
#Ppjoy 64 bit windows 7 install
You must install PPJoy before this will do anything.
Sits quietly in the tray, and if it works (I can guarantee it works on my machine, as they say), then it never requires any settings or attention. The MAC address on the DS is used as a unique identifier, so settings can be saved, loaded per-system. All settings are saved and loaded automatically. Mouse control can be enabled or disabled, and this setting can be applied per-controller. An icon is displayed on the status window next to each device, the color of which can be changed to match your controller or system. You can rename each device connected through the program interface- you can have two systems connected named "Nintendo DS Lite" and "Nintendo 3DS" for example. Writes button and axis names to the registry, which means games that bother to look for this can use accurate button labels. It does not automatically delete them, though, because it turns out that is really annoying. Automatically creates PPJoy virtual joysticks for each unique device connected. Absolute joystick control using the touch screen (must be calibrated in the Windows joystick panel). Relative mouse control using the touch screen and L/R buttons. Support for up to 16 connected DS systems. Mouse movement is choppy, though, due to how messages are handled
Mouse control using either (or both) of the analog sticks and L/R buttons.
Analog sticks and triggers are supported. Support for all four controller ports, simultaneously. It will only work right now if your DS or Wii has an IP address that starts with 192.168.1. NET framework 2.0) and run the client on your Wii or DS. Just run the server on your computer (requires. PadSend lets you use Gamecube pads connected to a Wii, or a DS, as a PC gamepad.