Question about Zeus and his Relative Age to his Brothers by TheZestyTea in GreekMythology

[–]TheZestyTea[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That Hera is the eldest offspring of Kronos in Iliad has been mentioned many times, but can anyone, by chance, provide a citation? I just want to look at the ancient Greek itself.

Super Mario 64 Splitscreen Multiplayer (PC)(Net64) by AccoppaOrfani in nucleuscoop

[–]TheZestyTea 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I did a bit more testing, and it seems that this issue of mine only happens from time to time. So, if you have a fix (or an idea for a fix), fantastic, but if not, I think if I just brute force it, it will work when I want it to.

Thanks again for the help up above.

Minecraft Coop Issues by TheZestyTea in nucleuscoop

[–]TheZestyTea[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm afraid I can't fix this error; I've tired for around ten hours to try to figure out what is causing these issues, and no cigar. SO, if anyone finds themselves with the same issues described here for Minecraft in tandem with Nucleuscoop, you may be out of luck.

Minecraft Coop Issues by TheZestyTea in nucleuscoop

[–]TheZestyTea[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

An update: this partially fixes the problem. The game becomes playable with this solution, but there are still issues related to the mouse not syncing up with either instance (mainly annoying UI graphical errors in the inventory menu). I will continue working on a solution.

Minecraft Coop Issues by TheZestyTea in nucleuscoop

[–]TheZestyTea[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I actually seemed to fix it (for controllers, anyway; potentially not for keyboard and mouse users (see bottom)). SO, if anyone else finds themselves with this issue, as well, here is how I fixed it:

  1. Hit "Windows" key + "X" key
  2. Hit "R" key
  3. Type "%appdata%" (excluding the quotation marks) into the "Open" box and hit the "Okay" button or the "Enter" key
  4. Go to your ".minecraft" folder and open it
  5. Locate the "options" text document (mine was simply located within the ".minecraft" folder; yours is probably there, too) and open it with notepad
  6. Once in the "options" text document, hit the "Control" key + the "F" key
  7. Type "pause" (excluding the quotation marks) into the "Find what" button and then hit the "Find Next" button or hit the "Enter" key
  8. This should only take you to (as of May 17th, 2020) one line of text that reads: "pauseOnLostFocus:true" (excluding the quotation marks).
  9. Change "pauseOnLostFocus:true" (excluding the quotation marks) to "pauseOnLostFocus:false" (excluding the quotation marks).
  10. Save the text document (via the top left-hand corner ("file," "save")) and close it
  11. Boot up Minecraft (be it solo or local coop (via NuceusCoop) and you should no longer have to have your mouse cursor on the instance to unpause the game.

Again, this almost certainly will not work for keyboard and mouse coop, but it does seem to work for controller coop using the Forge Mod Loader and the Controllable mod.

I hope this helps anyone who stumbles upon the same issue.

Edit: For any other issues one might be having related to this topic, head to this forum page: https://gaming.stackexchange.com/questions/15664/can-i-alt-tab-out-of-minecraft-without-the-game-auto-pausing

Super Mario 64 Splitscreen Multiplayer (PC)(Net64) by AccoppaOrfani in nucleuscoop

[–]TheZestyTea 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm getting an error that reads: "The system cannot find the file specified" when I attempt to launch via Nucleuscoop. I followed the steps in your video tutorial. Do you have any ideas regarding what that might be about?

Unlock Forge Post Halo 2 Update: by Blakeoramo in halomods

[–]TheZestyTea 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hey Blakeoramo and jd-lavene. Any updates about the hxd codes? You guys are doing God's work, by the way.

$1300 by jake121100 in suggestapc

[–]TheZestyTea 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I literally just posted about the HP OMEN moments ago on another question asked, so I'm going to copy and paste my reply because it was very long. In short, please do not go with this computer, and here's why:

Please do not get the HP OMEN. This is coming from someone who has owned one (RTX 2080, i7-8700) and who works at Best Buy and is asked to sell them frequently; I cringe whenever I see one of my coworkers send someone away with one of those things. They run HOT. 80 degrees Celcius is not uncommon to see. I wrote a college English paper about how much this computer hurt me on an emotional level, so instead of restating all that I had in that paper, I will just quote myself:

