They probably figure it keeps a few people who have purchasing authority on the commercial side happy.MS basically gives away the OS to non-commercial users... It's a wonder and a gift they keep the flight sim going.
They probably figure it keeps a few people who have purchasing authority on the commercial side happy.MS basically gives away the OS to non-commercial users... It's a wonder and a gift they keep the flight sim going.
It's a helluva drug. I haven't touched MSFS since the mid-1980s.I got addicted to making money.
Totally. but for the mortals...MSFS was one of my favorites - really gave me a head start when I started flight lessons. Now that I have an airplane, the thrill is gone from the sim.
Brew on![]()
Where is your install (the EXE)? Did you download from steam or MS store?I'm a "bit" skeptical about the 50gb thing.
View attachment 858294
Steam. The actual install folder is only a couple of gigs, but it creates another folder (maybe you pick the name at install?) and mine is called MSFS. I don't have any purchases either, only the game, and all the free DLC.Where is your install (the EXE)? Did you download from steam or MS store?
I'd prefer to have it all on "disk" and not have to risk latency
Cheers!
You know you're old when...
Of course, I have to admit I thoroughly agree. But I also like installing software, and having hard drive copies of things, rather than finding out I cannot reach them because Al Gore is playing with the internet, or sunspots have caused StarLink issues, or whatever.
That'll only help with load times. All the relevant data is already in RAM until the game needs new data, like loading a new cell or something like that. As long as the programmers aren't nincompoops that is!I wonder if you could create a ram disk large enough to hold something like MSFS. Running completely from RAM would be insane I think. I don't know where the bottleneck is to performance for games like that though (graphics retrieval from storage, GPU, CPU)?
Afaik, that's actually how it has always been. But WAN latency would swamp that anyway...imagine if you have to wait for stuff to get downloaded and THEN loaded into memory!
My PC might be able to handle it if I select one of those balloons as the aircraft.
Comcast is gonna love that!Well this is rather disturbing...
Microsoft Flight Simulator 2024 sucks up to 180 Mb/s of internet bandwidth while in flight — equivalent to 81GB of data per hour
https://www.tomshardware.com/video-...in-flight-equivalent-to-81gb-of-data-per-hour
I think my media PC decided that it was time to update. Not a bad canary. I'll just flatten it if it goes to hell.Meanwhile, back on topic, the W11 24H2 update should be approached with due caution and a solid recovery strategy
8 reasons to avoid the latest Windows 11 update (hint: they're all bugs)
Cheers!
Good luck with your resuscitation plan. I'm wondering about your wish to keep this old stuff alive, given you've already ordered a replacement. 7-year-old spinning disks and a flaky controller/mainboard suggest it's time to just say goodbye. Of course, given your backup scheme and the implication that your new NAS comes without disk drives, re-using the old drives could be sensible -- assuming that the "new" unit will operate with drives that are available when the old ones fail.This isn't exactly Windows 11 ,,, any gross flaws here with my plan?
This isn't exactly Windows 11 but I'd imagine a bit OT is OK> Clearly this is where the IT crowd hangs out.
My old QNAP NAS gave up last night. A TS-251+ from about 7 years ago. I'm seeing a lot about it being a CPU problem and that a 1-0 ohm resistor jumpered between certain pins tricks it back into life. I can handle trying that out with fingers crossed. Hopefully it springs back to life, even if only for a few days.
I've already ordered another QNAP, being familiar with it's OS I'll forgive them this failure and get another. It'll have a pair of drives in it, hoping that I can boot it and configure it and then copy everything over. It looks as though the drives would only go directly into another machine and "just work" if the new machine is also quite old and has the right version of their OS on it. If the old one is resurrected I'll change its static ip address and name, and then set up the new one in its place. If I'm lucky the old links on my laptop and PC will still work, but it's not a big deal if they don't, I can replace them. I'll have to check that the TV and Nvidia Shield can find it to play videos from it as well, and so the QNAP media app and all the DLNA crap will have to be set up again as well. Certainly have some work in my future but it's do-able.
I'll be glad for my backup scheme of - things are on my laptop and PC, backed up regularly to the NAS in the house, and then the NAS itself backed up onto a portable drive which I keep at my desk at work "just in case".
Stating all this to ask if anyone sees any gross flaws here with my plan?
oh I'm in the same boat I have a huge tub of disk drives, I spent a week wiping all data with 0 just in case, now what to do hmmmThe new NAS will have a pair of WD Red's in it, similar to what I have now, but of course new.
I'd like to resurrect the old one to copy to the new one, so I can see my folder structure and how I had it all organized. After the copy I'll back up everything fresh, in case any 1's and 0's got corrupted during the copy phase. I'm hoping if I stick the new one with the same IP address and folder structure that my links will work as always and I wont' have to go through that again as well.
I wouldn't put a ton of work into the old one, but for the cost of a resistor which I picked up at work today for free, I'll give it a go. I disassembled it last night and it took all of 5 minutes if that with just a single small Phillips screwdriver.
Not sure what I'll do with the old drives. Probably bring them to work for the official e-recycling programs they stick all the old work drives into. Data destruction and etc.
Get the magnets out of them!oh I'm in the same boat I have a huge tub of disk drives, I spent a week wiping all data with 0 just in case, now what to do hmmm