Srslysims simulation lag fix

Sfs huge lag with big builds

2023.06.01 08:35 Edward_me Sfs huge lag with big builds

Hi im a new sfs player, i play on my computer but when i started to make bigger builds it lags when taking off. There is no lag when you open pause menu ot not taking off and afk. I hope i can get help and given some tips or advice on how to fix it thank you! (English not first language)
submitted by Edward_me to SpaceflightSimulator [link] [comments]


2023.06.01 08:32 OrmanRedwood Either Christians Are Atheists or Athiests are Theists, pick one.

The definition of what an Athiest is is pretty darn simple: Athiest do not believe in the existence of any god. However, some athiests believe in the simulation hypothesis which posits that our universe was created by intelligent life in a more real universe... The simulators in that case would basically be gods to us and their world basically heaven, not the paradise we often think of as the reward of the faithful, but the more ancient idea of heaven: the place that actually controls what goes on in the world. The thing is, there is no real difference between the pantheons of other religions and the simulators, so simulationists seem to be polytheists, not athiests.
But, if you want to say they are athiests, you somehow have to change the definition of atheism so that it doesn't exclude simulationists. This is actually pretty darn simple because "God" in the English language and in most languages refers to two very different concepts and since Atheism does not believe in the existence of either concept Atheism real is a lack of belief in two things rather than one thing. The word "God" can refer to two separate concepts and the set of both concepts while atheism refers to the denial of two distinct concepts but never refers to the denial of only one of the two distinct concepts. I simply propose that we make "atheism" and "theism" more symmetrical, use atheism to refer to two separate denials or both denials separately... This has some interesting consequences.
The word "God" does not refer to one defineable concept, but rather to two distinct concepts. There are polytheistic gods which are defined as exceptionally powerful, generally immortal, spiritual (not defined by our world) beings. Sometimes gods can die in their view, though usually not from old age. I'm pretty sure Mormons have a different view where the gods are perfectly immortal but also often physically in our universe, but correct me if I am wrong on that. Hinduism makes this something of a simplification, but that's because they view everything, literally everything, including the polytheistic gods, as a mere extension, or reflection, of the next concept the word "God" refers to, and that is the Monotheistic God.
Every Abrahamic religion worships being itself, that which exists without reference to anything besides itself, and that can only be existence itself. This strange way of defining God has a unique consequence: having more than one of this being is literally impossible. Since God is existence himself, he cannot be divided into two separate beings because if two beings exist within the same reality they are necessarily dependent on and distinct from existence itself. Secondly, there can not be two separate monotheistic Gods that do not share the same nature as both Gods are different definitions for what is and isn't real, and because they are different definitions neither God would be contained in the others definition of reality, thus relative to one God, the other does not exist, and since we live in one reality, relative to us, only one God can exist under the monotheistic definition. The idea that more than one God exists according to the monotheistic definition is wrong, and as has already been shown, this is not because God is defined as one, but because monotheism necessarily and unavoidably follows from how the nature of God is defined. The oneness of God is not attached to the definition of who he is, but rather is the result of the way he is properly defined.
Now, since these two definitions of God refer to completely different concepts, it seems that athiests should be allowed to choose which concept they actually do not believe since Theists are allowed to pick and choose which concept they believe. After all, most Christians think being monotheist also means believe the polytheistic gods do not exist (an incorrect assumption, but still one commonly made). Theists don't have to believe in both God concepts to be Theists, but athiests do have to disbelieve both God concepts to be Athiest. However, this way of defining things perpetuates the misconception that the word "God" refers to one and only one coherent concept when it actually refers to two distinct concepts. Instead, athiests ought to be defined those who do not believe in the existence of God according to either or both definitions while Theists are those who believe according to either or both definitions.
Oh, but there is a clear problem with this. There are two categories in which you can define yourself as a "theist" or an "athiest" without changing your beliefs. Under this schema, many Christians are athiests and theists at the same time because they believe in God but believe every other being called god does not exist. To fix this issue, you could try to use a three term system like we do now: polytheist, monotheist, and Athiest... But the problem with this is that it assumes believing in the existence of God and the gods is mutually exclusive... But it isn't. There is no overlap between the concept of God and the gods, they don't contradict one another, they are simply different. Hindus believe in the existence of fundamental reality, Atman, a universal consciousness which is a (inaccurate) way of understanding the one God('s relationship to creation), but they are polytheists... That believe in the one God... To an extent, they don't actually worship him... He is simply in their cosmology. As for the Christians, we are supposed to say that all the gods of the nations are demons, (Psalm 96:5, I know the translation is disputed) that is that pagan religion is an immoral communion and interaction with very real demonic spirits rather than a mere indulgence in very fake fantasies, so both polytheists and monotheists can believe in the existence of the beings which the other worships while still retaining their polytheistic and monotheistic identities. Similarly, monotheists and polytheists can deny the existence of the God or gods of other religions while still retaining their theism. This is why it is important to distinguish between what kind of God is denied as theistic beliefs aren't a simple binary or even trinary, but in this case there are more like Five distinct views without taking worship into account.
Inclusive Monotheism: Only the one God is God, but other beings called god are thought to exist.
Exclusive Monotheism: Only the one God is God, and he is the only being called god that exists.
Strict Atheism: No belief in the existence of any personal being more powerful than humanity.
Exclusive Polytheism: There are many gods but the One God does not exist.
Inclusive polytheism: There are many gods including the One God.
submitted by OrmanRedwood to DebateReligion [link] [comments]


2023.06.01 08:03 Putrid-Pool8613 I've been having this problem where my game has a lag spike every 1 or 2 seconds. Is there anything I can do to fix this?

I've been having this problem where my game has a lag spike every 1 or 2 seconds. Is there anything I can do to fix this? submitted by Putrid-Pool8613 to No_Time [link] [comments]


2023.06.01 07:41 shakamone After 4 years, SideQuest is still making your Quest better! Streaming now supports audio!! 👏👏Custom homes can be installed inside VR again!! Tonnes of other fixes. Plus 100 FREE exclusive giveaways running now with Quest Pro Controllers, Quest2s, Pico4s, Hoodies, 50+ FREE Game Keys + more!

