![]() To simply remove all UI chrome, notices, and all chat press Ctrl-Alt-F1 (it is the same in both viewer: FS & SL). Those are more about how chat is logged than what appears on screen.įor machinima it is the on-screen appearance that we want to control. ![]() Plus Firestorm has another 10 or so settings that are user specific. However, Firestorm’s Debug Settings list shows about 117. The SL Viewer’s Debug Settings list shows 36 settings for chat. …yeah it is a bit more complex learning Firestorm. The list is broken into Global and Users settings and there are sub groupings Phoenix Mode, Firestorm Mode, SL Viewer Mode, Hybrid Mode, and Latency Mode. The Firestorm Viewer has a similar list here: Firestorm Viewer Debug Settings. There are 40 or 50 settings related just to chat. You can look at the Second Life Viewer Debug Settings to find a list of the settings. The result is the SL Viewer has many hidden settings. The Firestorm Viewer is a power users viewer and the team tries to give more power and control to the user, which means exposing more viewer settings. ![]() The Lindens try to make the SL Viewer easy to learn, which to the Lindens means in some measure fewer UI controls. The philosophies behind the two viewers are different. A big difference is Firestorm puts most them out in the User Interface (UI) where users can more easily get to them and remember where and what they are. Both viewers have a load of chat settings. Depending on the type of video you plan to make you may want to still have the user interface showing, like tutorials. If you do machinima you want to kill chat and notices. But, I have used Phoenix or Firestorm off and on since the great viewer purge… when Emerald was excommunicated.
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