Thread: It's Geek to me: Translating computereze Board: Oblivion / Ship of Fools.


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Posted by jedijudy (# 333) on :
 
Here you go!

This is where we match up helpers and helpees for those times when you don't know what to do for that computing or programing problem, because we have Shipmates who know [* ]lots[/* ] of helpful things!

[ 21. September 2014, 08:13: Message edited by: Firenze ]
 
Posted by Wesley J (# 6075) on :
 
Ooooh, shiny!

And look at all the specs! Centuple core! 1bn TB RAM! 2012 TB HDD! Graphics to show all them New Year fireworks in MegaMultipleHighestEverDefinition!

Welcome, all, and thank you, jj!

[Cool] [Big Grin]

NB. The old thread goes into Oblivion, I hope? - Still useful stuff for reference meseems. Thanks. [Smile]

[ 31. December 2011, 19:48: Message edited by: Wesley J ]
 
Posted by jedijudy (# 333) on :
 
Here's a link to the old Geek Revival thread.

You're right, Wesley J. Lots of useful things there!
 
Posted by Wesley J (# 6075) on :
 
[Overused]
 
Posted by Doc Tor (# 9748) on :
 
Evening, comrades.

My ancient laptop (Acer Aspire 5101) has subtly and mysteriously Done Something, and I don't know what it means.

Previously, when the power cable was in the back, the power LED on the front panel glowed green. When it was charging the battery, it glowed orange. When it's about to run out of battery juice, it goes red.

What does blinking orange when the power cable's in mean?

My googlefu seems to indicate that it might mean that the battery's not charging, but I've recently (6 months) replaced the battery, and currently it's on 2h40m charge, from a peak of 3h, which is as good as it gets on the old thing. I'm running the battery down to see if it'll recharge.

But in the meantime, [Confused]
 
Posted by The Kat in the Hat (# 2557) on :
 
Has anything happened in Windows land that will cause Outlook to stop communicating with my email service provider? It worked fine yesterday, but today keeps asking me to log in, but rejects the password.
 
Posted by Amanda B. Reckondwythe (# 5521) on :
 
Does the Internet work? If not, then your Internet service provider could be down, or your cable modem or hub could be unplugged.

If so, then your ISP's mail server may be down. A call to their support number would verify that. It is also possible that a virus may have changed your password on you.

Can you access e-mail via the Internet? (For example, I use Microsoft Outlook, but I can also log onto e-mail by browsing to my ISP's home page and clicking Mail.)
 
Posted by The Kat in the Hat (# 2557) on :
 
Must have been a temporary blip, as it's working fine now. The internet was fine, I could access the emails via the web, it was only Outlook that was not happy (and only with that account, the others that I have worked fine). Must have been New Year gremlins.
Thanks anyway.
 
Posted by Jengie Jon (# 273) on :
 
Right, I am really making sure this does not exist. I am looking for an app/programme in Windows 7 that will do the following simple thing.

When a folder is opened in Window explorer along with the usual view there is also opened a space for writing notes. These notes are preserved between times the folder is open and only open when that folder opens.

Its for my thesis, all sections of chapters have their own folder, in these I end up with several files (different draft versions, copies from different proof readers and also sometimes a section is taken out to be redrafted). I am finding it increasingly needful that I keep notes so I know what is going on in each folder. I have a program that will attach notes to folders but I have to remember to open the notes, and I am good at not doing htat and therefore not updating the notes.

Jengie
 
Posted by Talitha (# 5085) on :
 
How about the other way round: a note-taking program that also displays your files?

I think Microsoft OneNote does this. You could have a notebook page for each section of your thesis, and the page would contain your notes, plus links to each of the related files, which you could open from inside it, like you could from in Explorer. Your files are still in the same place on disk, but you work from within OneNote rather than Explorer. It comes with recent versions of Office - or you can probably get free equivalents.
 
