aeronauts
(demo) language selection is shown.
As always the advise: if you are missing some menus or screens,
play with the Offscreen Drawing settings. If there is garbage in
the screen border areas, play with the Offscreen Drawing settings. If
you are feeling bored, play with the Offscreen Drawing settings ;)
- All plugins: fixed a small scissor problem which could happen on
very rare occasitions (if the game was using strange screen
centering values). The text boxes in Star Ocean 2 will now pop up
fine with the D3D/OGL plugins.
- All plugins: I've improved all triangle soft drawing funcs, you will
get a small speed increase with the Soft gpu in games using lotsa
triangles. Since the hw/accel. gpus are using the same funcs for
offscreen drawing and full vram primitives, a small speed increase
can happen with them, too.
Thanx to Lewpy for suggestions :)
- OGL/D3D plugins: if you are using the "gfx card buffer" frame
buffer textures option, you prolly will have noticed shaking screens
effects in some games (for example sometimes in ChonoCross battle
screens, in Alundra2 underwater levels/cutscenes, in Megaman
Legend 2 water/desert stages, in some AITD4 effects... yawn).
Well, what to say? It's fixed :)
15. "And what have started long ago
Is heading towards the end
There's no easy way out
There's blood on my hands
But I am sure in the end
I will prove I was right
Runes of a long forgotten time
Ancient spells in endless rhymes
Soon the other world appears
Roam to the ghostly river Rhine
Leave the misty shades behind
I can feel I'm getting near"
- "Blood On My Hands" by Demons & Wizards
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
26. August, 2001 Version 1.52
- All plugins: I've added some code to list all available desktop
resolutions of your gfx card. That way you have a bigger choice
for the gpu fullscreen modes (and I don't have to add more and
more resolutions in every gpu release ;)
- OGL plugin: changed the "InitFullScreen"func. I hope it will
now work better with certain cards, and with the W2K OS.
Please note: toggling between the window/fullscreen mode
(ALT+ENTER) is still unstable, if your desktop color depth is
not the same as the desired fullscreen mode.
- All plugins: Lewpy told me about a bug with high performance
counters. Our plugins are using such counters to calculate the
framerate and to do the fps limitation. The bug will show up only
on certain chipsets under heavy PCI bus load, and it can cause
weird speed behaviour with our gpu plugins.
I've tried to make a workaround for that issue, let us see if it helps
(no problems on my system, so it's hard to check by myself...).
If you want to know what MS is saying about that bug, or check
out if your chipset is known as buggy, look at:
http://support.microsoft.com/support/kb/articles/Q274/3/23.ASP?LN=EN-US&SD=g
- All plugins: my new system (Athlon 1.2C, GF3) is very fast... that's
fine, of course, but it also brought me some troubles: usually I
play psx games at the 'auto-detected' speed (50 or 60 fps), and if
some (boring) scene happens, or if I have to do some (uneventfull)
walks in the game, I just turn off the fps limitation in the gpu menu.
On my old system (P3-550, GF1) speed usually doubled, so I had a
kind of 'fast forward' function, until I enabled the fps limit again.
Well, on my new system the 'fast forward' tends to be a 'hyperspeed
forward', making walking around nearly impossible... so I've now
enhanced the old "limit on/off" switch in the gpu menu into "limit off",
"limit manual setting" and "limit autodetect". that way I can toggle
between "auto" and "manual" (I set the manual value to 120 fps),
and now I am happy again ;)
- All plugins: if you are running a game at a "manual" limited
framerate, you can change the manual value in the game using the
gpu menu: set the menu arrow to the FL option, and press
SHIFT + HOME or SHIFT + END. On each keypress the manual
value will in/decrease by 1 FPS, so you can try to adjust the manual
value within the game to a framerate which suits you.
16. - SOFT plugin: oh no... a glitch! In my 'oh-so-compatible' soft plugin!
While checking out a few game demos I've noticed a wild shaking
screen in the Pandemonium2 demo. After a little debugging I've
pinpointed the problem to wrongly called psx vsync signals from
ePSXe. So I've double-checked the demo with FPSE, and to my surprise
the vsync calls were even worse (in ePSXe the vsync comes at
a wrong time with that game, in FPSE the vsync comes at a wrong time
AND far too often...)
Ah, well, to get around the bug I made a 'special game fix' for P2.
It's called "Lazy screen updates", and if you want you can try
the option also with other games, they may become faster if it is
activated. Of course it can also cause unwanted side-effects (missing
parts of the screen, for example), so use it with care.
Btw, in the hw/accel. gpus Pandemonium2 needs also an (already
available) option, the "Swap front/back detection" special game fix.
Btw, part 2: the psx vsync is very important to get the 'right' FPS
limitation, so don't be surprised if some games are running at a wrong
speed in FPSE... the only way to get around that problem (beside
a fix in the main emu core, of course) is to set a manual FPS limit until
the game 'feels' right (the new in-game "manual FPS limit adjust" as
described above can help you with that).
- OGL plugin: and another special game fix... pfff... well, it's not really
a game fix, it's more a 'bad OpenGL ICD' fix... in version 1.51 I've
introduced a perfect "subtractive blending" mode, if the gfx card driver
is reporting it can do it.
Well, I should have guessed that some vendors will report they can do
the feature, but in reality they just screw it (did I say S2000? no, I
didn't ;)
You can now force the gpu plugin to ignore the OGL extension for
subtractive blending by the new game fix.
- OGL plugin: "keep psx aspect ratio" option. In version 1.50 I did that
option for the soft plugin, now it is available in the OGL plugin as
well... it does a 'ratio correct' stretch in x/y, causing lotsa screen
borders,
of course. Use it, if you like it, or turn it off (like I do ;) I am not sure
if I should code that option in the D3D gpus as well (it's really lot of
work).
- OGL/D3D plugins: in december 2000 (version 1.42) I made the
black scanlines option, promising that all requests for 25% or 50%
scanlines will get ignored :) While looking for new ways to improve
the image quality, I stumbled again over the scanline func, and played
a bit with it... the result: you can now set the scanline brightness in a
range between 0 and 255. 0 is like it worked before (black scanlines, dark
display), higher values will make the scanlines brighter (blended over the
image, not just simple lines in one color)...
I suggest to try a value of 200 to get a nice smoothed display, of course
it also depends of the used resolution and your personal taste :)
- OGL/D3D plugins: some small changes in compatibility: when you
play FF7, using the special game fix for the text box borders, the battle
hand cursor will also be fine now.
Also I've tried to remove some screen garbage which showed up
occasionally in some games (usually between splash screens), if your
OD mode is 3 (enhanced) or smaller.
