Recommended Posts

Took a few more screens, my favourite way to arm an MCOM station, drive away from all the hectic gunfire and explosions and arm the MCOM, most people never seem to see it coming. I did it all the time in BF3 too. And after arming it, sat near it still in your EOD BOT, players will rush in to disarm it, don't see anything resembling a human being and start disarming. Kill them with your blowtorch. I killed 4 guys in a row in the last game just like that  :rofl:

 

post-350302-0-43410800-1384292946.jpg

 

post-350302-0-68332700-1384292948.jpg

Stupid kid, complains about the price and askes "wtf is digital deulux?" but still brought it. Well done, bet still buys BF5.

 

This video pretty much sums up the current state of EA, but you still cry and buy their games...

 

Again, NSFW language

 

I'd love that tagline at 2:36 into the video to be my signature. 

Stupid kid, complains about the price and askes "wtf is digital deulux?" but still brought it. Well done, bet still buys BF5.

 

This video pretty much sums up the current state of EA, but you still cry and buy their games...

 

Again, NSFW language

 

 

Is he genuinely the ex-ceo or is it a parody? either way i agree with every single word that comes out of his mouth. I wont be buying another EA game, I wasted my money on Battlefield.

Yeah they must be using the slowest HDD known to man in that video.

 

on my laptops, load times are absolutely horrible even on the lowest settings(still looks good though). so a 5400 HDD has some real loading issues with this game, even if it's a fairly high performance 5400.

Not sure if this will help anyone, but once I tried this, I haven't crashed in all of my gameplay yesterday (about 2.5 hours).Right click on the Battlefield 4 game in Origin, and the go to Game Properties. Under the "When Launching this game" section, just set it to x64. When I first read this, I didn't think it'd help at all. But so far, and it could be the placebo effect for me, I haven't crashed at all. Sure, that doesn't help me on servers that lag, but it's a HUGE improvement. I'm having lots of fun with this game again.

on my laptops, load times are absolutely horrible even on the lowest settings(still looks good though). so a 5400 HDD has some real loading issues with this game, even if it's a fairly high performance 5400.

 5400 RPM and high performance are two completely different things.

 5400 RPM and high performance are two completely different things.

 

I said it's fairly high performance for a 5400. also there are 5400 disks with very good performance as well. either way. the loading times are fare worse than the difference between 5400 and 7200 should dictate. 

Not sure if this will help anyone, but once I tried this, I haven't crashed in all of my gameplay yesterday (about 2.5 hours).Right click on the Battlefield 4 game in Origin, and the go to Game Properties. Under the "When Launching this game" section, just set it to x64. When I first read this, I didn't think it'd help at all. But so far, and it could be the placebo effect for me, I haven't crashed at all. Sure, that doesn't help me on servers that lag, but it's a HUGE improvement. I'm having lots of fun with this game again.

 

My game created two different shortcuts, one says 64 bit. anyway. or me it usually crashes on startup several times, when I get it to start up and load on the 3-5th try it usually runs for a couple of hours. 

I said it's fairly high performance for a 5400. also there are 5400 disks with very good performance as well. either way. the loading times are fare worse than the difference between 5400 and 7200 should dictate. 

Sure a 7200 vs a 5400 isn't going to be an earth shattering difference, but compared to a SSD, it is.

BF4 has huge and highly detailed maps, so it shouldn't be a surprise what a mechanical HDD, which has super slow access times, takes a long time to load.  HDDs are slow by nature, so you can't really say they're high performance, especially for gaming.

Sequential reads, which most maps loads should be, won't be terribly slower on a mechanical HDD than SSD. depending on the disk, it might actually be faster. seek time and and small files is where SSD's rule.

 

either way, while my desktop doesn't load instantly the laptops aren't just twice as slow at loading, they're many times as slow. which doesn't make sense. 

In Battlefield 3, I was used to loading maps in about 20-30 seconds on my 7200 RPM drive. With Battlefield 4 on the same drive, that could take 90 seconds to 2 minutes. After installing the game on my SSD, I'm now getting 15-30 second load times in BF4.

Sequential reads, which most maps loads should be, won't be terribly slower on a mechanical HDD than SSD. depending on the disk, it might actually be faster. seek time and and small files is where SSD's rule.

 

either way, while my desktop doesn't load instantly the laptops aren't just twice as slow at loading, they're many times as slow. which doesn't make sense. 

Um what?  Sequential reads and writes are magnitudes faster on SSDs compared to HDDs.

 

http://www.tomshardware.com/reviews/ssd-upgrade-sata-3gbps,3469-4.html

the next gen consoles just have regular 7200rpm drives afaik...

I thought about that too but they probably have other specific techniques to quicken load times. Some sort of prefetching? Also, aren't we comparing PC load times with console load times? The consoles we're comparing to are last-gen and don't have the same quality maps, right?

I have Battlefield 4 on Windows 8.1 but every time I try to join a server it just stays at joining server at the bottom with the battlelog plugin. Battlefield 4 never opens up. This is on Firefox. I am not using Internet Explorer.

Battlefield 4 Beta worked fine in Windows 8.1

 

Does anyone know what could be wrong?

