Kmuland Posted Wednesday at 02:27 PM Posted Wednesday at 02:27 PM Anyone know a way to set timer resolution in XP using a registry key or similar? Currently I use a timer program that needs to be open/active to maintain the desired time, but I was looking for a permanent timer change.
ED_Sln Posted 22 hours ago Posted 22 hours ago If it were possible to fix it in the registry, they would have done so instead of creating a program. No, in XP, you cannot set a timer without third-party programs.
Kmuland Posted 20 hours ago Author Posted 20 hours ago 2 hours ago, ED_Sln said: If it were possible to fix it in the registry, they would have done so instead of creating a program. No, in XP, you cannot set a timer without third-party programs. You are true. Lets talk about some of these tools working on XP to set the timer resolution. Currently Im using this one https://timerresolution.net/#download anymore? (better without .Net requirements)
ED_Sln Posted 18 hours ago Posted 18 hours ago (edited) I use this: https://yadi.sk/d/KpTGDPITsNWn7w the program itself is in the Timer_Fix folder. Brief description: Timer_Fix program with source code written in Visual Studio 6.0. The program has no interface; after launch, it will set the system timer to a period of 1 ms and leave it unchanged. The program will remain in the processes until the OS is rebooted. For convenience, it is best to place this program in “Startup” and completely forget about the problem of time passing. No issues have been found with using this method. Edited 18 hours ago by ED_Sln
Kmuland Posted 15 hours ago Author Posted 15 hours ago (edited) Million thanks!!! It was the program that I was looking for. Just a little tool to load at startup without interface!. Thanks for sharing pal!! It will run by default in all my XP machines since now Edited 15 hours ago by Kmuland
NotHereToPlayGames Posted 13 hours ago Posted 13 hours ago I'm not seeing the "advantage". What am I missing? Before/After comparison?
Kmuland Posted 12 hours ago Author Posted 12 hours ago you cannot "see". Its a feeling. Its similar to CRT times and setting monitor from 60hz to higher refresh rate. Some people didnt notice nothing.... other felt the screen more pleasant in that way
ED_Sln Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago (edited) 12 hours ago, NotHereToPlayGames said: I'm not seeing the "advantage". What am I missing? Before/After comparison? This manifests itself in the fact that the time on the computer starts to rush. This occurs when working with relatively new versions of Chrome-based browsers, such as 360, Chromium 87, and Supermium. They constantly switch the timer mode from 1 to 16 ms, which causes the time to run ahead. This program switches the timer to continuous operation in 1 ms mode, so the time is correct. Edited 1 hour ago by ED_Sln
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