Looks like I'll need to hack my registryIt's not Hacking...
No reason why this setting shouldn't be managed in the application directly
No reason why this setting shouldn't be managed in the application directly
The TEAM does NOT want members to relocate the set of DATA folders.
They want it to remain in the Members profile, in the default installation location.
So there is no Provided Setting in the App to change it.
It's not meant to be changed.
it is tantamount to an unsupported hack.
Editing an value in the registry is NOT Hacking.I quote and agree with @Wyldanimal on the subject.
and telling people that it is, is just promoting the ***** even more.
It was not Hacking to open an ini file with a text editor and edit one of the values.Usually or almost the same what i'm doing in Linux if i need to edit an Configuration File
Windows,
In years past, each Application had it's Own .ini file where needed.
In this file were user adjustable Settings / Variables.
It was not Hacking to open an ini file with a text editor and edit one of the values.
Later, ALL of the ini files were consolidated in to what is known as the registry.
They still function just like ini files, but now located in a common repository.
Editing of an Applications Registry values is not Hacking by definition of hacking.
The TEAM does NOT want members to relocate the set of DATA folders.
They want it to remain in the Members profile, in the default installation location.
So there is no Provided Setting in the App to change it.
It's not meant to be changed.
it's not hacking.....
when a person of knowledge gives out Instructions of which branch and key value to edit.
making settings changes by editing Registry keys was not the intention of the OS designers.I would think - though - that, if such was the case, we would not get at all an app called Register Editor (regedit) which permits everyone to easily change register values...
If Instead of all these values being in the registry,
and they were in a Configuration File in the Data folder,
Would you still call it hacking if Instructed to
Use Notepad, Open the configuration file and edit the Path?
If Instead of all these values being in the registry,
and they were in a Configuration File in the Data folder,
Would you still call it hacking if Instructed to
Use Notepad, Open the configuration file and edit the Path?
Here is the Difference.
If the Application was Written or Designed to Make use of Values in the Registry
then Editing these values is Not HACKING, even if these values are not exposed in some control Panel
or not Documented in the user manual.
But they are intended by the design of the application to be available and used when needed.
It's not meant to be changed.
We currently think we know what the registry entry in question is used for, and we are probably right. But we do not truely know it, and we certainly do not know how it may be used in the future.It's also an eventuality which could happen, a chasm hole to open in the ground while we are walking in our city and eat us... but the risk is so low that we usually can walk outside without not even thinking about it.
For example, Totem could decide to split the Data folder into separate parts each with its own folder and each pointed to by a separate registry entry - perhaps Cards, Scenes, MiscData and Temp.
Consider a hypothetical program that is identical to iStripper in every way except that the protection against using cards copied from another user is controlled by a registry entry that comprises a 128 bit key made up by concatenating the user id with an encryption key and that by replacing the encryption key part with one copied from a different user would allow you to play copies of that user's cards. Now this is a very weak protection scheme but the fact that it can be overcome by exactly the same mechanism as that used to change the data path does not mean that it would be, in your own words, "intended by the design of the application to be available and used when needed."Such an extreme case is totally different from the sort of registry changes this thread is about, since the speculated inserted code copied from another user's one would mean acquiring and using stolen and false informations. Which would be, of course, a totally different matter from what an ordinary change of a registry value is.
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