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Coffee Crisp

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Everything posted by Coffee Crisp

  1. It's really up to the person handling the appeal. Sometimes people who were banned months back who come back with an appeal being polite and mature will get unbanned. Other's who are D-Bags to the person handling the appeal don't. It kind of depends on the situation and our history with you and of course, how you interact with our responses. Here's a Pro Tip and a summary: Be Polite, Truthful, and Respectful--- there's a chance you might get unbanned.
  2. WOW

    Sometimes people on websites where you can download skins leave hacks hidden in the folders to get you VAC Banned. Other than that, it's obvious that it was some kind of cheat. You can't get VAC banned for anything but things that use the engine to your advantage. Spectating tools for admins that allow you to see through walls just get you kicked, winamp does not get you banned anymore.
  3. Did some research. You should try exiting/starting steam then if failed try uninstalling steam and deleting every single directory, then restarting your computer. If that isn't the solution than maybe this FAQ may be. I am trying to connect to a secure game server, but I received the error message 'SECURE CONNECTION FAILED'. Common causes: Connection Issues Security Software Background Applications Third-party Anti-Cheat Applications Answer This issue stems from four main sources: connection issues, security software, background applications and third-party anti-cheat applications. Connection Issues Firewalls and Routers If your computer is behind a router with a firewall, you must open the ports that Steam uses to connect to the Internet. Most embedded firewalls require you to open ports manually (they do not automatically learn your used ports). Routers without firewalls rarely need to have ports opened for a game client, but usually do for game servers. If you can specify ports to open, please use the following: UDP 27000 to 27020 inclusive TCP 27020 to 27050 inclusive TCP 27040 and 27041* *CyberCafe Owners only After making any changes to your router and firewall settings please EXIT STEAM AND RESTART before attempting to connect to a secure server. Router Problems Routers can cause connectivity problems, especially Wireless routers. If you have a stand-alone router and you are having connection problems, you can always bypass the router and plug your computer directly into your modem to see if the router is the problem. If you determine that the router is the source of the issue, please follow the Using a Router with Steam guide. Dual WAN Routers are not compatible with Steam. Internet Connectivity Issues Check the stability and reliability of your Internet connection. An unstable connection can cause Steam to download improperly and connections to game servers time out. There are many online tools that help you to check for problems with your connection, here are two of the most popular ones: http://www.dslreports.com/tools http://www.speedguide.net/analyzer.php If you suspect that you are having a problem related to your Internet Connection, please contact your Internet Service Provider (ISP). Security Software Security, Firewall, and Anti-Virus Software If you're using Internet security, firewall or anti-virus software, make sure they are set to recognize Steam.exe and all instances of HL.exe and HL2.exe as trusted programs. Please consult your security program manuals for instructions. Problems Directly After a Steam Update If you have a connection problem immediately after a Steam update, it is most likely being caused by a firewall. The best solution is to go to the firewall permissions and remove all references to Steam.exe, HL.exe and HL2.exe and let them be relearned again. Just because there are existing permissions does NOT mean they are correct permissions. Every time the Steam client is updated, your firewall permissions need to be reset. Multiple Firewalls Never run more than one firewall program at a time while using Steam. They can conflict with each other and cause many different connection problems. Examples of running multiple firewalls include: Running the Windows firewall with your router's firewall simultaneously Running the Windows firewall with Zone Alarm, Tiny Personal Firewall or some other third-party firewall application Running the Windows firewall with your motherboard's built-in firewall (mainly and issue with nForce motherboards) After making any changes to your firewall, anti-virus or security software settings please EXIT STEAM AND RESTART before attempting to connect to a secure server. Once you have restarted you should be able to connect to VAC servers. [*] Peer Guardian Peer Guardian is not compatible with Steam. Please disable Peer Guardian before launching Steam to avoid connection issues. Background Applications P2P, FTP and Web Server Applications Do not run Peer-to-Peer (P2P) programs like BitTorrent, Kazaa, eMule, LimeWire or Exeem in the background. These programs can consume large portions of your bandwidth. The same is true for FTP and Webserver applications such as Apache, MySQL servers and Microsoft's IIS services. After exiting your Peer to Peer software please EXIT STEAM AND RESTART before attempting to connect to a secure server. Once you have restarted you should be able to connect to VAC servers. Viruses, spyware and malware, netlimiting, anonymous IP masking programs Connection problems can also arise if your system is infected with a virus or spyware. We strongly recommend running virus checks while you are not using Steam if you suspect there is a virus or trojan on your system. For more information, please follow the Spyware, Adware, and Viruses Interfering with Steam topic. Programs like Cybersitter, Netlimiter, X-Fire and Stegnos Anonymous Internet can also interfere with normal Steam operations. Please disable these programs before launching Steam. Third-party Anti-Cheat Applications Using third-party anti-cheat applications, both server and client-side, is not necessary and may result in the errors outlined above. Do not use third-party anti-cheat applications while playing on a VAC secured server. . . . . . . Basically. You should try disabling things running in the background like your firewall and anti-virus, check if your ports are opened, and make sure you have nothing that conflicts with steam in your background.
  4. Once you enter ED you'll never be the same again friend.
  5. ALL LINKS ARE NSFW!!!
  6. http://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=Backseat%20Moderator
  7. Been using AVG and Adaware for as long as I remember. I tried Kaspersky for a couple months but went back to AVG again.
  8. It's based from Serious Sam.
  9. I enjoyed playing Killing Floor and Napalm with you Suri. Good luck with everything. Now we need a BD to take on our Henda role.
  10. I love Oscar "Bald" Hernandez.

