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QuestHelper

 

Project Updated:
Files Updated: Wed, Nov 25 2009
Supports Game Version: 3.2.0
Category: Quests & Leveling, and Map & Minimap
Tags:

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Project Manager: ZorbaTHut
Additional Authors: smariot , vipersniper , nesher , lonadar , divinewind420
Current Version: 1.3.2-beta
License: All Rights Reserved
Development Site: CurseForge.com
Avg Daily DL (last 30 days): 51,305
Downloads Total: 36,047,169
Favorites: 18,729
Comments: 9,018
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  • About QuestHelper
  •  

What It Does

Questhelper tells you how to finish your quests in the easiest, fastest manner. It includes a database of quests, monsters, and items, telling you the exact location of that dang Perfect Satyr Horn you can't find. It also computes the fastest path to complete all your quests - and gain experience - as quickly as possible.


Contribute To Development

QuestHelper survives on your contributions and donations! Below you'll see the major categories that I want to work on. Contributions fill up the pretty blue bar, and once the bar is completely full, I'll finish the feature ASAP. Think I'm taking QuestHelper in the wrong direction? Now you can tell me where it should go! QuestHelper makes your $15/mo World of Warcraft subscription more enjoyable, and if you're willing to share a little of your enjoyment, you can ensure that QuestHelper is kept running forever and does what you want it to do.

Every donation helps.

http://static.curseforge.net/content/images/17/674/QHbar_Configuration.png

http://static.curseforge.net/content/images/17/673/QHbar_Achievements.png

http://static.curseforge.net/content/images/17/676/QHbar_Tracker.png

Don't care what happens next? Just https://www.paypal.com/en_US/i/btn/btn_donate_LG.gif





Data

If you can't afford to contribute (It's okay! I still like you) then I also need your data. QuestHelper records monster positions, questgiver locations, item drops, and all manner of fun information that I use to build QuestHelper's database. There's no personally identifiable information involved - I can't get your username, your character name, your friend's names, or anything of that sort. The file I need is stored in the following location, assuming you're using Windows XP and didn't change the installation path:

C:\Program Files\World of Warcraft\WTF\Account\ACCOUNT_NAME\SavedVariables\QuestHelper.lua

Some have reported that for Vista and Windows 7 their path is one of:

C:\Users\USER_NAME\AppData\Local\VirtualStore\Program Files\World of Warcraft\WTF\Account\ACCOUNT_NAME\SavedVariables\QuestHelper.lua
C:\Users\Public\Games\World of Warcraft\WTF\Account\ACCOUNT_NAME\SavedVariables\QuestHelper.lua

I've heard that on OSX, the path is:

/Applications/World of WarCraft/WTF/Account/ACCOUNT_NAME/SavedVariables/QuestHelper.lua

To make things even more difficult, it seems that Windows might try to "help" you by hiding file extensions. This makes 'QuestHelper.lua' appear as "QuestHelper". Warcraft makes backups of all these files, so there is a "QuestHelper.lua.bak" file in there as well, and without its file extension, it appears as "QuestHelper.lua", but it isn't really and it's not actually the file I want.

Be careful not to descend into the realm / character directories, we specifically want the SavedVariables directory. There are QuestHelper.lua files in the other directories as well, but they only store which flight routes your characters know, and aren't actually useful. On a similar note, I also don't want the file named SavedVariables.lua, which contains your UI preferences and is entirely unrelated, or the file named QuestHelper.toc, which is a small part of the QuestHelper code and not anything I need.

When in doubt, look at the file size - if it's less than 100k, it's probably the wrong file.

You can email it to me at:

qhaddon@gmail.com

This address is NOT the proper place to direct inquires about the addon. that should be done in the comments below. NO messages sent to this address are EVER read as it receives more than anyone could hope to read. The only thing that logs into that account is an AUTOMATED script to download all the attachments. Every once in a while I happen to glance at a few messages when deleting attachments, and there are consistently month-old pleas for help. These get deleted and not responded to. Do not email questions to this address. Seriously, stop doing it, I don't know why people keep emailing me here.

Many have asked how often to send in data. My personal preference is basically this: Send stuff in every month or so, or when you remember. Thanks!

Please note that the above has nothing to do with installing this AddOn. You install this AddOn the same way you would install any other AddOn, by unzipping it into the "Interface/AddOns" folder.

