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

Crocodile - 16 Dec 2002 03:59

Optimist - 05 Oct 2006 13:37 - 5046 of 11003

Splat

The short answer is that it is one of the windows system files. If you want further details, try Googling it.

MightyMicro - 05 Oct 2006 14:23 - 5047 of 11003

TP:

Did you find out whether you could tone down (yes, pun intended, sadly) the noise from the base unit, MM?

As promised, I went home and read the instruction manual (there's a first)!

On the Panasonic phone I have, you can control the volume of the base unit warble, even mute it, but you can't select a different tone (unlike the handsets). My phones are about two years old and cost about 180, looks like you can buy them by the gross (well, a four handset system) for about 100 these days. I don't doubt that the spec has improved as well.

ThePublisher - 05 Oct 2006 14:44 - 5048 of 11003

MM,

"you can control the volume of the base unit warble, even mute it, but you can't select a different tone (unlike the handsets). "

Well that's progress.

I'll start looking at the alternatives.

Thanks,

TP

Kayak - 05 Oct 2006 15:46 - 5049 of 11003

True, I'd forgotten that my Panasonic phone base unit is the same. In fact I have it on mute with the phones themselves on music.

ThePublisher - 06 Oct 2006 07:38 - 5050 of 11003

Thanks folks for all the phone suggestions.

I spoke to a Panasonic retailer yesterday and it seems that now, Legislation!!, almost all the base units have to be fitted with non-disableable ringers. He stocked dozens of models but was unsure which had ringers you could mute.

So when I got home I took the base to pieces and found a little black object on the masterboard next to the word Buzz. I made the phone ring and it suggested an odds on chance that was where the sound came from.

"It came off in me hand, guv"

And now the base makes no noise and the handset tinkles discretely.

With regard to the range I also established that my wife had done her test whilst talking to a chum and searching from room to room for something they needed to check. What this was proving was that the phone will drop out with movement, presumably as it finds a new signal/frequency.

If you stand/sit still the range is actually not all that bad.

It does not reach nearly as far as the old Sanyo cordless I bought years ago, but that was an under-the-counter jobbie which you'd be hard pressed to find in the UK these days.

So, thanks again for all the ideas. We now have a quiet cordless with adequate range - and this thread can now revert to much more critical topics such as dreaded blue screens........

TP

Kayak - 06 Oct 2006 09:17 - 5051 of 11003

Of course your cordless phone would probably show you a blue screen from time to time, if it had one, it's probably got a computer inside bigger than the one our whole university ran on 30 years ago :-)

Self19 - 06 Oct 2006 11:43 - 5052 of 11003

Is anyone on here using Mac? I've failed to find a CFD account that runs on a Mac platform; the problem seems to be with the streaming prices. Has anyone had success with this?

Optimist - 06 Oct 2006 12:01 - 5053 of 11003

Self19

I don't use a Mac so I can't help you directly.

However, I understand that you can get Windows emulation packages for the Mac that may well run the CFD software. Another solution would be to get hold of an old Win XP Pro box and usea remote desktop client on the Mac to operate it.

This would get round the compatibility problems, use fewer resources on your Mac and once set up, you wouldn't need a screen or keyboard on your Windows box (or even for it to be in the same room).

MightyMicro - 06 Oct 2006 14:09 - 5054 of 11003

Self19: Not sure about the connection with streaming prices: MoneyAM's streaming works OK on the Mac.

Is it simply that the CFD platform software clients (i.e., the bit you download and run on your computer) are only available for Windows?

maddoctor - 07 Oct 2006 11:27 - 5055 of 11003

can somebody confirm for me that a download of a music video is about 0.75 gbs as BT have been telling me with my 40gb allowance i can only have 65 of them a month. did not realise the size of files and been playing TOTP unknowingly.
if true i will have to watch it , as running SCPro all day as well

Fundamentalist - 08 Oct 2006 10:09 - 5056 of 11003

Hi guys, got a prob with my laptop. When i turn it on it doesnt boot up and comes up with the following over and over:

For Realtek RTL8139(X)/8130/810X PCI Fast Ethernet Controller
PXE-E61 Media test failure, check cable
PXE-MOF: Exiting PXE ROM.

Anyone tell me whats wrong and or how to fix it please?

Kayak - 08 Oct 2006 10:23 - 5057 of 11003

maddoctor, it depends on the compression used for the video information and exactly what you're downloading. An hour's TV program can be around 0.75Gb, but that is not DVD quality or anything near it. Best thing to do is to look at the site you are downloading from, they must have the info somewhere, either on the file you are downloading or in the FAQ or forums.

Kayak - 08 Oct 2006 10:24 - 5058 of 11003

fundy, it looks like your laptop is trying to boot from the network and finding there isn't one there. Look in the BIOS boot options and check that it is set to boot from the C drive.

Fundamentalist - 08 Oct 2006 10:34 - 5059 of 11003

Kayak

can you tell me how i do that please

Kayak - 08 Oct 2006 13:40 - 5060 of 11003

Difficult to say exactly, depends on your laptop, but normally press the Del key while it's booting and then look for an option in one of the menus giving a list of devices to try on booting. The floppy drive or CD drive should be first, then C drive rather than the network. There might also be a separate option telling it to boot from the network.

I should say though that you might also find that the options are set correctly and that the reason it is trying to boot from the network is that your disk drive is dead, hopefully not!

Fundamentalist - 08 Oct 2006 13:56 - 5061 of 11003

Kayak

thanks

the menu comes up with 4 options:

1) Hard Drive
2) CD-ROM/DVD Drive
3) +Removcables devices
4) Network Boot

Have tried all 4 and get the same error message :-(

When you say disk drive is dead - am i right in assuming you mean the Hard Disk?

maddoctor - 08 Oct 2006 14:03 - 5062 of 11003

Kayak , thanks for reply , just using the bbc website \ totp

Self19 - 08 Oct 2006 20:27 - 5063 of 11003

optimist/mightymicro - many thanks. i guess running Virtual PC or buying a new Intel Mac is the only way around it.

Kayak - 08 Oct 2006 20:47 - 5064 of 11003

Fundy, yes I meant the hard disk. It's not necessarily had it, but I think you're at the stage where you need to have someone look at the laptop.

Optimist - 08 Oct 2006 21:04 - 5065 of 11003

Self19

I think the problem with the Intel Mac solution is that you will either have to set the machine up to dual boot or run Windows as a virtual machine. The first means that you can't use the Mac programs at the same time as Windows, the latter that your machines resources have to cope with the two concurrent operating systems.

If yo use a separate Windows machine with Remote Desktop client, the Windows box can be an old low spec machine because it is only used to run your trading software and the client on your Mac only has to display the Windows screen.

The Remote Desktop client for Mac is free so you can try it out by getting a friend to plug their Win XP Pro laptop into your network.
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