Sharesmagazine
 Home   Log In   Register   Our Services   My Account   Contact   Help 
 Stockwatch   Level 2   Portfolio   Charts   Share Price   Awards   Market Scan   Videos   Broker Notes   Director Deals   Traders' Room 
 Funds   Trades   Terminal   Alerts   Heatmaps   News   Indices   Forward Diary   Forex Prices   Shares Magazine   Investors' Room 
 CFDs   Shares   SIPPs   ISAs   Forex   ETFs   Comparison Tables   Spread Betting 
You are NOT currently logged in
 
Register now or login to post to this thread.

PC & MAC CLINIC - On line problem solving. (CPU)     

Crocodile - 16 Dec 2002 03:59

Timeliner - 24 Sep 2006 22:09 - 4975 of 11003

Removed the memory and swopped the modules over.
That sorted out the problem.

Thanks for your help.

(I have sent an email to you - assuming your email is the same as previous - if you don't receive it let me know on here).

Bolshi - 26 Sep 2006 08:07 - 4976 of 11003

I've added an external drive via a USB port (Seagate. Drive G:) and everything seems to work fine. However my PC won't boot up with it powered. I get an error message after the PC does its Scanning Devices routine "Error Loading OS". If I switch off the ext drive and boot up & then power up the drive everything is fine.

Optimist - 26 Sep 2006 08:47 - 4977 of 11003

Bolshi

Are you powering the drive from a single USB port?

USB drives draw close to or above the maximum that the USB ports can supply. The solutions are to get a powered USB hub, an external power supply for your USB disc or an adaptor cable that takes the power from 2 USB ports.

I favour an external solution, as taking more power from your motherboard can never be good for it although in most cases should not do harm.

Bolshi - 26 Sep 2006 09:07 - 4978 of 11003

Optimist. The power is from a separate xformer/mains.

Optimist - 26 Sep 2006 11:09 - 4979 of 11003

Bolshi

So much for that theory then :-(

In that case it is possibly a problem with the MB - try swapping to a different USB (remember that most computers have two USB sockets for each driver). The other thing to try is flash the BIOS with the latest version.

Bolshi - 26 Sep 2006 11:46 - 4980 of 11003

Optimist: Thanks for your time.

Swapped with another USB - no difference.

"Flash the Bios with the latest version" Oooer mother! Sounds complicated. How would I do it?

It seems strange that the drive is recognised after start up and copies, retrieves etc without problem. Is the drive being recognised at start up do you think?

Optimist - 26 Sep 2006 12:06 - 4981 of 11003

Bolshi

To flash the BIOS, you need to go to the manufacturers website, identify your motherboard, and follow the instructions EXACTLY.

I have never got into trouble doing this, but it does come with a massive PC health warning.

Another thing that occurrs to me, is that if you have a modern machine, then there may be an option in the BIOS to boot from a USB drive. If it exists, dissable it.

Bolshi - 26 Sep 2006 12:30 - 4982 of 11003

Optimist.
I will have a look at the manufactureers web site as you recommend.

BIOS option. One of my reasons for adding the external drive (plus Acronis True Image software) was to allow the machine to be booted up if my existing hard drive was totally screwed. If I disable this feature would that in turn not let me do what I originally planned?

I take it that the error message I get (Error Loading OS) refers to the operating system? Is my machine trying to load from G drive instead of C?

Thanks again for your trouble.

DocProc - 26 Sep 2006 12:31 - 4983 of 11003

My daughter is interested in purchasing an external hard drive for backup purposes. It will be for storing all sorts of data, particularly doc, xls, jpg, gif, mp3, etc, types of files and importantly, also OE e-mail backup.

Can somone point me towards a well written site that deals with OE Backup in a fairly generic 'dbx files, etc' type of way, as I would like to point her towards it.

hilary - 26 Sep 2006 12:42 - 4984 of 11003

I've got a feeling, Doc, that you can't backup OE messages. You can backup your address book, etc., but not the messages.

