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Últimos mensajes - Página 1548

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x2463378
Desde en Aug 2008
148 posts

Finally Done!! Models By Country

Todo sobre iStripper
March 12, 2017, 42 respuestas
@mo7ibelkuss

OMG! 3300 cards? I couldn't put in that much time. My first attempt on my Mac in AppleScript created two Excel spreadsheets. One has a line of data for each card including counts of clips by type. The second has one line for each clip. The Access DB stores its information is half a dozen tables and can output various summaries or full details.

@dorsai6:

I did not go by cards, I went by girls/models, not cards, so my spreadsheet contains 752 rows of girls/models, Not 3300 rows of cards. Then for each girl: I counted the number of cards that each model performed in each card category.

The information was easily obtainable from the website, not the software, which has 18 web pages of girl names (with each page containing 30 girls) and the stats of each one of them, and if you click on the girl page, you can see all her cards. So I went through each girl/model in the website, and manually input her data, and counted her cards in each card category.

Of course, I had to go to the software to collect the info for the models in the classic collection, but that involved 259 cards only, and even there, I went by girl names not cards.

I admit it was tedious, and after I was done I spent many hours reviewing that data and insuring its accuracy, and running multiple audits, but it was necessary for me to obtain accurate info. I have no programming background, so any discussion of me attempting to use technological tools to achieve this was not possible based on my poor skills in programming and and my poor understanding of the inner workings of the software :)
TheEmu
Desde en Jul 2012
7424 posts

Finally Done!! Models By Country

Todo sobre iStripper
March 12, 2017, 42 respuestas
@mo7ibelkuss

I am impressed that you put in the effort to do the analysis, but there are easier ways to do it than manualy entering the data.

Dorsai6's approach of converting the whole of the iStripper card and model data into a standard databse is the most flexible way of doing such thing but requires programming skill to produce the database in the first place.

A simpler, quick and dirty, method is to install Agent Ransack (a free file search utility) and use it to seach the xml files in your vghd/data directory. Specify ?????.xml to seach just the xml files for each card and ignore any others, specify <country> as the text to search for. After about 50 seconds it will display a list of the files it has found. Click on Reports, select "Contents" rather than "File List" and you will see a list of lines each looking like

a0001.xml C:\Users\X-Format\AppData\Local\vghd\data\a0001\ 04/05/2016 07:09:32 2 40 <country>France</country>

with two such lines for a duo card. You can of course search for any text, but for the iStripper files its usualy best to search for xml tags to avoid matches to words in the models descriptions.

The report can be exported as a text file or a CSV (comma separated values) file which can then be loaded into a spreadsheet. You can build up a more complete database by merging the results of multiple searches.

Any spreadsheet you produce this way will not be as useful as Dorai6's database, but it requires little skill to produce it. Agent Ransack (or an equivalent program) is a useful general purpose tool to have on your computer anyway. Don't be disturbed by the name - its the free version of a comercial "professional" file search tool.
Dorsai6
Desde en Apr 2013
3459 posts

VG on a 1440p Screen

Todo sobre iStripper
March 12, 2017, 17 respuestas
I have 3 displays running on a 2013 Mac Pro. I don't do much gaming, so 60 Hz is fine for me. My main display is a 40" 4K Phillips BDM4065 (3840 X 2160). It's about 2 years old now. My second display is a 30" HP LP3065 (2560 X 1600). It's about 6 years old and was my main display before I got the 4K. My third display is a 23" HP LV2311 (1920 x 1080). It's about 4 years old and replaced a smaller display the failed.

All three of my displays have about the same number of pixels per inch so images have about equal crispness. If you had a smaller 4K display, images would look sharper because of more pixels per inch. My wife really likes her 27" retina iMac for just that reason. It's a 5K display in just 27", effectively twice the pixels per inch.

I've done a lot of experimenting with iStripper on all three displays. When you display a card larger than it's nominal size you get some blurring and pixelation. The more you enlarge the card the worse it gets. I normally play cards at 60% on my 4K display. The 3K cards look great and the 1080p cards are a bit blurry, but acceptable. As a point of reference a 3K card at 45% on the 4K display is at it's nominal resolution. Anything larger is being scaled up. When I play 720p cards I only play them at 30% because to me they look terrible at 60%.

On a 1440 display a size of about 65% will produce nominal resolution for a 3K card.

I once did some experiments with my 4K display in portrait mode. The 3K cards were a little fuzzy at 80% but the size was awesome. The 1080p cards were ***** at 80%.

The net result of my experiments is that I seldom watch 720p cards. When I do it's in small mode. The old 480 cards are even worse. When I watch them its at about 20% - ten tiny girls.

On my Mac, iStripper seems to calculate image size based on the size of my main display regardless of which display is showing the card. When I ***** a card from one display to another, there is no apparent change in size. Remember that the pixels per inch of all three of my displays are about the same.

Hope this helps.
IceCold007
Desde en Dec 2008
250 posts