After 4 years, SideQuest is still making your Quest better! Streaming now supports audio!! 👏👏Custom homes can be installed inside VR again!! Tonnes of other fixes. Plus 100 FREE exclusive giveaways running now with Quest Pro Controllers, Quest2s, Pico4s, Hoodies, 50+ FREE Game Keys + more!
Howdy Folks!
Hi, I'm Shane the CEO of SideQuest. Nice to see you! I've got a few things to tell you guys about today so ill just jump right in!
We recently turned 4! We are super humbled to have already spent nearly half a decade helping developers grow and helping users get access to loads more games for their VR headsets! Some of the most popular games in VR got started on SideQuest. We think that is because we are still dedicated to giving all our energy to help developers at no cost, so they can get you some of the best and most cutting edge games in VR. We ❤️ developers, they are the troops.

Giveaways: Shed loads of FREE stuff!

https://preview.redd.it/ixfuqfuxec3b1.png?width=2048&format=png&auto=webp&s=298e0bca5f6d769221f31b3a2961703f5f5786ec
That's right, 100+ giveaways running right now! All totally FREE to enter!
5 X Quest Pro Controllers 4 X Quest 2s, 2 X Pico 4, A Bobo M2 Pro Battery Pack, 50+ FREE Game Keys Tonnes of hoodies, caps and beanies. We have great games to give away too, here is a complete list of the games each of which we have 1-2 keys to give away for FREE!
https://preview.redd.it/294qnpj0fc3b1.png?width=1920&format=png&auto=webp&s=528ef4a7b7a84356d65dd6db895acea2fa096ed5
Zombies Noir GrooVR - Air drumming Finger Gun Unplugged: Air Guitar Blockworks Farming Tractor Airport Ground Handling Simulator VR Cubism Trippy Tavern Gravity Lab Eye of the Temple Vader Immortal: Episode I,II and III Marvel's Iron Man VR The Walking Dead: Saints & Sinners The Walking Dead: - Chapter 2: Retribution BONELAB Swordsman Among Us Blade & Sorcery: Nomad Contractors Beat Saber Drunkn Bar Fight Job Simulator Vacation Simulator Walkabout Mini Golf Pistol Whip Red Matter Red Matter 2 Resident Evil 4 Titans of Space PLUS SUPERHOT VR Breachers Into the Radius Five Nights at Freddy's: Help Wanted Shave & Stuff The Room VR: A Dark Matter Hand Physics Lab World Of Mechs Fruit Ninja 2 Medal of Honor™: Above and Beyond ARK and ADE Windlands Tetris® Effect: Connected The Climb The Climb 2 Green Hell VR Thief Simulator VR: Greenview Street The Thrill of the Fight

How do i Enter?

These giveaways will be a little different to giveaways we have run in the past, more challenging and we hope more fun too! To mix things up we have hidden these giveaways inside a game for you to find - just like an easter egg! This means there is some challenge but for those that are up to it, they get much higher chances of winning these prizes!!
To start with we have hidden 100+ giveaways inside different worlds in our game Banter! All you have to do is download the game and look for these buttons and click them! Once you click them it will reveal a link to the hidden giveaway!
Tip: Take a screenshot in-vr to collect them along the way by pressing Oculus button + Right Trigger.
https://preview.redd.it/l6y0pef2fc3b1.png?width=1818&format=png&auto=webp&s=162e17bd467af71c01b6e1bdb09e86ad2e29e6ed
We are excited to experiment with this new form of giveaways, and we hope to expand this to other games too in the future!
We just launched a new space in Banter called SlipStream Island! You can find it in the menu, it's a lot of fun sliding and slipping around! A massive space to explore with friends too! It has 25 hidden giveaways in it too!
https://preview.redd.it/59cth283fc3b1.png?width=2413&format=png&auto=webp&s=ddf4249427863938a21f2f4f602309074173715e
Ok if you have read down this far, Congrats! You will be rewarded with more info to make it easier to find the hidden giveaways. Yay!
Here is where all the prizes are and how much is in each world:
SlipStream Island (25 prizes) Backrooms (15 prizes) Winter Sport Resort (10 Prizes) Dive To Atlantis (7 Prizes) Outset Island - Night (5 Prizes) RPM Tag (5 prizes) ISS (4 prizes) GoldenEye Dam (3 Prizes) Quest Homes (3 Prizes) Mars One (3 prizes) New Users World (3 prizes) Croft Mansion (3 prizes) Cinema (3 prizes) Poolhouse (3 prizes) Time Warp Cabaret (2 prizes) Rocket Party (1 prize) Star Trek Bridge (1 prize) SQ Community Hub (1 prize) Meditation Clearance (1 prize) Ben’s Toy House (1 prize) Custom Home: Steam Void (1 prize) All Star Wars Custom Homes (3 total prize, 1 in each)

SideQuest Desktop: SideQuest Stream now with audio!

https://preview.redd.it/uhe7soa4fc3b1.png?width=615&format=png&auto=webp&s=fd4964cd18dfb26ca4fa7bb8ded530e077142b2d
Until now you weren't able to get audio in the SideQuest Stream feature, but as of three weeks ago the Quest 2 could finally do this due to the android 12 upgrade in v51 firmware, and that 3 weeks ago scrcpy released version 2 of their software which now supports audio out of the box on Android 11+! For anyone who streams or records long gameplay sessions this is an awesome update to get. No more need for audio cables, or bluetooth transmitters/receivers. Yay!
Grab the latest version here!

SideQuest In-VR: Custom Homes from inside VR is back!

https://preview.redd.it/w9l1o015fc3b1.png?width=2048&format=png&auto=webp&s=b07d44f8829db7ac13b37c995f5c701476112b05
As users started to get v51 on their devices we realized that some features broke on the SideQuest in-VR app. After we got over cursing Meta for breaking some stuff, we worked hard to get the app working at its best again. One of the biggest problems was that custom homes no longer worked when installed this way and could only be installed using the good old SideQuest desktop app. I'm happy to say that we have now fixed that issue and custom homes are now working again so feel free to dive into your favorite custom homes from inside the headset again. We also fixed a number of issues with the search an d filtering system that we also broken in the v51 update.
Grab the latest version here!
That's all for now! Thanks from the whole SideQuest team! ❤️
submitted by shakamone to oculus [link] [comments]


2023.06.01 07:41 shakamone After 4 years, SideQuest is still making your Quest better! Streaming now supports audio!! 👏👏Custom homes can be installed inside VR again!! Tonnes of other fixes. Plus 100 FREE exclusive giveaways running now with Quest Pro Controllers, Quest2s, Pico4s, Hoodies, 50+ FREE Game Keys + more!