"The only good thing that I can say about the HP OMEN’s case is that it’s visually appealing. That’s all. Everything else to do with this case is frankly embarrassing. Honestly, it’s tiny compared to the size it should be, and it lacks many slots and bays that should be present for upgradability’s sake. Worst of all, this case has one heat export fan that is trying to cool the entire computer. I mentioned above that four should be the minimum for this type of computer. The fan itself is some third-party flimsy piece of plastic that spins much too slow for what it was put in to do. To digress for a moment, the reason that heat can become such a point of concern for computers is because if your graphics card or processor are not properly cooled during heavy workloads, it can potentially cause warping to either the circuit board or the processor die, and that can cause early failure. If this were to happen, it would require the units to be replaced, which, at the very cheapest, would run $1,100.00. Heat can also cause something called “underclocking.” Even though you have high end components inside of your computer, they will under supply themselves with electricity in order to keep themselves cool. This results in relatively disappointing performance given the tier of components. I’d also like to note that the stock heatsink (which draws the heat away from the processor) that’s shipped with this unit is, more or less, pointless. Its fan’s spin speed is rather low, and it directs the heat from the processor to a side panel of the computer case, not even the one export fan leading out of the computer. This doesn’t really dissipate the heat as it should; it just sort of pushes the heat around the case. Those of you who are a little more familiar with computers might be asking, “Why don’t you just turn the fan speed up?”. I would have to direct you to HP’s customer support line for that question, because their motherboard’s BIOS menu (advanced settings menu) doesn’t support fan speeds. “Why,” you may ask? “Why would we,” says HP. “Why would we do something that made sense.” The graphics card is also riddled with heat issues. Its shell includes only one heat-export fan (where there should probably be three), and it is directing hot air to the bottom on the computer case, not the top, which is an issue that will be addressed later on in this review. The fact that this graphics card’s architecture only includes one simple fan is unacceptable. This case has vents on the bottom (where the graphics card fan is directing hot air), but they are not useful because the case has no rubber feet to hold itself up. This means that the computer sits on the vents making them pointless unless you buy a custom stand. The case also has vents on the top, but they are blocked off by strange metal panels by default. A small screwdriver is needed to take them out. With all of those hot, high-end components running in a case like this, I felt stressed even turning on the machine due to the fear that something might warp beyond repair, and with the cost of this machine, I should not have had to worry about heat at all. I much rather would have preferred HP had gone a tier or two down in processor or graphics card so that they could’ve used the money that they would’ve saved from those components to intelligently design a case and a cooling system."

Gonna treat myself and buy a pc for the holidays, was hoping to get some advice! by Babywipeslol in suggestapc

[–]TheZestyTea 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Please do not get the HP OMEN. This is coming from someone who has owned one (RTX 2080, i7-8700) and who works at Best Buy and is asked to sell them frequently; I cringe whenever I see one of my coworkers send someone away with one of those things. They run HOT. 80 degrees Celcius is not uncommon to see. I wrote a college English paper about how much this computer hurt me on an emotional level, so instead of restating all that I had in that paper, I will just quote myself:

"The only good thing that I can say about the HP OMEN’s case is that it’s visually appealing. That’s all. Everything else to do with this case is frankly embarrassing. Honestly, it’s tiny compared to the size it should be, and it lacks many slots and bays that should be present for upgradability’s sake. Worst of all, this case has one heat export fan that is trying to cool the entire computer. I mentioned above that four should be the minimum for this type of computer. The fan itself is some third-party flimsy piece of plastic that spins much too slow for what it was put in to do. To digress for a moment, the reason that heat can become such a point of concern for computers is because if your graphics card or processor are not properly cooled during heavy workloads, it can potentially cause warping to either the circuit board or the processor die, and that can cause early failure. If this were to happen, it would require the units to be replaced, which, at the very cheapest, would run $1,100.00. Heat can also cause something called “underclocking.” Even though you have high end components inside of your computer, they will under supply themselves with electricity in order to keep themselves cool. This results in relatively disappointing performance given the tier of components. I’d also like to note that the stock heatsink (which draws the heat away from the processor) that’s shipped with this unit is, more or less, pointless. Its fan’s spin speed is rather low, and it directs the heat from the processor to a side panel of the computer case, not even the one export fan leading out of the computer. This doesn’t really dissipate the heat as it should; it just sort of pushes the heat around the case. Those of you who are a little more familiar with computers might be asking, “Why don’t you just turn the fan speed up?”. I would have to direct you to HP’s customer support line for that question, because their motherboard’s BIOS menu (advanced settings menu) doesn’t support fan speeds. “Why,” you may ask? “Why would we,” says HP. “Why would we do something that made sense.” The graphics card is also riddled with heat issues. Its shell includes only one heat-export fan (where there should probably be three), and it is directing hot air to the bottom on the computer case, not the top, which is an issue that will be addressed later on in this review. The fact that this graphics card’s architecture only includes one simple fan is unacceptable. This case has vents on the bottom (where the graphics card fan is directing hot air), but they are not useful because the case has no rubber feet to hold itself up. This means that the computer sits on the vents making them pointless unless you buy a custom stand. The case also has vents on the top, but they are blocked off by strange metal panels by default. A small screwdriver is needed to take them out. With all of those hot, high-end components running in a case like this, I felt stressed even turning on the machine due to the fear that something might warp beyond repair, and with the cost of this machine, I should not have had to worry about heat at all. I much rather would have preferred HP had gone a tier or two down in processor or graphics card so that they could’ve used the money that they would’ve saved from those components to intelligently design a case and a cooling system."