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#DEXTER

Ex-Staff
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    Tunisia

Everything posted by #DEXTER

  1. some Rules for Downloads section

     

    1. Ares

      Ares

      Thank you my friend.? i really appreciate?

  2. Hello JaEgArN Its normal thing, We have some bug, when someone post something it shows for him that it didnt post, So, he publish it again by clicking on "Submit Status" other time, Then when he refresh the page he find two posts, so, he delete one of them, thats why you find "We could not locate the item you are trying to view" I think you got it now ?. (The problem will be fixed soon as possible) Topic/Closed!!
  3. May be from these "♔♔♔", you must write full nick, or your sign in will get rejected, you must write it exactly like it is Greetings.
  4. @Lunix I, @Ntgthegamer

    Congraits feos :V

    @Nıco,

    Welcome back ugly ? 

  5. Eid Mubarak for all ❤️ 

     

    1. Karadza.

      Karadza.

      عيد مبارك لجميع المسلمين

      Eid Mubarak for all Muslim

  6. #DEXTER

    Problam Cs1.6

    Hmm, I will give u some solutions i hope they solve ur problem. First we gonna re-store the game to its original configurations. 1. Right click on "CS 1.6 icon", go to properties and look in the target window. It should look like: "C:\installation Directory\Counter-Strike 1.6\hl.exe" 2. Outside of the quotation marks type: -width 800 -height 640 Now it should now look like this: "C:\Installation Directory\Counter-Strike 1.6\hl.exe" -width 800 -height 640" 3. Now ur CS starts in normal mode and u can access to whatever resolution u want. NOTE: Finally remove "-width 800 -height 640" otherwise CS will start in 800x640 resolution everytime. This way, it maybe more difficult for u: Run the regedit command in the CS bottle. Go to HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Wine\X11 Driver and add these strings (name and value, without the quotes): "UseXVidMode"="Y" "UseXRandR"="N" Try this video maybe make it easy for u. Or try to reinstall it or install a new one from this community, or this one. I hope This is the solution for ur problem. If u didnt understand something contact me Greetings.
  7. Xiaomi has teased the Mi 9T, an incremental upgrade to the Mi 9 that only launched in March 2019. The 9T promises specs and design changes, with promo photos appearing to show a screen without a notch. It’s likely that the Mi 9T shares similarities to the Redmi K20 Pro that Xiaomi just launched in China. With that phone likely to stay exclusive to eastern markets, the 9T will likely come to the UK and Europe with the rest of the Xiaomi range. The absence of a notch is pretty much confirmed by Xiaomi’s use of the hashtag #PopUpInStyle on its official Twitter page, implying the 9T will indeed have the pop-up selfie camera of the Redmi K20 Pro. Much like OnePlus is known to do, Xiaomi updating its flagship phone with a ‘T’ version probably means some cosmetic but not internal updates. The Mi 9T is likely to retain the Snapdragon 855 (there is no better Qualcomm mobile processor as of May 2019), 6/8GB RAM and, as the photos confirm, triple cameras on the back. Those cameras may get a slight update, perhaps in the megapixel count, with the pop-up selfie camera added for good measure. Otherwise we’ll have to wait for full details on the phone. Hopefully the 3300mAh battery of the regular Mi 9 will get a bump up to the 4000mAh of the K20 Pro – and potentially it could offer a headphone jack that the Mi 9 lacked. For now, it’s yet another incremental update to a phone that has not been out for long, and will no doubt annoy anyone who has just bought a Mi 9 if it does indeed improve the specs.
  8. Whether you're looking at laptops or desktops, the heart of your PC starts with the selection of a CPU, paired with the best AMD motherboard. These days, you'll hear about four major platforms: AMD Ryzen (socket AM4), AMD Threadripper (socket TR4), Intel 9th Gen Core (socket LGA1151), and Intel's X299 9th Gen Core (socket LGA2066). The range of CPUs is immense, going from 4-core models at the bottom up to 16 and 18-core parts at the top, with an equally large price differential. But the next round of AMD Ryzen 3000 CPUs revealed at Computex will potentially cull the number of meaningful choices to just two: Ryzen 3000 or Intel 9th Gen. Come July, it's going to be last man standing in this head-to-head matchup. While AMD and Intel have both hyped the HEDT (high-end desktop) market for the past several years, the truth is that market is becoming far less interesting as the mainstream platforms level up. It used to be that Intel would only give you more than a 4-core CPU if you went with it's HEDT 'enthusiast' platform and spent