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Am I losing anything by converting a displayport signal to hdmi? I'm using it for 1080p, video only. No audio through it. Edit: thanks for the quick response! Gentwise fucked around with this message at 02:47 on Oct 24, 2014 |
# ? Oct 24, 2014 02:15 |
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# ? May 6, 2024 04:05 |
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Gentwise posted:Am I losing anything by converting a displayport signal to hdmi? I'm using it for 1080p, video only. No audio through it. Not if your convertor is functioning normally.
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# ? Oct 24, 2014 02:27 |
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Sing this Corrosion posted:Well that wasn't what I was expecting but thanks for the heads-up! FYI: Don't clone it. The uncorrectable sectors means lost data. You will be copying corrupted material along with the bad. Use a file-based transfer instead of a block-based one so that you will be alerted to what you can't recover.
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# ? Oct 24, 2014 02:46 |
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Alereon posted:Clear the CMOS via the jumper on the board. Doh, forgot that my board had this and it worked like a charm, thanks! All my computer troubles lately stemmed from a hard drive dying. Got everything replaced and a new bigger hard drive now; everything is golden. My drive that was dying, magically decided it wanted to cooperate and allowed windows to run chkdsk and fix itself up enough to let me copy all the files off in Windows. Swapped drive letters and Windows is none the wiser. I ended up formatting the bad hard drive and ran chkdsk on it again and it seems to be doing OK. What do y'all do with hard drives that work but you're not comfortable putting data on it alone? Thinking I want to turn it into a tertiary backup drive. It'll be more convenient to access than my external hard drive, but I won't really care if it goes kaput.
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# ? Oct 24, 2014 14:23 |
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cisco privilege posted:You have a current pending sector count of 234 and 162 uncorrectable HDD sectors. That drive is failing. Backup what you need and RMA or replace it. I'm curious, how did you exactly find the number count? Did you convert the RAW values? How would I go about finding the detailed numbered information you found?
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# ? Oct 24, 2014 16:21 |
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So I am going to be replacing my i7 4790k stock fan cooler with a 212 EVO, but I have never done a replacement before. So I have a couple questions: -When removing my old cooler, do I just yank it off? -Is the the thermal paste that is going to be left over on the cpu going to be a problem? -The 212 comes with a thermal paste applicator, but I have never done that because the intel coolers come with it pre-applied. Is there a particular pattern I should apply it in?
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# ? Oct 24, 2014 16:39 |
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Titor posted:I'm curious, how did you exactly find the number count? Did you convert the RAW values? How would I go about finding the detailed numbered information you found? The raw values are in hexadecimal (base-16). You can convert it with most calculators that support hex (the windows one will do it in programmer mode, just hit the hex radio button and type in EA then hit the dec radio button) or you can do it manually. The rightmost place in base 16 is the one's place and the second is the 16s place (like the rightmost digit in base 10 is the one's place and the next is the tens place). So you've got E 16s and A 1s, (in hexadecimal, numbers above 9 are represented as letters - A (which is 10), B (11), C (12), D (13), E (14), F (15)). E 16s is 14 * 16 = 224 and A ones is 10 * 1 = 10. Add these up to get 224 + 10 = 234. Most programmers I know who work with hex regularly tend to just convert back and forth with a calculator because as you can see it'll get tedious when you get to the next digit which is the 256s place and beyond.
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# ? Oct 24, 2014 16:54 |
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Titor posted:I'm curious, how did you exactly find the number count? Did you convert the RAW values? How would I go about finding the detailed numbered information you found? Mr. Crow posted:What do y'all do with hard drives that work but you're not comfortable putting data on it alone? Knifegrab posted:So I am going to be replacing my i7 4790k stock fan cooler with a 212 EVO, but I have never done a replacement before. So I have a couple questions: Clean the CPU and stock heatsink with 90% or higher rubbing alcohol - you can use 75% if you have to, but you'll need to give the CPU more time to dry if you do. You need thermal paste. If it's not pre-installed on the heatsink, although it should already be there, you will have to apply it. Do not re-use the paste from the stock heatsink. Put a little grain of rice-sized dot on the CPU and it should be fine. You don't need to use too much. future ghost fucked around with this message at 17:05 on Oct 24, 2014 |
# ? Oct 24, 2014 17:02 |
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Knifegrab posted:So I am going to be replacing my i7 4790k stock fan cooler with a 212 EVO, but I have never done a replacement before. So I have a couple questions: You do yank it off, but not before undoing the locking pins. The locking pins are the most important part. After that, there will just be the residual adhesive effect of the thermal paste holding the cooler down, and you may find that it just comes loose by itself.. The thermal paste left over will be a problem. Always clean off and reapply thermal paste, even if you're just lifting the heatsink for a moment. Best way is with high-purity isopropyl alcohol (90%+) and a microfiber cloth. Second best is high-purity isopropyl alcohol and using some coffee filters for mop-up. For applying paste, basically do anything that isn't spreading it yourself. Dot in the middle, very thin line down the CPU die, little smiley face - as long as the mounting pressure of the heatsink itself is what spreads the paste and you don't use too much, you'll be fine. Here's a relevant video.
