I'm all for keeping a computer clean, but running all manner of random malware 'fixes' without making any attempt at identifying the problem? potential for a lot of damage
SBSD/MBAM are safe enough, generally. But digging into the startup/services menus? especially for the rather large number of novice menus? lawd.
> Higher-speed DDR2 DIMMs are compatible with lower-speed DDR2 DIMMs although the motherboard or CPU memory controller will be bound to the limits of the lower-performance modules.
so, pretty much, go with anything PC2-4200 or higher
For several reasons: 1) Security. Please trust the pretty blue eyes of the cloud provider 2) Security. (How secure is the link to the cloud, from anywhere?) 3) What happens if things crash. Are you just customer number 1879879879879? 4) What happens if the cloud provider goes bankrupt?
when you don't have full control over every machine and networking node, inevitably security is going to suffer. maybe not all that much, but it will suffer
The last case is interesting, because the caretakers task is to make money and over here (s)he is allowed to break older contracts. So if selling your data to the competition yields more money than selling your data back to you ...
GEGL (Generic Graphics Library) is a graph based image processing framework.
GEGL provides infrastructure to do demand based cached non destructive image editing on larger than RAM buffers. Through babl it provides support for a wide range of color models and pixel storage formats for input and output.
Have you changed something in the Windows Services ? Have you disabled the Service Software Licensing?
You must do this through safe mode.
Remove all floppy disks, CDs, and DVDs from your computer, and then restart your computer.
Click the Start button, click the arrow next to the Lock button...
I am not up to date on all the details, but the very short version is as follows:
1) CPU want to read something. It sets the address it want to read from on the address bus and sets the R/W line to READ. 2) RAM detects this and selects the right data and puts it on the databus. 3) CPU reads data from the data bus.
All nice and synchronous.
Now what happens if the CPU is much faster than the RAM, or if setting stuff takes time?
Say CPU want to write something 1) CPU sets the address on the address bus and the data on the databus WAITS (1 clock or more) until it is stable 2) Only after it is stable the CPU sets WRITE state (else writes might have gone to the wrong place) 3) RAM selects the right place to write to (terms as RAS and CAS select belong here) 4) RAM writes the contents
Somewhere around item 2) in the first example and 3) in the second example you will find RAS and CAS timings. More or less CLx