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Install Gentoo posted:Usually it's because your antivirus software automatically gets invoked to scan them, and sometimes they just get caught up. UAC filters can slow it down too especially if the installers don't include manifests.
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# ? May 9, 2013 03:23 |
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# ? May 22, 2024 17:57 |
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Grawl posted:If that doesn't have it, nothing else will. Bad luck. It's an internal HDD and apparently Seagate decided to force the users to save a little bit of power by turning it off or semi-off very quickly when it is not in use.
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# ? May 9, 2013 12:27 |
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Anyone have a recommendation for some kind of error reporting program? I know Task Scheduler can be activated by events, and that those events can be errors in the system log. Problem is, the error my particular program generates is a generic "error 1001" (or whatever it is) which works fairly well but then I learned that other programs can trigger an error with this same number code, which will trigger my script and gently caress everything up. I need something that can monitor a specific program, and then use its closing (error or otherwise) as a trigger for a script (AHK script). Any ideas?
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# ? May 9, 2013 16:09 |
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Install Gentoo posted:Usually it's because your antivirus software automatically gets invoked to scan them, and sometimes they just get caught up. Intrepid00 posted:UAC filters can slow it down too especially if the installers don't include manifests. So you're saying that it's the fault of the writers of the installer, and not a problem with my OS or something? That's a relief, I guess, but it's still frustrating sometimes.
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# ? May 9, 2013 16:16 |
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PirateBob posted:How do I keep a hard drive from switching off? I've already tried setting it to Never and to a high number of minutes in advanced power settings, but to no avail. Put a small paging file on the drive. It will never spin down. fookolt posted:Nope! I'm using this bad boy: Are you using a PS2 adapter?
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# ? May 9, 2013 16:48 |
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WorkingStiff posted:Put a small paging file on the drive. It will never spin down. Nope; straight to USB.
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# ? May 9, 2013 18:16 |
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fookolt posted:Nope; straight to USB. If you have a PS/2 port, try that. I don't think N-Key Rollover (NKRO) works anyway if you aren't using a PS/2 port, which is one of the reasons why those keyboards are so drat spendy. Also, make sure Legacy USB Support is enabled in your BIOS.
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# ? May 9, 2013 18:46 |
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Mak0rz posted:So you're saying that it's the fault of the writers of the installer, and not a problem with my OS or something? That's a relief, I guess, but it's still frustrating sometimes. Well sometimes its also the fault of the antivirus software, but yes basically. The computer gets caught up verifying things before running it, but you kinda want that to happen instead of allowing any program to waltz on through.
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# ? May 9, 2013 18:59 |
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Install Gentoo posted:Well sometimes its also the fault of the antivirus software, but yes basically. The computer gets caught up verifying things before running it, but you kinda want that to happen instead of allowing any program to waltz on through. Good to know, thanks!
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# ? May 9, 2013 19:09 |
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Windows 7 slow smb transfers? At home I can transfer large files win7 to win7 on gig-e at 64MB+/s. At work doing desktop tech stuff we setup a couple win7 enterprise desktops with big drives my boss bought as temp file servers (for a Win7 upgrade project) and we're getting 1.25MB/s at best sometimes as slow as 300KB/s. Result is the same whether plugged in to our expensive cisco gigabit core switch or an 8 port netgear gigabit disconnected from corp lan. Since its a win7 upgrade project, clients are xp at first win7 later, no real difference, way slow going up or down. What's going on? I read some things today about disabling autotuning (lol) or remote differential compression. Tried both of those on the temp-servers, not clients, no change in speed. Any other clues? Was thinking of trying something super easy and *nix, I used to play around with freenas way back when but we already have big drives with lots of stuff formatted ntfs, thought about trying xp for the servers but can't find any xp machines other than the migrating ones and no local real servers with any amount of real storage, but surely this can be fixed on the existing win7 fileservers. edit: anything I've said here about speeds is of course based on just one client accessing the share at a time. I've transferred numerous terabytes of data to/from xp fileshares at work before and in the last couple years lots through win7 fileshares at home with no slowness, why is win7 at work a problem? never mind all this It was only one model desktop affected, just needed newer nic driver from lenovo. Vin BioEthanol fucked around with this message at 16:31 on May 10, 2013 |
# ? May 10, 2013 01:12 |
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I recently had a lot of trouble installing the kb2817183 update, where installation would just not progress. I even left it on overnight twice. Especially as it would install whenever I put the computer to sleep or shut it off, I was worried about force shutting it down too many times. Then it started giving me a 'restart in 10m/whatever' prompt which was troublesome. Eventually after some Googling I tried disabling MSE and on the next shutdown it was able to install. Was that the real solution that I should do first if this happens in the future, or was it just coincidence?
