Oh no! More boring computer problems! Oh no!

Message Bookmarked
Bookmark Removed
Not all messages are displayed: show all messages (1739 of them)
cool. i did have a quick look at it last night and it is the usual dreamweaver mess of tables (triple nested, some with only a single row and single cell = pointless) but just copy and modify what's already there and it'll be fine.

what you could do is change the a:active colour so that links don't disappear when you click on them 8)

koogs (koogs), Thursday, 2 March 2006 09:13 (twenty years ago)

How do I get my phonebook off my mobile phone onto my work PC. I have paired the laptop and phone no problem but what can I use instead of the Mac iSync and Address Book to copy store and manipulate my phone numbers?

Ed (dali), Thursday, 2 March 2006 12:52 (twenty years ago)

I've got a Toshiba Satellite Pro 2100 laptop, it's kinda old, bought in 2003 but does most things pretty well. I recently upgraded the ram from 256mb to 512mb. It has two slots for ram cards, one has a 512mb card in and the other slot is empty. Today I bought another 512mb card and put it into the spare slot but when I turned the laptop back on it just went BEEEEP BEEEEP BEEEP and the screen stayed black.

I went back to the shop and the shop guy told me that all it means is that the BIOS needs updating, an easy enough job. I've just tried to update the BIOS now and it says 'You do not need to update BIOS'. So now I'm stumped. Have I wasted £40 on a useless bit of plastic or can I sort it out so my laptop can have 1gb of ram? Is a laptop from 2003 likely to be capable of managing 1gb of ram?

Affectian (Affectian), Monday, 13 March 2006 22:23 (twenty years ago)

Sounds like a memory incompatability or bad stick. Try moving the stick to the other slot and see if it boots normally. The limit for your system is 1024mb, so this shouldn't be a problem. If this fails, exchange the RAM for another similar stick wherever you purchased it.

ng-unit, Tuesday, 14 March 2006 04:50 (twenty years ago)

so I can't read my secondary hard drive that has thousands of mp3s on it. should I pay for data recovery, or is there something else I can do?

Sym Sym (sym), Tuesday, 14 March 2006 06:14 (twenty years ago)

Try running a disk scan on it first. Start -> Run -> type "cmd" (no quotes) -> type "cd f:" (no quotes, and the "f" refers to the drive letter -- if it normally mounts as something else, "d" or "g" or whatever, use that) -> type "chkdsk /r" (no quotes) -> type "y" for yes -> reboot

You may not be able to get that far, in which case you could run a hard drive recovery utility to harvest the data. I can't think of any good ones that are free, but they may reveal themselves to you after a google search.

ng-unit, Tuesday, 14 March 2006 12:41 (twenty years ago)

Xpost x 2, thanks ng-unit. Just emailed Toshiba and found out that my laptop can't cope with more than 512mb of ram. Wish I knew this before splurging £40 on a useless bit of plastic. Ngh. (thanks for the advice though).

Sym Sym, not sure if a hard drive works the same way but I had a memory card full of photos that became corrupt. I downloaded PHOTORECOVERY 3.07 and it retrieved them all no probs. This probably wouldn't work for you but it's worth a try - try Emule for a 'demo' version..

How useful are these data recovery services? Can these people do things that average computer user cannot?

Affectian (Affectian), Tuesday, 14 March 2006 12:51 (twenty years ago)

There are two levels of data recovery. One involves removing the hard drive from your computer, putting it in an enclosure (or connecting it straight to a computer) and basically treating it as the equivalent of a USB device. The idea is that if the file system is fucked and you're booting into a clean copy of Windows, you can view it as an additional drive and copy the files over easily. Encolsures run about $25 at Comp USA/Micro Center, or you could take it to a repair shop who will charge you whatever the hourly rate is for labor (maybe $80) to copy the files.

