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

Crocodile - 16 Dec 2002 03:59

Optimist - 04 Dec 2008 16:38 - 7478 of 11003

hangon

I take your point about taking the PC to an expert, but many people on this thread have found that though they are not technically minded, they are capable of replacing some components in a PC. I would suggest that most here ask for advice because they don't want to pay an expert and/or they do not entirely trust them. If Foale where to take his machine to an expert, he may well pay 50 and have it diagnosed and fixed perfectly, they may open it up, disturb the fault and return it as fixed only for the fault to reappear or they may use it as a selling opportunity.

As regards long term storage, I agree that external disks are probably the best though you should really use 2.5" ones as they are more robust. I've never had a problem with the 3.5" ones but have read of cases where someone trashes their disk by knocking the desk.

It's been a while since I looked into it, but last time I checked, CD-R was guaranteed for 18 months to 2 years, though they clearly last longer. DVD's will last longer as the media is sandwiched between plastic and hard drives are good for at least 15 years so long as they are stored properly and so long as you can find a SATA interface.

The best medium is said to be REV drives, said to be good for 30 years. Paper is also good but I would not count on the longevity of printer inks.

As far as I know, the 100 year claim for CD/DVD refers to the commercial pressings and is probably wishful thinking.

I would not trust important data to SD cards or USB flash drives at all.

HARRYCAT - 04 Dec 2008 16:54 - 7479 of 11003

Hangon, I absolutley disagree with your first paragraph. If you take the time to learn how something works, you will then be able to fix it yourself for free in future & also be able to help others (Isn't that why this board exists?). Same goes for your car, your washing machine etc. Obviously there are tasks which are too complicated for the DIY'er, but always paying for someone else to get you out of trouble is no way to develop your knowledge.

scussy - 04 Dec 2008 19:23 - 7480 of 11003

sometimes it is an easy fix,twice this has happened to me,
the first one was the graphics card had so much dust etc it stopped the fan from working,
so a good clean and to the rest of the fans fixed the fault,
the second one was the CPU cooler had fell off,artic cooler 64 i think,
the next tower i get will have a window,lol

hangon - 04 Dec 2008 19:33 - 7481 of 11003

Well, it seems we almost agree Harrycat ( see 2nd last comment,). - I still think that uninitiated shouldn't touch a pc until they don't know what they are doing. Only when the fault is understood should anyone start removing bits. It may appear as though the fault is "fixed" but it will reappear - or worse, create another.

Our data is far more valuable than the cost of having a PC fixed . . . . . and what beep code came out of this enquiry? - seems to have gone quiet!.

+your advice was correct, with the beep-link. - It was the following reply that concerned me. OK?

Foale - Hope it's fixed now...do tell - - -

MightyMicro - 04 Dec 2008 20:31 - 7482 of 11003

Seymour Clearly:

Your sparkies should NOT be running the network cables in the same conduit channel as the mains cables. They must be in a different channel, otherwise it is a breach of the wiring regs. Physical proximity is not the issue, insulation is, so office conduits usually have three channels for mains, network and phone.

Richgit69 - 04 Dec 2008 22:19 - 7483 of 11003

IE keeps opening IE windows for pop adverts alot recently??? did the usually stuff virus check and spyware but nothing found?

Norton Security has also started to tell me product key is not right today, so need to find a good Free Firewall/Virsus/spyware checker all in one wud be best

Also got Zonealarm Security Suite 7.0483
SuperAntiSpyware
Avasti 4.8

Seymour Clearly - 04 Dec 2008 23:49 - 7484 of 11003

You're a bit late Dezzer. Plasterboard's gone on now!! Just have to live with it. Anyway, it's for the kids bedrooms, and I haven't got the router end wired through yet.

Thanks anyway :-)

foale - 05 Dec 2008 10:23 - 7485 of 11003

thanks for the advice guys will have a look a bit later...encouraged that someone said my HDD may not be at fault...

amazingly very uptodate with back ups and so only 3 days data at risk...
pics etc safely backed up elsewhere...

kernow - 05 Dec 2008 12:32 - 7486 of 11003

A bit of feedback fwiw - my ASUS eee has arrived and set up. It came with XP, Star Office (the Sun equivalent of Open Office I think) ppt viewer, msn and skype preloaded. I thought the lack of an optical drive would be a problem. Not at all. I've just copied installation discs to a usb stick and installed Office and other things easily and can now have all my presentations on the 80gb hdd plus calendar and contacts. 1gb ram seems to cope fine. The display is small of course but clear enough and the keyboard/touchpad are little different to my main machine for ease of use.
I've also eset nod antivirus preinstalled - never heard of it but it is working fine and I suspect I'll be asked to pay after a trial period in which case my AVG will replace it.
Battery life is incredible - all morning yesterday as a trial while I set it up.
All in all at 225 delivered a wonderful buy for use in my lecturing and taking to Spain.