"It's not the end
Not the kingdom come
It is the journey that matters, the distant wanderer
Call of the wild
In me forever and ever and ever forever
17. Wanderlust"
- "The Wanderlust" by Nightwish
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
06. July, 2001 Version 1.51
- All plugins: _Demo_ suggested to use a 59.94 fps
NTSC timing (instead of the old 60 fps one), if auto-
detected fps limitation is enabled. Well, done... (don't
ask me if that will improve anything... most of my
games are PAL ones anyway :)
- D3D plugins: I wanted to add a few more fullscreen modes
to the D3D plugins in version 1.50, but somehow I've forgotten
to add the 320x240 and 320x200 D3D modes, tsts. Oki,
fixed.
- All plugins: it is now possible to redefine the gpu hotkeys
in the gpu config windows (look for a small "..." button).
- OGL/D3D: added some mmx asm to squeeze out a few more
frames per second. The optimizations were done in my texture
caching funcs, the speed increase will be in the range of 0 - 10
more fps (depends, as always, on the game and your pc specs).
No mmx was added to the soft gpu (main reason: most time in
the soft gpu is used up in the per-pixel blending funcs, and that
ones are very mmx-unfriendly right now... well, I've checked out
some other optimizations in the soft gpu, giving me around 2
additional fps, but the gpu dll size was doubled and the code was
a really big mess, so I've dropped that again).
- OGL plugin: the best is yet to come: 100% perfect subtractive
blending!
Well, one of the psx blending modes is hard to emulate in hw/accel.
gpus, because that kind of blending was not supported on older
pc gfx hardware.
But lately I've found an OGL extension to get that mode right,
and luckily my GeForce1 DDR card can do it without problems.
Version 1.51 of the OGL plugin will check your card's opengl
capabilities, and enable that special blending mode, if it is
available. Prolly all GeForce cards can do it, I don't know if it is
supported on other cards as well, though. The gpu ingame-menu
will show a little 'moon' symbol, if the extension can be used.
Of course the gpu plugin will fall back to the old blending func, if
it's not possible to use it. Quite easy, no special option needed :)
You will notice the new blending mostly with correctly faded menu
backgrounds in FF9, or with darker shadows and lighting in CC.
Oki, and now let me answer some new FAQs _before_ they
have a chance to get FAQs ;)
1. Q: Is it possible to do the new mode in the DX6/DX7 D3D plugins?
A: No
2. Q: Would it be possible in a DX8 D3D plugin?
A: Yes
3. Q: Will you code a DX8 D3D plugin?
A: No... at least not in the near future :) Ask Lewpy to do one... :):):)
- All plugins: there is _no_ new option for the wrong mdec colors with
fpse 0.9! I did think alot about it, if I should do a 'special fpse game fix'
or something like that, but in the end I've decided against it. Why?
Well, the wrong colors are caused by fpse, not by the gpu plugins,
and I think in terms of compatibility it was a bad decision by the fpse
team. And if I would do a special fix, hey, maybe the fpse team would
never correct the colors... and maybe the next emu team would decide
18. to display the mdecs up-side-down, and I would have to add another
bunch of useless convert funcs... nonono ;)
And one fpse member already told me that they want to fix the mdec
issue themselves, so hey, don't worry :)
"There was a man found hanging in a jail cell
And they said it was suicide
A man was found hanging in his jail cell
And they told me it was suicide
Now you can blame the social system
But I still say it was his necktie"
- "Necktie" by Michelle Shocked
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
24. May, 2001 Version 1.50
- D3D plugins: sometimes there were disturbing lines in
unfiltered mdecs on Matrox cards. Fixed.
- OGL plugin: because of PSEmu Pro I always had to do a
delayed gpu init (otherwise the screen would stay black
in this emu). Well, I've noticed a problem (crash, boom,
bang) with one demo because of that delay, so I do now
some more 'init' checks.
- SOFT plugin: a new stretch option: "scale to window, keep
aspect ratio". That one will keep the original psx
screen proportions, of course you will get black screen
borders, if the aspect ratio doesn't match your window
size. That option is much harder to do on the OGL/D3D
gpus (because many of my funcs are relying on a fully
rendered window), but maybe I will do that in a later
version... we will see :)
- OGL/D3D: a new special game fix for FF9: "G4 polygon
cache". If it is activated, the yellow character selection
rect in battle mode will be displayed. All cudos are going
to Lewpy, who has developed that fix :)
Btw, enable it ONLY with FF9. No other game will need
it, and it can cause glitches!
- OGL/D3D: a workaround for horizontal wrapping
display positions. Now my XPloder demo cd is working,
maybe it will help with some more 'black-screen-only'
games, too.
- OGL/D3D: Thanx to Gabi, who did send me her original
RRT4 game cd, I could investigate (and fix) some more
glitches:
* disabled screens are now handled more correct. That
means: less garbage with some games (like the garbage
in RRT4 before/after mdecs).
* clipping areas with a width/height of 0 are now fine...
It seems that sometimes I do too much checks ;)
The disturbing bottom menu boxes in the RRT4 menus
are gone.
* Changed my line offset code a little bit. Result: less
disturbing dots/lines in RRT4 (most times while
driving below bridges).
- OGL/D3D: fixed a wrong clipping area which was caused
by toggling between fullscreen/window mode. Because
19. of that bug sometimes only a part of the screen got updated
after switching to fullscreen mode.
- All plugins: I've changed the gpu config dialogs,
so now there is a better description for most options.
Don't get shocked when you are opening the config
window for the first time :)
In the D3D/Soft plugin you will also find some more
fullscreen resolutions (added by user requests).
- All plugins: Well, if you have visited www.psxemu.com,
you will already know about the new "save state pic"
feature. Of course the main emu has to support it, and right
now there is no released emu with that ability yet, but hey,
we are prepared :)
You can still check out that feature, though: when you hit
the "INSERT" key, and no fps menu is displayed, you will
see a nice pic with the gpu version number. If the fps menu
is enabled, a description text of the selected option will
be shown instead... kind of an online help :)
- OGL/D3D: I've hidden an easteregg... yup... a very slow
one, though... try to find it... I will tell no more, all requests
to reveal it will be ignored :)
Oki, just one thing: somewhere I've placed an _obvious_
hint how to activate it...