substantially more money, but AMD's Ryzen brought 8-core parts to the mainstream market and Intel was forced to respond. Now 6-core and 8-core CPUs are everywhere, and we know AMD is at least planning to release a 12-core Ryzen 9 3900X in July—and probably a 16-core model at some point in the future. There will always be a market for even more cores and threads, of course, but that's already satisfied by the server and workstation platforms, which is basically what HEDT uses, just with a few tweaks that aren't really that important to most people. Unless you're running serious professional applications where a workstation makes sense, I can't see getting excited about HEDT these days. Here's why. Intel's Core i9-9900K delivers an 8-core/16-thread CPU that hits clockspeeds of up to 5.0GHz. Few consumer workloads—the stuff we might actually use on a regular basis—benefit going beyond eight cores, and more cores at lower clocks often ends up being slower in many tasks, or at best a wash. Take Intel's Core i9-9900X: it costs twice as much for two additional cores, but while performance is slightly higher in multithreaded tasks like video encoding and 3D rendering, in games and other applications it's actually slower. Why pay more for less performance? And it's not just about performance and price. Intel's Skylake-X CPUs for the X299 platform run hot, and the motherboard manufacturers are playing fast and loose. I had to enforce a 90C core temperature limit on multiple CPUs and X299 motherboards to keep the PC from overheating, at 'stock' operation (according to the BIOS). Even then, some workloads can push total PC power use up to 350W or more with a nominally 165W TDP processor. I know the GPU, motherboard, and other components are only using about 50-75W at most, which means the CPUs are exceeding the rated TDP by 100W or more. Which in turn makes the cooling fans go nuts—my X299 rig can get loud! All that for a modest bump in performance in professional applications, but worse performance in general use and games. And again, the HEDT X299 platform costs quite a bit more thanks to the higher CPU and motherboard prices, plus the need for four sticks of DDR4. AMD's HEDT Threadripper is in a similar state, though to be fair I haven't noticed quite the same level of heat and power use as on Intel's Core i9-7900X and i9-9980XE. Threadripper CPUs with as many as 32 cores and 64 threads are available, but there are all sorts of oddities due to the arrangement of memory channels. With the right workload, the TR 2990WX looks great, but in plenty of other instances the lesser 16-core/32-thread TR 2950X is nipping at its heels and even beating it in most games—and you still have the more expensive motherboards and CPUs to consider. Throw a mainstream Ryzen 9 3900X into the equation—and potentially a 16-core/32-thread AM4 CPU at some point—and Threadripper looks like it's purely for bragging rights. "I have more cores than you!" If you're running a server or building a workstation where a 32-thread CPU is actually useful, why not just go grab an Epyc system that doubles the memory channels? Otherwise, the third gen Ryzen 3000 CPUs appear to be more than sufficient for anything you might do, and almost certainly a superior choice for gaming purposes. Talking about core counts also misses the point that higher per-core performance is still important. Some tasks just don't scale to more cores, so a fast individual core is more important. Intel's i9-9900K hits 5.0GHz on one or two cores with lighter workloads, and in such cases the internal core arrangement has advantages over the HEDT CPUs. Basically, the i9-9900K is anywhere from 10 to 25 percent faster in singlethreaded tasks compared to the i9-9980XE and i9-7900X. That's why I'm particularly excited about AMD's initial performance figures for Ryzen 3000. AMD showed the Ryzen 7 3700X just edging past the Core i7-9700K in the Cinebench R20 singlethreaded test, and the same goes for the Ryzen 7 3800X versus the i9-9900K. That might not seem like a big deal, but the i9-9900K beats the current Ryzen 7 2700X by nearly 25 percent in the same test. Parity in singlethreaded performance—likely running at lower clockspeeds and using less power—is a huge deal for AMD. Hopefully that applies to other applications and not just Cinebench. That appears to be the case, but we won't know for sure until we've performed independent testing. It's not just CPUs, though. AMD is also moving up to PCIe 4.0 with its Ryzen 3000 CPUs and X570 motherboards. That's another first for the consumer market. In short, AMD (via TSMC) will beat Intel to 7nm, AMD will beat Intel to PCIe 4.0, and AMD's announced specs appear to beat Intel on pricing, power, and performance. That's the holy trinity of CPUs right there. The question is what Intel plans to do in response to Ryzen 3000. If the Ryzen 7 3800X legitimately beats the Core i9-9900K, which is certainly possible, and the Ryzen 9 3900X increases the gap by providing 50 percent more cores and threads, Intel will lose the desktop performance crown. Could a 10-core or 12-core Comet Lake CPU, still manufactured on 14nm++, reclaim the lead? Perhaps, but Comet Lake won't be here until fall at earliest, and perhaps not until 2020. 10nm Ice Lake desktop CPUs may not be coming any time soon either.
