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On April 11 2012 21:04 Redback93 wrote:
Looks like a pretty cool program for stream watchers. I have just one gripe with the picture above, namely that the Win ratio is displayed incorrectly.
21 wins / 32 games played = 0.65625
So it should either display a Win ratio of 0.66, or a Win percentage of 66%. The percentage of 0.66% currently displayed means the player has about 2 wins every 300 games, rather than 2 wins every 3 games.
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I've tried it a bit more today and sometimes it doesn't work while others it repeats the same text a few times in a row unfortunately I don't really know how to reproduce this bugs
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New version: 1.5 Hopefully going to clean up some of those stream connection options. It will not verify your connection before you go into a game, so get it working on a replay before you go live.
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If the program reads opponent's name & bnet id from the SC2 process' memory it can be considered a third party hack that is against the EULA. Even if the program seems harmless & beneficial there should be a clear warning regarding its nature in the original post. People should understand the risks before they make decision to use it.
Battle.net terms of use: http://us.blizzard.com/en-us/company/about/termsofuse.html "You agree that you will not, under any circumstances:" ... "D. use any unauthorized third-party software that intercepts, “mines”, or otherwise collects information from or through any Game or the Service, including without limitation any software that reads areas of RAM used by any Game or the Service to store information about a character or a Game environment; provided, however, that Blizzard may, at its sole and absolute discretion, allow the use of certain third party user interfaces;"
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On April 14 2012 17:36 Nawyria wrote:Looks like a pretty cool program for stream watchers. I have just one gripe with the picture above, namely that the Win ratio is displayed incorrectly. 21 wins / 32 games played = 0.65625 So it should either display a Win ratio of 0.66, or a Win percentage of 66%. The percentage of 0.66% currently displayed means the player has about 2 wins every 300 games, rather than 2 wins every 3 games.
Thanks for pointing that out. This is actually an outdated picture, I will update it now.
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On April 15 2012 11:23 korona wrote:If the program reads opponent's name & bnet id from the SC2 process' memory it can be considered a third party hack that is against the EULA. Even if the program seems harmless & beneficial there should be a clear warning regarding its nature in the original post. People should understand the risks before they make decision to use it. Battle.net terms of use: http://us.blizzard.com/en-us/company/about/termsofuse.html"You agree that you will not, under any circumstances:" ... "D. use any unauthorized third-party software that intercepts, “mines”, or otherwise collects information from or through any Game or the Service, including without limitation any software that reads areas of RAM used by any Game or the Service to store information about a character or a Game environment; provided, however, that Blizzard may, at its sole and absolute discretion, allow the use of certain third party user interfaces;"
Thank you for pointing this out. This is the way that it reads the information. There was also some debate about this within the first few comments of this thread. That issue was resolved, so please read that for more information.
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I wanted something like this since I saw pokebunny have it on his stream. Now, this week when I get my new raedon 7970 and can finally stream again, I will be 100% using this.
Awesome shit, thanks man.
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On April 15 2012 11:41 iAmJeffReY wrote: I wanted something like this since I saw pokebunny have it on his stream. Now, this week when I get my new raedon 7970 and can finally stream again, I will be 100% using this.
Awesome shit, thanks man.
You're very welcome! Thanks for the support
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Can you help me on skype, I'm having issues, my skype is bucksdude7
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I've been looking for a program like this for quite some time now. Thanks OP
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On April 15 2012 11:58 MaV_gGSC wrote: I've been looking for a program like this for quite some time now. Thanks OP
Thanks for supporting, MaV_gGSC! The SC2 Community is the reason I make these things.