"Master of the lightnings, rider on the storm, wearer of a crown of swords,
spinner-out of fate. Who
thinks he turns the Wheel of Time, may learn the truth too late. (From a
fragmentary translation of
_The Prophecies of the Dragon_, attributed to Lord Mangore Kiramin, Sword-bard
of Aramaelle
and Warder to Caraighan Maconar, into what was then called the vulgar tongue
(circa 300 AB))"
- "The Wheel of Time" by Robert Jordan
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
28. April, 2001 Version 1.49
- OGL/D3D: improved my screen clearing detection, so some
garbage borders (like the ones in Legend of Mana) are now
history. RIP :)
- D3D plugins: while doing the above mentioned improvement,
I've noticed a wrong clipping on block fills in the D3D plugins.
The OGL plugin was fine, though
- All plugins: Lewpy suggested to do some more coord
checks like the ones needed for the silent hill maps... well,
it's done, and it doesn't seem to hurt, so we give it a try, eh? :)
- OGL plugin: fixed a stupid bug which caused the gpu to crash
after a race in GT2 when offscreen drawing was enabled.
The D3D plugins only worked because of some strange kind
of luck ;)
- OGL plugin: a wrong ZBuffer init caused troubles with some
games, if the mask bit detection was enabled (for example:
wrong shadows and missing texts in GT2). Conclusion: never
forget to remove debugging code... tststs
20. - OGL/D3D: I've tried to get more game menus/splash screens
to work. Currently the screen detection is a real mess... but
always when I've started to recode the funcs, I've ended up
with the same zillions checks. So I decided to leave the funcs
in the current state, and just to add a few more or less clever
lines of code if the "Offscreen Drawing" mode is set to
"4: extended".
The new code works not too bad in games like Spyro (intro
screens), Spiderman demo (intro screens), Batman demo
(special kind of mdec at the beginning of the demo)... still,
the extended OD can also act too eager, producing additional
garbage and/or flickering. My advice: use it only, if you are
missing something important in your game.
Oh, and btw: some changes in the OD code is causing wrong lines
in the FF8 intro screens... Lewpy fixed the lines in his 1.32 glide
plugin, well, I've fixed it in an earlier version of my gpus, too...
now it's magically back, and honestly: I don't care :)
- OGL/D3D: a new 'special game fix' called 'Framebuffer read'.
What's that? Well, some games are reading back the currently
displayed frame to the psx main memory, changing it, and upload
the changed frame data again to the gpu.
Such effects could only emulated in the past by activating the
(slow) "full vram primitives" option (FVP is drawing everything in
the emulated gpu memory, so the "read back" is possible).
The new 'framebuffer read' (FBR) option can be used as a FVP
replacement in most games: it tries to detect, if the game is reading
screen data, and if yes, it will convert the needed screen part of
the OGL/D3D display into the psx format, giving that data to the
emulated cpu.
Advantage compared to FVP: it only has to jump in if the game is
really trying a read back (my FVP has always to be activated to
do its job right, causing a slowdown _all_ the time). Disadvantage
compared to FVP: a) the FBR "read back detection" can guess wrong,
causing either glitches or also unwanted slowdowns. b) the gfx
card driver has to support the screen reading I am doing (it's not
as complex as the "gfx card framebuffer textures" option, so I think
most cards can do it).
The interaction between FVP, FBR and FBT (framebuffer textures)
is a bit tricky, so lemme try to explain the best combinations:
1. if you have a very fast cpu, you can enable FVP, set FBT to
"emulated vram" and disable the new FBR.
2. if enabled FVP is too slow on your system, turn it off and use the
new FBR option. FBT has to be set to "emulated vram" or sometimes
"gfx card buffer".
3. Many games will run best, if you simply set the FBT to "gfx card
buffer" and disable FVP/FBR. Maybe you will miss some
(unimportant) bkg gfx or battle transitions, but that's all. And if you
are looking for speed only, disable FVP/FBR and set FBT to "Black"...
speeds up most transitions (they will be black, of course).
I've checked the new combination #2 (using FBR) with a couple of
games, and it worked fine on Spyro 1 (bkg gfx in the option menu),
Tomb Raider TLR (bkg gfx while pausing), ChronoCross (bkg gfx while
pausing/item menu), Star Ocean 2 (battle transition), Blaze&Blade (bkg
gfx and transition), Legend of Mana (entering town transition). Prolly
more games will also show up additional stuff which you have missed
before if you haven't used FVP.
Another thing: all framebuffer read effects will look 'low res'... if you
have read the above text carefully, you can guess why.
A final note on the new FBR option (wow, that description is getting
far too long): DON'T USE IT WITH FF9!!!
FF9 is also reading back data after a battle... and if the new FBR option is
enabled, ePSXe will crash with an unkown opcode. Don't ask me why...
maybe FF9 doesn't like what I am giving back (copy protection? bug in
21. my code? mmm... have to do more investigations). Still: complains
about problems in FF9 with activated FBR will go to my personal
NULL device :)
"Little do I know - little do I care
Little would it help if I knew and was aware.
Aim beyond the stars, catch a glimpse of gold
A planetary chart where the stories are untold.
There's a piece of truth for everyone..."
- "Lunar Sanctum" by Kamelot
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
07. April, 2001 Version 1.48
- OGL plugin: fixed a small bug in the "filtering without
sprites" modes. In some games (using textured windows)
the sprite filtering was not turned off. The D3D plugins
were doing it fine, though.
- OGL/D3D: improved the mask bit detection, should be
now handled exactly like the SoftGPU.
- All plugins: added code to get negative display positions
to work. That bug could have caused crashings in the
SoftGPU and black screens in the OGL/D3D ones. Of course
not much games are using it (I've seen it just with "Tobal
No.1")
- All plugins: I've tried to make mdecs less skippy if frame
limitation and frame skipping are turned on at the same time.
But if your cdrom is a bit slow reading psx cds, the skipping
will be still there (well, frame skipping can cause all kinds of
problems, so I don't recommend it anyway).
- All plugins: faster "MoveImage" func... yup... but I don't
think that you will notice it much.
- All plugins: the Silent Hill maps will now be displayed. Maybe
some splash screens/background gfx in other games will
appear as well.
- All plugins: faster "Line offset" func. I like the new func,
it's a very easy (but still accurate) approach. I had to
do a lot of thinking until everything worked as planned,
so I am kinda proud of it, ehehe ;)
- All plugins: you can now use the "HOME" key to step
down the available option modes in the in-game gpu menu.
It's like the "END" key, just in the other direction... of course
it's only helpfull, if an option is offering more than two modes
(like the filtering option, or the new offscreen drawing one).
- OGL/D3D: there are now 5 OD option modes: 0 (none), 1
(minimum), 2 (standard), 3 (enhanced), 4 (extended).
