![]() Keep drivers up to date, use DDU in case you think your GPU driver its giving you issues and install the newest one. Just stay on any version you have, don't rollback, try to tweak it as much as possible, fr33thy guides are ok, even so he doesn't explain certain things, some of that stuff just works. When Windows 2004 comes out, I will try it, it promises a lot, but we'll have to see. I decided to go back to 1803 and everything feels ok, its a bit snappier. Speaking in general terms, it won't affect the normal user because not everyone can notice these changes as some of us do, gaming felt the same, no difference that I can remember. Even with Spectre&Meltdown disabled, the 10 MHz QPC will remain, there is no way to change it. Very good in the regard, but the system felt "muddy", like most of the stuff I did had an small delay to respond, fast, sure, but not as snappy as 17 versions are. ![]() He doesn't even know what he is doing or changing, it just seemed ok for him, that's itĪnd if your whole post is sarcasm, well then, I fully fell for it, because taking advice from a random post from a random user that has no idea on anything its something I refuse anyone from here would just do.Ĭlick to expand.I tested Windthat has the 10 MHz QPC, latency measurement with Latencymon was as low, if not lower than 1803 with some tweaks I do. He also said this (from the thread you linked): "Fortunately I have to say that useplatformclock defaults windows to the best that the clock has (cpu), but is it so with mb's?" I'd rather believe a real video than some telling me to force a timer on my O.S that doesn't need to be force, because its actually dynamic. Stock HPET+active on BIOS is the best setting: Windows uses TSC HPET when its needed, no need to force it on or off, I believe if an user fully understand its functions, then they could force it on for a particular program or application, the rest of users don't need it on because Windows manages it. If HPET active on Windows was so amazing and epic and whatever, then the O.S would have it active as default yet it doesn't. Same goes for a single voice on a tech forum.Ĭlick to expand.That thread is ancient and the user who posted that was explaining things from his point of view, it doesn't mean it will be the same for all users or that he is right. Point is, you won't find your salvation from some random soul on YouTube. Sometimes there are issues with Windows that require a fix for stutter or latency, like ISLC.īut when that's the case, it's pretty easy to find consensus on what works and what doesn't. Now, that's the one-size-fits-all answer. There's someone just like you who probably blames their latency issue on the graphics driver version, instead of windows version. It's easy to look in the wrong place on this stuff. If you still have issues, it's probably more appropriate to blame the specific scenario, blame the game and Google around for fixes. I'm sure I'm missing something there, but if you're on this thread and know who "FR33THY" is, then you're already deep in the rabbit hole. That's pretty much in order of importance. ![]() And a good mouse with 1000hz polling to top it off. Not using Vsync (competitive games), or ideally using Gsync/Freesync with a FPS limit of 3~ FPS below your refresh rate. ![]() Higher more consistent FPS, fast monitor refresh rate and response time. The one-size-fits-all answer is things you likely already know about, tried and true methods. ![]()
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