Posted by Jengie Jon (# 273) on :
 
Not really that means I need to start up One Note to make the notes or to see what notes are made. Also as well as write and edit the files I have to tell one note about them.

The current note making system is easier as is the old fashioned have a note file in every folder approach.

Easy is important, I need to make it as easy and obvious as possible to reduce the chances I won't ignore this file, Oh I have lots of files in a folder before I have the final piece written.

Jengie
 
Posted by Sparrow (# 2458) on :
 
I have a Word document that I want to put some pictures in. I can insert the pictures, but how do I make the text flow round them, e.g. so the picture takes up one side of the page and the text continues down the other side?
 
Posted by Eutychus (# 3081) on :
 
Right click on the image and you will have a list of options. These vary depending on which version of Word you have, but one of them should say something like "position" or "format", and in one of those you'll have options to make the text go in front, behind, to the side, etc. Hope that helps.
 
Posted by Sparrow (# 2458) on :
 
Thanks, that worked!
 
Posted by Gwai (# 11076) on :
 
Becoming extremely baffled here, so if I am lucky, one of you good people can tell me what I am missing.

Fact: Approximately once a week, my computer loses its ability to connect to the internet. It spouts an error message about not being able to get a DNS address.

Fact: I live in a house with many computers, and connect through a router. This issue never affects any computer besides my computer and Bullfrog's computer.

Fact: We always eventually solve the issue by turning off my computer, the computer with the router/modem attached, and the modem.

Fact: I have tried putting in 192.168.1.1 instead of getting my DNS address automatically, but that did not help.

Theories: Is my computer trying to get a DNS address directly instead of getting it from the modem as is appropriate? I'm not sure if that's really how things work though, or sure how it helps if that is what's happening.
 
Posted by monkeylizard (# 952) on :
 
DNS is "Domain Name Service". It's what resolves the computer names to the IP address number. So "GwaisSuperAwesomePC" can be translated on your home network to 192.168.1.4 or whatever its IP address is.

Within your home on your own network, all the devices get an IP address from the router, not the modem. If the router assigns the same number to 2 or more devices, you'll get weird errors like what you're seeing.

Addresses for the devices in your home can either be assigned dynamically or be static.

Dynamic means the router hands them out as needed. Static means that you tell the router which devices will use which numbers, then tell those devices to use those numbers.

I'm going to guess that you use dynamic, as that's what most use. The conflicts happen when a device has received a number before, but doesn't check with the router to see if it needs a new one. So it keeps using 192.168.1.5 when that number has also been given to your shiny new iPhone.

The router is usually 192.168.1.1 so don't use that for anything else. In your router admin page, you may have a place for Static IPs. If you do, then you can assign one to your PC. The router will no longer pass that number out. then you have to change your TCP/IP network settings in Windows (don't know about Mac) to use that static IP address.

Another quick trick that will sometimes solve this without the need for static IPs is to refresh your ip address with the IPCONFIG command.

Open a command prompt (DOS window) by choosing "Run" from the Windows/Start menu and typing in "cmd" without the quotes.

Once you have the command prompt, you can type in "ipconfig" and press enter. This will show your current settings. "ipconfig /all" will show more details.

"ipconfig /renew" will force your PC to drop its IP address and go get a new one from the router. I'd try this first.

[ 11. January 2012, 18:10: Message edited by: monkeylizard ]
 
Posted by Eutychus (# 3081) on :
 
I am not an expert, still less on routers, but I've had what sounds like similar experience.

Are you running more than one OS?

We have had similar problems, which were a lot worse when we had a one computer running Vista alongside another running XP. We now run Windows 7 and XP concurrently and don't have (too many) problems. The computers all run off the same wifi but they are not networked together. The issue was usually solved by asking for a new IP address (or switching to our other wifi network for a while - we run two!).