A short overview:
OD is used to detect drawings which are outside the
front/backbuffer, doing such stuff in software (or by tweaking
polygon coords).
0 (none): fastest mode, glitches in splash screens/game gfx can happen
1 (minimum): takes care of most splash screens
2 (standard): does an easy check, if software drawing/coord tweaking is needed
3 (enhanced): does a more complicated check for soft drawing/coords
22. 4 (extended): does the "enhanced" check, and adds some additional buffer
swaps (can cause flickering with some games)
Usually the "standard" mode is enuff to get everything to work, with FF8
you should use the "enhanced" mode to get all character stats in battles.
"Hear my song. People won't you listen now? Sing along.
You don't know what you're missing now.
Any little song that you know
Everything that's small has to grow.
And it has to grow!"
- "The Song Remains The Same" by Led Zeppelin
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
17. March, 2001 Version 1.47
- All plugins: a small bug krept in my 1.46 versions in
the fps limit autodetection. If you did stop and continue
a game, the auto detected limit value was lost, and the
manual one was activated. That's fixed.
- All plugins: Improved the screen centering funcs...
not much to say about it :)
- OGL/D3D: fixed the smeared background in Castlevania
by doing a more lazy "clear on next swap" detection...
Thanks to R. Belmont for giving me a chance to investigate
the issue :)
- OGL plugin: removed the anti aliasing option... yup...
most users didn't understand that the option did activate
line a-a, not FSAA, causing big slowdowns with most
gfx cards (yeah, I wrote in my ogl readme that the line a-a
is NOT supported by most cards, but of course that didn't
help much... there are always some 'wise' ppl knowing it better).
Well, the a-a option is dead and buried... use FSAA, if your
card is supporting it.
To fill the missing space in the config window, I've added
the old funny "Lines only" mode again, because I've got
some nice mails asking for it... be happy :)
- All plugins: the biggest improvement... new mask bit
detection. Lewpy's and my plugins already had a mask bit
option in the previous versions... but "Silent Hill", one of
the few games which is using mask bits, was still screwed...
Well, we decided it's a main emu bug (ehehe), but now I've
tried my luck again... and I think I've finally solved the riddle :)
At least Silent Hill is now working fine, I don't know
how many games are also using mask bits, though.
Some hint: activating the option eats away valuable texture
vram, so only turn it on, if you really need it.
- And now... I am off to play Gothic :)
"They made a living by growing Swampweed.
Its smoke was highly praised, because
it gave sweet dreams to all human beings..."
- translated from the manual of "Gothic" by Piranha Bytes
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
25. February, 2001 Version 1.46
23. - SOFT plugin: the soft plugin supports now cards
which are using a 5-5-5 16 bit desktop color. So, if you
had troubles in the past (green/yellow lines or something
like that), it should finally work without problems.
- All plugins: some games seem to have problems with
the main emu vsync timing, causing strange speedups/
slowdowns even if the FPS is shown as 60/60 (or 50/50)...
Well, now you can activate Lewpy's old FPS calculation
again, which is based on the PC framerate, not the PSX one.
It's a special game fix, mostly for some soccer games, I
don't suggest to use it generally, though (it will cause
a wrong MDEC timing, and sound can be out of sync).
Please note: the PC fps rate is most times just half of
the PSX one (30/30 or 25/25), so don't worry, if the fps
display is showing less fps by activating the fix.
- All plugins: yeah, it's possible to transfer image data
in the dmachain... pfff... I always thought it's a main emu
bug :) My plugins should now handle such transfers
without problems... check out "Tombi" :)
All credits and a big "thank you" to Kazzuya and especially Taka...
really great job! I hope "Dragon Quest 7" will work fine
for you :)
"Before anything further is written, it must be noted that the following
section is included only as a matter of historical documentation. The
use of magic has long been proven to be unreliable and the suspected
cause of mental deterioration. The author takes no responsibility for
anyone who may attempt to practice magic based upon the information
contained herein."
- taken from the manual of "Ultima 7" by Origin
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
09. February, 2001 Version 1.45
- SOFT plugin: a new option called "unstretched display".
The display will be shown in the original psx resolution,
centered into the plugin window.
- OGL/D3D: the old "Texture alignment" option has been
removed... the plugin will now correct the texture alignment
automatically, without any option. The new func works
similar to the "Texture correction" option in Lewpy's
Glide plugin :)
- OGL/D3D: new "special game fix" for Legend of Dragoon.
That game needs an incredible high pixel accuracy, only
my soft plugin can display it without blue pixel trash...
Well, the new fix will turn the blue glitches into (much
harder to see) black ones :)
- OGL/D3D: and another new special game fix, called "short
DMAChain check". You can use it to repair the pause
in Tekken3 after a fight, but you should disable that fix
in other games. It works like Lewpy's "short dmachain"
option.
- All plugins: biggest change in version 1.45: a new optimized
dmachain handler... it was a lotta work, and there will
be not much speed increase (if any), but I like the new
24. function... and it will handle corrupt dma chains even
better.
"Red sun rising in the sky
Sleeping village, cockerels cry
Soft breeze blowing in the trees
Peace of mind, feel at ease"
- "Sleeping Village", by Black Sabbath
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
21. January, 2001 Version 1.44
- SOFT plugin: fixed a small issue with the FF9 'pause'
screen. It is working without problems in version 1.44
- All plugins: new ODDLINE bit handling. More games
(like XMen) should be working (fingers crossed :)
- OGL/D3D: if you are using a filtering mode w/o sprites,
the new version will not only ignore sprites, but also
textured windows (most times used as background pattern
in text boxes). Less glitches will happen in such text boxes...
try it with FF9 :)
- OGL/D3D: you have noticed a small vertical line in the
right area of MDEC movies? Well, that's fixed, too...
Unfiltered MDECs should be fine now in OGL, nVidia
cards will still show some small line with unfiltered MDECs
in D3D, though (because of the stupid 'auto-blurring'
nVidia is doing on stretched blits in D3D).
- OGL/D3D: biggest improvement: a speed boost in games
which are using textured windows as main texture type
(like Spiderman). Enjoy :)
"In diz lant hat er gesprochen
einen angeslichen tac.
da diu witwe wirt gerochen
und der weise klagen mac
und der arme den gewalt
der da wirt an ime gestalt.
wol im dort, der hie vergalt!"
- "Pal stinalied" by Walter von der Vogelweide�
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
06. January, 2001 Version 1.43
- SOFT plugin: fixed a small bug with wrapped sprites coords.
MediEvil intro and Bust-A-Move are fine now.