And, of course, a huge thanks to everyone that has sent me their data so far. It's very much appreciated.

READ THIS BEFORE POSTING AND ASKING FOR HELP

If you're confused by how to make it work, use the Curse Client. The Curse Client pretty much just works now. It is your friend. If you want to install manually, more power to ya, but if you just want to make it work, consider the client. Seriously. I really mean this.

It doesn't show me any objectives on the map: Type "/qh hidden" and see why they're hidden.

It reduces my framerate too much/uses too much CPU: You could try reducing "/qh perf" (for example, "/qh perf 50%".) Some parts of what Questhelper does just intrinsically use a lot of CPU. There ain't no such thing as a free lunch. This problem should be largely fixed in the current version.

It uses too much RAM: You could try "/qh purge" (please submit your data first!) but, fundamentally, the things Questhelper does also use a lot of RAM. There is not much I can do about this.

Pretty much any issue with it not running: "/qh hardreset" should reset it to "factory install conditions". Try it!

FAQ

How can I help?

Donations pay my rent and buy me food. I'm very attached to rent and food, I find them good things to have. Even a few bucks will help more than you'd expect - look at the top of this page for more information.

You could also submit your collected data to me, which is free and helps Questhelper's database. Check out the top of the page for that as well.

It doesn't work. What can I do?

Three things. First, if there's a major issue with QuestHelper, you can type "/qh error" and it will show you the first error it ran into. If you post that in the comments here, one of the people who helps regularly may be able to solve your problem. Please post the entire error, not just parts of it. We really, really want the see the whole thing, even if it's long.

If it just doesn't work, "/qh hardreset" will reset all your accumulated data and preferences, hopefully getting rid of weird problems. If you still can't see the quest tracker, "/qh treset" will try to force it into a visible position on your screen, with "/qh treset center" jamming it uncomfortably into the center of your screen. It can be moved from there by dragging the small gray box at the top-right of it. If you're not seeing quests at all, even on your main map, "/qh hidden" will tell you why and let you change it. The combination of these three fixes most problems.

If none of those help, disable your other plugins as a test to find incompatibilities.

My framerate is low. What can I do?

If you have any addons that enabled CPU profiling, turn it off, it greatly increases the amount of work WoW has to do. The command to do that is: /console set scriptProfile 0 /console reloadui

If that doesn't make a difference for you, there's a slash command, /qh perf, that can scale the amount of work QuestHelper does per frame. Example: /qh perf 50%

QuestHelper uses a lot of memory. What can I do to fix this?

QuestHelper intrinsically uses a chunk of RAM. You can currently expect about 15m of usage. There's really not anything anyone can do about this, but that small amount of RAM usage also shouldn't be much of an issue.

Why aren't my quests showing up?

/qh hidden will list everything that isn't being shown, along with the reason for it being hidden.

If I send you my data, should I delete my copy?

You'll save hard drive space and RAM, but lose any preferences you had saved. I don't recommend it, but if you want to, it's fine. You can type "/qh purge" ingame to get roughly the same effect without losing your preferences.

How can I get rid of that arrow over my character's head?

First, try right-clicking it and looking for a "hide" option. Second, try /qh arrow, /qh cartwp, or /qh tomtom, depending on which arrow it is. Try them all - at worst, you'll end up with extra arrows. The same command will disable it again. If you'd rather move it instead, you can drag it around by left clicking . . . unless it's been locked, in which case right click on it and unlock it first.

How do get that 3D arrow pointing where to go?

/qh arrow.

If you'd prefer integration with Cartographer Waypoints or Tomtom, try /qh cartwp or /qh tomtom respectively. I don't really officially support these options, but they seem to work.

The Icons on my map are huge! How can anyone see anything?

If you find the icons are too big for you, you may enter /qh scale X%, replacing X with some reasonable scale. I'd start with 80%, depending on how that looks you can try bigger or smaller numbers.

Author(s)

ZorbaTHut is the current maintainer of this project. Any bugs are probably either his fault or Blizzard's.

Smariot is the original developer of the package.

Nesher and Vipersniper both made improvements while Smariot was still maintaining it, and are worthy of praise.