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Posts

    • As I've been usually saying lately - we all can thank "AI" for this.
    • Friday Windows 11 preview builds are here. Insiders in the Experimental (formerly Dev) and Beta Channel can download builds 26300.8697 and 26220.8690. My Windows11 device on the Preview Channel just got 26220.8728. My guess is this build is a nightly update from 26220.8690.
    • Traffic has a surprisingly unexpected impact on your surroundings by Sayan Sen Image by Radik 2707 via Pexels A collaborative study by researchers from several Israeli institutions found that everyday pollution from traffic and industrial activity measurably changed the atmospheric electric field over the Tel Aviv metropolitan area, providing new evidence of how human activity can influence the lower atmosphere. The research was led by Dr. Roy Yaniv of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem and the Gertner Institute at Sheba Medical Center, Dr. Assaf Hochman of the Fredy & Nadine Herrmann Institute of Earth Sciences at the Hebrew University, and Prof. Yoav Yair of Reichman University. The study also involved Itay Froomer, a student from Hadera High School and the Israeli Museum of Medicine and Science (Technoda), who carried out the work as part of the Ministry of Education's 5-unit physics research track. The researchers focused on the atmospheric electric field under fair-weather conditions. Even in the absence of storms, a weak electric field naturally exists between Earth's surface and the atmosphere. One of the main ways scientists measure this field is through the Potential Gradient (PG), which is the inverse of the vertical component of the electric field. PG is a key part of the global electric circuit, a planet-wide system of electrical currents maintained by thunderstorms and electrified clouds around the world. Scientists have long known that the atmospheric electric field can be influenced by factors ranging from large-scale atmospheric processes to local weather conditions such as dust, fog and clouds. Human-made pollution is also known to play a role, but understanding exactly how urban emissions affect the electric field close to the ground has remained an area of ongoing research. To investigate this relationship, the team analyzed measurements from a newly installed electric field mill, an instrument used to continuously monitor the strength of the atmospheric electric field. The instrument was installed at the Center for Technological Education (Roter House) in Holon and became operational in August 2024. It was funded by Israel's Ministry of Education and the Holon municipality. The electric field mill forms part of a broader monitoring network that includes nearby meteorological stations and air-quality monitoring sites. This allowed researchers to compare electric field measurements with detailed weather data and pollution records to better understand what was driving changes in the Potential Gradient. The study focused on two major urban pollutants: fine particulate matter (PM2.5) and nitrogen oxides (NOx), both commonly produced by vehicle traffic and industrial activity. PM2.5 refers to microscopic airborne particles small enough to remain suspended in the atmosphere for extended periods, while NOx is a group of gases released during fuel combustion. Researchers examined daily, weekly and seasonal patterns in the atmospheric electric field and compared them with changes in pollutant concentrations. Their analysis revealed a clear relationship between NOx levels and changes in the Potential Gradient, particularly during morning and evening rush hours when traffic emissions were at their highest. “What we observe is a direct physical link between emission peaks and electrical variability,” explained Dr. Roy Yaniv. “NOx reduces atmospheric conductivity very quickly, so the electric field responds almost instantaneously during traffic rush hours.” Atmospheric conductivity describes how easily electrical charges move through the air. According to the researchers, nitrogen oxides rapidly alter this conductivity, causing a near-immediate response in the electric field. PM2.5, however, was associated with a delayed response. The researchers attributed this difference to the particles' longer atmospheric residence time, meaning they remain in the atmosphere for longer periods, as well as their different microphysical interactions with surrounding air and atmospheric components. The study also identified a pronounced "weekend effect." In Israel, traffic volumes and some industrial activity decline significantly on Fridays and Saturdays. During these periods, concentrations of both NOx and PM2.5 dropped, and corresponding changes were observed in the atmospheric electric field. “The weekend signal demonstrates just how sensitive the electric field is to changes in human activity,” the researchers noted. “When emissions decline, the electrical environment adjusts at once, providing a high-resolution indicator of urban atmospheric conditions.” The findings showed that pollution levels can influence not only the chemical composition of the atmosphere but also its electrical properties. Researchers said the results strengthened the case for using atmospheric electricity as an additional tool for environmental monitoring, particularly in densely populated urban areas where anthropogenic, or human-caused, influences are most pronounced. The study also pointed to potential public health applications. By combining air-quality measurements with observations of atmospheric electricity, researchers said they could gain a more complete picture of how urban atmospheric conditions change over time. “Integrating air-quality data with electric-field measurements gives us a clearer picture of how the lower atmosphere evolves moment by moment,” the researchers added. “It’s a framework that can support both scientific insight and practical environmental decision-making.” Beyond the scientific findings, the project highlighted a collaboration between universities, public institutions and secondary education. Researchers said the work demonstrated how students could take part in real-world environmental research while contributing to studies of air quality, atmospheric processes and their potential effects on society. Source: Hebrew University, ScienceDirect This article was generated with some help from AI and reviewed by an editor. Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, this material is used for the purpose of news reporting. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing
    • We aren't even at the all-star game and Microsoft is talking about an update that will most likely be released during the World Series if not after. A lot can happen in the world between now and the 2026 World Series, including the 2026 FIFA Cup. Tell me about it again after the FIFA Cup is concluded. That should allow plenty of time to prepare for it.
    • Great, tell me when I have a "Bad Pool Caller" elsewhere not in Windoze.
  • Recent Achievements

    • Week One Done
      AMV earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • One Month Later
      AMV earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • Collaborator
      ryansurfer98 went up a rank
      Collaborator
    • One Month Later
      Eurosoft10 earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • Week One Done
      Eurosoft10 earned a badge
      Week One Done
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      542
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      186
    3. 3
      Michael Scrip
      77
    4. 4
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      77
    5. 5
      Steven P.
      71
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!