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Segnala un problema nella traduzione
Notepad++ (for Windows anyways) can handle the line breaks too
The following information looks odd to me too...
"AvgFrameMS" "62.845630645751953"
"StdDevFrameMS" "269.71429443359375"
FrameMS - Total time taken to stream the frame.
"I have no idea why the StdDevFrameMS is so large here - none of the other counters could account for it... Do I have this wrong?"
"AvgFPS" "46.290416717529297"<---does this mean you're performing below the average?
"StdDevFPS" "8.3101902008056641"
FPS - Frames per second
The average is 46, and if the FPS values were in a "normal distribution" there'd be a nice 68-95-99.7 rule[en.wikipedia.org] about how much of the time the FPS value hovered around 46.
Unfortunately my one flirtation with statistics (which I failed due to not turning up very much...) was 21 years back now. A shame really, because (having looked at the text book later) it's quite an interesting field.
Anyone recall if we can say what percentage falls within one SD for non-normal (or even aproximations of normal) distributions?
We may only be able to say that "high SD = scattered results".
I believe that slouken's ^^ translates to "read above, good information".
I'll pop a link near the top of this one when I'm at a real keyboard.
...
Added links to the Davew_uk's write up, and the streaming support page (which I always seem to have trouble finding).