The other is when there's physical damage to the drive (i.e. it makes horrible sounds and won't appear in the BIOS as a bootable device). Then you can send it to a company like Drive Savers and prepare to spend $600-1700 for recovery. Even if they can not recover files, you're out the $$$. They do have capabilities that the standard user or your company's tech guy don't, in that they can scrape the data off layer-by-layer and reconstitute it into something usable. Sometimes. I would never recommend this option unless you seriously can not live w/o what you have on your computer.

ng-unit, Tuesday, 14 March 2006 13:25 (twenty years ago)

any guess on how many hours it would take for the repair people to copy 16 gb of music? i'm pretty sure my stuff is recoverable, but I need to figure out if it's worth paying for.

Sym Sym (sym), Tuesday, 14 March 2006 17:50 (twenty years ago)

I am trying to wireless up Sgs's laptop. I have stuck a wireless card in it and installed the drivers; at least, the machine now recognises both the card and the fact that there is a wireless network in the vicinity.

However, it can't actually access it. When I try and set it up, it gets stuck on "renewing IP address" and fails to connect to it. Anything I can do to make it connect to our wireless network successfully?

Markelby (Mark C), Friday, 17 March 2006 11:36 (twenty years ago)

when you say 'set up' where exactly are you?

Ste (Fuzzy), Friday, 17 March 2006 11:55 (twenty years ago)

When I try and set it up, it gets stuck on "renewing IP address" and fails to connect to it

That means it's trying to find a DHCP server, and can't. Giving it a static IP address on the same subnet will work, but if you're trying to use a DHCP server it might cause clashes in the future.

Forest Pines (ForestPines), Friday, 17 March 2006 11:57 (twenty years ago)

(I'm assuming it can actually connect to the wireless network itself)

Forest Pines (ForestPines), Friday, 17 March 2006 11:58 (twenty years ago)

see i wouldn't have known that anyway

quickie - is there a way in WinXP to minimise all windows with one click, like you can in win98?

Ste (Fuzzy), Friday, 17 March 2006 12:00 (twenty years ago)

Windows Key + D

steal compass, drive north, disappear (tissp), Friday, 17 March 2006 12:01 (twenty years ago)

I send a mailout every month for this clubnight I run. I use Gmail but it takes a fair while having to click on each name in turn, and you can only send 100 at a time and 500 in one day. It's taking a few hours to sort out. Can anyone suggest a better way of doing it? Is there a program that I can stick all these email addresses in and it'll do it quickly and easily?

Affectian (Affectian), Thursday, 23 March 2006 19:58 (twenty years ago)

If I need to do that - and I used to in previous jobs - I find a computer with a decent command shell and a command-line mail-sending program; that makes it very easy to do.

Forest Pines (ForestPines), Thursday, 23 March 2006 20:06 (twenty years ago)

I don't think my pc could handle that, it's a basic laptop. I was thinking more of a program I could download and use with my gmail as the return address. Someone just mentioned a listbot or mailshot program, do you or anyone know the best place to start with them?

Affectian (Affectian), Thursday, 23 March 2006 20:13 (twenty years ago)

I'm sorry, I don't know of any myself. There are a *lot*, though, most of them optimised for dodgy purposes.

I could probably write you a command-line one myself - but you'd have to install Perl on your laptop.

Forest Pines (ForestPines), Friday, 24 March 2006 08:35 (twenty years ago)

(and you'd need to make sure you knew a few details about your ISP's outgoing mailserver, too)

Forest Pines (ForestPines), Friday, 24 March 2006 08:40 (twenty years ago)

(and it's still only a "probably" - I don't want to get you overexcited here)

Forest Pines (ForestPines), Friday, 24 March 2006 08:40 (twenty years ago)

see i wouldn't have known that anyway

quickie - is there a way in WinXP to minimise all windows with one click, like you can in win98?

-- Ste

or if you want "like Windows 98" right click on the taskbar, and turn quick launch on. That "show desktop" button will be in there. (or right-click > show desktop, even quicker).

file under cozy techno (fandango), Friday, 24 March 2006 08:52 (twenty years ago)

hi my three-year-old iBook G3 has just started fucking up. It freezes and the screen blinks after about 10 mins of use, then it seems to turn on but nothing is visible on the screen. any thoughts? is this gonna ruin it forever???