After 4 years, SideQuest is still making your Quest better! Streaming now supports audio!! 👏👏Custom homes can be installed inside VR again!! Tonnes of other fixes. Plus 100 FREE exclusive giveaways running now with Quest Pro Controllers, Quest2s, Pico4s, Hoodies, 50+ FREE Game Keys + more!
Howdy Folks!
Hi, I'm Shane the CEO of SideQuest. Nice to see you! I've got a few things to tell you guys about today so ill just jump right in!
We recently turned 4! We are super humbled to have already spent nearly half a decade helping developers grow and helping users get access to loads more games for their VR headsets! Some of the most popular games in VR got started on SideQuest. We think that is because we are still dedicated to giving all our energy to help developers at no cost, so they can get you some of the best and most cutting edge games in VR. We ❤️ developers, they are the troops.

Giveaways: Shed loads of FREE stuff!

https://preview.redd.it/jvdrwa9ffc3b1.png?width=2048&format=png&auto=webp&s=2b785d45c16c76e766fe5edccd429b17878b48ff
That's right, 100+ giveaways running right now! All totally FREE to enter!
5 X Quest Pro Controllers 4 X Quest 2s, 2 X Pico 4, A Bobo M2 Pro Battery Pack, 50+ FREE Game Keys Tonnes of hoodies, caps and beanies. We have great games to give away too, here is a complete list of the games each of which we have 1-2 keys to give away for FREE!
https://preview.redd.it/os1b760gfc3b1.png?width=1920&format=png&auto=webp&s=392bf42122925d24c5a0831eedb8dc199820b574
Zombies Noir GrooVR - Air drumming Finger Gun Unplugged: Air Guitar Blockworks Farming Tractor Airport Ground Handling Simulator VR Cubism Trippy Tavern Gravity Lab Eye of the Temple Vader Immortal: Episode I,II and III Marvel's Iron Man VR The Walking Dead: Saints & Sinners The Walking Dead: - Chapter 2: Retribution BONELAB Swordsman Among Us Blade & Sorcery: Nomad Contractors Beat Saber Drunkn Bar Fight Job Simulator Vacation Simulator Walkabout Mini Golf Pistol Whip Red Matter Red Matter 2 Resident Evil 4 Titans of Space PLUS SUPERHOT VR Breachers Into the Radius Five Nights at Freddy's: Help Wanted Shave & Stuff The Room VR: A Dark Matter Hand Physics Lab World Of Mechs Fruit Ninja 2 Medal of Honor™: Above and Beyond ARK and ADE Windlands Tetris® Effect: Connected The Climb The Climb 2 Green Hell VR Thief Simulator VR: Greenview Street The Thrill of the Fight

How do i Enter?

These giveaways will be a little different to giveaways we have run in the past, more challenging and we hope more fun too! To mix things up we have hidden these giveaways inside a game for you to find - just like an easter egg! This means there is some challenge but for those that are up to it, they get much higher chances of winning these prizes!!
To start with we have hidden 100+ giveaways inside different worlds in our game Banter! All you have to do is download the game and look for these buttons and click them! Once you click them it will reveal a link to the hidden giveaway!
Tip: Take a screenshot in-vr to collect them along the way by pressing Oculus button + Right Trigger.
https://preview.redd.it/mcgv3azgfc3b1.png?width=1818&format=png&auto=webp&s=ef3e911c51ab05c4a6831d63280349f36bb06e41
We are excited to experiment with this new form of giveaways, and we hope to expand this to other games too in the future!
We just launched a new space in Banter called SlipStream Island! You can find it in the menu, it's a lot of fun sliding and slipping around! A massive space to explore with friends too! It has 25 hidden giveaways in it too!
https://preview.redd.it/0qdhd82ifc3b1.png?width=2413&format=png&auto=webp&s=9b4e1ed6c76cc6a00933371d612c246b6b8735b8
Ok if you have read down this far, Congrats! You will be rewarded with more info to make it easier to find the hidden giveaways. Yay!
Here is where all the prizes are and how much is in each world:
SlipStream Island (25 prizes) Backrooms (15 prizes) Winter Sport Resort (10 Prizes) Dive To Atlantis (7 Prizes) Outset Island - Night (5 Prizes) RPM Tag (5 prizes) ISS (4 prizes) GoldenEye Dam (3 Prizes) Quest Homes (3 Prizes) Mars One (3 prizes) New Users World (3 prizes) Croft Mansion (3 prizes) Cinema (3 prizes) Poolhouse (3 prizes) Time Warp Cabaret (2 prizes) Rocket Party (1 prize) Star Trek Bridge (1 prize) SQ Community Hub (1 prize) Meditation Clearance (1 prize) Ben’s Toy House (1 prize) Custom Home: Steam Void (1 prize) All Star Wars Custom Homes (3 total prize, 1 in each)

SideQuest Desktop: SideQuest Stream now with audio!

https://preview.redd.it/bc40zytifc3b1.png?width=615&format=png&auto=webp&s=fed0d20a7e841b01736b93198261cd8aea84bcfe
Until now you weren't able to get audio in the SideQuest Stream feature, but as of three weeks ago the Quest 2 could finally do this due to the android 12 upgrade in v51 firmware, and that 3 weeks ago scrcpy released version 2 of their software which now supports audio out of the box on Android 11+! For anyone who streams or records long gameplay sessions this is an awesome update to get. No more need for audio cables, or bluetooth transmitters/receivers. Yay!
Grab the latest version here!

SideQuest In-VR: Custom Homes from inside VR is back!

https://preview.redd.it/linw2etjfc3b1.png?width=2048&format=png&auto=webp&s=0616f7c59cfdef70efeae25df27c2e87e0dc3c78
As users started to get v51 on their devices we realized that some features broke on the SideQuest in-VR app. After we got over cursing Meta for breaking some stuff, we worked hard to get the app working at its best again. One of the biggest problems was that custom homes no longer worked when installed this way and could only be installed using the good old SideQuest desktop app. I'm happy to say that we have now fixed that issue and custom homes are now working again so feel free to dive into your favorite custom homes from inside the headset again. We also fixed a number of issues with the search an d filtering system that we also broken in the v51 update.
Grab the latest version here!
That's all for now! Thanks from the whole SideQuest team! ❤️
submitted by shakamone to virtualreality [link] [comments]