Lonadar and Divinewind420 haven't actually written any code, but they've been helping out with customer support for many months now, and their assistance has been invaluable. <3

How to avoid getting your account stolen.

Simple explanation:

Don't run any programs attached to UI mods. Just decompress them into your addons directory. The major site installers, like the Curse.com installer, are probably safe. Be suspicious of everyone and don't give out your password.

There's a much longer and more detailed explanation here, which I recommend everyone read at least once.

Despite persistent rumors, Questhelper does not contain anything that can steal your password. Such a thing isn't even possible.

Usage

For the most part, you just install it and leave it alone. It should hopefully be smart enough to do The Right Thing, and not require you to meddle with it.

The task QuestHelper thinks you should do first is displayed on your minimap, which you can mouse over for a description. If the task isn't in your current zone, then it will point towards where QuestHelper thinks you should go to get there, such as a flight master or the zone border.

World Map

All the tasks QuestHelper wants you to do are displayed on the World Map. There are 'marching ants' connecting the objectives, showing you the order QuestHelper thinks you should complete them in.

You can right click on an objective to get a list of options for it.

Menus

Using the menus should, hopefully, be obvious. The only catch might be that they don't automatically disappear if you click on something else.

You can right click anywhere on a menu to hide it, or select the Close Menu command from the end of the menu.

Priorities

There are 5 different priority levels an objective can have: "Highest, High, Normal, Low," and "Lowest".

Most objectives default to "Normal". Objectives for timed quests default to "High". User created objectives default to "Highest". QuestHelper will try to arrange the objectives so that higher priority objectives get done first.

You can use priorities as hints to get the objectives in an order you'd prefer, without the need to micro-manage the route list.

Filters

There are 7 filters you can use to automatically ignore quest objectives, which you can turn on and off using the slash command /qh filter.

The first filter is "level", which by default is on. It will cause QuestHelper to ignore any objectives that your current party probably isn't high enough to complete. You can adjust the level offset used by this filter with the command /qh level "offset".

The second filter is "zone", which by default is off. It will cause QuestHelper to ignore any objectives that aren't in your current zone.

The third filter is "done", which by default is off. It will hide objectives for any quests that aren't complete. You can use this if you don't want to quest and just want to turn the quests you do have in.

The fourth filter is "blocked", which hides blocked objectives, i.e. ones that can't be done yet, such as quest turn-ins for incomplete quests. This is probably most useful if you prefer to hide the "ant trails", as the route it will compute will be somewhat of a lie.

The fifth filter is "watched", which hides objectives that you are not currently tracking via WoW's built-in quest tracker. This gives you a lot of control over which quests QH shows, but may limit you to fewer quests tracked at once.

The sixth filter is "group", which by default is on. It will cause QuestHelper to ignore group quests while you're not in a group. By default, it permits 2-player group quests, but not more. This can be adjusted with "/qh group".

The seventh filter is "wintergrasp", which ignores Wintergrasp PvP quests if you are not actually in Wintergrasp at the time.

You can force QuestHelper to show an objective that otherwise would have been filtered by typing /qh hidden and selecting "Show" from its entry in the menu.

Sharing

Sharing allows you to share your objectives with other party members, allowing you to combine your routes and work together effectively.

Note that sharing only tells your peers what objectives you have, your completion progress for them, and the priorities you have assigned to them. Information such as item drops and monster locations are not shared.

Each peer will take this information and calculate their own route from it. Assuming you stay together and work cooperatively, which was the whole idea behind this feature, your routes should end up being almost completely identical, and you can follow it and rest assured that nobody is getting left behind. Objectives shared by multiple users won't be removed until everybody has completed it.

Slash Commands

(May be very out of date. If you'd like to volunteer to update it, let me know.)