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# ? May 10, 2013 04:21 |
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Can anyone recommend a really, really lightweight contact manager? We have a super-powerful CRM system at work, but a) it's a big clunky and slow and b) it's only designed to record 'significant' transactions and notes. I want something that simply lets me record things like 1 sentence notes about phone calls for maybe 20 contacts with dates. At the moment, I use excel with one line per transaction - it works well, but it's a bit messy to insert a new row for each transaction, then screw around with borders to separate customers. Plus, it rapidly get unwieldy. Outlook's CRM add-on looks great, but MS has messed around with licensing and we don't have a license for it now.
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# ? May 10, 2013 09:24 |
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Not sure where else to post this: does traceroute still help in a situation like this? What am I doing wrong? Info: We use a database hosted offsite by the vendor. (Don't want to say much more about it since I'm sort of identifiable: just think of your standard offsite software-as-a-service database.) We've had major slowness on the backend over the past 4-5 days, and the vendor is insisting they see nothing on their end. I suggested running traceroute to see if their server could be documented as unresponsive, but it looks like they're set up to refuse traceroute requests. Is there any way to document the slowness and collect data aside from keeping a user-edited incident log (which is what we're doing now)? Are there any tricks to the Win7 tracert command that I should be using?
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# ? May 10, 2013 15:25 |
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The Macaroni posted:Not sure where else to post this: does traceroute still help in a situation like this? What am I doing wrong? Sounds like they are blocking pings then... You may need some cooperation on their end. I had a remote office complaining about latency. The network guys said the WAN link was never saturated, so nothing they could do, no evidence. I set up ping logging on about 6 different machines. I logged pings between the remote offices server, the user complaining, from one of my Domain Controllers in the data center, and then everything pinged our EMC storage. I ran this logging for 3 days or so, pulled the log files and graphed out the latency over time. Using this, I was able to prove massive WAN link latency, just outside of this remote offices edge router. With evidence, the network guys had no choice but to investigate and found there was an issue with the ATT MPLS. The point being, you are on the right track, but if you cannot ping the machines involved, its going to be tough. EDIT: Sounds like there are a few apps for this sort of situation, they run at higher layers, might be able to connect. http://pwhois.org/lft/ http://iperf.sourceforge.net/ Dyscrasia fucked around with this message at 16:55 on May 11, 2013 |
# ? May 11, 2013 16:50 |
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Hmm, I am not sure where to ask this, but this seems to be the safest bet. I have a media PC in one room with XBMC on it. I would like to find a piece of software that will allow me to listen to whatever is on that PC from another location in the house. I don't need video, and I don't really need them to be in sync - this isn't for entertaining, it's just for me. I am fine with them falling out of sync. Location 1 will be far enough away from location 2 that I am not even thinking about that. I'd simply like to be able to listen to music on my media PC, and if I choose, let it keep playing there, but go off to another location to do another task, and bring up an application or a locally hosted webpage, which'll let me listen to the audio from that computer. Is there a feasible way to accomplish this?
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# ? May 12, 2013 03:29 |
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You can just store them on your media PC and play them over the network using foobar.
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# ? May 12, 2013 07:11 |
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No I'm sorry, I want to hear the media PC from another PC, even if it's a second or two latent.
MC Fruit Stripe fucked around with this message at 07:35 on May 12, 2013 |
# ? May 12, 2013 07:31 |
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You could set up a streaming broadcast, and listen to it on the other PC with whatever. The only easy way I know offhand to do that is Winamp's Shoutcast.
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# ? May 12, 2013 07:52 |
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MC Fruit Stripe posted:No I'm sorry, I want to hear the media PC from another PC, even if it's a second or two latent. Uses VLC to stream, so pretty easy to hook into from another machine.
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# ? May 12, 2013 21:59 |
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MC Fruit Stripe posted:No I'm sorry, I want to hear the media PC from another PC, even if it's a second or two latent. foobar2000's UPnP component allows you to listen in to foobar's audio output from another machine without affecting it, exactly like you're talking about, as well as control the foobar2000 instance on your media PC if you need to pause it or the like.