2023.06.01 06:44 Economist-Nervous Still digging the S3Pro

Still digging the S3Pro
I’ve since moved on from APSC (aside from my GRiii). But I can’t bring myself to let these pair go. The other one has since died - dreaded “ERR” message. I pick up the S3Pro more and more these days - as it seems to adequately satisfy my “analog” fix when I need a film alternative.
Film simulations are pretty good - which gets baked into the raw file. Dig the CCD sensor. Raw files and dynamic range is actually pretty decent for an old camera. 12MP is meh.
I am a big fan of the vertical grip and the x4 AA batteries it houses inside. This camera is as future proof as it gets.
Now I’m thinking about buying it a fast prime. Any suggestions? Nikon 35mm 1.8 looks good and light weight. I used to have a Sigma 30mm 1.4 back in the day.
Anyone else still shooting the S3Pro?
Anyone find a soft shutter button for it that fits?
submitted by Economist-Nervous to fujifilm [link] [comments]


2023.06.01 05:40 Guilty_Chemistry9337 Hide Behind the Cypress Tree, pt. 1

There are instincts that you develop when you’re a parent. If you don’t have any children it might be a little hard to understand. If you have a toddler, for example, and they’re in the other room and silent for more than a few seconds, there’s a good chance they’re up to no good. I take that back, most of the time they’re doing nothing, but you still have to check. You feel a compulsion to check. I don’t think it’s a learned skill, I think it’s an actual instinct.
Paleolithic parents who didn’t check on their toddlers every few minutes, just to double check that they weren’t being stalked by smilodons were unlikely to have grandchildren and pass on their genes. You just feel you need to check, like getting goosebumps, a compulsion. I suppose it’s the same reason little kids are always demanding you look at them and what they’re doing.
I think that instinct starts to atrophy as your kids grow. They start learning to do things for themselves, and before you know it, they’re after their own privacy, not your attention. I don’t think it ever goes away though. I expect, decades from now, my own grown kids will visit and bring my grandkids with them. And the second I hear a baby crying in the earliest morning hours, I’ll be alert and ready for anything, sure as any old soldier who hears his name whispered in the dark of night.
I felt that alarm just the other day. First time in years. My boy came home from riding bikes with a couple of his friends. I’m pretty sure they worked out a scam where they asked each of their parents for a different new console for Christmas, and now they spend their weekends traveling between the three houses so they can play on all of them.
We all live in a nice neighborhood. A newer development than the one I grew up in, same town though. It’s the kind of place where kids are always playing in the streets, and the cars all routinely do under 20. My wife and I make sure the kids have helmets and pads, and we’re fine with the boy going out biking with his friends, as long as they stay in the neighborhood.
You know, a lot of people in my generation take some weird sort of pride in how irresponsible we used to be when we were young. I never wore a helmet. Rode to places, without telling any adults, that we never should have ridden to. Me and my friends would make impromptu jumps off of makeshift ramps and try to do stupid tricks, based loosely on stunts we’d seen on TV. Other people my age seem to wax nostalgic for that stuff and pretend it makes them somehow better people. I don’t get it. Sometimes I look back and shudder. We were lucky we escaped with only occasional bruises and road burns. It could have gone so much worse.
My son and his buddies came bustling in the front door at about 2 PM on a Saturday. They did the usual thing of raiding the kitchen for juice and his mother’s brownies, and I took that as my cue to abandon the television in the living room for my office. I was hardly noticing the chaos, by this point, it was becoming a regular weekend occurrence. But as I was just leaving, I caught something in the chatter. My boy said something about, “... that guy who was following us.”
He hadn’t said it any louder or more clearly than anything else they’d been talking about, all that stuff I’d been filtering out. Yet some deeper core process in my brain stem heard it, interpreted it, then hit the red alert button. My blood ran cold and every hair on my skin stood at attention.
I turned around and asked “Somebody followed you? What are you talking about?” I wasn’t consciously aware of how strict and stern my voice came out, yet when the jovial smiles dropped off of their faces it was apparent that it had been so.
“Huh?” my son said, his voice high-pitched and talking fast, like when he thinks he’s in trouble and needs to explain. “We thought we saw somebody following us. There wasn’t though. We didn’t really see anybody and we’d just spooked ourselves.”
“What did he look like?” I asked.
“Nothing? We really didn’t see anybody! Honest! I just saw something out of the corner of my eye! But there wasn’t really nobody there!”
“Yeah!,” said one of his buds. “Peripheral! Peripheral vision! I thought maybe I saw something too, but when I looked I didn’t see anything. I don’t have my glasses with me, but when I really looked I got a good look and there was nothing.”
The three boys had that semi-smiling but still concerned look that this was only a bizarre misunderstanding, but they were still being very sincere. “Were they in a car?”
“No, Dad, you don’t get it,” my boy continued, “They were small. We thought it was a kid.”
“Yeah,” said the third boy. “We thought maybe it was Tony Taylor’s stupid kid sister shadowing us. Getting close to throwing water balloons. Just cause she did that before.”
“If you didn’t get a good look how did you know it was a kid?”
“Because it was small!” my kid explained, though that wasn’t helping much. “What I mean is, at first I thought it was behind a little bush. It was way too small a bush to hide a grown-up. That’s why we thought it was probably Tony’s sister.”
“But you didn’t actually see Tony’s sister?” I asked.
“Nah,” said one of his buds. “And now that I think about it, that bush was probably too small for his sister too. It would have been silly. Like when a cartoon character hides behind a tiny object.”
“That’s why we think it was just in our heads,” explained the other boy, “That and the pole.”
“Yeah,” my son said. “The park on 14th and Taylor?” That was just a little community park, a single city block. Had a playground, lawn, a few trees, and some benches. “Anyway, we were riding past that, took a right on Taylor. And we were talking about how weird it would be if somebody really were following us. That’s when Brian thought he saw something. Behind a telephone pole.”
“I didn’t get a good look at it either,” the friend, Brian, “explained. Just thought I did. Know how you get up late at night to use the bathroom or whatever and you look down the hallway and you see a jacket or an office chair or something and because your eyes haven’t adjusted you think you see a ghost or burglar or something? Anyway, I thought I saw something out of the corner of my eye, but when I turned there wasn’t anything there.”
“Yeah, it was just like sometimes that happens, except this time it happened twice on the same bike ride, is all,” the other friend explained.
“And you’re sure there was nothing there?”
“Sure we’re sure,” my boy said. “We know because that time we checked. We each rode our bikes around the pole and there was nothing. Honest!”
“Hmmm,” I said. The whole thing seemed reasonable and nothing to be concerned about, you’d think.. The boys seemed to relax at my supposed acceptance. “Alright, sounds good. Hey, just let me know before you leave the house again, alright?” They all rushed to seem agreeable as I left the room, then quickly resumed their snacking and preceded to play their games.
I kept my ear out, just in case. My boy, at least this time, dutifully told me his friends were about to leave. He wasn’t very happy with me when I said they wouldn’t be riding home on their bikes, I was going to drive them home. The other boys didn’t complain, but I suppose it wasn’t their place, so my boy did the advocating for them, which I promptly ignored. I hate doing that, ignoring my kid’s talkback. My dad was the same way. It didn’t help that I struggled to get both of their bikes in the trunk, and it was a pain to get them back out again. My boy sulked in the front seat on the short ride back home. Arms folded on chest, eyes staring straight ahead, that lip thing they do. He seemed embarrassed for having what he thought was an over-protective parent. I suppose he was angry at me as well for acting, as far as he knew, irrationally. Maybe he thought he was being punished for some infraction he didn’t understand.
Well, it only got worse when we got home. I told him he wasn’t allowed to go out alone on his bike anymore. I’d only had to do that once before, when he was grounded, and back then he’d known exactly what he’d done wrong and he had it coming. Now? Well, he was confused, furious, maybe betrayed, probably a little brokenhearted? I can’t blame him. He tramped upstairs to his room to await the return of his mother, who was certain to give a sympathetic ear. I can’t imagine how upset he’ll be if he checks the garage tomorrow and finds I’ve removed his tires, just in case.
I wish I could explain it to him. I don’t even know how.
Where should I even begin? The town?
