hmm... another interesting lines of parameter... even though both of them (DisableHWAcceleration and Acceleration.Level) have similar task (hardware acceleration things), seems they have different way to do the task... or do they complement each other so that they can't exist without the other? ...or DisbaleHWAcceleration is more to "hard calibrating", while "Acceleration.Level" is more to "soft calibrating" because it has more values to be choose? @_@
- Acceleration.Level has 5 values ranging from 0 to 5 - DisableHardwareAcceleration has 2 values, only capable to understand 0 or 1 (or maybe any numbers that's not ZERO), "true"/"false", "enable"/"disable", "yes"/"no" ?? ...it's just my impression to both of them "at a glance", so please correct me if I'm wrong. >_< On Dec 3, 7:38 am, tribaljet <[email protected]> wrote: > Yeah, it HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\ControlSet001\Control\Class > \{4D36E968-E325-11CE-BFC1-08002BE10318}\0000 (and 0001) > > It's a 32-bit DWORD called "Acceleration.Level", with values ranging > from 5 (disabled) all the way to 0 (full hw accel). 945GME defaults at > 4 (minimum accel). If the value doesn't exist, just create it. > > The results didn't seem to be consistent for some people. I did notice > improvements going from default 4 to 1 (2nd highest value), but I > can't link you to my results as google groups is messing up and > doesn't open pages for me. > -- 9xx SOLDIERS SANS FRONTIERS
