04-03-2016 12:55 PM
05-03-2016 09:22 AM
blindrezo said:
@water_ - That's all fine and dandy, but Oculus should allow us the option to disable it. They can even popup a message stating that by clicking on this, we agree to not blame Oculus for any problems that may occur, yada yada yada... Something along those lines. That's just my opinion.
05-03-2016 09:30 AM
Superman217 said:
I wonder why they didn't do a test like Steam VR. Here's a video from some guy on youtube.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AVmfT8QhvEQ
05-03-2016 09:35 AM
Ricktor_Black said:
Superman217 said:
I wonder why they didn't do a test like Steam VR. Here's a video from some guy on youtube.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AVmfT8QhvEQ
They did... when the CV1 was announced I downloaded a little client which looked at my specs to tell me if my rig was "VR Ready". I thought everybody did that? Vavle's tool was a lot more fancier and more comprehensive, but they accomplished the same task.
05-03-2016 09:41 AM
05-03-2016 09:53 AM
05-16-2016 11:27 PM
05-16-2016 11:32 PM
DaftnDirect said:
@mambo1888, sorry for the late response... no I'm not aware that changing that processor name in the registry causes any problems with any other processes or software. I haven't tested it for more then a few days though.
05-17-2016 05:05 AM
05-17-2016 05:29 AM
05-17-2016 06:39 AM
r00x said:
<snip>
Far more irritating is the stupid "try not to sprint into a wall/out a window/punch your wife in the face while enjoying VR" safety warning that you're forced to endure as if you have the memory of a goldfish and would otherwise trash your house if the message was ever skipped on launching a game. I deeply resent having to move my neck a couple of inches to glare at the dismissal text for two seconds, or god forbid, having to actually press a controller button, to skip that stupid message.
<snip>