- All plugins: if you are doing a screenshot (F8 key with
most psx emus), there will be created an additional
info text file in the sub-directory "snap". The info file
contains all the current plugin configuration settings,
so you don't need to write them down anymore, if
you want to post/mail your settings.
- OGL/D3D: lotsa small fixes, should give you a better
speed (in some games) and less garbage glitches...
As always: I only can hope the new stuff don't screw your
25. favourite game ;)
- OGL/D3D: added three more menu items in the gpu menu:
Dithering (DI), Special game fixes (GF) and Framebuffer
textures (FB). The first two just toggles the option on/off,
while FB is a new feature...
- OGL/D3D: Framebuffer textures, yeah... my personal
nightmare ;) Some special effects (mostly before entering
a new screen), or things like motion blurring, are hard to emulate
using hw/acceleration. But, hey, nothing is impossible! :)
Ok, there is a new option in the gpu config called "Framebuffer
textures". Three settings are available:
* "Emulated vram" : you can use this setting in combination with
activated offscreen drawing and full vram primitives... it will show
you most special effects/blurring, but of course you will need a
very fast cpu (1 Ghz...) to get a reasonable speed.
* "Black (fastest)" : that's a setting which turns the special effects
black... it's the same as the special game fix "Black framebuffer texture"
in version 1.42, you can use it if you don't care about the effects,
or if the effects are slowing your game down.
* "Gfx card buffer" : that's the new one... it will give you the effects
in nice looking hi-res, with good speed... IF your gfx card/driver can
handle it.
Here is some technical info concerning the "Gfx card buffer":
1. if you are owning a GeForce, you are lucky :) Use at least the
Detonator drivers 6.31, though, to get a good speed.
2. TNT cards... pfff... well, I did some tests on my girlfriends P2-400
with a TNT1... with 5.xx drivers the effects crawled... 6.xx was
faster, but there were big glitches in the D3D plugins.
3. 3DFX cards... well, try it... my V2 can do it using the DX6 plugin...
slow, but hey! At least the speed should be better than using
full vram primitives ;) ATI, Matrox, whatever cards... dunno :)
4. Resolution/color depth : the higher the resolution/color depth, the
slower the effects. Using OpenGL, resolutions up to 640x480 will
take away 1 MB of your cards vram. Higher resolutions will cost
you up to 4 MB vram! Using D3D, the effects will always take
256 KByte of vram, no matter what the window/fullscreen resolution,
but speed will also go down on high resolutions. Well, you have to
play with different window/fullscreen settings, if speed gets too slow.
5. Yeah, OGL is a bit slower using the "Gfx card buffer" option, but it
will give you an even better image quality than the D3D solution. Keep
in mind: if you are using scanlines and/or dithering, or the gpu menu
is displayed, while a whirl/blur effect is happening, strange things can
happen... it's fun to see the menu sucked into a whirl, though ;)
6. Known games working with "Gfx card buffer": Crash3, BOF4, FF9, MGS,
Vagrant Stories, Wild Arms1 (extended OD needed)... some games
(like Blaze&Blade), will not work, though...
- OGL/D3D: I've improved the "dynamic" caching mode, if a game is using
procedural textures... Well, here is a small caching mode overview:
* "Standard" : usually the slowest mode, causing a lotta texture uploads
* "Heavy" : will store up to 10 palettes per texture... not a bad one for some
games, at least faster than "Standard"
* "Dynamic" : best mode for most games. It optimizes the used textures and
stores as much palette stuff as possible in your gfx card vram. It even
tweaks the textures for a better filtering/alignment... wow :)
* "Palettized" : most times slower than the "Dynamic" mode, but some games
are doing big blinking/color rotating effects, which are stressing the
"dynamic"
one... such games can run smoother in "palettized".
TNT owners can't use it (neither in OGL nor in D3D), GeForce cards can use
it with OGL, 3DFX cards with D3D... depends on the driver (maybe nVidia
will fix the D3D bug with GeForce cards somewhen, fingers crossed).
26. "Ugly is bad
And bad is wrong
And wrong is sinful
And sin leads to eternal damnation
An' hot burning fire
... I'm so cute!"
- "I'M SO CUTE" by Frank Zappa
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
25. December, 2000 Version 1.42
- Merry christmas... dunno if that's a bug or a feature,
though :)
- The Windows gpu plugins are now delivered in one
zip archive... that way I have to write only one version info,
giving me time to do more useful things :)
- Scanline option in all gpus... well, I've got many mails
concerning scanlines, and I finally decided to satisfy
your hearts desire ;)
Not much to say about that option, turn it on, if you like
it, turn it off otherwise. Scanlines will NOT give you more
speed, but if you are lucky, it will not get slower, too.
The soft gpu contains two different scanline modes, enable
the second mode only, if you are getting a very blured
display (nVidia cards mostly).
Oh, btw, any mails begging for a 25% or 50% scanline
option will be ignored :)
- OGL plugin: the snapshot function (F8 key) is
fixed with mdecs (older versions didn't capture mdec
frames).
- SOFT plugin: fixed a bug which caused flicker
sprites on the left side of the screen (mainly with
scrolling background graphics, thanx to GreenImp
for tests). Also a small issue with the Analog/Mouse
display in the soft gpu menu has been repaired.
- OGL/D3D: Small changes in the dynamic caching mode.
I don't pull in coords of filtered textures in that
caching mode anymore, giving you a less blocky
display with filtering (NOT a perfect filtered display!).
Still gaps/garbage can happen if you are enabling
filtering (it seems that OGL is a little bit better with
that, though).
- OGL/D3D: I've added a new "special game fix" called
"Black framebuffer texture". If you activate the option,
garbage in games like BOF4 (before entering a battle)
or Vagrant Stories (motion blur) will disappear. That
doesn't mean, that the special psx effect will be repaired
and shown perfectly...
if you really want to see such framebuffer tricks, you
still have to use "extended offscreen drawing" and
"full vram primitives"(very slow), and you have to
deactivate the new "black framebuffer texture" option.
Well, but the new option gives you a fast alternative to get
rid off disturbing glitches without using the slow
"full vram primitives", making certain games more playable :)
27. - Ah, and like in Lewpy's 1.23 Glide plugin, there is a great
new surprise hidden within all plugins... but you
will have to wait, it's not up to me to tell you more
about it :)
"Maybe all I need
besides my pills
and the surgery
is a new metaphor for reality."
- "DIS CON NEC TED" by Queensryche
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
- OLD OPENGL VERSION INFOS
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
09. December, 2000 Version 1.41
- ALT-ENTER... toggle between window/fullscreen mode.