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On April 15 2012 11:40 Redback93 wrote:Show nested quote +On April 15 2012 11:23 korona wrote:If the program reads opponent's name & bnet id from the SC2 process' memory it can be considered a third party hack that is against the EULA. Even if the program seems harmless & beneficial there should be a clear warning regarding its nature in the original post. People should understand the risks before they make decision to use it. Battle.net terms of use: http://us.blizzard.com/en-us/company/about/termsofuse.html"You agree that you will not, under any circumstances:" ... "D. use any unauthorized third-party software that intercepts, “mines”, or otherwise collects information from or through any Game or the Service, including without limitation any software that reads areas of RAM used by any Game or the Service to store information about a character or a Game environment; provided, however, that Blizzard may, at its sole and absolute discretion, allow the use of certain third party user interfaces;" Thank you for pointing this out. This is the way that it reads the information. There was also some debate about this within the first few comments of this thread. That issue was resolved, so please read that for more information. I did read the whole thread before posting my previous post. There is no information in this thread that would 'resolve' the issue. Unless you have applied and have been granted a permission for the program by Blizzard reading the info from the memory is not allowed by the terms of service. Even if Warden would not register these kind of things, it does not change the issue. Most likely the other programs mentioned in this thread also fall into same category.
I agree that the info the program provides is beneficial. One can hope that Blizzard will some day offer the same info in Bnet user interface or export it e.g. to win registry for external programs.
(Edit: language fixes)
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He helped me over skype, fixed the issues, thanks a ton !
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On April 15 2012 12:01 korona wrote:Show nested quote +On April 15 2012 11:40 Redback93 wrote:On April 15 2012 11:23 korona wrote:If the program reads opponent's name & bnet id from the SC2 process' memory it can be considered a third party hack that is against the EULA. Even if the program seems harmless & beneficial there should be a clear warning regarding its nature in the original post. People should understand the risks before they make decision to use it. Battle.net terms of use: http://us.blizzard.com/en-us/company/about/termsofuse.html"You agree that you will not, under any circumstances:" ... "D. use any unauthorized third-party software that intercepts, “mines”, or otherwise collects information from or through any Game or the Service, including without limitation any software that reads areas of RAM used by any Game or the Service to store information about a character or a Game environment; provided, however, that Blizzard may, at its sole and absolute discretion, allow the use of certain third party user interfaces;" Thank you for pointing this out. This is the way that it reads the information. There was also some debate about this within the first few comments of this thread. That issue was resolved, so please read that for more information. I did read the whole thread before posting my previous post. There is no information in this thread that would 'resolve' the issue. Unless you have applied and have been granted a permission for the program by Blizzard reading the info from the memory is not allowed by the terms of service. Even if Warden would not register these kind of things, it does not change the issue. Most likely the other programs mentioned in this thread also fall into same category. I agree that the info the program provides is beneficial. One can hope that Blizzard will some day offer the same info in Bnet user interface or export it e.g. to win registry for external programs. (Edit: language fixes)
I hope that that is eventually the case. Their whole API is outdated. The only things that they keep in the registry are pretty much useless (HKEY_CURRENT_USER/Software/Razer/Starcraft2). They also have failed to come out with an online armory (such as World of Warcraft's). I know that this program touches on the dark side of the ToU, but people need these programs to make their life easier (that doesn't mean that I condone hacking, however), and it seems that the Starcraft 2 development team are more worried about the balance.
