Jay Miller
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Jay Miller reacted to unr3al in What siren is this?The Cincinnati & Norwood Ohio Police departments use that on their CVPI's currently. I recognize it by the sound.
Example:
[media=]
You'll hear the distinctive yelp around 1:06. The one in this video sounds more like the 2nd example Raggio posted, although the first is a good substitute.
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Jay Miller reacted to Raggio in What siren is this?What you go there is a Code 3 MasterCom B siren. Here are a couple examples and links to the ones that I can find:
Download here.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UdKQVP_Lzpg
I cannot find this one...
Or if you're looking to make your own mod, Code 3 has put up tones for its sirens on its website (linked above).
Hope that helps!
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Jay Miller reacted to AlconH in Are There Any Tutorials on How to Script?http://www.cplusplus.com/doc/tutorial/
Good luck.
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Jay Miller reacted to Raggio in Need Some Assistance With DAS v1.3You're welcome! Enjoy! :happy:
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Sounds like a hardware performance issue to me. What are your system specs? Have you set the graphics settings to the lowest possible? Also, have you tried forcing the game to lower the settings via the commandline.txt method? If not, try it out. The commandline options are good even for me when I'm running it on a high-end PC, as it actually optimizes the game better than just using the graphics settings in the game's menu. Make a new text file called "commandline.txt" in your game's root directory and copy/paste the following lines in it exactly as shown:
-novblank -norestrictions -safemode -frameLimit: 0 -availablevidmem: 2.0 -percentvidmem: 100 -minspecaudio -noprecache -nomemrestrict
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Jay Miller reacted to Asuna in Lost on what to doAnd what prey-tell is the matter with my method? You do not have to place the files into your EFLC directory, just extract them to a folder on your desktop and run it, they will find the install location regardless, if it is a legit copy, it has written it down int he system registry as being in the computer. Please, you are feeding information that should be an option, not a first off strike. Placing the files in the eflc folder will just increase that folders size and have unnecessary files in it
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Jay Miller reacted to Asuna in Lost on what to doIgnore Ahling considering he is telling you to use GTAIV PATCH 7 .... You have EFLC you need http://support.rocks...1-1-2-0-patch-2
And you DO NOT need to place the files into the eflc folder
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Jay Miller got a reaction from Guru Nathan in Thread concerning this modification and pirated game versions.I agree with Guru Nathan 100%, and I understand NicolaiB's distinction between cracking and pirating software. It is totally unfair that game companies nowadays are using more and more intrusive measures to "protect" their intellectual property. Remember what happened when EA released Spore? People were outraged with the intrusive SecuROM measures implemented, as well as the limited installs of 3 times, with each additional one needing authorization from EA Support. Why would you think that people started to crack the game then? Not to save themselves a few bucks--that's what uninformed consumers would think. The real reason is to protest EA for basically punishing its paying customers.
It's people with this kind of thinking that are helping the big businesses' cause in invading the consumer's privacy. EA's Origin is known to go through documents on your computer, as a German computer user proved with a task tracking tool that showed Origin looking through his financial records among other things. SecuROM is known to cause problems to Windows and damage hardware. Think about it, people who crack the game to get around these BS measures are, as Guru Nathan said, the "smart shoppers." They are not falling for the companies' traps and are protesting them for their rights. If GTA V still contains SecuROM or other stupid draconian DRM system, then I'm simply not paying R* a cent of my money. But I'm sure there are other consumers out there that don't care and just want to get their hands on it no matter what. These are the ones who R* are manipulating, making it think it's OK to implement such intrusive software onto their customers.
Just stating my opinions so that others can stop and think for a moment and become smart shoppers as well. I remember the days when installing games used to be as easy as simple disk and CD-key checks. What ever happened to those days? Surely the cracking and pirating of games has seen an increase due to these intrusive measures. You would think that they'll go down, but like I said, the wise consumer won't take this kind of abuse from the big businesses.