I really wish Windows File History had a better UI where you could navigate by date and see an overview of previous versions—a calendar feature would be really useful
Ha! Watching two ex-engineers having trouble trying to dismantle a broken printer... I can see the exact way to do it from here, but they are adamant they know how to get it.
Also, CPU is cool to the touch and it does not seem to matter if the heatsink is on tight
@JourneymanGeek its one beep, and it seems to be a "reset beep". I.e. It does not turn on again if connectted to power until that beep happens (if you disconnect the power, and replug in, it starts immediately)
Also, no change if RAM is in or not, or HD, or keyboard
While searching for a fix for my broken ThinkVantage Power Manager, I came across a forum post suggesting that I press the power button ten times after disconnecting power to the machine. At first I thought it was a joke or a troll, but there are other reports suggesting the same thing — or very ...
Anyone know of a NAS which can act like a regular USB drive to download files from? Like.. you take your laptop, plug into the NAS, and it will appear like a hard drive to the laptop, so you can "download" files from it.
I mean, it seems like a terribly useful feature, but I don't know if any of the USB ports on a NAS do that. Mine certainly can't do it—it'd rather try to use the laptop as a disk.
I have a satellite video reciever that can store (save) movies on an attched USB hard disk (FAT32 or NTFS). I there an NAS-System out there that can act as a dumb hard disk attached via USB towards the video reciever??
Whhat I am looking for is a NAS that my satellite reciever will accpept as a ...
So I'm thinking about which NAS to buy. Spending the money and configuring it isn't such a big problem, but having someone take care of it for 5+ years is.
You'd have to check if the RAID is intact, if all the drives are working, have a good and working replication of it somewhere, etc.
So my workplace decided on a new CMS I know nothing about and I have to learn it from scratch. Oh, and they want a decade-old site migrated in a week. .___.
windows should have its own uninstaller, im sick of crappy installers not properly uninstalling things now I gotta waste hours trying to manually remove junk
how do I just take ownership of all subfolders and folders on C:/
I cant even get into the start menu folder
trying deamon tools
cant even take ownership of a junk desktop shortcut...
if this is supposed to be close to the final build of windows 10 forget it
And Windows has their own installer, but they need it to be customizable for the developers to ensure their product works properly. And the Start Menu folder is at %APPDATA%\Local\Microsoft\Start Menu, since Windows Vista
And as stated above, don't use Daemon Tools if you can help it
@DragonLord The internals of the ADF don't break down very often. It's the feed module, which is modular that is the most common issue. It's also considered a consumable and user replaceable. So they end up having a high retail cost.
@allquixotic Mind you, I haven't A/C at my office (for a year now (despite the replacements being sitting on the corner for the last 2 months (so most of the team just brings fans from home))).
So now I am just sitting at someone else's desk in some other office, waiting for the sun to set or the traffic to clear. Whatever comes first.
@MichaelFrank I don't remember my last power outage at home. At work, our last power outage was, let me see, that'd be last Monday sir. (30min, twice in a row)
@snipe Using network boot, loading Windows isn't necessarily a step of booting
> When using PXE the boot process is changed from the normal order to: Power on –> BIOS –> Network Card’s PXE stack –> Network Boot Program (NBP) downloaded using TFTP from server to Client’s RAM –> NBP’s responsibility to perform the next step (a.k.a. 2nd stage boot).
> Protip: Don't get the Venti tumbler unless you order a lot of Venti drinks. It's huge and you might not want to carry it all the time. Also, unlike the Grande tumbler, the Venti tumbler is too tall to fit in the Starbucks Mastrena espresso machine, reducing the environmental benefit as the shots will have to be pulled into another cup, likely a Short cup. (At least a Short cup takes fewer resources to make than a Venti Iced cup, but it's not ideal.)