Beware: there are small troubles with some gfx card drivers
(at least with my GeForce and detonator 6.49 drivers), if you
try to change from a 16 bit window (desktop) mode to a 32 bit
fullscreen mode (or from a 32 bit window mode into a 16 bit
fullscreen mode). No known problems if your desktop has the
same color depth as your chosen fullscreen mode.
- I've changed the Offscre en Drawing/Frontbuffer rendering
detection again. The new function will finally work fine
with FF8 battlemenus/world map, if you select "Standard"
offscreen drawing.
Some small manual about Offscreen Drawing:
* "no" OD will be the fastest mode, but some splash screens
and special effects (like Crashs shadow in Crash3 or menus)
will not appear.
* "Standard" OD will show most splash screens, and most of
the battle menus/special stuff
* "Extended" OD is like the "Standard" setting, but it also forces
the plugin to update the screen more often if the game is
drawing into the psx frontbuffer area. That will show some
stupid coded "pause" menus, for example. It can cause
flickering displays, though.
* "Extended" OD + "Full vram primitives". That one will finally
show most special psx framebuffer effects (typically used for
motion blur or those nifty level entry efftecs). Of course that
way the gpu has to do twice the work (acting like a soft gpu and
doing the hardware drawing), and you will need a fast cpu to
use it.
- New rgb24 (mdec) upload detection, that one will be faster
with some mdecs, and produce less garbage on mdec top/bottom
(see the FF7 mdecs)
- Improved the "texture alignment" option. The new TA will give
better results with "Warriors of Fate", for example. So, if
you are seeing vertical garbage lines in your game, try enabling TA.
- I could kill some shift/and operations with each drawing
primitive... it will not give you lotta more speed, but hey ;)
28. - Last but not least: a new way to handle polygon coordinates.
It will fix games like Tony Hawk 1+2, Spiderman, Apocalypse,
Driver 1+2 and so on :)
Thanx go to Galtor & Calb from epsxe for their suggestions,
tests and chats ("it's a GPU bug" - "no, it's a CPU bug" -
"no, must be a GTE bug" - "Nope, gpu can fix it" - "aaarggg")
Well, I've tested the new funcs with many games and demos
and it seems to be pretty compatible, but still, if you are
seeing big flashing polygons with 1.41 in your favourite
game, try disabling the new funcs in the "special game
fixes" option.
"And the tower bells chime, 'ding dong' they chime
They're singing, 'Jesus died for somebody's sins but not mine.'"
- "Gloria" by Van Morrison
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
23. November, 2000 Version 1.40
- Fixed an issue with ePSXe which was causing a crash
if you stopped a game by hitting ESC and continued it
again.
- Small speed improvement with unfiltered MDECs, also
fixed a small bug with uploading screens, if a game is
using the screen centering bits
- New info in the in-game menu: if the main emu is telling
the gpu that the pad emulation is running in analog mode,
a small 'A' will appear... no 'A' means digital pad mode
- Biggest change with the version 1.40 gpu core:
New way to calculate the FPS.
Previous versions were only calculating the really
drawn frames, so games were running 'right' at
different FPS speeds (mostly 50 or 25 FPS in PAL mode
or 60/30 FPS in NTSC). Version 1.40 is just using the
vsync signal for doing the calculations, so if a game
is running at 50 (PAL) or 60 (NTSC) FPS, you have
reached full speed... ah, very easy, isn't it?
Well, on my P3 550/GeForce DDR system nearly all
games are working fine, and the new FPS detection
helps to limit even the MDEC speed propery, sono
disturbing noise is happening while playing the XA
sound anymore (fingers crossed ;)
Of course there is also one drawback with the new
functions: you can't compare the new FPS values
with the ones of my previous versions or with the plugins
of Lewpy, Segu or Kazz...
"If I could
I'd slow the whole world down
I'd bring it to it's knees
I'd stop it spinning round
But as it is
I'm climbing up an endless wall
No time at all
No time this time"
- "No Time This Time", The Police
29. --------------------------------------------------------------------------
29. October, 2000 Version 1.39
- The new 1.39 core is my first try to emulate the
screen centering bits. Usually this register values
are used to fine adjust the game display on the TV
screen, but sometimes games are using it to make
big position offsets or to clip the display output.
Well, I've tried to do a careful approach, because I
didn't want to cause bigger black borders around
the game screen, I hope I've been successful :)
Yeah, Raiden 1, Raiden 2 and the Alundra2 movie
sequences will work better now.
- A special new game fix for 'Speed Freaks' can be
enabled in the 'game fix' config options.
- Found and removed a bug which caused flickering
effects in 'Horned Owl'.
- Polylines are now supported in the offscreen drawing
functions, I've noticed a demo using them.
The same demo did a stupid way to update the screen,
it's also fixed (sigh).
- Changed the BlockFill function a little bit, it 'feels'
better now (I didn't see any differences in my games,
though)
- Ah, yeah, I've also squashed a small bug in my offscreen
drawing funcs, the drawing area wasn't always detected
properly.
"Down by the seashore, where the waters foam white,
Hang you head over; Hear the wind's flight.
The east wind loves sunshine,
And the west wind loves night.
The north blows alone, dear,
And I fear the light."
- "The Order War", by L.E. Modesitt, Jr.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
08. October, 2000 Version 1.38
- It's a small update this time, just killing some bugs
I've detected while doing a new kind of psx gpu plugin :)
The fixes are all clipping-related, so you will not
get better speed, just less glitches with a few games
(see for example Dead or Alive with version 1.37, urgh)
- The offscreen drawing funcs have been cleaned up, too.
All errors I've found with the soft gpu are fixed in the
OD stuff used by hardware accelerated plugins.
"What's the worry, what's the hurry,
Do you hear me, do you fear me ?
You've got the message, you read the story,
You want the power, you need the glory.
...
30. So you thought you had it made,
Ain't it easy to be afraid,
Feel the pressure, take the bait,
Here it comes again."
-"What's the hurry" by Marianne Faithfull
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
24. September, 2000 Version 1.37
- Some 'primitive position wrap' from the 1.36 core caused
glitches with a few games , so I've changed that to
a safer behavior.
- New 'special game fixes' option. Well, of course my
goal is to to make a nice psx gpu emulation with as
little glitches as possible, but some annoying stuff
will always happen. If I find a way to 'do it right' I
always include it without options in the plugins, but
sometimes the only way seems to be to code some
special workarounds. Those fixes will only work with
certain games, all other games will get worse.
Well, the FF7 menu border fix and the lighting fix
(both gitches are caused by the main emu, imho) were
already available in previous versions by hitting
the 'INSERT' key.