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# ? May 12, 2013 22:35 |
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Looking for some recommendations for online file storage, à la dropbox or spideroak. What I'm looking for is something that will completely take the place of local storage instead of being a backup or syncing service. Integration with explorer so it can be targeted like any other drive is a must. I'd rather not go with dropbox for security reasons, and I'm having trouble navigating through what spideroak's capable of--it seems to be mostly geared towards backups and syncing between devices which I'm not really looking for.
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# ? May 13, 2013 21:44 |
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Not sure if this specifically a Windows question, but I can't think of where else to ask. Is there any VPN site people recommend for US IPs? I only need it to browse a webpage (a clothing apparel store) that blocks non-US traffic, not access digital media, so I'd rather keep it low-cost (ie: free). It's not that I can't google, but putting "free VPN" into the search bar brings up a ton of results, and I don't which one I can trust.
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# ? May 13, 2013 21:46 |
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stubblyhead posted:Looking for some recommendations for online file storage, à la dropbox or spideroak. What I'm looking for is something that will completely take the place of local storage instead of being a backup or syncing service. Integration with explorer so it can be targeted like any other drive is a must. I'd rather not go with dropbox for security reasons, and I'm having trouble navigating through what spideroak's capable of--it seems to be mostly geared towards backups and syncing between devices which I'm not really looking for. All I've tried is Google Drive, and you can use it as an almost regular directory where you store and edit your stuff. Things will get one-way synced to Google as your connection permits. On anything but a lightning fast upload it sucks rear end to work with, of course.
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# ? May 13, 2013 23:51 |
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Pilsner posted:Must it act like an actual drive? I would greatly prefer that, whether it's presented as a drive, or a special folder like Google Drive or Dropbox creates, or what have you. I've used google drive in a very limited fashion on a project at work, and I seem to recall it syncing poo poo up. What I want is to get my stuff into their servers so I can access it from other computers without it needing to have a local synced copy on each machine and without needing to go through a web interface to get at it. Agent software is fine though.
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# ? May 14, 2013 00:03 |
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On that note, is there a roll-your-own Dropbox-esque software suite for people who have a file server running at home and want to be their own cloud? Ideally I set this up and do all the technical legwork and then hand people an MSI and say "hey it's like dropbox, you just have to point it at this IP address."
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# ? May 14, 2013 00:22 |
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Eikre posted:On that note, is there a roll-your-own Dropbox-esque software suite for people who have a file server running at home and want to be their own cloud? Ideally I set this up and do all the technical legwork and then hand people an MSI and say "hey it's like dropbox, you just have to point it at this IP address." lifehacker did a post on goodsync, you could give that a shot. but if you want each person to have their own profile/folder, not sure how well it'll do that.
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# ? May 14, 2013 03:16 |
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I'm not sure if this is the right place to ask, but anyway... My friend is disabled, she's confined to a powered wheelchair and has limited use of her arms. Her hands work OK, but her muscles are gradually deteriorating which means it's hard for her to hold her head steady (the chair has a headrest, of course) and she has to walk her arms around on a desk by pulling with her fingers; it's kind of fascinating to watch, actually. She spends much of her time on-line, and is looking for an application that can read to her and more importantly speak for her - she's hard to understand because she can only move her jaw a small amount. Something that can output text as speech, either on-screen or as something she types in. Her desktop is running Windows, I don't know the exact version but I strongly suspect Windows 7. Thanks in advance!
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# ? May 14, 2013 04:49 |
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ExecuDork posted:I'm not sure if this is the right place to ask, but anyway...
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# ? May 14, 2013 09:14 |
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I think the go-to text-to-speech software is Dragon Naturally Speaking, but honestly I don't have any data to back to this up.
dpkg chopra fucked around with this message at 15:40 on May 14, 2013 |
# ? May 14, 2013 12:21 |
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Ur Getting Fatter posted:I think the Go-To text-to-speech software is Dragon Naturally Speaking, but honestly I don't have any data to back to this up. I've heard Jaws for Windows is pretty good, too.
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# ? May 14, 2013 15:29 |
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stubblyhead posted:I would greatly prefer that, whether it's presented as a drive, or a special folder like Google Drive or Dropbox creates, or what have you. I've used google drive in a very limited fashion on a project at work, and I seem to recall it syncing poo poo up. What I want is to get my stuff into their servers so I can access it from other computers without it needing to have a local synced copy on each machine and without needing to go through a web interface to get at it. Agent software is fine though. Have you tried Microsoft's SkyDrive yet? It has pretty darn good Windows integration, as you can imagine.