ThePublisher - 05 Dec 2008 12:47 - 7487 of 11003

kernow,

I've been tracking the eee since it was announced.

As I need to use some Windows photographic software that probably does not work with Linux I've not been tempted yet.

Which particular spec is yours?

You mention the 80gb hdd. Presumably that's a USB add on? Does that not use quite a bit of battery power?

TP

kernow - 05 Dec 2008 13:10 - 7488 of 11003

TP - the hard drive is integral with 80gb on the 904 and if it does use a lot of battery I've not noticed - at least 4 hrs almost continuous use yesterday.
I was in favour of giving linux a go as a blow against the Gates empire. Open Office looks very good but like you I have one app. (my internet dongle) which only runs on windows. I still considered installing linux in dual boot but all the articles I read suggested this could cause issues that this amateur couldn't understand let alone solve :-(

Optimist - 05 Dec 2008 13:22 - 7489 of 11003

TP

Your asking a lot to run graphics applications on a small processor. One with the Intel Atom processor you would be better but the Windows versions of those are getting expesive.

I've just bought the Linux Version of the Acer Aspire 1. It is a very capable machine for 210 but I'm not sure if I'd want XP on it. I've installed rdesktop which means I can run power hungry programs on my main desktop. I'm not sure whether rdesktop can handle 24bit colour though.

Optimist - 05 Dec 2008 13:30 - 7490 of 11003

Kernow

If you like the Linux apps then checkout Portabkeapps.com it is a suite of free stand alone apps that run on Windows. Most of the common Linux apps are there and they don't need installing so they don't slow your computer when your not using them.

ThePublisher - 05 Dec 2008 13:56 - 7491 of 11003

Opt,

I'd use a solid state hard drive laptop primarly to download pictures from a tethered camera. To do that I need the Canon USB interface driver to work (and how I'd find out whether that does under Linux is anyone's guess) and also a programme that links and displays the images called DLSR Downloader

I'd then use it for holidays as my e:mail and web contact device - but here I am sure the Linux equiv of Portable Apps will do all I'd ever need.

TP

Optimist - 05 Dec 2008 14:30 - 7492 of 11003

TP

Yes, I see you need Windows.

Be very careful with solid state drives in general and particularly with the EEE.

Most SSD are not optimised for Windows, and apparently the 16GB EEE 900 series has a fast 4GB drive with the OS on and an incredibly slow 12 GB for everything else. The Windows machines must be different, but be careful.

Seymour Clearly - 05 Dec 2008 14:43 - 7493 of 11003

If I want to store copies of documents on my hard drive, is it quicker / better / smaller to store them as pdf or jpg files?

kernow - 05 Dec 2008 14:54 - 7494 of 11003

Optimist - thanks and I've taken a look. Not for me though as my original thought was to buy a linux version and banish Gates altogether - just my contrarian nature I suppose as I knew nothing about Linux/open office et al until last week. However this is just wishful thinking until all apps can run under linux and that's never going to happen I suspect e.g. I still have to keep IE around as some internet sites I use don't like firefox

Optimist - 05 Dec 2008 15:12 - 7495 of 11003

SC

I suspect that it is slower and that you get a larger file size with PDF but it is better than JPEG for documents.

JPEG is designed for pictures and as it compresses the image, the saved version is never quite as good as the original. PDF is designed for documents and should reproduce them perfectly. Make sure that you have a decent program to create them though - their must be a reason why Adobe get away with charging so much.

Seymour Clearly - 05 Dec 2008 15:46 - 7496 of 11003

Thanks, we just need to be able to read the documents, not analyse them. Will go with jpeg I think.

SEADOG - 06 Dec 2008 08:51 - 7497 of 11003

SC
If you use JPEG to copy documents I have found that if you try to enlarge them the print goes to pixels very quickly and are unreadable on screen. SD
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