@DavidPostill Shouldn't the bot stop in this case?
We might have to put in a bugfix...
You do this at your own risk. Disconnect the external HDDs. Go to "Device Manager" (Windows key, start typing "hardware"). "View" menu -> "Show hidden devices". Expand the "Disk drives" node. Right-click on the drive corresponding to the external HDD. Choose "Uninstall". Repeat as necessary. Reboot. Connect external HDD. Hope, but do not expect, the drive to work. — Andrew Morton30 mins ago
@AndrewMorton: There is no need for a disclaimer. I'll bear the risk. — bwDraco1 min ago
Am I suggesting risky activity?
Why the hell am I writing this?
Comment deleted.
...I must be out of my mind. I'm losing my sanity. Who on Earth would willingly expose themselves to liability for no reason?
We have a two-part database at cadets, one is the "backend" (storing tables only), then front ends. They talk to each other on the Z: network drive. A user needs access to an archived version at home, I used the subst command so it thought it was talking on the Z:
But if you can get into VGA mode, and remove the nVidia drivers, then tell Windows not to install it when you reboot, you'll have a functioning (albeit limited graphics) Windows
Two different things, BIOS doesn't really exist in newer computers anymore. The Windows Boot Menu is for AFTER the EUFI (or BIOS in older systems or compatibility mode) has loaded the NT Loader (NTLDR) boot program
OK, so once you get it booted, try that site for one of the methods of opening that Boot Menu (even if you need to boot from your install media to tell it to do that), and try again
EUFI rocks when you have everything working with it
The new Linux servers our district bought are now using EUFI, and boot to the Debian login prompt in under 25 seconds
i used to use bas2com to convert my qbasic applications to com applications.. and would use rawwrite to write it directly to the disk. And the OS would boot and start the com application without a mbr
UEFI on the other hand gives assholes like Microsoft the ability to mandate that your PC refuse to boot anything other than their own pre-approved boot sectors
debug is a command in DOS, OS/2 and Microsoft Windows (only in 32bit) which runs the program debug.exe (or DEBUG.COM in older versions of DOS). Debug can act as an assembler, disassembler, or hex dump program allowing users to interactively examine memory contents (in assembly language, hexadecimal or ASCII), make changes, and selectively execute COM, EXE and other file types. It also has several subcommands which are used to access specific disk sectors, I/O ports and memory addresses.
== Background ==
Traditionally, all computers and operating systems have included a maintenance function, used...
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