He's using the Printscreen button, yes, but people keep suggesting ways to save his bitmaps as jpegs.
Zealot Wrote:Just go play the game and have fun dammit.
Treewyrm Wrote:all in all the conclusion is that disco doesn't need antagonist factions, it doesn't need phantoms, it doesn't need nomads, it doesn't need coalition and it doesn't need many other things, no AIs, the game is hijacked by morons to confuse the game with their dickwaving generic competition games mixed up with troll-of-the-day.
they keep suggesting that because he asked how to change the file format in which they are saved. the only solution to the lag when taking screenshots, and saving in other formats is by using a third party program like fraps (or xfire as you suggested).
Zealot Wrote:Just go play the game and have fun dammit.
Treewyrm Wrote:all in all the conclusion is that disco doesn't need antagonist factions, it doesn't need phantoms, it doesn't need nomads, it doesn't need coalition and it doesn't need many other things, no AIs, the game is hijacked by morons to confuse the game with their dickwaving generic competition games mixed up with troll-of-the-day.
I was asking if it was possible to change the format in which they're saved. Means, they should be saved as
.png instead of .bmp. I know how to change them.
So there's no way, except using a third party program? That's mhh...bad. Xfire you say? Don't know Xfire to
be honest...
' Wrote:I was asking if it was possible to change the format in which they're saved. Means, they should be saved as
.png instead of .bmp. I know how to change them.
So there's no way, except using a third party program? That's mhh...bad. Xfire you say? Don't know Xfire to
be honest...
But thanks for the help.
No way to directly save it as .bmp, unless we magically get the source code tomorrow. (That is, via PrtScrn.)
I would recommend a third-party program, and to cut down any other programs you are running to free up RAM and processor.)
' Wrote:5terra byte's of space. Problem solved.:P
Not if your computer has the processing power of a rock.