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# ? Oct 24, 2014 17:25 |
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Thanks so much guys!
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# ? Oct 24, 2014 17:34 |
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Rexxed posted:The raw values are in hexadecimal (base-16). You can convert it with most calculators that support hex (the windows one will do it in programmer mode, just hit the hex radio button and type in EA then hit the dec radio button) or you can do it manually. The rightmost place in base 16 is the one's place and the second is the 16s place (like the rightmost digit in base 10 is the one's place and the next is the tens place). So you've got E 16s and A 1s, (in hexadecimal, numbers above 9 are represented as letters - A (which is 10), B (11), C (12), D (13), E (14), F (15)). This is extremely informative. So if the RAW value of an Uncorrectable Sector Count is 00000000078B, would that mean it's 1931? That's an extremely high number so I'm concerned I might be making a major calculating mistake.
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# ? Oct 24, 2014 17:47 |
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Titor posted:This is extremely informative. So if the RAW value of an Uncorrectable Sector Count is 00000000078B, would that mean it's 1931? That's an extremely high number so I'm concerned I might be making a major calculating mistake. You did the calculation correctly, and the drive with that many bad sectors is falling.
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# ? Oct 24, 2014 17:55 |
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Mr. Crow posted:What do y'all do with hard drives that work but you're not comfortable putting data on it alone? Like other people have said, I throw these drives away. For the cost of a hard disk these days I just don't waste time with something I don't trust.
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# ? Oct 25, 2014 03:29 |
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Knifegrab posted:So I am going to be replacing my i7 4790k stock fan cooler with a 212 EVO, but I have never done a replacement before. So I have a couple questions: I ended up watching a couple of youtubes of the installation before I put on a 212. The part with the backplate on the other side of the board seemed vague in the printed directions but was simple once I had watched someone else do it first.
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# ? Oct 25, 2014 03:38 |
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I'm using my 50" LD tv as a monitor for the time, i did this for a long time in the past also and i had no issues. Back then i used one of those wires with the pin connectors in a rectangle (i don't know the name, i'm sorry). These days i'm using a HDMI wire and i'm seeing while the resolution says 1920x1080 it is infact 1280x720. Now i googled and it said this could be a thing with HDMI and computer to TV connects. So i was fine with that and started looking for a new wire, but meanwhile i started playing the new Civ game, the one in space and it is 100% in 1920x1080, so the TV CAN display that resolution with the HDMI wire after all. Anyone got a clue with that limited information? I use a Nvidia GTX 770 and the specific make of the TV i can't remember, sorry, it's a bit old.
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# ? Oct 25, 2014 18:53 |
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I just updated the bios on my motherboard and now I can't get into windows. I get past the bios but windows never starts, it blue screens and then restarts the PC. When it comes back on it says windows shut down improperly blah blah blah. Figured it might be something with my overclock but when I looked the bios update set the board back to default CPU settings. Anyone know what could have happened? Mobo is an msi z97m-g43 and CPU is a g3258. Windows 8 on a 250gb evo 840.
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# ? Oct 26, 2014 04:56 |
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Did your SATA settings change from AHCI to IDE?
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# ? Oct 26, 2014 05:15 |
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Star War Sex Parrot posted:Did your SATA settings change from AHCI to IDE? When I checked it was AHCI. I switched it to IDE and now everything works fine... What are the differences between the two and why would this have changed?
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# ? Oct 26, 2014 23:46 |
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JRay88 posted:When I checked it was AHCI. I switched it to IDE and now everything works fine... What are the differences between the two and why would this have changed? AHCI and IDE are two different modes of communication between the hard drive and the SATA controller on your motherboard. IDE is the older standard, AHCI the newer. AHCI supports newer features (for instance, native command queueing). Windows was failing to load because, currently, its AHCI driver is disabled. Presumably, Windows was installed with the controller set to IDE mode, so it never bothered to enable it. If I had to guess as to why, the BIOS upgrade process you performed probably dumped all the saved BIOS configuration, and AHCI may be the new default mode for the SATA controller.
