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

skg83239 - 11 Oct 2006 22:26 - 5084 of 11003

SC Have you looked at www.maxivista.com?
skg

Optimist - 11 Oct 2006 22:34 - 5085 of 11003

SC

Are you trying to use 3 seperate computers or one machine with 3 displays? My suggestion assumed the latter in which case you would have one very wide PP presentation split into 3 sections and spread it accross 3 screens.

If you're using three machines, I can think of some possibilities, but how complex will your message be? How often do you want to change it and how accurate must the synchronisation be?

Seymour Clearly - 11 Oct 2006 23:53 - 5086 of 11003

Optimist, One PC, triple head graphics card, and three screens on a totem pole, i.e. one above another, three separate, but linked presentations, i.e. one screen shows something, one has text about it and a third adds to the message - that sort of idea. The presentations must be linked, but split second accuracy isn't important.

skg, I'm really looking for a software solution that allows me to run the presentations on each screen in a linked form. No problem sorting the hardware out - that's the easy bit!!!!

Optimist - 12 Oct 2006 00:16 - 5087 of 11003

SC

Powerpoint may yet do it, but another way would be to set put a web browser in each display pointing at a different page on a local server.

You would have to create a web page for each different display and then write a script to swap the required files into the pages that your browsers are pointing at. You would need to refresh the pages at regular intervals which on an internal server will produce no more than a slight flicker, or I'm sure that it is possible to write some code into the pages that will refresh only when a file changes.

It sounds complex, but will not involve very much work, and should be achievable with standard Windows software. You would also have the option of putting the web server on a machine in the back office if that is easier to control.

Seymour Clearly - 12 Oct 2006 08:19 - 5088 of 11003

Blimey, that sounds complex!!! Will have a look though, thanks.

Optimist - 12 Oct 2006 09:23 - 5089 of 11003

SC

It's not as bad as it sounds, but if you need any help then PM me. You would have to get the web pages designed though.

Bolshi - 12 Oct 2006 11:08 - 5090 of 11003

MM. Thanks for the link to the screen cleaner chappie. Is it better than PC World offerings and the like? From their website (PCWorld's) they don't give spec or detail about their general screen cleaner.

I'll put my Mr Muscle away now! I thought it was my eyes getting worse! I'm nearly down to the bare metal :-)

Kayak - 12 Oct 2006 12:02 - 5091 of 11003

You could look at the instructions that came with the monitor, or the manual on the manufacturer's website. Mine (Dell) suggest just using water and a soft cloth, and otherwise a screen cleaner made specifically not to damage anti-static coatings.

Bolshi - 12 Oct 2006 12:15 - 5092 of 11003

Kayak. Instructions? Mmmmmm. Novel idea. Will it ever catch on?
:-)

MightyMicro - 13 Oct 2006 23:34 - 5093 of 11003

Kayak has a point. You should never use general household polishes on screens, plastic cases and so on.

Klear Screen is approved by all the major manufacturers, including Apple, IBM, Palm, Psion and so on. It leaves an anti-static polymer skin on the screen which is protective of touch screens. I use it on my ThinkPad laptops, PDAs, BlackBerrys, phone screens. It's standard in my company for use on all such things.

Bolshi: you may find that it is now supplied as an 'own-label' in other stores. I believe that Sainsbury's carry it under another name at a ludicrous 10 for 100 ml for cleaning TFT TVs.

Bolshi - 14 Oct 2006 10:02 - 5094 of 11003

MM. I ordered online from screenclean as per your post. Excellent service. Next day delivery. Thx for that.
I can now see where I am going wrong :-)

ThePublisher - 14 Oct 2006 18:07 - 5095 of 11003

A Win XP pro question, please.

My photographic studio computer has an assortment of USB devices. Some are permanently attached and some, such as CF card readers and external back up hard drives, are only plugged in from time to time.

Is there any way I can fix the drive mapping that these readers and drives acquire so that I can introduce drive letters into the software I use with them. Most times they have been coming up with the same drive letters, but sometime they pick a different one and that makes the program invalid until I re-do the address.

TP

PeterG - 15 Oct 2006 18:51 - 5096 of 11003

Help!
I've started getting a lot of "Undelivered Mail Returned to Sender" "Delivery Status Notification (failure)" "Returned mail" etc. emails.
At first I thought it was just spam under a new disguise... But someone said that spammers might be using my mail address to send out spam, and I'm receiving notices about the ones that aren't getting through.
How can I find out what's going on?

hewittalan6 - 15 Oct 2006 19:22 - 5097 of 11003

I am suffering massive amounts of spam to my e-mail.
As many as 60 a day, usually phishing or floggong viagra (ok I admit I need it).
Anyone any ideas how to stop it??
Thanks,
Alan

DocProc - 15 Oct 2006 22:16 - 5098 of 11003

The following site is the best site on the Internet for Outlook Express knowledge:

http://www.insideoe.com/

You might get a few pointers there. eg, using key wordsto block spam, etc

Using 'Message Rules' in OE

Haystack - 16 Oct 2006 12:16 - 5099 of 11003

I have a strange browsing problem. I have a WiFi connection which works fine and has done for some time now. However, I have gained a problem recently. As the browser is paer way through loading a page, I get a dialog box which asks me which connection I would like to use to. The loading stops until I cancel it. It then loads a bit more and the same question is asked again as it has to go to a different address to get something new. For instance this page starts loading then I get a pause when it wants something from camapigns.moneyam.com, another when it wants img.moneyam.com. If I keep cancelling the dialogs then the page loads eventually. It doesn't do it on all web pages.

ThePublisher - 16 Oct 2006 12:50 - 5100 of 11003

Peter and Alan,

A few posts ago I mentioned that I use an e:mail system called nPOP on both my PDA and PC. It does not stop spam, but it does allow you to delete it from your mailbox instead of downloading it.

It is not solving your problem but it might make the immediate future more tolerable until someone comes up with the solution I know you both want.

As for Outlook Express, I have never used it as I understand it to be the most easily manipulated system for hacking. In fact only earlier today, on some bulletin board somewhere, I saw a post to the effect that it was almost a waste of effort using virus blockers if you then continued to use OE. Maybe I'm wrong, but I simply report what other seemingly wiser people have told me.

TP

hewittalan6 - 16 Oct 2006 13:17 - 5101 of 11003

Thanks TP,
I never use OE but this spam issue is getting to be a real pain in the mailbox.

MightyMicro - 16 Oct 2006 14:29 - 5102 of 11003

Again, I recommend Eudora as a mail client with its excellent Spam filtering. Now only $19.95 to download.

http://www.eudora.com

Things are changing with Eudora: sadly, Qualcomm have decided to stick with their main business of CDMA cellphone technology in the future, and Eudora will go Open source within a year. That doesn't make it any less attractive for now. and I intend to continue to use it as my Windows email client.

ThePublisher - 16 Oct 2006 15:03 - 5103 of 11003

This was the comment about Outlook. It was written by Mike Chaney who developes a bit of software called Qimage for photographers. He said, earlier today:-

"The same people who want their IP address to be "invisible" to the ddisoftware.com server (a reputable software developer) have
signed up for a public discussion group and send messages that can be seen by
everyone on the internet (in the case of Qimage which is a public group). Most
of them use Microsoft Outlook which is the most exploited internet tool available."

Another bit of e:mail software I use is Virtual Access. But the snag with that one is the need to download some of the message to see what is in it.

TP
Register now or login to post to this thread.