• @froztbyte
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    112 months ago

    now that you mention it, kinda surprised I haven’t ever seen a spate of custom 3D-printed turbo buttons from overclocker circles

    • @selfA
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      142 months ago

      it could turn on the RGB! though that would imply that the RGB could be turned off in the first place, which is optimistic on my part

      • David GerardOPMA
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        2 months ago

        it’s the button for more RGB

        saw a microphone with RGB and i’m like wtf is this thing supposed to do, flash disco lights when you’re on stream shouting slurs at your esteemed fellow gamers

        • @BlueMonday1984
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          92 months ago

          shouting slurs at your esteemed fellow gamers

          They’re called “heated gaming moments” /j

          • @froztbyte
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            42 months ago

            nah, just call a fuckwit a fuckwit. even jokingly giving them breathing room is something they know how to abuse.

      • @froztbyte
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        72 months ago

        your comment demonstrates a remarkable lack of imagination

        • @Korhaka@sopuli.xyz
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          72 months ago

          Better option: An array of flip switches for throttling to different speeds.

          Best option: Mount these flip switches above you on an overhead control panel.

          • @sem@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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            22 months ago

            I thought it makes the game tick faster or slower, such that you have to have it set correctly or it’s unplayable.

            • @toddestan@lemm.ee
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              2 months ago

              Some early PC software, mostly games, were written expecting the computer ran at a fixed speed which was the speed of the original IBM PC which used an Intel 8088 that ran at 4.77 MHz. If the IBM PC was more like computers such as the Commodore 64 which changed little during its production run, that would have been fine. But eventually faster PC’s were released that ran on 286, 386, 486, etc. CPUs that were considerably faster and hence software that expected the original IBM PC hardware ran way too fast.

              The turbo button was a bit of a misnomer since you would normally have it on and leave it on, only turning it off as sort of a compatibility mode to run older software. How effective it was varied quite a bit - some computers turning it off would get you pretty close to the original IBM PC in terms of speed, but others would just slow the computer down, but not nearly enough, making it mostly useless for what it was intended for.

            • @Hexarei@programming.dev
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              42 months ago

              Kind of, though it’s about the CPU’s clock speed rather than the details of the game.

              So, pedantically? no.

              Experientially? yes.