When I was about my son’s age I had just seen that movie, The Goonies. It had just come out in theaters. I really liked that movie, felt a strong connection. A lot of people do, can’t blame them, sort of a timeless classic. Except I wasn’t really into pirate’s treasure or the Fratellis, what really made me connect was a simple single shot, still in the first act. It’s right after they cross the threshold, and leave the house on their adventure. It was a shot of the boys, from above, maybe a crane shot or a helicopter shot, as they’re riding their bikes down a narrow forested lane, great big evergreen trees densely growing on the side of the road, they’re all wearing raincoats and the road is still wet from recent rain.
That was my childhood. I’ve spent my whole life in the Pacific Northwest. People talk to outsiders about the rain, and they might picture a lot of rainfall, but it’s not the volume, it’s the duration. We don’t get so much rain, it just drizzles slowly, on and on, for maybe eight or nine months out of the year. It doesn’t matter where I am, inside a house, traveling far abroad, anywhere I am I can close my eyes and still smell the air on a chilly afternoon, playing outdoors with my friends.
It’s not petrichor, that sudden intense smell you get when it first starts to rain after a long dry spell. No, this was almost the opposite, a clean smell, almost the opposite of a scent, since the rain seemed to scrub the air clean. The strongest scent and I mean that in the loosest sense possible, must have been the evergreen needles. Not pine needles, those were too strong, and there weren’t that many pines anyway. Douglas fir and red cedar predominated, again the root ‘domination’ seems hyperbole. Yet those scents were there, ephemeral as it is. Also, there was a sort of pleasant dirtiness to the smell, at least when you rode bikes. It wasn’t dirt, or mud, or dust. Dust couldn’t have existed except perhaps for a few fleeting weeks in August. I think, looking back, it was the mud puddles. All the potholes in all the asphalt suburban roads would fill up after rain with water the color of chocolate milk. We’d swerve our BMX bikes, or the knock-off brands, all the way across the street just to splash through those puddles and test our “suspensions.,” meaning our ankles and knees. The smell was always stronger after that. It had an earthiness to it. Perhaps it was petrichor’s lesser-known watery cousin.
There were other sensations too, permanently seared into my brain like grill marks. A constant chilliness that was easy to ignore, until you started working up a good heart rate on your bike, then you noticed your lungs were so cold it felt like burning. The sound of your tires on the wet pavement, particularly when careening downhill at high speed. For some reason, people in the mid-80s used to like to decorate their front porches with cheap, polyester windsocks. They were often vividly colored, usually rainbow, like prototype pride flags. When an occasional wind stirred up enough to gust, the windsocks would flap, and owning to the water-soaked polyester, make a wet slapping sound. It was loud, it was distinct, but you learned to ignore it as part of the background, along with the cawing of crows and distant passing cars.
That was my perception of Farmingham as a kid. The town itself? Just a typical Pacific Northwest town. That might not mean much for younger people or modern visitors, but there was a time when such towns were all the same. They were logging towns. It was the greatest resource of the area from the late 19th century, right up until about the 80s, when the whole thing collapsed. Portland, Seattle, they had a few things going on beyond just the timber industry, but all the hundreds of little towns and small cities revolved around logging, and my town was no exception.
I remember going to the museum. It had free admission, and it was a popular field trip destination for the local school system. It used to be the City Hall, a weird Queen Anne-style construction. Imagine a big Victorian house, but blown up to absurd proportions, and with all sorts of superfluous decorations. Made out of local timber, of course. They had a hall for art, I can’t even remember why, now. Maybe they were local artists. I only remember paintings of sailboats and topless women, which was a rare sight for a kid at the time. There was a hall filled with 19th-century household artifacts. Chamber pots and weird children's toys.
Then there was the logging section, which was the bulk of the museum. It’s strange how different things seemed to be in the early days of the logging industry, despite being only about a hundred years old, from my perspective in the 1980s. If you look back a hundred years from today, in the 1920s, you had automobiles, airplanes, electrical appliances, jazz music, radio programs, flappers, it doesn’t feel that far removed, does it? No TV, no internet, but it wouldn’t be that strange. 1880s? Different world.
Imagine red cedars, so big you could have a full logging crew, arms stretched out, just barely manage to encircle one for a photographer. Felling a single tree was the work of days. Men could rest and eat their lunches in the shelter of a cut made into a trunk, and not worry for safety or room. They had to cut their own little platforms into the trees many feet off the ground, just so the trunk was a little bit thinner, and thus hours of labor saved. They used those long, flexible two-man saws. And double-bit axes. They worked in the gloom of the shade with old gas lanterns. Once cut down from massive logs thirty feet in diameter, they’d float the logs downhill in sluices, like primitive wooden make-shift water slides. Or they’d haul them down to the nearest river, the logs pulled by donkeys on corduroy roads. They’d lay large amounts of grease on the roads, so the logs would slide easily. You could still smell the grease on the old tools on display in the museum. The bigger towns had streets where the loggers would slide the logs down greased skids all the way down to the sea, where they’d float in big logjams until the mills were ready for processing. They’d call such roads “skid-rows.” Because of all the activity, they’d end up being the worst parts of town. Local citizens wouldn’t want to live there, due to all the stink and noise. They’d be on the other side of the brothels and the opium dens. It would be the sort of place where the destitute and the insane would find themselves when they’d finally lost anything. To this day, “skidrow” remains a euphemism for the part of a city where the homeless encamp.
That was the lore I’d learned as a child. That was my “ancestry” I was supposed to respect and admire, which I did, wholeheartedly. There were things they left out, though. Things that you might have suspected, from a naive perspective, would be perfect for kids, all the folklore that came with the logging industry. The ghost stories, and the tall tales. I would have eaten that up. They do talk about that kind of thing in places far removed from the Pacific Northwest. But I had never heard about any of it. Things like the Hidebehind. No, that I’d have to discover for myself.
There were four of us on those bike adventures. Myself. Ralph, my best friend. A tough guy, the bad boy, the most worldly of us, which is a strange thing to say about an eight-year-old kid. India, an archetypal ‘80s tomboy. She was the coolest person I knew at the time. Looking back, I wonder what her home life was like. I think I remember problematic warning signs that I couldn’t have recognized when I was so young, but now raise flags. Then there was Ben. A goofy kid, a wild mop of hair, coke bottle glasses, type 1 diabetic which seemed to make him both a bit pampered by his mother, who was in charge of all his insulin, diet, and schedule, and conversely a real risk taker when she wasn’t around.
When we first saw it…
No, wait. This was the problem with starting the story. Where does it all begin? I’ll need to talk about my Grandfather as well. I’ve had two different perspectives on my Grandfather, on the man that he was. The first was the healthy able-bodied grandparent I’d known as a young child. Then there was the man, as I learned about him after he had passed.
There was a middle period, from when I was 6 to when I was 16, when I hardly understood him at all, as he was hit with a double whammy of both Parkinson’s and Alzheimer's. His decline into an invalid was both steep and long drawn out. That part didn’t reflect who he was as a person.
What did I know of him when I was little? Well I knew he and my grandmother had a nice big house and some farmland, out in the broad flat valley north of Farmingham. Dairy country. It had been settled by Dutch immigrants back in the homesteading days. His family had been among the first pioneers in the county too. It didn’t register to me then that his surname was Norwegian, not Dutch. I knew he had served in the Navy in World War II, which I was immensely proud of for reasons I didn’t know why. I knew he had a job as a butcher in a nearby rural supermarket. He was a bit of a farmer too, more as a hobby and a side gig. He had a few cattle, but mostly grew and harvested hay to sell to the local dairies. I knew he had turned his garage into a machine shop, and could fix damn near anything. From the flat tires on my bicycle to the old flat-bed truck he’d haul hay with, to an old 1950s riding lawnmower he somehow managed to keep in working order. I knew he could draw a really cool cartoon cowboy, I knew he loved to watch football, and I knew the whiskers on his chin were very pokey, and they’d tickle you when he kissed you on the cheek, and that when you tried to rub the sensation away he’d laugh and laugh and laugh.
