Steam telepítése
belépés
|
nyelv
简体中文 (egyszerűsített kínai)
繁體中文 (hagyományos kínai)
日本語 (japán)
한국어 (koreai)
ไทย (thai)
Български (bolgár)
Čeština (cseh)
Dansk (dán)
Deutsch (német)
English (angol)
Español - España (spanyolországi spanyol)
Español - Latinoamérica (latin-amerikai spanyol)
Ελληνικά (görög)
Français (francia)
Italiano (olasz)
Bahasa Indonesia (indonéz)
Nederlands (holland)
Norsk (norvég)
Polski (lengyel)
Português (portugáliai portugál)
Português - Brasil (brazíliai portugál)
Română (román)
Русский (orosz)
Suomi (finn)
Svenska (svéd)
Türkçe (török)
Tiếng Việt (vietnámi)
Українська (ukrán)
Fordítási probléma jelentése
Same here.
1 - in steam, steam>settings>interface>disable "run steam when my computer starts"
2 - (under win7) open start menu in windows (press start button, lol)
3 - right click 'all programs' and click open all users
4 - enter 'programs' folder
5 - enter 'steam' folder
6 - right click steam icon, select copy
7 - go back one level back to 'programs' folder
8 - enter 'startup' folder
9 - right click, select paste, then continue to give it admin rights to add steam there (you need admin account or rights to do this)
win xp should allow you to skip from 3 to 5 if you doubleclick the "programs"
that way steam will still start at windows start, but won't show the fake update window anymore. whatever method it uses to start at windows startup is apparently buggy.
at least that's what helped me and made steam start normally, with the logging in window that lasts few seconds as opposed to the fake update message that takes over a minute.
this only happens on system boot if it's auto starting from steam's own autostart method. if you use my way, it never "syncs" anything, but everything still works fine. it additionally speeds up the boot sequence a lot.
edit: guess i was a bit too fast with that. it worked the first few times, but now it's back to being stupid after the most recent actual update.
What I saw here is that, even though the "white" box shows up, it's much faster if I start it later on (no autostart).
This probably just happens because during system startup the disk is heavily used, whereas later on, steam can do whatever "sync" it needs in a few seconds.
Since I don't use steam every single time I log into windows, I think that's better than the alternative.
Well, I know it's a tough alternative because it takes a long time, but, have you considered reinstalling steam?