Last idea I have it to swap the two SATA cables for the broken drive (from ATA1 to ATA 4 or vice versa, since apparently you have the middle two SATA plugs used for the other drive and the DVD
Once that's done, you can hop back into Linux, mount the image and play with testdisk on that. We can probably go through that tomorrow - the clone will likely take several hours. Though, it's better if you have an unmodified copy somewhere, if you have enough space.
Now, if the image tool doesn't detect your drive... well...
Nvidia motherboards are not even based on an Intel platform controller hub (as they're now known) like every other Intel motherboard is these days, so yeah, their differences being so broad, the support has always been lacking
the largest and most complex IC package on any motherboard today for Intel processors is 100% standardized between vendors
@Bob I thought the Windows kernel retained binary compatibility of modules between Vista and Win10 (assuming modules were ever compiled for your architecture)? wouldn't that enable at least partially working driver support released for Vista to work on 10?
@JourneymanGeek young dog walks up to JMG in the yard while he's digging a hole to bury his old floppy disk controller -> barks, whines, sits on his haunches and turns his head, to say "I don't know what that is you have there...?! :(" -> JMG just barks like an annoyed old dog and scares the young pup away
Performance is way better than it was before. And my sister uses the '60 for gmail, marktplaats (which did not work before due to an old IE) and webbrowsing
The Covox Speech Thing (also known as Covox plug) was an external audio device attached to the computer to output digital sound. It was composed of the most primitive 8-bit DAC using a resistor ladder and an analogue signal output, and plugged into the printer port of the PC.
The circuit was marketed around 1986 by Covox, Inc of Eugene, Oregon, for about 70 USD (79.95 USD as of 1989), but as its parts were much cheaper than the complete plug, and as its design was fairly simple, people soon started to build their own variants. The plug was used long into the 1990s, as sound cards were still very...
Up to now I never realised that people actually sold those premade. It was just one of those things which you made from a few resistors.
A Laplink® Cable (also known as null-printer cable) is a cable that allows one to connect two computer s together to establish a direct cable connection. The connection is achieved via the parallel port s or USB port on the two computers. No networking hardware (such as a network interface card or a modem) is required. The cable is named after the Laplink Software Inc. software package now known as PCmover, which was designed Laplink in 1983, formerly known as Traveling Software, to make such a connection possible. Laplink now sells 4 different cable products: the Laplink Easy Transfer cable; a...
Never understood the too-chatty flag reason. I mean it is subjective in the first place and culture based. In some culture people tend to talk more and while in others there are strict rules of communication.
Some facts about this:
AMS guide for cultural differences
High-context cultures (...
@HackToHell interesting, I guess they left out the USA and China because both would take up a huge fraction of the room to put all those other smaller countries :P
"tons of space" - let's assume only 20% of the area of India is used for human domiciles. At its current population growth rate of 1.2%, India's population will double every 58 years. So in 2073 (possibly within your lifespan), 40% of the area of India will be used for human domiciles. In 2131, 80%. By 2150, 100%.
In 135 years India will be "wall to wall people". And then where do you put all the universities, cows, hospitals...? In other countries, which will be full in another ~150 years?
Of course there are, but this was the most charitable account possible of what will happen when population grows: we just continue to live happily on, magically producing food through technology and using more and more land for ourselves
We all (as in, the entire world) need to set our population growth rate down in the noise if we have any hope of reaching the year 3000 as a species. A growth rate of 0.001% would buy us a couple millennia to figure out how to get off this rock :P
I would like to propose to somehow notify a rejected edit.
Meanwhile the accepted edit give a +2 and it is somehow notified in the Recent Inbox Messages, the rejected one is difficult to find [1,2] and have to be searched for.
If it happens that someone is not interested to see each moment th...
Monaco is the world’s most densely populated country and second-smallest independent nation; with a population of just 32,410 and an area of 1.96 square kilometers (485 acres),
You stated:
It is possible that he/she forgets about that edit and miss even the comment that sometimes are given with the rejection.
Unlikely, as the next time they sumbit an edit they will see a warning about the last reject:
Kevin implemented this as described below. One rejected edi...
I currently have four identically sized HDDs in RAID-10 on an Adaptec 8805. Unfortunately this controller can't do read/write caching of the array's blocks on SSDs attached to the RAID controller.
I now have several SSDs (two right now, possibly expanding to four later) and would like to utiliz...
I am sick and tired of @qasdfdsaq passive aggressive comments towards me. I have tried to ignore him and flag his comments but he clearly knows how to rub me the wrong way and does it ON PURPOSE
He will find comments I made months, and even years, and ping me just to indicate I was wrong
If the heads were stuck on the drive then they are likely damaged and will need replacing. Head stiction (google.co.uk/search?q=head+stiction) doesn't just happen for fun. These days a head crash is just as likely to damage the heads as they are the platter. While Ramhound is wrong as usual, I would say a drive failing in 6 months would have been far better sent back to the retailer for replacement, unless you were desperate to recover the data. — qasdfdsaq28 mins ago
> ...Ramhound is wrong as usual...
There are indications of trolling. I'll look into it.
He never goes into details. When pushed for feedback to improve my answers ( which he admits he downvoted ) he provides none. What little is given when asked for specifics or the chance to fix the information himself he never acts on it. When I provide my own feedback he spends his time trying to defend the content instead of just considering it. He deliberately attempts to bait me into an argument.