• Fallout 3 Free Download Google Drive

    From Irmela Caccavale@irmelacaccavale@gmail.com to comp.lang.mumps on Thu Jan 18 12:10:33 2024
    From Newsgroup: comp.lang.mumps

    <div>Starlight Drive In is a small booby trapped drive in with plenty of rusting cars, a big screen, and a concession stand. The location provides multiple areas to explore, including in and on top of the big screen itself. There is a highly toxic pool of radioactive waste in the middle of the lot.</div><div></div><div></div><div></div><div>fallout 3 free download google drive</div><div></div><div>Download File &#10042;&#10042;&#10042; https://t.co/dr0fE3VkZN</div><div></div><div></div><div></div><div></div><div></div><div></div><div>I have an xbox 360 which I did not buy with a hard drive. I played Skyrim, and then when I wanted the DLCs, I had bought a 32GB USB to use. My problem is that I just bought Fallout 3 Game of the Year Edition and whenever I put the second disc in and try to install the extra gameplay, my xbox 360 reads "You must have a hard drive to install this expansion pack. Attach an Xbox 360 Hard Drive and try again."</div><div></div><div></div><div>Sadly, since Fallout GOTY is a older game (and it was not programed for the Slim) you can never play those DLC's. You can try to edit the Xbox so it says you have a hard drive, but I DON'T recommend it because it is hard and voids your warranty. I found a webpage that explains some things.</div><div></div><div></div><div>I think if you take a USB to a friend who has a hard drive, get them to install the DLC, then move the DLC from there hard drive to the USB, then take it back home and put it in your xbox. When you load up the game select the USB that has the DLC on it and when you select it the game should say loading extra content or something like that. You might want to put a save on the USB as well so you don't have to start all over again. I HOPE this works!</div><div></div><div></div><div></div><div></div><div></div><div></div><div>If you are able to give me some helpful advice, I would be most, MOST! greatful. Failing that I would be willing to listen to knowledgeable speculation and lastly, just speculation. Surely someone has reinstalled this game to a different drive......how do I do so with the least effort.</div><div></div><div></div><div>My C: drive -- where win 10 resides, is red - lining. Win10 needs paging space. Its gone. Finally found why. User/me/appdata/local/ModOrganizer ... folders for each mod I installed via MO2. I never wanted MO2 on c: drive. It's why I installed new F: drive - just for MO2. Now MO2 has gobbled over half the space on my OS drive. I just finished installing Nolvus guide, manually. Four days.</div><div></div><div></div><div>Start MO and press the wrench and screw driver icon to open the settings dialog. In there there will be a paths tab, click on it to bring it forward. Look for the "Mods" option and go to the right to the three dots and press on them. The "Select Mods Directory" file browser will open. From here you can navigate to the copied "Mods" folder on the "F" drive. Press the select folder to bring you back to the main window. Do this for the downloads if you moved it too. Click the OK button to close the the settings dialog. Restart MO.</div><div></div><div></div><div>Thank you for reply. Appreciate your precise (and helpful) reply. Wish I had read it sooner. NEW situation. I spent 3 days moving mods up and down left pane- yada. Finally, Uninstalled MO to get rid of all the already installed mods. Creating a new profile, unfortunately, carries over all the mods, even in not checked. No way to start fresh. I installed MO2 again. However, I could not figure out how to change the data path so the virtual archives are NOT on c: drive. C: way too small - is why I had to move MO2 the first time. >> How change "data" path off of C; drive (to F:drive)?</div><div></div><div></div><div>If you are using Instance mode (the default), your downloads, profiles, and mods folder are stored in %LocalAppData% (usually C:\Users\[username]\AppData\Local\ModOrganizer). I think you can change the default locations by clicking the Screwdriver/Wrench icon and changing the Base Directory path at the top. If you change this one setting, Downloads, Mods, Caches, Profiles and Overwrite are stored within this folder as well. The advantage with Instance mode is that you can click the button at the top-left to switch to any of the supported Bethesda games (say from Skyrim Special Edition to Fallout 4).</div><div></div><div></div><div>The northeast section of the drive-in features a diner that has a small camp at the top. Southwest of the diner is the main parking lot, which has a large, severely radioactive pond in the center, peaking at 30 rads per second; the north side of parking lot has a Novice-locked shed containing the settlement workshop. Behind the movie screen is a small building with a cooking station, as well as a Novice-locked storeroom.</div><div></div><div></div><div>Once a week our creative team gets together and has a little fun. Last week we were discussing interesting ideas for custom shaped flash drives and the topic of video game characters came up. A couple of the guys mentioned they were really excited for the new Fallout 4 coming out, so we stayed up late last week messing around with molds and made these Vault Boy USB drives.