asf is a very useful tool, but I have a question. When I log in to my steam account with it, and use a proxy to change the system’s traffic direction, how can I know if the account is logged in to the region where the proxy changes the traffic?
Solution
asf is a very useful tool, but I have a question. When I log in to my steam account with it, and use a proxy to change the system’s traffic direction, how can I know if the account is logged in to the region where the proxy changes the traffic?
Why currently available solutions are not sufficient?
asf is a very useful tool, but I have a question. When I log in to my steam account with it, and use a proxy to change the system’s traffic direction, how can I know if the account is logged in to the region where the proxy changes the traffic?
Can you help us with this enhancement idea?
Yes, I can code the solution myself and send a pull request
Checklist
Enhancement purpose
asf is a very useful tool, but I have a question. When I log in to my steam account with it, and use a proxy to change the system’s traffic direction, how can I know if the account is logged in to the region where the proxy changes the traffic?
Solution
asf is a very useful tool, but I have a question. When I log in to my steam account with it, and use a proxy to change the system’s traffic direction, how can I know if the account is logged in to the region where the proxy changes the traffic?
Why currently available solutions are not sufficient?
asf is a very useful tool, but I have a question. When I log in to my steam account with it, and use a proxy to change the system’s traffic direction, how can I know if the account is logged in to the region where the proxy changes the traffic?
Can you help us with this enhancement idea?
Yes, I can code the solution myself and send a pull request
Additional info
No response