The new option gives you more control to activate
the desired internal gpu patch.
Ah, yes, and a new one, called 'No sprite transparency',
eliminates the 'trails' in the Abe's games.
You still can toggle the special fixes with the
'INSERT' key... but only the ones you have enabled in
the 'special game fixes...' window.
- And finally some small repairs with 4 bit palettized sprites
in the offscreen drawing funcs.
"And you, who want to know me, be aware that all
of your searching and wanting will not help you at all.
You have to know the mistery: if you don't find the
truth you are searching for within yourself, you will
never find it anywhere outside."
- "The Spiral Dance. A Rebirth of the Ancient Religion
of the Great Goddess." by Starhawk
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
17. September, 2000 Version 1.36
- For infos about the 1.36 core please read the 'version.txt'
of the D3D DX7 plugin :)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
03. September, 2000 Version 1.35
- Yup, I've skipped the 1.34 core from my SoftGPU and
made a new one... so check out my SoftGPU version 1.35,
too :)
- Something unique in my gpus right now: improved
auto-detection of the game's FPS limit. My older versions
did an easy check on the interlace bit, if set: 50/60 FPS,
if not: 25/30 FPS (PAL/NTCS). That checking is easy, but
31. also bad with many games. So I've done some research,
and my new functions (examining the game's vsync usage)
are working much better in most cases.
So, for example, in Wild Arms (PAL) you will get 50 FPS
in towns and 25 FPS in the battle screens... that's the way
it should be. Well, I know, some ppl will not understand
why they should do FPS limitation at all, but if you want
to have correct game music, the timing is important. And,
of course, in my age I can't handle Spyro at double speed ;)
- I've taken all my new SoftGPU funcs and added them in the
OGL plugin... yup. I've also killed all of my old Offscreen-
Drawing detection stuff and coded some new (hopefully better)
routines. And I made a new option: full vram updates.
All the changes (lotta work, boah) are related, I will try
to explain it in simple words: the real psx gpu is able to draw
polygons and sprites _everywhere_ in the vram. Well, a
hw accelerated gpu plugin usually has to detect if the game
is drawing into the next visible part of the vram and do that
drawings with the 3D API (OGL, D3D, Glide) it is using.
By doing that things will be faster and looking much better,
but (because the primitives are not painted in the vram),
some special gfx effects are not right with some games.
My 'standard' OD is checking, if the psx is painting
outside the visible area, and if that happens it will use the
soft gpu funcs to update that part of the vram correctly.
The 'Extended' OD does even a bit more: it detects if painting
is going on in the actually displayed area of the vram (something
I call frontbuffer drawing, some popular games are doing that
for displaying battle screens) and adjust it to get it (nearly) right.
And what's new 'full vram update' option? Well, if combined
with an OD mode, it will paint _any_ polygon in the psx vram,
keeping the vram content as fine as possible. That's an hell of
a job to do (because the gpu has to act as a soft gpu AND
to handle the 3D accelerator as well), so you will need a most
powerful cpu to use it. But on the good side: you will get nearly
all funky effects (like whirling screens and motion blurrs) if you
are using full vram updates and extended offscreen drawing.
Hint: usually I am using 'extended' OD without 'full vram', but if a
game is flickering (yup, that can happen), I just use 'standard'
OD. Only a few games (like Vagrant Stories) will need 'full vram'
to play without glitches.
- Some smaller changes were done to some psx state bits and
interlaced screen uploads. Oh yes, I also wanted to speed up
MDECs, but I've learned (again), that the fastest way to paint
2D screens with OGL is to use textures, so I removed the new
(slower) code and did a new option instead: 'Unfiltered
framebuffer updates' will be a little bit faster with mdecs (not
using texture filtering).
Oh well, and some older options like 'texture windows' simply
vanished (all those options are now fire proofed, no need to
turn them off).
- My version 1.35 D3D gpus (for all non-nVidia users) will be
ready in a couple of days, I hope (I just need some time,
sigh).
"I think therefore I am, familar to most?
How long did we eat the seed planted by our host?
4 billion years between our ears,
still hatred brings as many tears.
Still we judge each other...
32. why when we're only looking for the same high?"
- "spOOL" by Queensryche
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
30. May, 2000 Version 1.33
- Attention: I've renamed the gpu to "Pete's OpenGL Driver"
(gpuPeteOpenGL.dll), because that name fits better than
the old "Pete's TNT Driver" one.
Reason A) It's not for TNT cards only (for example I use the
plugin with my GeForce)
Reason B) It uses the OpenGL API... yup, surprise ;)
Reason C) <insert any reason that satisfy yourself>
But keep in mind that you have to reconfigure PSEmu Pro to
use the new file, just copying will _not_ work this time
(of course you could rename the file to "gpupetetnt.dll" again
and copy it over the old version, but hey :)
- This is my first gpu version with sprite mirroring enabled.
I thought that the standard psx gpu is not capable of
sprite mirroring (and when I coded that feature I noticed
glitches with some games), but of course it was just a little
bug in my code which caused the bad behavior. Well,
one game using mirroring is the "GD010" shoot-em-up
demo, that one plays fine now.
- I've rewritten the whole code for detecting screen uploads
(you know, for game titles and loading screens and such), I was not
happy with my old code (it was not bad, but a real mess...).
The new code is leaner and does its job even better (in my opinion),
some screens will still be missing, but not many, I think (if you are enabling
offscreen-drawing, though). Because of the new functions it can
happen that even "too much" will be displayed causing some garbage
when the screen should be black.
- Last thingie: my email address has changed: if you have suggestions or
problems or whatever, mail to: BlackDove@addcom.de
"An Aes Sedai never lies
but the truth she speaks
may not be the truth you think you hear"
- Saying concerning sisters of the White Tower, by Robert Jordan
"The Wizard's Fifth Rule: Mind what people do,
not only what they say, for deeds will betray a lie."
- The Sword of Truth, by Terry Goodkind
"Honestly, I feel that we have a great
product in the market and that the vast
majority of users are happy with bleem!"
- Sean Kauppinen, Communications Director of bleem! Inc.
"Hehehe"
- Pete
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
01. May, 2000 Version 1.32
- I've done a lotta testing if the V1.31 dma handler could
cause any troubles before I did the release...
33. and all looked fine. Well, some games I didn't check
(there is a point in every man's/woman's life when
he/she can't stand another fighting game), so I just
did a short check on Tekken3... and of course that
game was the reason for the 'emergency break'.
Sigh... this version repairs things again with a better
dma handling, so T3 _and_ the demos will work.