  11. yeah I was searching up posts in special numbers (666,1337,69,007) and I found that. I showed it to jen and she was like "WTF andre!?" :p

  12. Relapse

    I personally thought 3 A.M was pretty fucked up out of all the weird up songs he's made (Kim, Ass Like That, Without Me). I like it when he makes diss tracks.
  13. I'm pretty sure you contradicted yourself at your first paragraph. Look at the wattage usage of the 8800 vs the GTX 280. With your logic you're saying that a GTX 280 needs only a couple more Amperes to run. But look at the wattage usage under load. That chart doesn't prove anything. It's just proving my point that a GTX 260 needs more than a 27a. I can find many charts with different numbers with this for example. Also, it's not my conversion. It's a mathematical conversion of amperes to volts to watts vice versa. I was using it to find the PSU recommendations through amperes and volts. Not PSU sizes. I don't think finding the Watts for already marked PSUs is very useful. P.S: That facepalm wasn't needed. It was an educational opinion, and my thread hijack picture is true. Look what's happening now? To be honest. We can keep this going, but in the end we're both right on either side and both wrong at the same time.
  14. I wasn't looking at a random box or company statistics. I've always said how overblown power need requirements are put out (you can find many threads with me saying that) I was talking about self experience and experiences of friends. I'm pretty sure a GTX 280 won't be merciful. He could probably run a GTX 280 at rest with a cheap PSU, but under load in games like Crysis or CSS (Source Engine = Resource hog) he won't last that much. I guess I exaggerated about the power needs though. Maybe it should be good with a 400-450W PSU. But that means he would need a 37 ampere with a 12v rail. A 280 requires about 30+ (guessing 35-40) amperes. A 260 probably needs a little less. If you look at the technical conversions then you're looking at [W (550) / V ( 12) = 45 (A)]. Even with the recommended you would have [W (500) / V (12) = 41 (A)]. If you're looking at 450W then you're looking at [W (450) / V (12) = A (37)]. Then to a 400 that woudl be [W (400) / V (12) = 33 (A)]. If you're saying that a GTX 260 can run with 27a and a 12V rail I'm thinking that's not a very high end computer. [27 (A) x V(12) = 324 (W)]. I don't know anybody running a GTX 260 with a 350 W PSU. That's overkill. A 8800 GTS only needs about 25 amperes on a 12v Rail. That's a 2 ampere difference from a GTX 260 power need according to you. I'm pretty confused here. The performance difference between the two series is unmeasured.
  15. Nou !!!!!!!!!!

  16. I'm the fish whore!!

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