Then there were the parts of his life that I’d learn much later. Mostly from odd passing comments from relatives, or things I’d find in the public records. Like how he’d been a better grandfather than a father. Or how his life as I knew it had been a second, better life. He’d been born among the Norwegian settler community, way up in the deep, dark, forest-shrouded hills that rimmed the valley. He’d been a logger in his youth. Technologically he was only a generation or two from the ones I’d learned about in the museum. They’d replaced donkeys with diesel engines and corduroy roads with narrow gauge rail. It was still the same job, though. Dirty, dangerous, dark. Way back into those woods, living in little logging camps, civilization was always a several-day hike out. It became a vulgar sort of profession, filled with violent men, reprobates, and thieves. When my grandfather’s father was murdered on his front porch by a lunatic claiming he’d been wronged somehow, my grandfather hiked out of there, got into town, and joined the Navy. He vowed never to go back. The things he’d seen out in those woods were no good. He’d kept that existence away from me. Anyways…
Tommy Barker was the first of us to go missing. I say ‘us’ as if I knew him personally. I didn’t. He went to Farmingham Middle School, other side of town, and several grades above us. From our perspective, he may as well have been an adult living overseas.
Yet it felt like we got to know him. His face was everywhere, on TV, all over telephone poles. Everybody was talking about him. After he didn’t return from a friend’s house, everybody just sort of assumed, or maybe hoped, that he’d just gotten lost, or was trapped somewhere. They searched all the parks. Backyards, junkyards, refrigerators, trunks. Old-fashioned refrigerators, back before suction seals, had a simple handle with a latch that opened when you pulled on it. It wasn’t a problem when the fridges were in use and filled with food. But by the 80s old broke-down refrigerators started filling up backyards and junkyards, and they became deathtraps for kids playing hide-and-seek. The only opened from the outside. I remember thinking Tommy Barker was a little old to have likely been playing hide-and-seek, but people checked everywhere anyway. They never found him.
That was about the first time we saw the Hidebehind. Ben said he thought he saw somebody following us, looked like, maybe, a kid. We’d just slowly huffed our way up a moderately steep hill, Farmingham is full of them, and when we paused for a breather at the top, Ben said he saw it down the hill, closer to the base. Yet when we turned to look there was nothing there. Ben said he’d just seen it duck behind a car. That wasn’t the sort of behavior of a random kid minding his own business. Yet the slope afforded us a view under the car’s carriage, and except for the four tires, there were no signs of any feet hiding behind the body. At first, we thought he was pulling our leg. When he insisted he wasn’t, we started to tease him a little. He must have been seeing things, on account of his poor vision and thick glasses. The fact that those glasses afforded him vision as good as or better than any of us wasn’t something we considered.
The next person to disappear was Amy Brooks. Fifth-grader. Next elementary school over. I remember it feeling like when you’re traveling down the freeway, and there’s a big thunderstorm way down the road, but it keeps getting closer, and closer. I don’t remember what she looked like. Her face wasn’t plastered everywhere like Tommy’s had been. She was mentioned on the regional news, out of Seattle, her and Tommy together. Two missing kids from the same town in a short amount of time. The implication was as obvious as it was depraved. They didn’t think the kids were getting lost anymore. They didn’t do very much searching of backyards. The narratives changed too. Teachers started talking a lot about stranger danger. Local TV channels started recycling old After School Specials and public service announcements about the subject.
I’m not sure who saw it next. I think it was Ben again. We took him seriously this time though. I think. The one I’m sure I remember was soon after, and that time it was India who first saw it. It’s still crystal clear in my memory, almost forty years later, because that was the time I first saw it too. We were riding through a four-way stop, an Idaho Stop before they called it that, when India slammed to a stop, locking up her coaster brakes and leaving a long black streak of rubber on a dry patch of pavement. We stopped quickly after and asked what the problem was. We could tell by her face she’d seen it. She was still looking at it.
“I see it,” she whispered, unnecessarily. We all followed her gaze. We were looking, I don’t know, ten seconds? Twenty? We believed everything she said, we just couldn’t see it.
“Where?” Ralph asked.
“Four blocks down,” she whispered. “On the left. See the red car? Kinda rusty?” There was indeed a big old Lincoln Continental, looking pretty ratty and worn. I focused on that, still seeing nothing. “Past that, just to its right. See the street light pole? It’s just behind that.”
We also saw the pole she was talking about. Metal. Aluminum, I’d have guessed. It had different color patches, like metallic flakeboard. Like it’d had been melted together out of scrap.
I could see that clearly even from that distance. I saw nothing behind it. I could see plenty of other things in the background, cars, houses, bushes, front lawns, beauty bark landscape.. There was no indication of anything behind that pole.
And then it moved. It had been right there where she said it had been, yet it had somehow perfectly blended into the landscape, a trick of perspective. We didn’t see it at all until it moved, and almost as fast it had disappeared behind that light pole. We only got a hint. Brown in color, about our height in size.
We screamed. Short little startled screams, the involuntary sort that just burst out of you. Then we turned and started to pedal like mad, thoroughly spooked. We made it to the intersection of the next block when it was Ralph who screeched to a halt and shouted, “Wait!”
We slowed down and stopped, perhaps not as eagerly as we’d done when India yelled. Ralph was looking back over his shoulder, looking at that metal pole. “Did anybody see it move again?’ he asked. We all shook our heads in the negative. Ralph didn’t notice, but of course, he didn’t really need an answer, of course we hadn’t been watching.
“If it didn’t move, then it’s still there!” Ralph explained the obvious. It took a second to sink in, despite the obvious. “C’mon!” he shouted, and to our surprise, before we could react, he turned and took off, straight down the road, straight to where that thing had been lurking.
We were incredulous, but something about his order made us all follow hot on his heels. He was a sort of natural leader. I thought it was total foolishness, but I wasn’t going to let him go alone. I think I got out, “Are you crazy?!”
The wind was blowing hard past our faces as we raced as fast as we could, it made it hard to hear. Ralph shouted his response. “If it’s hiding that means its afraid!” That seemed reasonable, if not totally accurate. Lions hide from their prey before they attack. Then again, they don’t wait around when the whole herd charges. Really, the pole was coming up so fast there wasn’t a whole lot of time to argue. “Just blast past and look!” Ralph added. “We’re too fast! It won’t catch us.”
Sure, I thought to myself. Except maybe Ben, who always lagged behind the rest of us in a race. The lion would get Ben if any of us.
We rushed past that pole and all turned our heads to look. “See!” Ralph shouted in triumph. There was simply nothing there. A metal streetlight pole and nothing more. We stopped pedaling yet still sped on. “Hang on,” Ralph said, and at the next intersection he took a fast looping curve that threatened to crash us all, but we managed and curved behind him. We all came to the pole again where we stopped to see up close that there was nothing there, despite what we had seen moments before.
“Maybe it bilocated,” Ben offered. We groaned. We were all thinking it, but I think we were dismissive because it wasn’t as cool a word as ‘teleport.”
“Maybe it just moved when we weren’t looking,” I offered. That hadn’t been long, but that didn’t mean anything if it moved fast. The four of us slowly looked up from the base of the pole to our immediate surroundings. There were bushes. A car in a carport covered by a tarpaulin. The carport itself. Garbage cans. Stumps. Of course the ever-present trees. Whatever it was it could have been hiding behind anything. Maybe it was. We looked. Maybe it would make itself seen. None of us wanted that. “OK, let’s get going,” Ralph said, and we did so.
I got home feeling pretty shaken that afternoon. I felt safe at home. Except for the front room, which had a big bay window looking out onto the street, and the people who lived across it. There were plenty of garbage cans and telephone poles and stumps that a small, fast thing might hide behind. No, I felt more comfortable in my bedroom. There was a window, but a great thick conical cypress tree grew right in front of it, reaching way up over the roof of the house. If anything, it offered ME a place to hide, and peer out onto the street to either side of the tree. It was protective, as good as any heavy blanket.
submitted by Guilty_Chemistry9337 to EBDavis [link] [comments]


