Showing posts with label joystick. Show all posts
Showing posts with label joystick. Show all posts

Thursday, 31 March 2016

And lo, I have Windows 10

I’ve been meaning to upgrade my gaming PC to Windows 10 for some time but it didn’t manage to be the most important thing on my todo list at any point. Partly this was fear of the unknown - I knew Win10 was going to be a shift in UX and also thought it likely to break at least one peripheral. My attitude to an operating system is that it should do its job quietly and not get in the way and, frankly, I didn’t feel inclined to invest time in adoption pains. That’s time I can spend more profitably sleeping or looking out of the window.
Microsoft, it seems, had other ideas. They pushed the Win10 upgrade through their patch management system and I fell victim to the auto-upgrade problem. It’s a dark, stormy night. The wind is shaking the windows, drowning out the drumming of the rain. I’m sitting in a partly lit room, curled up comfortably and reading something on my tablet. In the corner, my computer is on, untouched for the past hour. I glance up and a chill runs through me. On my monitor is the ominous message “75% upgraded”.
I could write extensively about the aggressive way Microsoft have pushed Win10. I could complain at length about it arriving on my computer unwanted and the abuse of trust around using a security patch mechanism to automatically install a complete operating system without my input. I could compare the techniques used in release of this system to the way malware is spread. But others have done all that. Instead, I’ll focus on my experiences now it has arrived.
It’s fine.
Sorry, that was really dull but honestly it sums it up. The installation process was really simple. I had to track down and turn off the P2P patch sharing stuff (uncharitable, but I wasn’t in the best mood at this point) and some of the information sharing stuff (Win10 is horribly intrusive) but otherwise it just loaded up as New Windows with no real fuss.
The next evening I sat down to see what had really happened behind the scenes. First step was going through the security and privacy options. The defaults here were horrible (everything seems to have access to everything, including cameras and microphones) but the menus themselves were clear and it was easy to turn it all off. I also came across some advertising options - it seems in the brave new world of Windows it’s a good idea to have (targeted) advertising on your lock screen. Fortunately, both the targeting and the advertising can be disabled (separately) and so that went too. The start menu was a mess, but simple enough to remove the new and exciting rubbish and simplify back to the applications I’m actually going to use.
Next up, there is Cortana. I like the idea of Cortana and I quite fancied playing around with her. Unfortunately, in order to be helpful she looks at everything you do and sends it all off to Microsoft HQ so they can tune her electronic brain. So she had to die. Killing her off was actually harder than it needed to be - stopping her talking to Microsoft wasn’t too hard, but that left her zombified husk on my task bar and I had to work out how to purge her from there too.
Having finished with my electronic holy water, I moved on to my own customisations. I found that Steam, Chrome and Office all worked fine which is the majority of my use of that computer immediately. Also, my automatic backups (I use Macrium) continued to work and mapped drives were still mapped.
So far, so painless. I hadn’t needed to reconfigure anything and the new interface hadn’t caused me any real suffering. Time to check the two things I feared would break - the main reasons for putting off the upgrade in the first place. My joystick and my game recording setup.
First off, the joystick. My basic fear was that the (already shoddy) performance of the drivers would be even worse under a more modern operating system. My fears were confirmed when it failed to load properly. To Google! Fortunately, I wasn’t the only person looking for help (this thread was very useful) and - much to my surprise - Mad Catz had released some beta drivers for Windows 10. The Win7 drivers were released in 2011, whereas the Win10 drivers came from August 2015. And they worked. Probably better than the older drivers (I didn’t, for example, suffer any blue screens while installing them). I’d lost some of my settings, but that was easy to replicate and it was fine.
I did notice a problem on boot. Win10 boots faster than the USB devices which caused problems with my stick. This was easily fixed by disabling Fast Boot. It didn’t seem like the best solution, but it worked.
Next up, game recording. Astonishingly, this also Just Worked. Mostly. I had to re-enable some of the output devices in the sound menus, but I got everything going just by double-checking the everything in my original post.
Windows 10 is fast, stable, not overly ugly, and very easy to install. It’s a change to the user interface, but not one that particularly gets in the way of just using the computer. It’s a pig for privacy, but you can turn all that nonsense off. So, overall a surprisingly good experience. 9/10. Would have my computer hijacked and a new OS forcibly installed again.

Sunday, 28 February 2016

Into space with the Saitek X52 Pro

Since Christmas I have been playing a lot of Elite Dangerous. It’s a great way to spend time - floating around in space, deciding what to do with an evening, heading off to achieve things and gradually increasing in rank and skill.

I cut my teeth (whatever that means) playing on a keyboard and mouse setup, which is … functional. At best. Online People say that a HOTAS setup changes the way the game plays entirely and is a must for any serious Elite player so I thought I’d give that a go.

After much deliberation (should I spend £270 on a replica of the flight controls from an A10?) I decided to go for the Saitek X52 Pro. It was, apparently, the stick used by Frontier Developments when designing Elite so should have good in-game support. There is a strong body of opinion that it is better than the newer stick, the X55, in terms of button placement and general feel (and saves £50 too). Plus it looks exactly like the joystick your avatar is using in the cockpit of your ship.

The good

  • the hardware is lovely - solidly built and satisfyingly weighty
  • ergonomic stick, adjustable and comfortable
  • button placement is equally good with most functions falling naturally under my fingers
  • I keep finding buttons - after a month of using it I suddenly discovered a small wheel on the throttle I hadn’t noticed before

The bad

  • the drivers are horrible - I mean really horrible
    • it took several attempts and a few blue screens to install
    • I have to plug the joystick in to the SAME USB port - I’m not quite sure how they’ve achieved that
  • the control software is horrible, although less than the drivers
    • saving the profile doesn’t seem to work properly
    • I have to manually tell it to load a particular profile before playing
    • in Elite some buttons can only be mapped after changing the default bindings in the profile
    • for some reason I seem to need the control software actually open to make some of the remapping work in-game
This is running the latest official Saitek / Mad Catz drivers on a Windows 7 machine.

So, did it change my life?

Well, kinda. It really has made a difference in game. I can perform manoeuvres that were next to impossible with the keyboard / mouse combo. More importantly, the feel of the game is indeed very different. The joystick and throttle really help with the immersion and even routine activities are a lot more fun.

On the other hand, the driver problems really tarnish the experience. I would struggle to recommend a Saitek device to others - especially since I’ve apparently got away lightly (the control software rarely crashes for me and my system remains stable). None of these problems are insurmountable but, basically, I expect a lot more from a piece of hardware costing in excess of £100.

I’m happy with where I am now, but it was far more work than I wanted to go through for a premium peripheral. If I decide to buy a new stick in the future I will be reading about the software support very very carefully before selecting my product and it will take a lot to convince me to buy anything with software by Mad Catz again. It’s a shame because the hardware is really very nice.