Barnaby (Barnaby), Tuesday, 4 April 2006 10:30 (twenty years ago)

MY WOES
laptop #1: purchased jan 03, works fine till april 05, when windows crashes and becomes corrupted somehow, meaning laptop will no longer restart. i am flying to LA on business this day and need laptop.

purchase laptop #2 later that day, april 05. intend to get laptop #1 fixed, but PC World cover tell me that due to it being a software problem, it is not their problem. i work out that if i reinstall windows, i get laptop working perhaps, but also lose 4 years of writing on laptop HD which i have cleverly yet to back up on External HD.

april 06, power socket on laptop #2 is seriously unreliable - making a connection is a tricky business of tweaking and twitching, and sometimes it feels like the only way to keep power going/battery juiced is to physically hold cable plug in place. this is not good.

i can get laptop #2 fixed under PC World Cover, if i could find paperwork, but will be without laptop for abt 3 days i guess, which is NOT GOOD (tho i have backed up laptop #2 HD on external HD). a friend has offered to try and get files off laptop #1 and put on external HD, but #1 it is a friend, so i don't want to pressurise them into doing it, and #2, i don't know if its possible. if it did work, i could theoretically 'fix' laptop#1 and operate it while #2 is being fixed.

argh. woe. and it is, of course, all my lazy ass's fault. but is there any way of feeding laptop #2 electricity via some source other than the power cable/socket?

as you may have guessed, i know not much about computers.

i am not a nugget (stevie), Tuesday, 4 April 2006 11:55 (twenty years ago)

I'd pressurise that friend if I were you. If they get the files off the first HD, all's well. If the laptop gets fixed, you've got a spare to use whilst the second is off being fixed.

Don't PC World do 'while you wait' repairs, or something?

James Mitchell (James Mitchell), Tuesday, 4 April 2006 12:04 (twenty years ago)

i popped in this morning to pick up the external hard drive to find lots of peeps arguing over that very fact. i'm just assuming that they suck so hard that it won't be a reasonable option.

i am not a nugget (stevie), Tuesday, 4 April 2006 12:16 (twenty years ago)

I'd pressurise that friend if I were you. If they get the files off the first HD, all's well.

so this does sound do-able, then?

i am not a nugget (stevie), Tuesday, 4 April 2006 12:16 (twenty years ago)

Sure try a linux live cd for computer #1.

http://www.frozentech.com/content/livecd.php

svend (svend), Tuesday, 4 April 2006 12:35 (twenty years ago)

all of a sudden, I can't send out attachments, through any of my webmail programs. what the hell? could this be a norton antivirus or windows firewall thing? when I try I wind up getting a javascript alert that says "document contains to data".

kyle (akmonday), Tuesday, 4 April 2006 12:59 (twenty years ago)

er, very strange, it seems to be ONLY a zip of mp3s that cannot be sent. .zips of everything else are fine, as are other documents.

kyle (akmonday), Tuesday, 4 April 2006 13:10 (twenty years ago)

thank you svend! and james too!

i am not a nugget (stevie), Tuesday, 4 April 2006 13:18 (twenty years ago)

anyone tried the hardware based firewall Stingray ST-100? http://www.stingrayinc.com/products.htm

rory@, Tuesday, 4 April 2006 19:06 (twenty years ago)

I wonder if my wireless router already give me the same protection.

if it would be safer in some ways, how would I plug it: between the modem and the wireless router?

rory@, Tuesday, 4 April 2006 19:19 (twenty years ago)

how would I plug it: between the modem and the wireless router?

Yes.

I wonder if my wireless router already give me the same protection.

Yes.

Forest Pines (ForestPines), Wednesday, 5 April 2006 05:22 (twenty years ago)

(probably)

Forest Pines (ForestPines), Wednesday, 5 April 2006 05:22 (twenty years ago)

Is it possible to set environment variables on a remote machine as part of the ssh command when logging in? In other words, I have a script that extracts my VPN IP address on my laptop, and I'd like to automatically have $DISPLAY set to this address when ssh'ing into remote machines, so I can view xterms etc from the laptop.