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# ? May 14, 2013 18:50 |
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Dyscrasia posted:Sounds like they are blocking pings then... You may need some cooperation on their end.
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# ? May 15, 2013 14:46 |
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Alright, I've been skimming through SHSC and even the Dorkroom for a while and can't find a more appropriate thread than this so I'll just ask, as google hasn't returned any results to help either. I have Adobe Photoshop CS3 and I knew Adobe did a 3-step upgrade because I had upgraded it from PS7 previously. With all this talk of "The Cloud" and them moving to a subscription, I figure I may as well upgrade it to CS6 before that happens. Well it turns out the deadline to do that via Adobe.com with CS3 and 4 was December 31, 2012. My question is, there are still retailers with CS6 upgrade boxes for CS3-5 for about $200, but would Adobe have disabled their functionality? I don't want to shell out the money if it isn't going to work, and I thought someone may have had this same issue in the past few months. Edit: vv Thanks, I had gone through that FAQ but didn't think any of it pertained to my question. I guess the line about "Electronic downloads for Creative Suite products will continue to be available from both Adobe.com, as well as reseller and retail partners." Could sort of imply that discontinued upgrades should still work as long as they're being sold. I'll give the upgrade a try and hopefully get a refund if it doesn't work. davebo fucked around with this message at 05:42 on May 16, 2013 |
# ? May 16, 2013 02:42 |
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davebo posted:Alright, I've been skimming through SHSC and even the Dorkroom for a while and can't find a more appropriate thread than this so I'll just ask, as google hasn't returned any results to help either. I have Adobe Photoshop CS3 and I knew Adobe did a 3-step upgrade because I had upgraded it from PS7 previously. With all this talk of "The Cloud" and them moving to a subscription, I figure I may as well upgrade it to CS6 before that happens. Well it turns out the deadline to do that via Adobe.com with CS3 and 4 was December 31, 2012. My question is, there are still retailers with CS6 upgrade boxes for CS3-5 for about $200, but would Adobe have disabled their functionality? I don't want to shell out the money if it isn't going to work, and I thought someone may have had this same issue in the past few months. Adobe seems to have updated their FAQ to cover this. That being said, CS6 appears in SA Mart now and then at amazingly discounted prices.
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# ? May 16, 2013 05:15 |
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Has anyone gotten IMAP mail to work with Outlook 2013? Mine's getting stuck at synchronizing subscription folders and it seems to be a pretty wide spread issue.
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# ? May 16, 2013 08:46 |
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Bartie posted:Has anyone gotten IMAP mail to work with Outlook 2013? Mine's getting stuck at synchronizing subscription folders and it seems to be a pretty wide spread issue. It's been working for me, though I just noticed recently that mail I'd deleted* on the Outlook side wasn't being marked deleted on the server side for some reason and that's made me kind of concerned. It's not like mail was reappearing so Outlook still knew it was "deleted" but that's not how I'm used to it behaving. * I didn't so much delete it as drag it into a local folder, but that always counted as deleted in Outlook 2010.
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# ? May 16, 2013 10:26 |
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Polsy posted:It's been working for me, though I just noticed recently that mail I'd deleted* on the Outlook side wasn't being marked deleted on the server side for some reason and that's made me kind of concerned. It's not like mail was reappearing so Outlook still knew it was "deleted" but that's not how I'm used to it behaving.
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# ? May 16, 2013 12:03 |
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Dropbox question: Is there a way to stop it from downloading everything from my account? I have it both on my desktop and laptop, and I don't really have the disk space for all my crap on my laptop.
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# ? May 16, 2013 12:36 |
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real_scud posted:I was getting it to work for me for a while, but as of about a week or two ago it stopped deleting the mail on the server, or even marking it as read. I get it working for about 10 minutes after booting and then synching just stops working altogether. What's even weirder is that after running Outlook and closing it, Thunderbird won't work either and starts having the same problems. I ran TCPview and lo, Outlook (which at this point is shut down even as a process, PID is nowhere to be found) still has connections to the IMAP-server. After closing these by force, Thunderbird at least runs normally. I suppose I'll have to make due with Thunderbird now, some upgrade.
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# ? May 16, 2013 12:40 |
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# ? May 22, 2024 17:57 |
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Boz0r posted:Dropbox question: In the settings you can choose which folders to sync.
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# ? May 16, 2013 13:31 |