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

Crocodile - 16 Dec 2002 03:59

KEAYDIAN - 29 Jul 2008 08:35 - 7075 of 11003

Everything just stops.

Gave up last time and turned it off.

3 charts, no problem. 4 and it starts slowing down.

Optimist - 29 Jul 2008 09:59 - 7076 of 11003

KEAYDIAN

It does sound like a RAM problem.

As I said, keep Task Manager open and see what it is using.

A rough guide wold be to use no more than 1.2GB memory out of 2GB installed.

KEAYDIAN - 29 Jul 2008 10:01 - 7077 of 11003

Okey kokey, I'll give it a go later.

HARRYCAT - 29 Jul 2008 12:48 - 7078 of 11003

Thanks ExecL.! Perhaps I shouldn't have posted late at night as it was bound to bring out the crazies!!! :o)
What I need to know though, is it possible to save vid clips from blogs (is that what the 'Embed' prompt means?) or just play them? Clicking the 'Paste to clipboard' just seems to copy the URL & then pastes as a link. Presumably the Flash players don't have a 'Save' capability?

ThePublisher - 29 Jul 2008 18:51 - 7079 of 11003

I'm trying to use my new XDA Orbit as a Bluetooth modem for a Samsung Q1 ultra portable running XP Tablet edition.

I seem to be falling down with a lack of ability to set up a Bluetooth PAN on the Q1.

Can anyone shed a bit of light, please.

TP

Optimist - 29 Jul 2008 20:53 - 7080 of 11003

TP

I have done it with a standard mobile phone using GPRS but it was some time ago, a pain to set up and not in the least bit intuitive.

I assume that you have a GPRS or similar connection on your XDA - in the case of GPRS, although it is an allways on connection, the phone and your computer treat it more like a dial up modem.

First step os to get your Samsung to connect to the XDA via bluetooth. The XDA will probably offer several different services - choose the dial up modem or similar.

Save the connection.

In network properties on the Samsung, set up a new dial up connection using the bluetooth connection as the dial up device instead of the modem. The dial up number may be an unlikely combination of # and numbers and you will need a login name and password but all of these or probably standard for your mobile supplier.

That's all there is to it ;-)

Sorry to be so vauge, but it should give you some pionters. Best of luck. Let me know how you get on.

MightyMicro - 29 Jul 2008 23:23 - 7081 of 11003

TP: Not sure why you can't connect the Bluetooth to the XDA, Have you managed to pair the devices?

When you have, for the dialup number, try *99#

MightyMicro - 29 Jul 2008 23:34 - 7082 of 11003

Not normally one to bother too much about such things, in the current hot spell I became concerned about how hot my ThinkPad -- which I use in place of any desktop system -- became. Particularly the area above the hard drive.

So, I "invested" in a Belkin laptop stand which gives you a raked stand with an open wave-shaped area beneath the laptop and a dinky USB-powered fan (v. quiet). The difference in the perceived temperature of the laptop is dramatic. The area above the HD is now as cool as the proverbial cucumber. And it will travel with you in a reasonably capacious laptop bag.

Recommended, but might be a bit small width-wise for persons with 17" Apple thingies. As it is, my ThinkPad R52 overhangs it about 1" either side*, which does not present a problem.

* For the metricated, 1" = 2.54cm.

ThePublisher - 30 Jul 2008 07:49 - 7083 of 11003

MM,

I had one of those laptop coolers and it was most effective.

On my Bluetooth problem I think it lies in that the Samsung may not support Bluetooth PAN - a google says that it is not always a facility.

I'll now try to link via USB. I can see the XDA setting to make it work, but I am not sure what to set up on the Q1 to make it think it finds the internet on the USB linked XDA. Any suggestions.

TP

ThePublisher - 30 Jul 2008 11:35 - 7084 of 11003

Failed to get the Bluetooth to work. Still think that Bluetooth PAN is the problem.

However, I did a hard wired USB link and eventually that did work.

You have to install ActiveSync on the PC so the PDA drivers are there. But you must not have ActiveSync running when you do the USB modem ploy. Snag is how to turn off ActiveSync..... Try and see if you can do it.