  9. Is McLaren’s second attempt at a hardcore track-ready modern long-tail supercar quite as good as the first was – the reputation-building 675LT? That’s this week’s hot topic, and all the signs so far have promised just so. The 600LT coupé is, of course, Autocar’s reigning Best Driver’s Car. It won out in an incredibly tight judges’ vote at Anglesey Circuit in October last year at the head of a quite incredible field that included the Alpine A110, Porsche 911 GT3 RS, Jaguar XE SV Project 8 and Ferrari 488 Pista. At the time, the coupé escaped our road test treatment, so now’s our chance to lavish the full six-page, performance benchmarking exercise on the new 600LT Spider. Now we can finally and fully explore what makes this latest Longtail brilliant, and also better define exactly what it was about the car that made its victory at Anglesey last year so tight. Our first drive of the 600LT Spider came earlier this year in North America where, on the road only, the car repeated a feat we’re beginning to take for granted from McLaren: it demonstrated all the apparent advantages of the coupé – huge pace, superb steering, balanced handling and a stunning road-appropriate suspension calibration – but added the appeal of folding hard-top open air motoring. Now is the chance to try the 600LT Spider in right-hand-drive form, on UK roads – and to unleash it on benchmark handling circuits at MIRA’s proving ground to find out just how close a match the Longtail performance makeover has made the supercar to the likes of the 720S and even the incredible Senna on sheer, exhilarating track pace. Price £201,500 Power 592bhp Torque 457lb ft 0-60mph 2.9sec 30-70mph in fourth 6.3sec Fuel economy 16.7mpg CO2 emissions 276g/km 70-0mph 39.9m McLaren 600LT range at a glance There are two flavours of 600LT available: the standard coupé and the convertible Spider tested here. The Spider comes with a big price hike over and above the coupé, but such is the price of open-air motoring. McLaren has worked hard to shave weight from the car, so things like satellite navigation, carpets, air conditioning and a stereo are not included as standard. Those not too concerned about lap times can add some creature comforts back in.
  10. As commemorations for the 30th anniversary of the Tiananmen Square massacre take place worldwide Tuesday, any coverage or discussion of the event will be tightly censored in China. Hundreds of people were killed on June 4, 1989, as People's Liberation Army troops cracked down on pro-democracy protesters in and around Beijing's Tiananmen Square. Events will be held and speeches made to commemorate the massacre and those who died in cities around the world. Tiananmen Square massacre: How Beijing turned on its own people In central Taipei, capital of self-ruled Taiwan, a massive inflatable version of the iconic "Tank Man," who defied the military as they entered Tiananmen Square, has been on display for several weeks. On Monday, Taiwan's Mainland Affairs Council called on Beijing to "face up to historical mistakes and apologize as soon as possible for the crackdown." "In the past 30 years, Beijing lacked the courage to calmly reflect on the historical significance of the June 4th Incident," the council's statement said. "Rather, they blocked the information and distorted the truth about it and tried to conceal the crime."
  11. Thanks :V

     

  12. How Could You Leave Us, My mother, I miss her ? 

     

     

  13. should i called you @JâCkSpârô•™ or @*ahmad* or @."Ses" "Zm". u got 100 account Multi accounts #Contra
  14. welcome @Dâvlin♛ this is your 9999ed account 

    keep it up... 

  15. hahah look at this @κεnny.exe, he delete 10 status i have been post it on his profile, about multi accounts.... now tell me if i'm wrong why u delete them

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    1. Lunix I

      Lunix I

      Smart guy !

      black think about it GIF by Identity

WHO WE ARE?

CsBlackDevil Community [www.csblackdevil.com], a virtual world from May 1, 2012, which continues to grow in the gaming world. CSBD has over 70k members in continuous expansion, coming from different parts of the world.

 

 

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