  • /qh help: Lists all the QuestHelper slash commands.
    • /qh help "command": Tells you about a specific command.
  • /qh settings: Opens the Settings menu at the current cursor location. Note that not all settings can be changed through the menu.
  • /qh track: disables/enables QuestHelper's Quest Tracker, which provides status on your nearest objectives, in place of the default Tracker.
  • /qh hidden: Displays a list of all the hidden objectives, why they are hidden, and depending on the reason, will allow you to unhide them.
  • /qh ftime: Toggles the display of the flight time estimates.
  • /qh locale "locale": Sets the locale to use for displayed text., or lists possible locales if no argument is given.: Defaults to your client's locale the first time you run QuestHelper. The only locale that is complete right now is "'enUS"'. Missing translations will be marked with red text.
  • /qh share: Toggles objective sharing on and off. When on, will share quest objectives and progress with other party members that are using QuestHelper 0.17 or higher, and also have sharing enabled.
  • /qh solo: Will disable quest sharing and ignore anyone you might be partied with, basically assume you will receive no aid from your party members.
  • /qh comm: Toggles the display of the data sent between peers. I use this for debugging, but some people just love to stare at streams of meaningless data. It's really quite hypnotic. . .
  • /qh hide: Hides QuestHelper's minimap arrow and World Map icons and paths, and suspends the calculation of routes.
  • /qh cartwp: Toggles using Cartographer Waypoints to display your current objective.
  • /qh tomtom: Toggles using TomTom to display waypoints for your current objective.
  • /qh button: Toggles the QuestHelper button on the World Map frame.
  • /qh level "offset": Sets the level offset used by the level filter. Can be positive or negative. Invoke with no arguments to see the current offset and your effective level at various party sizes.
    • /qh level 0: Only show quests at or below your own level.
    • /qh level +2: Show quests up to two levels above your own level. This is the default.
  • /qh nag: Prints counts of all the new or updated quests, objectives, etc, that you have found that aren't in the supplied database.: Note: To reduce memory usage, QuestHelper deletes static quest data that doesn't belong to your faction. So, if you play both sides, it will always think the quests you did for the opposite faction are new.
    • /qh nag verbose: Displays the specific differences between your data and the static data.
  • /qh find "category" "query": Allows you to create custom objectives by searching for known items, NPCs, and locations. The queries allow fuzzy string matching, and so should happly accept typos and partial matches.: Note that if you attempt to create an objective twice, it will instead hide it.
    • /qh find item "item-name": Search for items.
    • /qh find npc "npc-name": Search for NPCs or monsters.
    • /qh find loc "zone-name" "x" "y": Search for a location in a zone. You may also use a comma, should you feel the need to.
    • /qh find loc "x" "y": Search for a location in your current zone.
    • /qh find "search-string": Searches in all categories.
    • /qh find: Invoking the find command without any arguments will instead display all your current user created objectives, allowing you to easily turn them off.
  • /qh filter "filter-name": Toggles objective filters on or off.
    • /qh filter level: Shows or hides objective that you probably can't do. Note that this considers the the levels of everyone in your party, not just you. If you're partied with somebody higher than you, it might not hide a quest that it otherwise would have.
    • /qh filter zone: Shows or hides objective that aren't in your current zone.
    • /qh filter done: Shows or hides quests that aren't complete.
    • /qh filter blocked: Shows or hides objectives that are blocked, i.e. require something else to be done first, such as turn-ins for incomplete quests.
  • /qh scale "value": Scales the map icons by this amount of their default size. Will accept a number or a percentage, in the range of 50-300%.
  • /qh perf "value": Scales the CPU workload for QuestHelper's route calculation routine. Will accept a numbere or a percentage, in the range 10-500% (although we don't recommend going above 100%).
  • /qh recalc: Recreates the world graph and location and distance information for the active objectives. You probably don't need to worry about this.
  • /qh purge: Deletes all your collected data. I'd prefer if you avoided using this any time other than immediately after sharing your collected data.: Requires that you to enter a randomly generated 8 character case sensitive alphanumeric password, to hopefully ensure that people read the message that gets displayed.
  • /questhelper: Alias for /qh.
  • /find, /qhfind, : Alias for /qh find.
  • /qh find monster: Alias for /qh find npc.
  • /qh find location: Alias for /qh find loc.

How You Can Help

Most importantly, check out the top of this page, under "We Need Your Support".

Translations

Translations can be easily edited at http:smariot.no-ip.org/translate. More translations are good!

Development

There is a Git mirror for this project's code: git://cams.pavlovian.net/questhelper.git

Note that you'll need to copy several files from a released version to make it work, most notably the ChatThrottleLib plugin, the Art directory, and every file starting with "static". These are all dynamically generated and not included in the repository.