2023.06.01 05:24 SkyIndie Choppy mouse movement

i’ve recently started having an issue where whenever i move my mouse, my FPS drop dramatically (literally to 1 fps). this only happens when i move my mouse, and i have a beast of a PC so i know this isn’t a graphics/pc lag issue. i ONLY encounter this issue on SCP SL, no other games. any ideas on how i can fix this? game is pretty much unplayable until i can fix it. i’ve already tried capping fps, toggling vsync on and off, changing raw input, mouse smoothing, sensitivity, and verifying the integrity of my game files.
submitted by SkyIndie to SCPSecretLab [link] [comments]


2023.06.01 05:24 Apprehensive_Bus6088 3x bar- it’s a bug

3x bar- it’s a bug submitted by Apprehensive_Bus6088 to rentpleasesim [link] [comments]


2023.06.01 05:22 alecman3k Tales of Destiny: Director's cut, lag on map Aethersx2

Anyone knows how to fix the lag when outside towns? I'm using a Poco F4 and everything seems to be running smooth aside when you're outside the town and on the map. When you change the angle of the camera in a certain way, it slows down so much.
submitted by alecman3k to EmulationOnAndroid [link] [comments]


2023.06.01 05:08 BlackHawk2176 Started dropping frames seemingly out of nowhere

I was playing GD a couple days ago and the game was running at 360 fps rather smoothly with not much variation on most levels, but after a particularly bad lag spike my fps began oscillating between 350-360 constantly, even on the main menu, and today it got worse, with a variation of 330-355 and the game got somewhat choppy, I downloaded the 4GB patch and it seemed to fix the choppiness and my fps now oscillates between 350-355, can someone explain to me what might have happened because the game was working fine, and for anyone curious the level I was playing when these issues first arised was Cobalt Ruins, so it wasn't the most deco intensive level.
submitted by BlackHawk2176 to geometrydash [link] [comments]