[x-post with monkeylizard who sounds like he knows a lot more about this than me]

[ 11. January 2012, 18:14: Message edited by: Eutychus ]
 
Posted by Amanda B. Reckondwythe (# 5521) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by monkeylizard:
"ipconfig /renew" will force your PC to drop its IP address and go get a new one from the router.

But there's nothing to stop the router from giving the PC the same address it just dropped.

"ipconfig /release" will release the old IP address. Then, if you pull the plug on the PC, thus forcing an "ungraceful" shutdown, and then plug it back in and boot it back up, it will truly get a new IP address from the router.

I wonder if you don't have more devices on your network than the router has available IP addresses to give out.

Also, you can't have more than one DNS server on a network. Is it possible that you recently installed a new device that is also acting as a DNS server, in addition to your router?

[ 11. January 2012, 20:33: Message edited by: Amanda B. Reckondwythe ]
 
Posted by monkeylizard (# 952) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Amanda B. Reckondwythe:
But there's nothing to stop the router from giving the PC the same address it just dropped.

That's true. It would be nice if you could do "ipconfig /release" on every device connected and force them all to get new ones, but I doubt every device is a Windows PC/laptop.
 
Posted by Latchkey Kid (# 12444) on :
 
You could try assigning the PC a fixed IP address from the router.

I have a network server (198.168.1.50)and another PC (192.168.1.2) that I need to keep the same address and my Netgear router provides a simple way to do that.
 
Posted by Gwai (# 11076) on :
 
Thanks for the advice all! I tried a fixed address with no avail. I will try with larger numbers though in case I was picking one that someone already had.

Other possibly relevant facts include that it only started a few weeks ago although we moved in almost a year ago.

As far as I know, Bullfrog and I are probably the only ones I know running Vista. Other housemates are running other OSes.

Oddly enough I don't have the rights to release my ip, but I can renew it at least. (Particularly bizarre since I have admin rights.)
 
Posted by Amorya (# 2652) on :
 
Try giving your computer a manual DNS server address of 8.8.8.8 or 4.2.2.1. (The former is Google's DNS server, can't remember who runs the latter.)
 
Posted by Snags (# 15351) on :
 
Gwai, you may need to run an elevated command prompt to release the IP, even with admin rights (type "cmd" into the search box, and wait for the icon to appear, right-click and choose "Run as administrator") - sometimes and admin isn't always an admin. Not sure if it applies in Vista, because we refused to supply/support it, but it does in 7.

The other thing that's worth checking is that nothing's nobbled your browser and told it to use a proxy. If you're using Internet Explorer, it's in the Internet Options, Connects, LAN Settings. Some malware tries to run your browser through a compromised proxy.

You should be able to look at the DHCP table on the router to find a free IP address (and/or simply choose an address outside of the pool the router allocates) assuming you have the login details for the router.

Finally, when you do lose t'Interweb, start a command prompt and try to ping a known Internet IP (e.g. ping 8.8.8.8) and see if you get replies. If you don't, try to ping the router (gateway) IP address of your network. That way you can work out whether you're losing:

- just DNS
- the ability to get through the router
- or the entire networking facility

That helps with the wider diagnosis.
 
Posted by Snags (# 15351) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Amanda B. Reckondwythe:
Also, you can't have more than one DNS server on a network. Is it possible that you recently installed a new device that is also acting as a DNS server, in addition to your router?

<Panto> OH YES YOU CAN!

You can't have more than one DHCP server on a network (and even that's kind of a lie) but you can have lots of different DNS servers, although they ought to be configured in a hierarchy so they co-operate with each other.
 
Posted by St Everild (# 3626) on :
 
It's a long shot, but...

My iPad 2 64 gb WiFi can "see" my computer via WiFi and will sync wirelessly.
So the WiFi is switched on, and is working.

So why won't it connect wirelessly to the Internet/go on-line? It ought to do it automatically, but Safari, Facebook and email all say that it is not connected. It is supposed to connect to known networks automatically....

