Add per-game controller configs for Dolphin, and make the Dolphin folder portable

This will explain how to make two key changes/improvements to your Dolphin emulator, regardless of what front end you utilize. I happen to use and am a big fan of Launchbox (specifically the BigBox portion). I can duplicate the whole Launchbox folder plus all the emulators and ROMs between my PCs. However, some emulators like to place configuration files in your personal Windows directories rather than store them locally in their own, making it more difficult to duplicate between computers. Dolphin is one such application, but this will fix the problem.

Nothing I’m showing below is undocumented on the Dolphin site. It’s simply a little confusing, so hopefully this will help make it easier to implement.

Disclaimer: Below instructions are using the latest version of Dolphin (as of 22 APR 2018 that is 5.0-7062).

 

How to make your Dolphin install portable:

Note: before this step I recommend you note/document any specific settings you had (graphics specifically). Although I explain how to copy your old settings back to the new folder that will be created inside the Dolphin directory, I found that not all the settings actually copied over.

First, add a blank text file to your Dolphin directory called “portable.txt”. This will force Dolphin to save all the config files to the Dolphin directory under a folder named “User” rather than in the windows user documents directory.

Once you’ve done this and run Dolphin once, you can copy your old files from your Documents directory (My Documents\Dolphin Emulator\*.*) to the dolphin\User directory that was created to make it portable. You may have to recreate some of your settings even after copying them over. I had to re-do my video settings.

For official documentation on this see: https://dolphin-emu.org/docs/guides/controlling-global-user-directory/

 

How to load per-game controller configurations:

Create and save your per-game controller settings:

  1. Under “Controllers – Wii Remote 1 (Configure)” set your configuration for the game.
  2. Save the configuration profile by giving it a name (preferably either generic i.e. “Sideways” or “vertical” or related to the specific game) and press “save”
  3. Right click on the game in the Dolphin menu list of games and select “Properties”
    1. Note that you must have specified the game directories in Dolphin’s settings for it to find and list the games!
  4. In the game properties menu there is a button in the lower left labeled “Edit User Config”. Select that to edit the config for that game.
    1. Note that you must specify your text editor in Dolphin’s settings for it to open the .ini (text based) file for editing.
  5. There may already be some pre-set conditions. Just add the control settings at the end, or overwrite anything in [Controls] if already there.
  6. The text you add will be [Controls] on one line and the next will be the WiimoteProlfileX (where X= the player # of the controller you are setting) = config file you set in step 2.
    1. The instructions are located at How-to set game ini settings per game.
    2. Do not add the .ini to the end of the config when you type it. Just the name of the config file.
    3. Basically you just paste the following into the ini file you’ve opened for editing:

[Controls]
WiimoteProfile1 = DKCountry

Replace the name after “WiimoteProfile1” (I used DKCountry in the example) with whatever you saved the controller config as in step 2 above.

Chromecast announces what is playing to and allows control from ALL ANDROID devices on your LAN

The solution for this is fairly simple. Thanks to the How-To Geek site and their simple instructions.

Summarized the resolution is:

  1. Open the Google Home app. Google Home
  2. Click the three vertical dots in the corner of the device you want to change the settings for – NOT the app itself.
  3. Click on “Settings”
  4. Near the bottom of the screen when you first open, there is a sliding button that controls “Let others control your casted media” – Turn this off.

 

Note the description for this fantastic little feature, that is enabled by default. Thankfully, when my 14 year old daughter got the media control bar popping up on her phone, the only damage was she kept pausing it because she couldn’t figure out what or why it was happening. I kept trying to figure out why my stream seemed to be buffering and pausing. Also thankfully it was an innocuous stream of The Arrow and not something more…uncultured.

Let me state this again. This feature is enabled by default. WTF, Google?

Why would you think my default preference would be for everyone on my network to suddenly see what I am watching, and control it without me knowing or giving them permission?

2017 Bills video working – again. For now.

If anyone had tried to view the 2017 season games over the past, oh, 6-8 weeks they probably noticed they weren’t working.

Well, they’re back up and functional.

If you’re interested in the issue, suffice to say the site I used to provide a continuously updated/live link to the Google Drive location for the video decided they had made enough money off of me and closed down. The fact I’d paid for 10,000 hits – or about 10 years worth of traffic – was moot to them. Caveat emptor as they say.

 

 

 

 

Good thing all the money from the ads makes me wealthy enough that it doesn’t matter…

 

17 December 2017: Dolphins at Bills

17 December 2017: Dolphins at Bills

After the Dolphins thoroughly dismantled the Patriots on Monday Night Football, Bills fans had concerns that the “should win – MUST win” game suddenly looked much more difficult.
Plus Shady goes over 10K rushing, and Suh plays Mike Tyson’s Punch-Out.
Staying alive, staying alive, ah, ah, ah, ah….

Video below:

Note: Default resolution is 720p.

Colts at Bills

10 December 2017: Colts at Bills

In a game to remember, the Bills had every opportunity to win, and then the Colts snatched defeat from the jaws of victory multiple times.
Ultimately a strange sequence of events was required to pull out the Bills victory in the Snow Bowl 2. Was it destiny, or just another extension of Bills’ fans misguided hope?

We shall see…

Video below:

Bills at Chiefs

26 November 2017: Bills at Chiefs

So maybe my son was correct last week…

I always enjoy the comments on the Two Bills Drive and Billievers.com forums after a win. Almost inevitably if you read the posts right after the game you’d swear we played like complete ass.

As the saying goes – you’re never as good or as bad as you looked on Sunday.
Bills win! Bills win!

Video below:

Bills at Chargers

19 November 2017: Bills at Chargers

My son said he was glad I am back from my last deployment because he blamed the Bills two game losing streak – and their poor play during it – on my absence.
Obviously that was just another Bills superstitious fan hope that was proven faulty this week.
The Bills are bad without any outside influence.

Peterman. Yeah.
Unless you’re a Charger fan, I suggest you have your favorite adult beverage available in copious amounts if you decide to watch this.

Video below:

Note: Default resolution is 720p. You can click the gear icon after you begin playing the video to change resolutions to 360p if needed.

Raiders at Bills

29 October 2017: Raiders at Bills

Ex-Raiders showed out against their old team today. No Jordan Poyer, no EJ Gaines, no Marcel Dareus. But four takeaways for the defense and no turnovers for the offense make for a good ending.
First NFL team with a +12 or greater turnover ration after seven games in almost 15 years.

Video below:

Note: Default resolution is 720p.