Move all files-
D:/Games/DDO (spinning disc drive)
to
C:/Games/DDO (SSD)
You won't believe the difference it makes. Night and day. You're welcome.
Move all files-
D:/Games/DDO (spinning disc drive)
to
C:/Games/DDO (SSD)
You won't believe the difference it makes. Night and day. You're welcome.
Kobold sentient jewel still hate you.
I remember one of my friends a long time ago bought 4 fast hdd and raided them and put windows operating system on them while the data was on another hdd.
This was back in the 90ths before ssd and M.2.
If you wanna overkill it you could in theory make a raid of a number of M.2 and put everything on that. Or even better buy enough ram and have the whole OS and DDO loaded into them on boot.
Well just crazy ideas.
But yeah transferring to SSD would make a big difference. You should also have your OS on a ssd.
My issue with how DDO runs is the constant flickering textures. Did a lot of googling and still can't fix it.
Kobold sentient jewel still hate you.
hey can you translate this for the tech ignorant? I have my shortcut pointing too: "C:\Program Files (x86)\Turbine\Dungeons & Dragons Online"
is that what you mean?
Wiki dashboard with some useful stealthplay links. LONG LIVE STEALTH!
Proud Knight of the Silver Legion, Cannith: Saekee (main) and some others typically parked at some level to help guildies and other players
The main point of the OP is that having your DDO installation on a Solid State Drive vs. the older mechanical drives makes a night and day difference in your ability to quickly load into the game and pass between loading screens. Sure does!
Have fun, and don't forget to gather for buffs!
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I'm playing this game on a Samsung 980 pro.
Load screens are still garbage. See my twitch stream from yesterday for more information. Toward the end we ran a Baba and we literally broke the instance - kept getting ported outside after we try to cross a particular line with stuck loading screens.
Figure out your product please. This is on par with the lag of the marketplace attack by the devils eons ago.
"Ignorance killed the cat, sir; curiosity was framed."Tripoint, C.J. Cherryh
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Let me try to elaborate.
When you buy a computer look at whether the harddisk is a ssd or hdd.
A harddisk drive (HDD) is like a cd or old time record. Where inside the disk drive a disk is spinning and a reader or "pick up" is reading from it. The data is then stored as magnetic zeros and ones on the drive. This means the head has to move to where the data is stored when it wants to read it. These drives are slow compared to ssd. The benefits of a harddisk drive is the data is more secure in terms of wear and tear and usually can store data longer. The read and write speeds meaning how fast the computer can load a program are typically in the range of 6 Giga bit per second. These drives are usually also bigger in terms of the data they can store and cheaper. When i as a kid had a comodore 64 it used tapes. I think this technology is about the same age as using tapes so i would guess the early 80's.
SSD stands for solid state drive and the technology is probably from the 2000 where it first appeared as memory cards for your camera. These disks are more expensive but transfer data at about 20 Giga bit per second so about 3 times as fast. The data is stored in a totally different way and i am not sure how, but i know that the "reading head" has access to all data at once so no moving parts. Pure electronics, no mechanics. The drawback of these drives is that they can only read and write a specified number of times to each block. So they have a limited lifespand. Data recovery from one of these drives is also harder if it has been damaged.
Generally speaking - especially before multicore cpus - you had the cpu which had a very limited memory called the cache but it was the fastest memory there was. Then there is the random access memory (RAM) which is fast but volitile so it can only hold data while given power. This is slower than the cache. Then there is the harddisk which is the slowest but the cheapest. At each of these steps the price and the speed goes down while the total capacity (how much data it can hold) goes up.
As a rule of thumb for myself i keep all the data that is not crucial for saving and that i need to access fast on a ssd. Namely the operating system (In my case Linux but could be windows or mac) and games and other stuff. If i am doing video editing i put it temporarely on the ssd whie i edit it. Things i like to save such as work or pictures or other data i like to keep i take a backup on a hdd.
Hope this was helpfull and if you ever need help with buying a new computer id be glad to help.
EDIT: I am no expert but hope this helps.
The gaming laptop wars are really hot right now.
Easy to find a quality gaming laptop with a 500GB or Terabyte SSD for under $1500 US.
Sadly computer upgrades are on our list of Pandemic Casualties, at the moment. When finances get better, I'd love to nab a SSD. Till then (pats PC tower) Ol' Betsy here is just gonna have to keep plodding along as best she can.