Future Releases

Everything in here is "planned" and not "guaranteed". Do not yell at me if things get delayed or shuffled. Pushing versions back happens extremely frequently if unexpected new bugs crop up. You may also notice there are no dates listed - that's intentional, if I knew how long it would be I'd have fixed it by now. This is just to give you an idea of what my next major plans are.

Right now, most of the work is going on behind the scenes. You won't notice any significant QuestHelper improvements because I'm adding backend code to support eventual major improvements, and to keep the entire thing from melting down. New features are coming, but don't hold your breath.

Major features that may be upcoming:

  • /qh find
  • better settings dialog for preferences
  • limited achievement support

Tasks

Things I'd like to do that may take a long, long time:

  • Rewrite pathfinding to be aware of mountains and other obstacles.
  • Track drop rate of quest items, estimate the number of kills you'll need to complete
  • Better path optimization, prioritizing "easy experience"
  • Addition of "quest-like goals", including achievements, vendor recipes, unadded flight paths, weapon/skill training, repairs/vendors, reagent/ammo restocking, and so forth
  • Automatic tracking of followup quests
  • Remembering quest priorities after logout
  • "Too Tough For Me" button, temporarily ignoring a quest until you've leveled
  • Downloads (7)
  •  
File Name Release Type Game Version Downloads Date
Addon Curse.com Beta 2.3.3 0 9/29/2008
  File Name Release Type Game Version Downloads Date  
  QuestHelper 1.2.5 Release 3.2.0 379,181 11/3/2009
  QuestHelper 1.2.4 Release 3.2.0 6,874 11/3/2009
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  • omegakidd said

    What do you need done with the Exploration achievements? Wowwiki has all of the coordinates for all the areas to discover. I'm sure the hardest part would be making them in a format that your database works with. If you need or want help let me know! I might be able to donate some $$$ once I get my next paycheck. Rent and bills are right around the corner. =O

    Reply Report Permalink
  • lonadar said

    Donate away - the exploration achievements are already part of the 1.3x line. I've been using them with great success! To access them, go into your achievements and on the lower right corner of each achievement's bar is a checkbox to make QuestHelper add it to it's routing.

    Reply Report Permalink
  • GodzFire said

    I hate to be rude, but while QuestHelper could very well be one of the top 5 best addons in the history of WoW, the increasing memory footprint does worry me.

    When I start WoW it's using at least 22 MBs. As I speak, I'm whacking away at a Primordial Drake Egg, and it increases from 32-45MBs, and then goes back down.

    While I understand you can't make this thing only use like 1MB of memory, my next 2 closest ones are:

    (4.28 MB) Informant
    (3.27 MB) Cartographer_QuestInfo

    Again, this is an absolutely WONDER addon which I would HATE to live without, and value the fact that it's actively updated. However, the memory issue is a bit concerning.

    Reply Report Permalink
  • moldavia said

    your usage is perfectly normal considering the high amount of computations this mod is doing on an ongoing basis. Usage will vary up and down based on numerous factors some being your current quest log size, how many quests you have in the current area your in etc etc. Also remember that this mod unlike most of the others is constantly computing data and making routes and stuff telling you the fastest way to do your quests. These constant computations will make memory usage fluctuate.

    The mods you list cannot even be compared to QH in ram usage. Informant is a static database mod which self contains all its information. Cartographer_questinfo is pretty much the same thing as informant. Thus saying once loaded they have all the information they need and never computer much more than information in the tooltip. QH is constantly calculating data, routes etc etc as you hand in/pick up quests this information must immediately change to reflect current quest log data.

    Currently computers these days start with average 3 gigs of ram and some even come with 6+ gigs standard. So in all seriousness 20-50 megs for a mod is pretty much nothing in comparison. Also compared to some other devices you install drivers for like keyboards and mice they take up insane amount. I mean look at logitech/microsoft mouse drivers that suck up 40-60 megs just to move that dead pan looking arrow around lol.

    Reply Report Permalink
  • GodzFire said

    FYI I forgot to mention that memory usage SKYROCKETS when you're in Windowed Mode. Right now I'm at 49 MBs simply hacking an egg.