I think you need Outlook 2k3 to be able to backup the messages (edit: which you do using a .pst file).

I'll now take a seat while everyone corrects me.

:o)

Optimist - 26 Sep 2006 13:06 - 4985 of 11003

Bollshi

Yes it sounds as though it is trying to load from the USB drive.

It sounds as if it could be an Acronis setup problem. What have you transfered to the disk. I'm guessing that Acronis will store a compressed image of your disk which would not be bootable, and installs it's own bootable OS on the disk for use in recovery operations. Is that the way it should work, and have you set Acronis up correctly. It looks to be a well thought out piece of software so I would expect it to have some sort of verification routine.

Haystack - 26 Sep 2006 13:15 - 4986 of 11003

You can back up OE messages. File, Export, messages.

There is also a directory with a very long name that holds the messages. You can backup the files in the diectory. I used to do it every day to rewritable CDs. There are a number of .dbx files in the directory.

C:\Documents and Settings\rg105064\Local Settings\Application Data\Identities\\Microsoft\Outlook Express

or

http://www.iopus.com/guides/oe-backup.htm

DocProc - 26 Sep 2006 13:25 - 4987 of 11003

hilary

I think in OE the messages are stored as .dbx files.

The sort of site I am looking for is sorta kinda like these two, sorta kinda:-

http://www.sitedeveloper.ws/tutorials/outlook.htm

http://www.insideoutlookexpress.com/backup/simple.htm

Bolshi - 26 Sep 2006 13:56 - 4988 of 11003

Optimist. I was waiting to get the disk working properly before installing Acronis.
I have installed it now and used a facilty to install a new hard disk. I've changed the original ext file format from Fat32 to Ntms to mimic my C drive. Same sort of problem but with a new twist. When booting up I don't get the error message but it just hangs there with a flashing "_" . Again when I switch off the drive and re-boot everything is hunky dory. I've sent Seagate a request for assistance to see what they have to say.

Edit. I think I must solve this problem before loading mirror images of my drives using Acronis or else I could be storing up trouble for myself.

Seymour Clearly - 26 Sep 2006 14:19 - 4989 of 11003

I'm getting cable broadband from NTL for work, 14.99 a month. I need to decide how to implement it. I want it available in the Consulting rooms for our professional staff (and me) but not available to our reception based staff. I also need to make it secure as in not accessible to outside hackers. We're totally (like most businesses) dependent on our PC system now so I don't want any possibility of it falling over because of outside interference.

What software should I use for security, and how easy is it to implement the access across the network?

Or should I get a local guru in ;-)

Kayak - 26 Sep 2006 14:40 - 4990 of 11003

Bolshi, not sure that you actually have a problem. I think you do need to load a copy of your disk onto the external disk and you will probably find that with the external drive plugged in it will boot from that. Be careful though since the drive it boots from will always be C: and the other listed as another letter.

Bolshi - 26 Sep 2006 16:20 - 4991 of 11003

Kayak. I'm coming to the same conclusion. It's more of a nuisance than a fault I suppose. Seagate have emailed me back (good service) confirming what Optimist said about the m/board and the bios setting ie I will need to disable function to boot from USB devices within the BIOS settings. But I think this will screw me up if I ever have to recover from the external disk which is why I got the darned thing in the first place. I think I'll leave well alone and simply switch on the external drive as and when I need it.

skg83239 - 26 Sep 2006 16:25 - 4992 of 11003

Bolshi, wot device order does your PC boot? If the USB device is before your C drive, but does not have a bootable OS loaded, it may be getting confused?
skg

Bolshi - 26 Sep 2006 17:34 - 4993 of 11003

skg. I don't know. How do you find that info?

Bolshi - 26 Sep 2006 17:37 - 4994 of 11003

A second message from Seagate :
"If your main internal Hard drive crashes then you should be able to go
back into the BIOS and enable boot to USB, as it should be a function that
can be turned on/off. The alternative is to keep the drive off or
disconnected while booting your system then, connect it after Windows has
booted."
Register now or login to post to this thread.