While writing out a more detailed description of the behavior, I stumbled upon the solution myself.
When you try to install the game over the internet, just let it start, and then cancel it. This will both remove the installation and download from the queue, but apparently also remove the knowledge of the installation from the Xbox One.
So:
- Start the online install
- Cancel it
- Return to the home screen
- Notice that the disc tile has now changed to "Install disc"
- Activate the disc tile to start the installation from the disc.
This worked, the game now installs from the disc. Obviously any downloaded DLC's will still need to be downloaded, but for the purpose of this question this is not relevant.
Now, what do you do when you get back home and want to plug in the external drive?
Here's what I did. I first uninstalled the game using the storage management.
This makes my Xbox One forget that I had the game installed. Make sure you don't delete any savegames you have on the console.
Then, you turn off the Xbox One, plug in the external drive, and turn it back on.
Once you do that, the disc tile still says "Install disc". Ignore that. Instead either use your pinned link to the game, the tile for the game (if it shows up on the home screen), or navigate to your games and apps list and activate it. You should get a message saying not to unplug the external drive, and that your game will be ready soon.
A few seconds later you can try again and the game should now start.
OK, I'm going to set the record straight here since I know quite a bit about this topic. ;)
Modern advertising has confused the masses in regards to Hz.. so here it goes.
All consumer grade HDTVs (that I have seen so far) do not accept greater than a 60HZ input - meaning - that 60fps is the highest framerate you can achieve on a modern HDTV with vSync enabled.
Now that we have that straight.....
Where things get tricky/confusing is when manufacturers advertise 120HZ, 240HZ, 480HZ, etc.
The input signal is still 60HZ. (blu ray movies technically run at 24hz, but we're not talking about that) Notice that each of those defined HZ above are multiples of 60HZ.
What's really happening is this: HDTV manufacturers have engineered software that interpolates motion. Motion interpolation software takes information from frame A, and frame B, and averages the brightness and color coordinates in each frame to create a third frame between the two.
Middle frames are new. They were never recorded as part of the original content.
This makes the picture look very smooth, but is BAD for gaming as it's causes input lag and response lag.
So to answer your question, 60HZ is best for gaming.
What's more important for gaming is your pixel response time, which you can check for several TVs here: http://www.displaylag.com/display-database/
Also, you might try connecting to the HDMI (DVI) port on your TV.
Head over to http://www.displaylag.com/display-database/ and set your filters to the following:
Set the size to the screen size you'd like to have and start checking prices. (it will link directly to Amazon) You want to pick a TV that has a Great or Excellent rating.
If the prices are still above $950 then drop down to the next smallest screen size and check prices again.
Keep repeating this process until you find a TV with a Great or Excellent rating that is $950 or under.
Good luck!
Best Answer
The buff would not stack. They would only have the 10 protection reduction and you CANNOT go below 0 protections..