09-23-2007, 04:55 PM | #21 |
Da Guy Wut Owns Dis Joint
Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: Texas
Posts: 3,566
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Those would be fan-created recolors of Maxis objects? If it's all of them then you need to enable costume content, quit, and restart. If it's some of them, there might be a problem with the GUID of the original object.
Have you installed at least up through Nightlife? Before Nightlife, the game did not look into subfolders for clothing.
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09-23-2007, 06:28 PM | #22 |
Reticulated MoonBat
Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: My trusty computer in Issaquah WA, USA.
Posts: 848
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Yeah, it's the user created re-colors (of Maxis Objects) that just went AWOL on me.
As "luck" would have it, I just stumbled on why: for reasons I cannot explain, the GMND part of the CEP mod (the one that goes into the Downloads folder) suddenly disappered! Now that I put it back in, everything is good to go again. I'm reeeeeaaaaly hoping that I just got careless with my Download swapping & it's not my computer getting funky on me. This is entirely possible as it was something of a "marathon" of a re-install, but I wish I could remember doing it! I never new that it was NightLife that added the whole subfolder thing! That's what I get for jumping strait in to everything-up-to-Pets when I finally decided to join the Sims 2 bandwagon; I'm not entirely sure just what earlier EP added what! (I am now back up to everything-up-to-Seasons/Celebrations status. Not sure if I'll throw H&M in yet or not as SimPE isn't updated yet... )
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09-23-2007, 06:43 PM | #23 |
Goddess for Life
Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: NY State
Posts: 3,303
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I keep spare files on my hard drive just in case the puter wants a little snack. Seems to work well; haven't lost an important file in ages!
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10-23-2007, 12:45 AM | #24 |
Solar Max
Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: England
Posts: 371
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At one time I had similar problems and thought I had too many downloads till I looked in the computer management screen and saw that the disk BADLY needed defragging. Once out of the red, it was fine.
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10-23-2007, 05:32 AM | #25 |
Reticulated MoonBat
Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: My trusty computer in Issaquah WA, USA.
Posts: 848
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I never even thought to check my "frag" levels at the time (since I found the culprit) but that's a good point!
I once stumbled across a fan-site for another game along time ago where the site owner was quit adamant that DeFragging was "a complete waste of time" and that it had "never helped solve any performance problems". I couldn't help but laugh! I can't count the number of times that a DeFrag has cured something for me. Maybe my computers have all just been strange that way? Actually, given all the file swapping I've been up to lately, I think I had better take a quick peek at my frag levels right now...
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** Long Live All Wild Canines! ** ** Leader Of The Moon-Bat Revolution! ** |
10-23-2007, 04:32 PM | #26 |
Da Guy Wut Owns Dis Joint
Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: Texas
Posts: 3,566
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It sounds like the other fellow just hasn't filled up his hard drive to the point that it matters. That could be bad because if the disk gets too full, defragging becomes quite an adventure.
He also might be playing a game that doesn't do a lot of disk access or have large files to fetch during game play.
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05-23-2008, 02:55 AM | #27 | ||
Herald of the Dawn
Join Date: Apr 2008
Location: Central Alabama, US
Posts: 53
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Quote:
Quote:
Let me tell you, as a computer consultant who has seen first-hand what defragmenting a HDD can do for performance (see my first response in this post), their testing was pure hogwash. Their test methodology was sound (they fragmented a drive, then made a proper 1:1 image of said data, using that for each test) but their results are, at best, suspect. (See this month's issue for the test.) To see an otherwise good magazine pump out bilge wash that bad really gets me a bit steamed. Fragmentation of critical system files or areas (the pagefile or MFT for example) can torpedo your performance, especially in Vista, so it's more than a good idea to lock the paging file to a size 2.5x the size of your system RAM (or 4Gb, whichever's smaller) and make sure it's moved to a place that makes it fast. Since most (if not all) commercialware defragmentation programs have fully-functional trialware, use one of those (I recommend PerfectDisk 2008) in "Offline Defrag" (despite the name, it defrags prior to XP or Vista coming all the way up, during the so-called pre-boot mode) to get the system files into shape. |
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