In the end I found this toggle

It works.

The only other thing I needed to do was to alter the Network Connection from O2 Active to Mobile Web. Both seem to work on the XDA, but now when using it as a modem for a PC.

At least I can now use the Q1 for an internet device when I know the screen on the PDA will be too small.

One final thing. In the XDA manual it says one should install 3gnetopt.exe to optimise the speed. In theory it is on the Application Disk - but I can't find it anywhere.

Any suggestions?

TP

ThePublisher - 30 Jul 2008 16:48 - 7085 of 11003

A new topic.

I have Microsoft Office Frontpage 2003 installed on my new Vista PC's.

I can see the shortcuts but I cannot find the folder with the actual software in it.

Any clues chums?

TP

Optimist - 30 Jul 2008 18:27 - 7086 of 11003

TP

Right click the shortcut and select properties. File location is on the General tab.

ExecLine - 30 Jul 2008 19:23 - 7087 of 11003

Optimist

Not so. On some of my Desktop Shortcuts the Shortcut Tab in Properties sometimes gives the location of the software under the heading Target:

On others, eg, Word 2007 (an edited Shortcut) the Target in the Shortcut Tab simply gives the full program name but not its location.

In the General Tab only the location of the Shortcut itself is given

eg, C:\Documents and Settings\Administrator(or User)\Desktop

Might I suggest an inventory check using the Belarc Advisor (from FileHippo.com) and when the report comes up on the screen the program concerned can be located from the link, which Belarc conveniently produces for each Program.

Optimist - 30 Jul 2008 21:19 - 7088 of 11003

Exec

Thanks for pointing that out.

I agree that Belarc is the simplest way to find that info.

ThePublisher - 31 Jul 2008 07:12 - 7089 of 11003

Thanks guys.

FWIIW FileHippo don't hold Belarc at the mo' but it's easy to find with Google.

TP

Richgit69 - 03 Aug 2008 19:02 - 7090 of 11003

Anyway of telling which ports are beening hacked, and surly it should only be the modem one if anything how do the others get hacked???

Optimist - 03 Aug 2008 20:02 - 7091 of 11003

Richgit

The ports that get hacked are TCP/IP ports which are completely seperate from the physical ones such as USB and serial ports. There are around 65,000 TP/IP ports and a modem could use any of them. Your firewall and other defence software will prevent access to most but hacking is about getting round those defences.

You could configure the firewall to log everything that comes to the computer, but that would be difficult to sort through. A modern AV/firewall package and/or Windows Defender should alert you to the important hacks that they spot so long as they are set to do so.

If you are using a modem to connect to the Internet, then you are not secure. The only safe way is to use a firewall router with it's own firewall. That way, most hacks are stopped before they reach your computer.

Richgit69 - 03 Aug 2008 21:18 - 7092 of 11003

Optmist, thanks

not really sure if I've got a firewall router, its a netgear wireless thingy

just sick of all this spyware crap and cookies trojans etc getting into the PC even thou I've got 2 or 3 firewalls working and virus checkers running at the same time but the gits still get in

everyday I can check the PC and the get thru the PC defences, ummm

Optimist - 04 Aug 2008 11:56 - 7093 of 11003

The Netgear Wireless ADSL or cable routers are fine so long as you have WPA wireles security enabled.

Most cookies are harmless although you can set Internet Explorer to prevent them but this will stop some sites working.

Spyware and trojans are normally downloaded as part of a web page or email. They will not normally be stopped by a firewall and are not always considered to be viruses by AV software.

If you are really serious about it then buy one of the top Internet security packages (Kaspersky was considered the best the last time I checked) and set it to maximum protection. The downside is that they use a load of computer resources, prevent you from accessing some websites and will keep asking you if you want to download others. If you say yes and something gets through then it's your fault.

There is no substitute for careful and responsible browsing. If you want to visit any dodgy sites then you could always set up a virtual machine with a virtual disk that you can trash at the end of each session but you still need to be careful.

Oakapples142 - 04 Aug 2008 13:12 - 7094 of 11003


When I "forward" an email which contains graphics or photographs recipitents often say they cannot open the pictures or graphics - can anyone help ?
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