![]() Beyond the gameplay aspect, the mod also brings many cosmetical updates, spectacular special effects and custom sounds and voice overs to the table.Įvery file meron naman instructions pakibasa na langĬONTENTS: ROTR Version 1.85/Patch 1.86/Patch 1.87 Examples include a technology progression system based around three tiers, a more fleshed out counter system between air and anti-air units as well as an additional emphasis on specialized scouting and detection units which serve to make s†éálth tactics a more viable option than they were in the original game. ![]() ![]() ROTR also changes some of the game mechanics in order to create a unique and fresh experience. In addition, the three original factions China, USA and GLA have been greatly expanded and redesigned in a variety of ways, with several new units, buildings, powers and abilities to explore and combine in your in-game tactics. Most notably, the mod adds two completely new factions, the tank-heavy Russian Federation and the defense-oriented European Continental Alliance. Rise of the Reds – or ROTR for short – improves upon the C&C Generals formula while also adding its own distinct elements to it. COMM4ND & C0NQUER ZERO HOUR (TOP 3 BEST MODS)
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![]() In Windows, search for and open Change the mouse pointer display or speed. Install this softrware and u have option do disable it or add new function to it. Click the Cortana button on taskbar, enter ‘mouse’ in its search box and then select Mouse & touchpad settings.That opens the window directly below from which you can reconfigure the primary mouse button and adjust scrolling settings. Click on it and you’ll switch to a retro Windows 7 style Mouse Properties window: There’s a lot more you can tweak and adjust if you prefer, notably if you click on the “Wheel” tab, where you can not only set it to be line by line, but you can specify exactly how many lines should be scrolled on each click of the wheel: Windows 10 has a problem with the mouse driver – often leading many “wireless” mice to exhibit “jittering”. Open the Settings Panel in Windows 10 (Win+ I) or search for the same in the Start Search Box. Step 4: You should see an option called Scroll Inactive Windows. Fix #9: Install the correct mouse driver. Most mice are easily disassembled and fixed I've done so more than once. Notice for Windows 10 users ! To Enable Mouse ClickLock in Windows 10, Open the Settings app. You can remap the middle mouse button/scroll wheel click function to something you use more often. Under Mouse tab, Choose Roll the mouse wheel to scroll Multiple lines at a time or one screen at a time. The mouse wheel can be used to ‘middle-click’ in browsers. Then select the Sound tab in the dialog box. Step 3: From the menu on the left side, choose Mouse or Mouse & Touchpad, depending on if you’re using a PC or a laptop. The reason this problem exists is because of several issues within the Windows system itself. I'm Alex and I work for Focusrite Tech Support and would like to assist you with your query.įirstly ASIO4ALL is not an ASIO driver, it is a wrapper that wraps the Windows WDM driver so that the software "thinks" that it is an ASIO driver when it isn't. Sorry if there's some obvious things that I don't understand, I'm not brand new to this stuff but I definitely have limited experience. Let me know if there's any additional information I should provide. ![]() If not, then I hope there could be a way to use a different output device for the Focusrite ASIO. I don't understand where it's determining a 6ms latency, but if that could actually be the case then it would be perfect. But the recording levels and monitoring delay are very sluggish, where the 11ms Focusrite ASIO is instantaneous in comparison, and even the non-ASIO options are faster than ASIO4ALL. If there was a way to use the ASIO4ALL and actually get the supposed 6ms latency, that would also solve all of my problems. But I know how to route it through the Virtual Audio cable and the monitored sound is fine. But there's another mystery, that the more typical ASIO4ALL tells me I only have about 6ms, but the levels when I speak react VERY slowly, more like 50+ms, and it sounds that way when monitoring it also. The Focusrite USB ASIO tells me the latency is 11ms and I believe it, the levels react immediately. For some of the non-ASIO options, I've gotten latencies (without any artifacting) of around 25-50ms. One final note: In the top-right of Reaper it reminds you what your estimated latency is. The Focusrite ASIO records just as well, has amazingly low latency, but I can't find a way to choose any other output devices. Normally I would want to specify that it route out through a Virtual Audio Cable which I can then monitor by listening-in to the VAC, can specify it for VoIP, etcetera. So it's capturing the voice just as well as any of the other audio systems/drivers, the recordings sound totally clear, and the latency is really low, but I just need a way to route the output to something other than the two outputs on the back of the Scarlett itself, because they don't do a good job. HOWEVER, the actual test recordings come out perfectly fine. I tried using those outputs to live monitor the microphone sound, but it doesn't work well, sounding a bit weird and robotic when monitoring as I talk. I'm guessing that these correspond to the Left and Right outputs on the back of the Scarlett 2i2. For the dropdown boxes of "first" and "last" it lets me pick "1: Output 1" and "2: Output 2". Under "Enable inputs:" there's of course the fields under "Output range:" just the same as the screen for any driver selected under ASIO. Maybe it just doesn't work in that manner and that's part of why the latency seems so low? Kind of a too-good-to-be-true scenario? But I can't figure out how to properly monitor it or direct it to another device for output so that I can use it in monitoring, VoIP, or live broadcasting. If I record a brief track, it works fine and I can open the audio file and hear the properly recorded audio. I can't get this Focusrite USB ASIO to actually output to anything. It also seems to be reacting with way way less latency, almost none, with the bars moving when I make a sound much quicker than ano of the other audio systems or drivers. Enable Inputs is checked (first/1:Input1, last/2:Input2) and I see my levels moving normally as I speak. This "Focusrite USB Audio" is working on the input end. Under ASIO I found an ASIO Driver called "Focusrite USB ASIO" (NOT the ASIO "Focusrite USB 2.0 Audio Driver" which didn't work). WASAPI, WaveOut, WDM Kernel Streaming, and ASIO4ALL(v2) each do a decent job at best giving me no artifacting and relatively low latency, but still enough that it creates a jamming effect when I'm monitoring my voice and it's a bit weird to speak. In the Audio Device Settings screen, I've been toying with different Audio Systems to see which can get me the lowest latency without artifacting. My Reaper project only includes the one track, no FX or plugins, so I can test and hear my microphone and its latency. I'm using Reaper, with a Scarlett 2i2 (1st Gen) through a USB 3.1 socket. Hi there, I'm posting this question around the internet in hopes for an answer. Hoping for a way to introduce a different output device. ![]() ASIO driver called Focusrite USB Audio shows 11ms and seems correct, recording bars react snappily, but the only outputs I can pick are the L/R outputs on the Scarlett backside, which sound bad when monitoring (recordings are still great) and can't be routed for my needs. ASIO4ALL shows 6ms latency but feels like 50-100ms in recording levels and monitoring. Many methods work alright but with moderate latency. Looking for lowest latency method to monitor voice and send to a Virtual Audio Cable. ![]() Curves have been improved for better image editing and creation.
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