Crocodile
- 16 Dec 2002 03:59
Mr Euro
- 28 May 2003 19:14
- 511 of 11003
:-) Managed to get another cable to fit, hasn't got a box thingy in between but its working all the same.
Seymour Clearly
- 28 May 2003 20:06
- 512 of 11003
Not really a PC question:
My 6 pack isn't working properly..... I have a 6 CD changer in my car. It's now quite old, and won't read the discs very well. Is there anything I can do or is it a specialist job?
BrianTrayda
- 28 May 2003 20:50
- 514 of 11003
I belong to a pretty good BB site, but they've got a problem with their internal email system that loses emails. Anyone got any good ideas I can pass on to them?
BrianTrayda
- 28 May 2003 22:01
- 518 of 11003
Jonathan, you're a star. Got 4.
the troll
- 29 May 2003 07:23
- 521 of 11003
Iain - they could only block access to MS sites, there's no MS involvement in your PC accessing, say, AM via Pipex. There has been some talk about future updates disabling systems using security codes known to be shared, but the legal/practical difficulties make this course of action vanishingly unlikely.
the troll
- 29 May 2003 12:28
- 524 of 11003
TullettJ - assume you can still apply updates if downloaded onto another PC? What I was suggesting won't happen is MS completely disabling the OS if an update finds it to be erm, unofficial.
Of course, using a key generator rather than an existing key avoids these issues altogether...
the troll
- 29 May 2003 13:57
- 526 of 11003
What, for research purposes, you mean? If you were running filesharing software (such as that found at www.kazaalite.com) and searched for "keygen", that might be quite enlightening.
Robb
- 29 May 2003 14:27
- 530 of 11003
Kayak and others who tried to help
An update to my hard disk troubles.
Spoke to various data recovery people and it breaks down into two main areas - logic/data or electric/mechanical. The first one is "relatively" cheap, probably @2-300 and they use some clever scanning software to winkle out whatever info is on the disk. The second area is where they need to use (from the sound of some of the descriptions) some kind of partial vacuum/sterile Level 5 Ebola virus laboratory to take the hd apart and try and physically repair it. Thats where things can get very expensive. So, down to the local specialist who pronounced it dead anyway, not ill or grumpy and awkward but DEAD.
Ordering a new hd today and very carefully reviewing back up procedures.
Kayak, if I ever moan again that my hard disk has gone wrong and I only have old back ups please laugh, make jokes about it and generally abuse me with robust language for not sticking to the back up plan :-).
Regards
Rob