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Speed up loading?


1234andrewdude

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Screenshots have to be from websites not your hard drive. I think if you go to the profiles or settings area on MSI you should see a place to adjust framerate. There should be an info or help button somewhere, too,,,

 

I am sorry I have to go...if you dont get this figured out send me a note tomorrow. :confused:

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For the antivirus, some of them allow you to specify folder exclusions so that it doesn't try to scan all of the files in a folder while you are playing a game. If it doesn't have that feature, some of them allow you to disable it completely for a specific amount of time such as 10 mins, 1 hour, etc. That's what I was talking about. Some games and antivirus software don't work well together. It's not as dangerous as it sounds. If you aren't doing anything but playing a game, it's unlikely that a virus is going to infect your computer. Most operate via links embedded in email, enticing you to click on them, which causes an executable to run. If you aren't reading email or browsing the web, it's very difficult to become infected.
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andrew, in order for others to see images, you will have to post them on a web site, such as postimage.org, which allows free image hosting. Giving us a path to a file on a disk drive mounted on your computer will not allow us to see the image. The "insert image" icon is very misleading. It's not making a copy of the image. What it should say is "insert image URL". You will have to post an image on a website, then copy the URL from your browser while viewing the image, then paste that URL into one of these pages, and the image will show up.
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You probably want to defragment the hard drive, since it sounds like you haven't done it. I won't claim that it's why you have such long load times. That's due to something else most likely. But it should help a little. I know that Windows 7 has a built in tool for defragmenting disks. If you don't do this occasionally, it will take longer to read data from the disk because it's scattered in pieces throughout different parts of the disk, and the head has to move around to different locations to read the data. A defragmenter will put all the pieces together into one strip so that the head can read it in one shot. Much faster. If you don't have WIndows 7, then find some free product like IOBit that has a defragmenter as part of a tool suite. Again, it's very unlikely that fragmentation causes the long load times, since you also have shorter load times. But it's a good thing to do in general. The hard drive will also last longer due to less wear and tear as it attempts to read files.
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