- Added some code for games/demos which are using
the MoveImage command for erasing the framebuffer.
The 'Space Lemmings' demo is working fine.
- Support for flat and smooth shaded 2-point lines in
offscreen drawing. It's needed in the 'Bad Funk Stripe'
demo, but that demo is hard to emulate with a 3D API
gpu, so it still doesn't work right.
Have to think about that issue first :)
"Long ago ran the sun on a folk who had a dream
And the heart and the will and the power
They moved earth; they carved stone; moulded hill and channeled stream
That we, the Stones, might stand on the wide plains of Wiltshire."
Lyrics by Gwenllian Gwalch'gaeaf , "Stones"
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
30. April, 2000 Version 1.31
- Removed an 'emergency break' from the dma handler.
That one caused troubles with many psx demos. Thanx to
the pcsx crew for putting the demos on their page.
Check out 'http://pcsx.emuforce.com/' for getting infos
about this new promising psx emulator :)
"Ain't getting old, ain't getting younger though
Just getting used to the lay of the land
I ain't tongue-tied, just don't got nothin' to say
...
Got people here down on their knees and prayin'
Hawks and doves are circlin' in the rain
Got rock and roll, got country music playin'
If you hate us, you just don't know what you're sayin'"
by Neil Young, "Hawks & Doves"
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
22. March, 2000 Version 1.30
- And again a small update. This version is emulating
the PSX ability to mask out special polygons, so they
will not be overdrawn by following primitives. Well, there
exists just one game (Silent Hill) which is using that feature
as far as I know, but I think it will not hurt to try the new
'Enable mask bit detection' option in the gpu config dialog
window with any game you own. Maybe some other
games will be fixed by it, too, eh? If you find some other
game which is using mask bits, let me know, just send a
mail to psswitch@online.de
BTW, I don't have Silent Hill, so I couldn't do much tests,
thanx to Lewpy for testing :) And yes, I know that Silent
Hill still doesn't work perfectly with PSEmu, you don't have
to report that issue ;)
34. Just one more note: If you enable mask bits, the '3D glasses'
option will also activated, that's simply because my mask
bit emulation also is doing the ZBuffer trick.
"I know where the stars glow
And the sky's unclouded
Sweet the water runs my friends
But Noldor
Blood is on your hands
Tears unnumbered
You will shet and dwell in pain"
- Blind Guardian, Noldor
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
19. Feb, 2000 Version 1.29
- At the moment I don't do much changes on my PSEmu
OpenGL plugin (I am busy with some other project) but
I've added a small new option and I want to release that
version even if it contains no big surprises.
Ok, so what is new? Two more filtering options: you can
now configure filtering to leave sprites unsmoothed.
That will look nice on some games: all 3D stuff will be
smooth, while text and health bars will be looking sharp.
Of course some games are having strange graphics with
that mixed mode, but hey, that's the reason why options
exist: turn em off if you like it, turn em off if you hate it.
Small suggestion: use my PSSwitch configuration utiliy,
so you can make different PSEmu settings for your different
games :)
Thanx to Q'tro for the idea to filter everything but sprites.
Oh, one last word: the in-game menu toggles now between
all five filtering modes in the following order: none, standard,
extended, standard without sprites, extended without sprites.
"Encumbered forever by desire and ambition
There's a hunger still unsatisfied
Our weary eyes still stray to the horizon
Though down this road we've been so may times"
- Pink Floyd
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
28. Jan, 2000 Version 1.28
- I've tried it again: out of order drawing to minimize texture
and shading state changes. And again: no speed gained. Sigh.
Maybe I have to play a bit more with that funcs, right now
all the o-o-o-d stuff is disabled (there are still some small
glitches and offscreen drawing isn't done in the new funcs yet, so
I've decided they are not ready for public eyes :)
But another option, related to o-o-o-d, can be activated in the
gpu config dialog: support for 3D VR glasses. I don't have some
for testing, so I can only hope it will work. Please note that most
3D glasses are working with D3D only, but I think the Asus
glasses come with tweaked nVidia OpenGL drivers, so they
should be working... try it and send me an email...
- While re-writing my gpu for o-o-o-d (nearly all gpu funcs had
to be changed, sigh) I've detected a small bug with smooth
shaded polylines. That one is fixed.
- Optimized some of my asm texture uploading code. Faster that
35. way.
- The GeForce is handling texture sow/tow coords slightly different
than TNT or 3DFX cards. All caching types beside the dynamic
mode produced small gaps between textures on some occasions
with the current GeForce Detonator drivers.
Well, I didn't want to wait until nVidia is willing to fix that
glitch (if ever...) and luckily I could finally tweak my texture
matrix so it should be fine with all cards.
I've tested it on my GeForce and Voodoo2 card, I hope that TNT(2)
cards will be fine, too. If you have a TNT based card and you are
detecting some small thin lines with version 1.28, please send me a
mail... in that case I will do some config option, so everyone will
be happy :)
"The elves and gnomes have to hide
when the moon is showing its face
and raging orcs will set their traps
and all forests will burn
they hate green trees
and love the dark
they don't understand
that they're caught and left alone
they feel the magic in the wind
they just fear the old man's song"
- Blind Guardian
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
09. Jan, 2000 Version 1.27
- Optimized 'Dynamic caching'. It will be slightly faster
(less cache thrashing).
- Support for sprite wrapping. Very interesting psx ability.
I've seen that just once in one game (yeah, again in BOF3, that
game seems to use nearly _every_ feature of the psx gpu).
Maybe some other games will also be repaired :)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
28. Dec, 1999 Version 1.26
- Yeah, christmas time... and because I was such a nice guy the last
year, Santa Claus brought me a GeForce256 DDR :)
Well, compared to my old TNT1 it's slightly faster... hey, just
kidding, it's really fast... as a matter of fact I think it's the best
consumer OpenGL card right now.
My PSEmu OGL plugin don't use the GeForce T&L features (not much
transformation and lighting stuff are needed emulating the PSX gpu),
but goodies like very fast vram data uploading mean a lot.
And don't worry if you have an older video card like the TNT1: I won't
lean back and think 'hey, why should I work on optimizations anymore,
the game runs just fine on my GeForce'. Of course I will try to
to get even better speed in the future, hey, the main issue of this
release _is_ about speed :)
- So, what's new? Generally just one new texture caching type... I call
it 'Dynamic caching', and it was in my mind for some months now. It has
some benefits compared to the 'heavy cachig' mode:
a) It will use your video cards vram to the fullest. It will try to
detect how much free vram could be used for textures on game startup,
so all textures used will be vram resident... no more texture swapping!