    Reply Report Permalink
  • moldavia said

    I use windows mode exclusively and my usage typically is between 15-30 megs and sometimes on occasion it goes up to 50. I notice that the more scattered my quests are the higher the memory usage. Say for example you got quests in your log from kalimdor, eastern kingdoms, outlands and northrend then yes your usage will be high because thats a lot of ground to computer to figure out what your fastest completion path would be. However say you have all 25 in northrend only and most of those in a couple areas your usage would be smaller because there is less distance for QH to process.

    Reply Report Permalink
  • fannypack said

    I hope that everyone whining about memory related issues would consider getting more memory rather than demand the whole addon be overhauled for their own benefit. If you haven't donated you really have no right to complain (Outside of maybe a huge bug). So buzz off, repeatedly complaining over something the author can't or isn't willing to do only ends up making them abandon their great projects.

    Reply Report Permalink
  • Kyosuke said

    I was wondering what will happen to Questhelper once patch 3.3 hits?

    Reply Report Permalink
  • myrroddin said

    Most likely nothing. It will still be around, doing things Blizzard's new quest tracker system does not, just as prioritizing your quests by geographic location and other tricks.

    Reply Report Permalink
  • moldavia said

    when 3.3 hits we all turn off the crappy blizzard attempt to be QH heroes and QH lives on in all its deserved Glory.

    Reply Report Permalink
  • Lunarblood said

    Crappy attempt? Um Blizzard bought the code and information from this author for this add-on... so you just called QuestHelper a crappy add on.

    Reply Report Permalink
  • lonadar said

    I highly doubt Blizzard "bought" anything...

    Reply Report Permalink
  • In other news will QH ever retain is quest log position. As well as QH Arrow position across turning the add-on off then back on. All other add-ons retain their information as normal besides QH. QH will retain all the other information just not these two (like whether of not the arrow was locked or not, etc etc). Cartographer Arrow does not have this reset issue. However when using the QH Arrow it does. I like questing with QH. Though when I am in a raid I disable it. And always having to fix its quest log position and QH arrow on re-enabling it.

    Reply Report Permalink
  • lonadar said

    The issue is with your system, then. My QuestHelper retains the arrow and tracker positions without fail. I have never had mine suddenly move over my minimap, or to the center of my screen. Make sure you have adequate system permission to write to the QuestHelper preference files (yes, plural) throughout your WTF folders, as well as permission to write to the folders themselves.

    Reply Report Permalink
  • It would be lovely to keep QH on all the time. However, in raids its just not even a issue to consider.

    Maybe instead of just hiding routing information. As clicking that in game button off and on doesn't seem to have much of a performance impact. Besides showing or hiding quest data and routing. Maybe giving that switch a true load on demand capacity. And when this switch is hit off only very basic data is left in memory. And a switch to on via this button would cause a QH loading function all over. This would then save having to totally disable the add-on through the log in screen. Which is currently only way to push it off to the side.

    Reply Report Permalink
  • lonadar said

    Perpahs it would help you to simply make a macro:
    /qh perf .1
    /qh hide

    Run that before going into a raid or instance.

    Reply Report Permalink
  • ZorbaTHut said

    This is actually kind of redundant - at the moment, "/qh hide" acts sort of like "/qh perf .01" or so.

    Reply Report Permalink
  • Oh and when I mean minimally off to the side I mean far far into the 1 MB memory zone or less. Then giving it a true load on demand through the in game "Quest Helper" button.

    Reply Report Permalink
  • QuestHelper uses a lot of memory. What can I do to fix this?

    QuestHelper intrinsically uses a chunk of RAM. You can currently expect about 15m of usage. There's really not anything anyone can do about this, but that small amount of RAM usage also shouldn't be much of an issue.

    Sorry to say and I seriously love your add-on so please don't consider this a troll or a flame. Simply love your work and it. However, this isn't a true statement by you. And a true Load on Demand capacity could be instituted. Yes I know easier said than done. However, it can be done. And your comment makes it seem as though its impossible. Which it is not. So hopefully you reconsider this issue.

    Reply Report Permalink
  • ZorbaTHut said

    In theory. It would be a whole lot of work, for a feature that very few people would use. Parts of it literally aren't possible (there are some resources that the WoW API simply cannot release, for example - once you make 'em, you're stuck with 'em forever.)

    And, on top of that, what makes you think that 15 megs of RAM is an actual performance issue? RAM is cheap.

    Reply Report Permalink
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