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On April 15 2012 12:22 Redback93 wrote:Show nested quote +On April 15 2012 12:01 korona wrote:On April 15 2012 11:40 Redback93 wrote:On April 15 2012 11:23 korona wrote:If the program reads opponent's name & bnet id from the SC2 process' memory it can be considered a third party hack that is against the EULA. Even if the program seems harmless & beneficial there should be a clear warning regarding its nature in the original post. People should understand the risks before they make decision to use it. Battle.net terms of use: http://us.blizzard.com/en-us/company/about/termsofuse.html"You agree that you will not, under any circumstances:" ... "D. use any unauthorized third-party software that intercepts, “mines”, or otherwise collects information from or through any Game or the Service, including without limitation any software that reads areas of RAM used by any Game or the Service to store information about a character or a Game environment; provided, however, that Blizzard may, at its sole and absolute discretion, allow the use of certain third party user interfaces;" Thank you for pointing this out. This is the way that it reads the information. There was also some debate about this within the first few comments of this thread. That issue was resolved, so please read that for more information. I did read the whole thread before posting my previous post. There is no information in this thread that would 'resolve' the issue. Unless you have applied and have been granted a permission for the program by Blizzard reading the info from the memory is not allowed by the terms of service. Even if Warden would not register these kind of things, it does not change the issue. Most likely the other programs mentioned in this thread also fall into same category. I agree that the info the program provides is beneficial. One can hope that Blizzard will some day offer the same info in Bnet user interface or export it e.g. to win registry for external programs. (Edit: language fixes) I hope that that is eventually the case. Their whole API is outdated. The only things that they keep in the registry are pretty much useless (HKEY_CURRENT_USER/Software/Razer/Starcraft2). They also have failed to come out with an online armory (such as World of Warcraft's). I know that this program touches on the dark side of the ToU, but people need these programs to make their life easier (that doesn't mean that I condone hacking, however), and it seems that the Starcraft 2 development team are more worried about the balance. Yes. Only the Blizzard's APM info is exported into win registry for Razer's gear at the moment. It may be unlikely that they would start actions against this kind of programs, but there should always be a warning just in case it would happen.
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On April 15 2012 12:31 korona wrote:Show nested quote +On April 15 2012 12:22 Redback93 wrote:On April 15 2012 12:01 korona wrote:On April 15 2012 11:40 Redback93 wrote:On April 15 2012 11:23 korona wrote:If the program reads opponent's name & bnet id from the SC2 process' memory it can be considered a third party hack that is against the EULA. Even if the program seems harmless & beneficial there should be a clear warning regarding its nature in the original post. People should understand the risks before they make decision to use it. Battle.net terms of use: http://us.blizzard.com/en-us/company/about/termsofuse.html"You agree that you will not, under any circumstances:" ... "D. use any unauthorized third-party software that intercepts, “mines”, or otherwise collects information from or through any Game or the Service, including without limitation any software that reads areas of RAM used by any Game or the Service to store information about a character or a Game environment; provided, however, that Blizzard may, at its sole and absolute discretion, allow the use of certain third party user interfaces;" Thank you for pointing this out. This is the way that it reads the information. There was also some debate about this within the first few comments of this thread. That issue was resolved, so please read that for more information. I did read the whole thread before posting my previous post. There is no information in this thread that would 'resolve' the issue. Unless you have applied and have been granted a permission for the program by Blizzard reading the info from the memory is not allowed by the terms of service. Even if Warden would not register these kind of things, it does not change the issue. Most likely the other programs mentioned in this thread also fall into same category. I agree that the info the program provides is beneficial. One can hope that Blizzard will some day offer the same info in Bnet user interface or export it e.g. to win registry for external programs. (Edit: language fixes) I hope that that is eventually the case. Their whole API is outdated. The only things that they keep in the registry are pretty much useless (HKEY_CURRENT_USER/Software/Razer/Starcraft2). They also have failed to come out with an online armory (such as World of Warcraft's). I know that this program touches on the dark side of the ToU, but people need these programs to make their life easier (that doesn't mean that I condone hacking, however), and it seems that the Starcraft 2 development team are more worried about the balance. Yes. Only the Blizzard's APM info is exported into win registry for Razer's gear at the moment. It may be unlikely that they would start actions against this kind of programs, but there should always be a warning just in case it would happen.
I agree. I will place a warning in the readme. I believe that the ToU would allow this type of program, but the quote that you mentioned is just there in case they need to take action against a hack.
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Redback, awesome program, thanks for the help earlier
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On April 15 2012 22:07 Ibra wrote:Redback, awesome program, thanks for the help earlier
Thanks for using it! Btw, love the sig ("I like turtles")
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On April 11 2012 21:09 Redback93 wrote: Reserved Edited: Nevermind
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