2023.06.01 05:03 Lordfarquaad66678 Ps5 / Ps4 connection issues

I recently bought a ps5 and gave my old ps4 to my little brother. Whenever we try to play with each other we have very bad connection issues (we are on the same WiFi and in the same house). Whoever is the host will be fine but the other will lag very badly. I assume it has to do something with us being on the same WiFi but I’m not sure. Is there a way to fix this or do I need to make a LAN connection. We can always play zombies on split screen but it hella annoying😭. Thank you
submitted by Lordfarquaad66678 to playstation [link] [comments]


2023.06.01 04:57 Snail322 Contanstly having to reentering credentials on mobile

Could someone explain to me why I have to reenter my credentials almost everytime I lag out?
It's been really annoying when it comes to any sort of time-based event that draws lots people to one area (wildy events, clawdia, guthix butterflies). Sometimes I have to reenter them after a crash and other times not, I don't really get it.
I don't expect there to really be a fix that will happen for this anytime soon, if at all. I would just love to know, why it is the way it is?
submitted by Snail322 to runescape [link] [comments]


2023.06.01 04:34 ColbyKuma9 Monitor Flickers Black Screen, Crashes Games

I have an LG 34 Ultrawide that experiences a screen flicker once every 15 minutes. This causes several games to crash / freeze and need to be closed, while other games just have a temporary lag for a second. Some settings I have turned on or off that seem to be semi-common fixes: Free sync: off, Response Time: off, Aspect Ratio: Full Wide, Auto Input Switch: On Power LED On HDMI Compatibility On, Resolution: 3440 x 1440 / 50 Hz (i've tried multiple different Hz options)
submitted by ColbyKuma9 to techsupport [link] [comments]


2023.06.01 04:12 cifer-cipher Redmi Note 11 - Non-stop lag spikes

Does anybody here who have the same issues as well with Redmi Note 11? I just bought this phone over a month ago and I can't play online games without experiencing to forcefully disconnect or to experience lag spike in-game. I believe there's no problem with our internet connectivity here since I've been playing online games with my laptop without any issues. I've tried everything including tweaking the wifi settings and the battery saver settings. Yet, I the issue still doesn't resolve. Hence, I would like to reach out if anybody here who experiences (or has experienced) the same issue as well. What have you guys done to fix the problem? Thank you in advanced.
submitted by cifer-cipher to Xiaomi [link] [comments]


2023.06.01 04:06 Exotic-Ad2045 Steam Game Speed

Hello everyone, I have very little knowledge on how PC hardware operates and I’ve recently changed my hard drive from a hdd to an ssd. I’ve run stuff that cleans/fixes game files and have updated my graphics card, and I tried to both drag my steam files from one hard drive to another and reinstall the games onto the drive individually, but no matter what I do the game operates very slowly. I tried reinstalling the game on both my new and old hard drive and neither improve it. To make matters worse, when I restarted my pc and steam, somehow all of my games uninstalled on the old drive.
To be clear, download speed is fine, but it struggles to do anything once the game is booted up, even trying to change audio in the starting menu lags.
submitted by Exotic-Ad2045 to buildapc [link] [comments]


2023.06.01 04:01 maximum_compassion playing on PC any way to fix mouse lag?

gotta have accuracy in this kinda game. I can barley click the speech boxes
submitted by maximum_compassion to theascent [link] [comments]


2023.06.01 03:28 Prestigious-was54 2016 KLX 140L backfiring, high rev, carb problems please help (with videos)

2016 KLX 140L backfiring, high rev, carb problems please help (with videos)
I have tried almost everything I can think of, and I am begging for help. I’m going to write as many details as I can, if you any questions Ill respond as fast as I can. I have a KLX 140L and I recent bought a Yoshimura exhaust, a big bore kit and a mikuni vm26 carb. I installed the big bore, the exhaust and carb at the same time, I also bought a newer battery that runs good. But when I start the bike it idles super high, is extremely loud and my exhaust constantly backfires. I adjusted the carb float heigh to 23mm (the vm26 is supposed to be between 22-24mm) and I changed the spark plug. I’ve check compression, spark, gas and air. The bike has a brand new oil filter, air filter, oil and gas. I just opened up the engine today and replaced the gaskets etc. I tightened the exhaust to check for air leaks and I found nothing. I think it’s the carb but I have no idea what to change. Everything is brand new and changing the jets, float level has done nothing. In the first video, it was when I first put the big bore kit and mikuni carb on and it ran fine. But when I was riding the bike every time I switched gears I would lunge forward and the bike would lag hard. And the video afterward is the bike when I tried to fix what was going on.
submitted by Prestigious-was54 to Fixxit [link] [comments]


2023.06.01 03:01 Fit_Trainer1878 Landing dynasty members and expanding the family tree lags the game

Title
I use Seduction focus judiciously and legitimize bastards so I can spawn geniuses. I also love having my dynasty owning literally everything so I land em everytime I conquer everything. All is well and good until a hundred ingame years later and my save slows down to a snail pace and my dynasty has like a 1000 more members.
Any way to prevent lag from actually playing dynasty simulator? I know and accept I am playing a Paradox game but I THINK someone somewhere has thought of a workaround. I don't want my spares just sitting around there... uselessly.. when I have the entirety of Eurasia and North Africa to paint my family name on.
submitted by Fit_Trainer1878 to CrusaderKings [link] [comments]


2023.06.01 02:09 HondaCrv2010 Any benefit to changing ATF again ?

Hi guys,
I have a 2003 Mitsubishi lancer that I got at 75k and the automatic transmission had major lag and jerk between gear shifts.
My dad (previous owner) never changed the ATF so I did a 3x drain and refill about 1 week time in between with daily commuting.
I’m at 90k now and notice lag in changing gears every once in a while. ATF is not cheap bc I use oem fluid.
Do you think another drain and refill will fix the problem ?
submitted by HondaCrv2010 to MechanicAdvice [link] [comments]


2023.06.01 00:39 Vownow Can't stream on discord using stable diffusion...

Hi guys, so I would love to screenshare my amazing renders on discord but it always lags and then my discord stream freezes.. Does anyone know a fix for this? Please let me know!
submitted by Vownow to StableDiffusion [link] [comments]


2023.06.01 00:32 FirstBankofAngmar Weird Camera bug in WoTLK 3.3.5a

I've noticed that turning the camera with the ui on causes some small stuttering/fps drop of maybe 10 frames. However, when I turn the ui off, the camera turns smoothly with zero stuttering/lag. Does anyone know why this is? and if so how to fix it? For reference, I do not have any ui addons or modifications. I understand it's an extremely minor bug but it's one of those things where you can't unsee it once you've noticed it.
submitted by FirstBankofAngmar to wowservers [link] [comments]