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# ? Oct 27, 2014 01:14 |
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JRay88 posted:When I checked it was AHCI. I switched it to IDE and now everything works fine... What are the differences between the two and why would this have changed? IDE is the legacy method of communicating with your hard drive and motherboards can emulate it to support older OSes. AHCI is the modern-day equivalent and brings a bunch of improvements in speed, power handling and TRIM support for SSDs. Changing to AHCI mode requires some finagling with Windows, but you'll probably see some improvements. And if you have an SSD, it's pretty much a requirement for it to work properly.* http://support.microsoft.com/kb/922976 This details the procedure for Windows 7 and also provides an automated fix it utility. Your steps would be to do what is said in this article and then go into the BIOS and change it to AHCI. *If you have an SSD and it's been running on IDE mode all this time, you might want to back up all data, secure erase it and then restore the data. So it can get back to full speed again.
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# ? Oct 27, 2014 01:16 |
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Quick question. I have a Mid-2009 (Core2Duo) MacBook Pro with a SSD that I use for browsing/excel/media consumption. I've noticed that it's gotten warmer than it used to just doing those tasks. I've replaced the fan and cleaned out the dust in the case. I run SMCFanControl and have the fan set to 3000rpm as the default speed. It still seems to be running warm though, the bottom case getting uncomfortable at times. Would I see any noticeable benefit from pulling it apart and reapplying a more modern TIM between the CPU and Heatsink? I've read about TIM drying out over time and how bad some of the factory jobs are on MBPs, but I'd rather not pull the entire thing apart like that if I'm barking up the wrong tree and won't see a noticeable difference.
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# ? Oct 27, 2014 03:04 |
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Replacing the TIM should make a noticeable difference to the temperatures and fan speed/volume.
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# ? Oct 27, 2014 07:55 |
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Geemer posted:IDE is the legacy method of communicating with your hard drive and motherboards can emulate it to support older OSes. AHCI is the modern-day equivalent and brings a bunch of improvements in speed, power handling and TRIM support for SSDs. I have no clue wether it was in IDE mode all this time or not. Guess I'll just back up, erase, and reinstall. Is there a certain tool I should use to erase it or will just reformatting the drive work?
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# ? Oct 27, 2014 15:00 |
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Are external USB enclosures for laptop HDs any good, or should I get some kind of adapted to connect them directly? I've got two laptop HDs from dead laptops that I want to pull data off (one about 3 years old, the other about a decade old) and onto a desktop, and an external enclosure would suit my needs except I vaguely recall reading somewhere that they're all barely-functional hot garbage, is that still true?
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# ? Oct 27, 2014 15:55 |
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Main Paineframe posted:Are external USB enclosures for laptop HDs any good, or should I get some kind of adapted to connect them directly? I've got two laptop HDs from dead laptops that I want to pull data off (one about 3 years old, the other about a decade old) and onto a desktop, and an external enclosure would suit my needs except I vaguely recall reading somewhere that they're all barely-functional hot garbage, is that still true? These vary wildly in quality, so stick with better-known brands and models with lots of positive reviews at newegg or amazon.
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# ? Oct 27, 2014 17:05 |
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Realized this doesn't fit in this thread.
HappyCapybaraFamily fucked around with this message at 03:57 on Oct 28, 2014 |
# ? Oct 27, 2014 21:25 |
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JRay88 posted:I'm using windows 8.1 so I don't think that link will help. When I tried googling it all I could come up with was ways to go from AHCI>IDE not the other way around. Secure Erase is a special command to tell the SSD to erase all its flash memory and return it to a factory-new like state. Just regular formatting won't be the same. I'd suggest asking in the SSD Megathread. They'll know which tool can do the trick. If it's a Samsung SSD, they provide a bootable cd image or USB drive image through their Magician software.
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# ? Oct 27, 2014 21:43 |
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Depends on the format, actually. Within Windows, a Quick Format issues a partition-wide TRIM, which isn't perfect but it's 95% there (it'll leave spare area unTRIMmed. Some SSD tools like Intel SSD Toolbox and Samsung Magician have "issue a free space TRIM" tools. And Windows 8 and 8.1's defragmentation tool will send a free-space TRIM to SSDs.