I was thinking something along the lines of

alias ssh="ssh username@remote-machine 'setenv DISPLAY `~/get_vpn_ip.sh`; xterm &'"

...but that doesn't seem to work.

Any ideas?

steal compass, drive north, disappear (tissp), Wednesday, 5 April 2006 10:43 (twenty years ago)

doesn't ssh -X work?

Forest Pines (ForestPines), Wednesday, 5 April 2006 10:55 (twenty years ago)

(the -X option does some monkeying around with $DISPLAY in your remote session particularly to sort this sort of thing out)

Forest Pines (ForestPines), Wednesday, 5 April 2006 10:57 (twenty years ago)

O RLY? I will check it out.

steal compass, drive north, disappear (tissp), Wednesday, 5 April 2006 10:59 (twenty years ago)

Aha, this doesn't work because ssh is picking up the wrong IP address (the non-VPN one). So I need to manually pass it the VPN IP.

steal compass, drive north, disappear (tissp), Wednesday, 5 April 2006 11:03 (twenty years ago)

Ah, no, sorry, ssh -X does work, but the job dispatcher doesn't respect it so I get no forwarding from the job cluster to the login machine (it's kinda convoluted how it all works). Bugger.

steal compass, drive north, disappear (tissp), Wednesday, 5 April 2006 11:11 (twenty years ago)

Anyway, for a more generic solution to the original question: what you could do is modify your .bashrc (or equivalent) on the remote machine so that it sets up the environment properly if you're logging in via ssh. Check for the presence of one of the ssh-specific variables such as $SSH_CONNECTION and behave appropriately.

Forest Pines (ForestPines), Wednesday, 5 April 2006 11:16 (twenty years ago)

Alternatively, another way to pass environment variables is to do this:

ssh -X user@host "VARIABLE_THERE=\"$VARIABLE_HERE\" bash -il"

Forest Pines (ForestPines), Wednesday, 5 April 2006 11:24 (twenty years ago)

i dont understand computers:(

i have a mac. i also have a linksys nslu2, and a lacie external drive. the linksys has formatted the lacie to ext3, and i mount the drive remotely and it appears as a locally connected drive. so, for, all good.

the thing is, i want to be able to do this in the terminal window. but it wont do it. something about an 'unknown or special file system'. what should i do, in the terminal to be able to mount this? (yes, i know i could just do it in finder, but i want to know why this wont work).

is it something to do with hfs and ext3? i dont know much about this, and ive tried to work it out, but i dont really get it

terry lennox. (gareth), Wednesday, 5 April 2006 17:25 (twenty years ago)

If you're mounting it as a remote drive, connected through the Linksys box, the fact that it's formatted as ext3 shouldn't make any difference. That only matters if you've connected it directly to your mac.

Try running the mount command from the terminal, without any options at all, when the drive is mounted in the Finder. That should just list all mounted drives, and their filesystem types, which should be a clue as to what options you need to pass to the mount command to mount it manually.

Forest Pines (ForestPines), Wednesday, 5 April 2006 18:26 (twenty years ago)

tangent: let's say i got a new (windows) computer and am installing a bunch of stuff. several of these programs require reboots. do i have to reboot each time or can i wait and reboot once after installing everything?

mookieproof (mookieproof), Wednesday, 5 April 2006 18:29 (twenty years ago)

ssh -X is so cute... like we actually want to run X11 apps? :D

Ichigo (ex machina), Wednesday, 5 April 2006 18:35 (twenty years ago)

You seem to be forgetting that not every computer in the world is the one on your desk.

Forest Pines (ForestPines), Wednesday, 5 April 2006 18:44 (twenty years ago)

You seem to be forgetting that X11 is awful.

Fight the Real Enemy -- Tasti D-Lite (ex machina), Wednesday, 5 April 2006 18:46 (twenty years ago)

mount command gives me

//WORKGROUP;music@LACIE/MUSIC on /Volumes/WORKGROUP;LACIE (nodev, nosuid, mounted by charltonlido)

charltonlido (gareth), Wednesday, 5 April 2006 18:47 (twenty years ago)


You must be logged in to post. Please either login here, or if you are not registered, you may register here.