Crocodile
- 16 Dec 2002 03:59
Bobcolby
- 02 Mar 2009 11:28
- 7807 of 11003
Opti
Thanks for post
I opted for dual partition rather than Virtual when I installed ubuntu from The computeractive ultimate guide to Linux. The main reason being that my desktop would not install SP3 on XP, my OS is completely legal but nothing in ms knowledge base helped and the forums are full of people with the same problem. So Linux was last stop before boot hill.
If it was not screwing around with my wifes Vista mail, I would be inclined to persevere. However she who must be obeyed gives me a very hard time when she cannot receive emails
I have tried several different single graphics cards no luck with dual display
My wife is going off for a week in spain soon so will give it another go then
ExecLine
- 02 Mar 2009 13:12
- 7808 of 11003
Hilary
I paid for and am using
SuperAntispyware Professional.
It's easy to understand. It updates once a day (or more if you like) and seems extremely thorough. I also found a Voucher Code on the Internet to get a bit of a discount and I also bought a lifetime subscription and the ability to use it on more than one machine.
You might like to check it out yourself. Anyhow, I do recommend it to everyone.
"SUPERAntiSpyware will remove ALL the Spyware, NOT just the easy ones!"
Optimist
- 02 Mar 2009 13:31
- 7810 of 11003
In the past, I've recommended
Crucial as a memory supplier because of their excelent quality and service.
Whilst I have never found anything wrong with their quality or service,
Dabs.com also give an excellent service and supplied the same Crucial branded memory for 10% less. The only problem is that they are owned by BT.
jeffmack
- 02 Mar 2009 13:35
- 7811 of 11003
Another lesson to learn. I ordered memory from crucial for a new Acer Aspire one netbook. Only after getting the memory I decided to see how to install it. You almost have to take the thing to pieces to install extra memory, so I didnt risk it. There was a good video on Utube explaining how to do it but too risky for me.
Optimist
- 02 Mar 2009 13:47
- 7813 of 11003
Jeff
If you check the
Aspire forums, there are several well described methods. I've got the 1GB model which can only be upgraded to 1.5GB so I haven't tried it yet but I'm sure to be tempted before too long.
Richgit69
- 06 Mar 2009 12:19
- 7814 of 11003
Anyone know of away of stopping or pausing Norton IS, as it keeps deleting a downloaded file when I know its clean
ThePublisher
- 06 Mar 2009 17:45
- 7815 of 11003
In my XP days I burnt photos to a CD with Nero.
I have Vista now and I gather there are problems with Nero - and the inbuilt 'burn' within Vista seems ridiculously slow.
What do the gurus use, please?
TP
Seymour Clearly
- 08 Mar 2009 20:23
- 7816 of 11003
And as TP has brought the subject up, I'm trying to burn some MP3s to CD using Windows media player. The first album I want to transfer is about 37 Mb, the second one a similar size, so on a 700 Mb CD I should get in the region of 15-20 albums, Media player tells me that after the first album there's only room for a few more tracks before I need a new CD. I'm pretty sure the fault lies somewhere in Media Player but I can't work out what it is. Anyone got any clues? The tracks are all recorded at 128 kbps.
Haystack
- 08 Mar 2009 21:26
- 7818 of 11003
I think the problem may lie with the fact that music on a CD album is in an uncompressed format.
The .cda files are just 1k long and are pointers to where the physical files are on the disk. On the other hand .mp3 files are stand alone files and are heavily compressed. That is why the quality of a .mp3 will be poorer than a .cda due the 'lossy' comresssed format. The .cda files on a CD are also poorer quality than that of a real old fashioned LP due to the sampling that occurs.
It may be that if you copy CD to CD with tqo drives then you will retain the quality. Otherwise the transition from CD to .mp3 and back to CD again will lose quality.
It all depends on what you want to do with the files. If you want to play them on a CD player then burning them is the right way as .mp3 files wont play that way.
A CD is actually full of .wav files which are uncompressed. That is why a CD-R will say something like 60 minutes of music. But it is in uncompressed .wav format.
If you genuinely want a CD full of .mp3 files then put your CD in the drive and in the file manager just copy them all directly to the CD as if it was to another folder. Then you will get a huge number on the CD. It will just be of use as backup and you won't be able to play them.
Seymour Clearly
- 08 Mar 2009 21:44
- 7819 of 11003
Ah but I want to play them in my car - I have one CD slot which plays MP3 files. I think there's something wrong with my system really because it then wouldn't copy them - tried to, then said there's something wrong with the CD - however i managed to burn some .wav files earlier (onto a different disc).
edit I decided to try to copy some files to CD using Explorer and it said "there is an error in the writing process. The disc you have attempted to write to may no longer be usable."
Sounds like there's something fundamentally wrong with my DVD RW drive
Seymour Clearly
- 08 Mar 2009 23:22
- 7821 of 11003
I suppose it's buy, remove the old, put in the new, boot up & get it installed - is it that simple?
Thinking about this one:
Pioneer dual layer DVD RW drive
I'm running XP home.
ThePublisher
- 09 Mar 2009 10:16
- 7822 of 11003
"When you look at the cost of a DVD RW drive then it is hardly surprising that they go wrong."
That may be my problem. The fitted RW drive seemed to want over a day to write my jpgs. I have an old external TDK one and that did the job in about ten minutes - using the Vista burn facility.
TP
ptholden
- 10 Mar 2009 22:06
- 7824 of 11003
Not sure if anyone can help with this problem, I have a feeling it might be a little too complex to solve via a bb, but I'll explain anyway. I've just invested in a vodaphone mobile broadband stick which should run off 3G or GPRS. I had a few problems installing but eventually managed to sort of get it up and running, however, the software reported 'no device' on a regular basis, then it would find the device and try to reconnect. Recoonection lasts only a short while before dropping out. I've checked Device Manager whilst the programme is running and it constantly jumps between working ok and not connected. I've tried different USB ports with no improvement. I've ruled out the lack of a signal and the stick itself. I think I have a software or hardware conflict but have no idea how to resolve. I recall some years ago I had a similar problem when trying to use a nokia phone as a modem on the same pc (Sony vaio) the same phone worked fine with a dell. Grateful for any advice.
Pth
banjomick
- 10 Mar 2009 22:24
- 7825 of 11003
Evening pth,
I have one of them there sticks and marvelous they are too.I didn't have any problems at all,which is not much help to you.
It will pick up 3G first and if not available then GPRS which you should be able to pick up just about anywhere.
It sounds like a similar issue that I have with a WD Passport (port.Hard drive) and my USB ports which I keep meaning to sort as it works on my other machines.
Is it for a laptop if so then have you tried it on another PC?
banjomick
- 10 Mar 2009 22:35
- 7826 of 11003
Just to add that when the WD Passport (used to work in this machine) is plugged into any USB port it's as though it's getting kicked out by the comp.Keeps making a 'dunk dunk' noise every 10 seconds and in d/manager the screen updates itself in time to the noise.
The only sensible advice found on the internet was to get rid of all the USB programs and reload as required but I haven't tried this and would not suggest that you do either.I'm sure one of the experts here will have the answer.........