I've been using it with ten beeps at 1000 frequency, but I've also used it with the visual cue only, for when I'm listening to music at the same time, because as anyone who does RNG knows, it can be a little boring when you're waiting for the timers to run down, especially if you happen to have long timers, or even if you happen to do a lot of RNG in an afternoon. It's also very simple and easy to use as a non-C-gear timer as well. I caught a pokemon in two tries using C-gear mode. It solved issues with severely swinging delays on Gen 4 RNG and it is super efficient with C-gear seeds on Gen 5. It has everything you need to RNG on Gen 4 and Gen 5. I've been testing this timer and it is just the best timer ever. Where can I find out how to use this stuff? I have a great idea for something to add. It will in all likelihood be its last update. The efficiency update was a simple fix that I've just taken a long time to do. GUI in Java is incredibly tedious and I just don't want to deal with it unless I have to. It really could use a complete rewrite since it was written when I knew little about programming. The code is messy and it would take a lot of time that I don't really want to put into it to fix. I'm just glad people are getting use out of it!įine. I did not put this update out as an alert because it is relatively minor. This was due to a font-size adjustment in Windows. 32-bit programs work on 64-bit processors, just not as well. Anyway, I don't know how to compile 64-bit Java. Well then you shouldn't have got a Mac (jkjk, well kinda). Why is there only a 32-bit version of ZomgTimer? If it says 圆4, you have a 64-bit machine.īut. If it says x86, you have a 32-bit machine. Here it will give you "x_-based PC." The blanks will either be 86 or 64. When it does, look for "System Type" in the information that appears. Go to Start > Program Files > Accessories > System Tools > System Information How do I know if my computer is 32-bit or 64-bit? - Note: this is no longer necessary. I'll be putting out info to work around any necessary things that I can't include in it. ZomgTimer is pretty much a finished product. It's the better of the two as it has more options, better UI, slight accuracy improvement and it's more easily upgradeable for me. It seems to me that the default value will not invoke the above code.EonTimer is entirely Windows based. ((Timer)timerInjectedValue.getValue()).schedule(refreshTask, refreshInterval, refreshInterval) When I decompiled a java class called DatabaseTimerPersistence.java, and found the method start(StartContext context), it has the following code: I am not very clear as to what this parameter does. It looks like a parameter that can affect performance. A low value means timers get picked up more quickly, but increase load on the database.
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