</div><div></div><div></div><div>Once you have built the entire foundation, making sure there is a gap left between the drive-in screen and the invisible back wall of the building, place three metal walls on the front of each wing, specifically the unit with a slanted roof. Use these walls as support for six metal roof units covering the wing, establishing a base to build the rest of the floors from.</div><div></div><div></div><div>The back of the building is also undergoing renovation, with new lighting and two guard towers, attached to the bazaar with walkways and stairs. The top of the old drive-in screen and the edge of its roof on the lower wing are both lined with lightboxes that link back up to the generators.</div><div></div><div></div><div>That's a unique enough concept that we had to reach out and figure out what was going on. We were told, "This is the second drive-in event that we've done after fans loved the first one. I was a little disappointed that there isn't a drive-in anywhere in the Fallout 76 map, save for a Grindhouse outdoor cinema settlement. So I built a classic drive-in and captured 4k video of the camp and screen." This is how you'll be both "inside" of Fallout 76 and watching movies on Twitch. The two movies, which are public domain, will be overlayed on the screen that was built in the game.</div><div></div><div></div><div>You can catch the stream on October 23 at 5 pm EST at twitch.tv/chadfallout76podcast. If you want to know more about what's going on in the Fallout 76 communities, you can follow CHAD: A Fallout 76 Story on Twitter, where they'll be sharing streaming news from across the wasteland.</div><div></div><div></div><div>The question is, what can be causing it? We know from performance profiling of the PC version that CPU load can increase substantially as new data is streamed from the hard drive - but this would not explain 1000ms frame-times. Similarly, a GPU issue is even more unlikely: after all, there's very little difference visually between the frames before and after the stall, where the tasks run by the GPU would be very similar from one frame to the next. By a process of elimination, the most likely culprit is therefore storage - and that's curious, bearing in mind that both PS4 and Xbox One both feature 500GB 5400rpm hard drives, and the Sony console has no similar problem.</div><div></div><div></div><div>After extensive testing, it does seem that the issue relates to a storage bottleneck on the Microsoft platform, but until this is addressed via a title update, there is a workaround - albeit a somewhat impractical one. Completely eliminating the issue - at least on the test areas used in our initial performance analysis - is possible, but it requires mounting an SSD into an external USB enclosure, then copying the game data onto that drive. This is not completely ideal for a number of reasons: SSDs aren't cheap, and the USB caddy required only adds to the expense. So we thought we'd try another couple of solutions - a 7200rpm hard drive and a hybrid SSHD. The latter consists of a 5400rpm drive paired with a smaller SSD cache. The results on both drives are intriguing.</div><div></div><div></div><div>Performance improves on both units, to the point where the 0fps drops we encountered are gone, but the stutter - though reduced - is still there, whether it's through standard traversal through the environments, or in accessing weapons you've not used for a while. Across our test clips, the 7200rpm drive seems to offer a small advantage generally over the SSHD, but there are hitches and stutters that seem to show more improvement on the hybrid drive. Both drives show a substantial uplift over the internal unit in that the 0fps macro-stutter is gone or massively reduced, but it's clear that only the SSD showed a complete fix in effect. And again, we should stress that owing to the sheer size of the game, our testing was limited to areas where we had existing data.</div><div></div><div></div><div>Although it doesn't appear to have anything like the same problem, we also tested the PlayStation 4 version of the game running from solid state storage. There's a very small ironing out of performance, but nothing to write home about and that makes sense as storage bottlenecks on the stock drive appear minimal. Of course, loading times are improved with the move to faster drives and that's a situation common to both consoles.</div><div></div><div></div><div>Here's a quick look at our data, showing that PS4 also has a loading time advantage over Xbox One in a straight stock drive comparison. Switching to an SSD lops 30 to 50 per cent off the time taken to get back into gameplay. Loading times aren't really intrusive to the Fallout 4 experience, but it is safe to say that when they do appear, the momentum of play is compromised - and the faster we're back in the game, the better. What's also curious here is that running the Xbox One game from a solid state drive actually provides faster loading times than doing the same from PS4, and this may well be a matter of contention: the Microsoft console still has its internal drive to use for OS tasks, while the Sony hardware is running everything from the internally mounted SSD.</div><div></div><div> df19127ead</div>
    --- Synchronet 3.21d-Linux NewsLink 1.2