I updated within the standard default screen, I started the game and got 42" of blackness that didn't go any further, I ctrl-esc and saw this error before forcing it to close "error default creating standard default shader" I hit Verify and it ends up with "one or more critical sim files failed verification" config says nvidia gtx670 sync = gpu AA =2 1920x1080 32 bit HDR AND FXAA = Ticked ON Core I7 bla bla DX 9.0c All our servers are updated with 660 so it's all a bit urgent really I don't "play around with things and don't know how so I'm not one of those "have a go sort of guys"" Thanks
There are two work-arounds that I'm aware of. Neither is acceptable, but either one should solve your problem. SOLUTION #1: Run as Admin 1) Right click the file "Launch rFactor.exe" in the rF2 installation folder 2) Select "Properties" 3) Select the "Compatibility" tab 4) Check "Run this program as an administrator", then click "OK" SOLUTION #2: Change permissions of "Users" group to "full control" for the rFactor install folder 1) Go to the admin command prompt 2) Type the following: cacls "x:\Program Files (x86)\rFactor2" /E /T /P Users:F (Note: change "x:\Program Files (x86)" to the correct installation location) Both of these solutions result in lower security if rF2 is installed in a "Program Files (x86)" directory. Use at your own risk.
If you didnt do yet, try tick off both in config sim and try to start again. After that, go to video setting ingame and turn both on (one at time and aplying just after). I have some like this in the past and that solved (in my case, since i dont use fxaa, it was the hdr the culprit)
Tried "Reset UI" and "putting lite over top", clean install, update install, etc. None worked without changing permissions.
SOLUTION #1: Run as Admin 1) Right click the file "Launch rFactor.exe" in the rF2 installation folder 2) Select "Properties" 3) Select the "Compatibility" tab 4) Check "Run this program as an administrator", then click "OK" Big Hugs Carlo, I can't imagine why that even worked but it did, some ppl know stuff, its all bloody witchcraft. I think this can go under Solved
Your welcome Pits. Been doing this crap since the early 1980s. Yes ... I'm old, too old. I'm a gray beard (as I limp away in shame).
The 80's ... my Commodore 64 in color with fast loader cartridge, Formula One Grand Prix, Street Road ... an awesome decade
You'd fit well in our club Carlo, apart from the "youngins" at 40 we are all over 50's lol. I do so enjoy the years that passed and the few less to come , there are worse ways to idle time away than doing a simple racing game.
Is this the guess the age thread? HA my first pc, I had Elite on 5.25" floppy, yeah I was a spoiled child. The beginnings of the ARM chip right there
ZX-81 with 1K extension, I win I remember sitting there with the wife for three days programming it then I bumped the expansion pack, I threw it away (after it hit the wall) A friend had a working 5meg hard drive from the old library, 3ftx2ftx18", I think he wins now lol
Ah the days of copying a program from a magazine only to find they had misprinted that semi-colon syntax error wtf? If only there was some way of saving this and coming back to it later........ We had one commodore Pet at our school of over 500 pupils...... look at em now with their new fangled slate looking things and the phones that let you bully someone on the other side of the planet if you want..... don't know they are born half of em
I truly miss some of that stuff ... The 10mb hard disk was mi first drive on a 8 Mhz XT using the ESDI controller. It was expensive, but worked for at least 10 years. I'm not a fan of the ZX but it deserves all my love and respect, the Z80 was the Concorde electronic brain. Just awesome. My 16kb Casio Electronic Organizer was faster to find a phone's number than most moderns Android's. Nashua and BASF ! 5 1/4 low density rules, much better than the last generation of 3 1/2 *cough verbatim cough* Basic (no quickbasic, no visual basic) But what I really like is extinct now ... those damn datassettes, a day playing with a screwdriver to read 10 lines of code ...
I remember like it was yesterday the first time I saw and put my hands on an Apple II. I was astounded. Up until then I was programming on a DEC VAX mini at the university. The idea of "personal" really rocked my boat. When the IBM PC was introduced, well that changed everything for me. Still have a couple of IBM Model M keyboards (best keyboards ever) in the house. Times have changed. In high school, the computer system took up half a building. Probably had less power than a smart phone.
ESDI controllers and drives - boy I don't miss those. But yep, they were built like Sherman tanks - never had one fail. The first Compaq 80286 8mhz I owned had rubber shock mounts (on springs I think) to contain the vibration. Come to think of it, SCSI ain't a whole lot better (still use a bunch of Cheetah 15k 320s). Now hard drives are plug and play - where's the challenge?
I agree, everything today is "built for dummies", setting up the IRQ and IO address on a controller (with local bus) using only jumpers without interfering the existing devices and when everything was working ... it was simple orgasmic I've earned the title of technician in the hard way. Interwhat ? Call in to my BBS
300 baud, 1200 baud, 2400 baud then wow V.56. I also ran a government BBS (Bulletin Board Service for you young people). Let's see ... C800 or D800 and what IRQ was that other card using?