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# ? Oct 27, 2014 22:18 |
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Factory Factory posted:Depends on the format, actually. Within Windows, a Quick Format issues a partition-wide TRIM, which isn't perfect but it's 95% there (it'll leave spare area unTRIMmed. Some SSD tools like Intel SSD Toolbox and Samsung Magician have "issue a free space TRIM" tools. And Windows 8 and 8.1's defragmentation tool will send a free-space TRIM to SSDs. You're right. I forgot about those. But don't some drives also have trouble getting back to full performance without a Secure Erase?
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# ? Oct 27, 2014 23:52 |
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There's a longstanding bug with Sandforce 2 drives, yeah.
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# ? Oct 27, 2014 23:58 |
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Are there any pitfalls to avoid when doing RAID0 with SSDs? I've got a machine at work with an LSI 9750-8i RAID controller feeding two Samsung SSDs in stripping mode. Performance is HORRENDOUS even on trivial workloads (we are talking sub-platter disk levels of performance here) and I don't have the first clue about how to debug this. Any ideas?
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# ? Oct 28, 2014 00:41 |
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shodanjr_gr posted:Are there any pitfalls to avoid when doing RAID0 with SSDs? I've got a machine at work with an LSI 9750-8i RAID controller feeding two Samsung SSDs in stripping mode. Performance is HORRENDOUS even on trivial workloads (we are talking sub-platter disk levels of performance here) and I don't have the first clue about how to debug this. Any ideas?
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# ? Oct 28, 2014 01:22 |
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I managed to kill my old Antec power supply tester today. It was probably close to ten years old by now anyway. Any recommendations or caveats on getting a new one, or just whatever Newegg has that's inexpensive and has the features I want?
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# ? Oct 28, 2014 02:06 |
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Kind of a weird question for this thread, but I am looking for a little standalone device that can erase HDD's and SSD's, ideally to the standard military standard. I am aware I can do this in most machines, but it is for a production line and it would be better to have a simple plug and play device to expedite the process.
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# ? Oct 28, 2014 18:21 |
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Knifegrab posted:Kind of a weird question for this thread, but I am looking for a little standalone device that can erase HDD's and SSD's, ideally to the standard military standard. I am aware I can do this in most machines, but it is for a production line and it would be better to have a simple plug and play device to expedite the process. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wp8sFsriH4c
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# ? Oct 28, 2014 18:27 |
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Knifegrab posted:Kind of a weird question for this thread, but I am looking for a little standalone device that can erase HDD's and SSD's, ideally to the standard military standard. I am aware I can do this in most machines, but it is for a production line and it would be better to have a simple plug and play device to expedite the process. Do you want to re-use the drives after securely erasing them, or is this erasure prior to recycling/disposal for security purposes?
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# ? Oct 28, 2014 18:36 |
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^^^ Reuse. Ha, I wish, that would be satisfying. I actually found one, I have a stupid question though, I know sata cables are the cables are the part that connects to the drive and delivers data, but what are the big blocky cords that deliver power called? edit: Wait do sata cables deliver power? edit: Double wait, are esata and sata the same cable? Knifegrab fucked around with this message at 18:52 on Oct 28, 2014 |
# ? Oct 28, 2014 18:37 |
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Knifegrab posted:Ha, I wish, that would be satisfying. I actually found one, I have a stupid question though, I know sata cables are the cables are the part that connects to the drive and delivers data, but what are the big blocky cords that deliver power called? The SATA power connector is on the left. A male 4-pin molex connector (for IDE drives and other peripherals) is on the right. In this case that's a power adapter from 4-pin molex to female SATA. I'm not sure if SATA power connectors have an official name. quote:edit: Wait do sata cables deliver power?
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# ? Oct 28, 2014 18:54 |
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Knifegrab posted:Kind of a weird question for this thread, but I am looking for a little standalone device that can erase HDD's and SSD's, ideally to the standard military standard. I am aware I can do this in most machines, but it is for a production line and it would be better to have a simple plug and play device to expedite the process. We've got a bunch of kit that can do this in my office, but the smallest unit is the WiebeTech Drive Erazer Ultra. The only issue I guess is that you can only connect 1 drive to it at a time. What I do like, though, is that the connector for SATA devices is a combo power and data cable, so it's a lot easier to plug new drives in. I personally use the TD2, as it lets me wipe 2 disks simultaneously, but I use the imaging side of it a lot more so that's why I have that.
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# ? Oct 29, 2014 02:15 |
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# ? May 6, 2024 04:05 |
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Twice in the past week I've had to repair my windows install before it will boot. I'm assuming this means my HDD is on its way out, and considering it's about 10 years old I wouldn't be surprised. What utility should I use to verify that the HDD itself is the issue before I go and buy a new SSD?
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# ? Oct 29, 2014 17:16 |