I have checked my email address etc...and I don't think I have done anything untoward.

I have tried switching it off, and on again.

There must be a simple solution, and I am just not "seeing" it.

Any ideas? Please?
 
Posted by Amanda B. Reckondwythe (# 5521) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Snags:
quote:
Originally posted by Amanda B. Reckondwythe:
Also, you can't have more than one DNS server on a network.

OH YES YOU CAN!

You can't have more than one DHCP server on a network.

Yes, you're right. Silly old Miss Amanda can never keep acronyms straight in her head.
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
Gwai,

Something to consider when configuring is your ISP. Some providers require your routers and computers to be set to dynamic rather than static. Especially true of cable.
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
St. E,

What is your Internet connection? Is it wireless? You likely need to connect to the router, not the computer.
 
Posted by Amorya (# 2652) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by St Everild:
It's a long shot, but...

My iPad 2 64 gb WiFi can "see" my computer via WiFi and will sync wirelessly.
So the WiFi is switched on, and is working.

So why won't it connect wirelessly to the Internet/go on-line? It ought to do it automatically, but Safari, Facebook and email all say that it is not connected. It is supposed to connect to known networks automatically....

I have checked my email address etc...and I don't think I have done anything untoward.

I have tried switching it off, and on again.

There must be a simple solution, and I am just not "seeing" it.

Any ideas? Please?

Firstly, is the little wifi icon in the status bar showing up? (Gotta start with the basics.)

Are you connecting it to a home wifi network, or are you connecting it directly to a computer by having the computer create its own wifi network? If the former, can any of the computers in your house use the same wifi network to use the internet? I'm not sure what the precise problem is, but that's the first thing to check.

If, however, you're creating a network from the computer, be aware that most operating systems have two separate ways to do this, and only one of them will get you the internet. On Mac OS X (the one I have most experience with), you can either choose "Create Network…" from the wifi menu, or you can go into System Preferences -> Sharing -> Internet Sharing.

It is only the second one of these that will get you internet access on your iPad: if you just do the "Create Network…" method, you'll get the symptoms you're experiencing, where the iPad can sync but not access the web.
 
Posted by Amanda B. Reckondwythe (# 5521) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by lilBuddha:
Gwai,

Something to consider when configuring is your ISP. Some providers require your routers and computers to be set to dynamic rather than static. Especially true of cable.

The router needs to get its external IP address dynamically from the ISP. However, each device connected to the router would get its internal IP address from the router, not the ISP. So in theory it shouldn't matter whether the router is handing out dynamic addresses or if the devices are configured with static addresses.

Since this sounds like a network with a relatively large number of devices connected, especially for a home network, I still would suspect that the router has simply run out of available addresses. My router, for example, can provide 99 addresses, but Gwai's may be configured to provide far fewer (perhaps this can be changed).

[ 13. January 2012, 22:15: Message edited by: Amanda B. Reckondwythe ]
 
Posted by Eutychus (# 3081) on :
 
So my plan was to turn off JavaScript on IEX and leave it on for Firefox.

For IEX9, I have followed tutorials in two languages, and none of them work. The options are not always the same on my French version of IEX as in the UK versions, but even a tutorial on the identical French version doesn't work (or at least, when I try to access Wikipedia today via IEX9 after supposedly disabling JavaScript, it's still blacked out).

I presume enabling JavaScript is browser-specific (ie I can have it enabled in one browser, Firefox, and not the other, IEX?). Am I just not turning off enough options?

[ 18. January 2012, 06:59: Message edited by: Eutychus ]
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
Fairly sure it is browser specific.
I go one step further and run an addon to Firefox called NoScript. This blocks all scripts from running in Firefox unless individually allowed. A pain at times, but safer. You would not believe The amount of scripts, and nested scripts, running on some websites.
 
Posted by Eutychus (# 3081) on :
 
What sort of functionality does one lose by turning all scripts off anyway? And does your add-on enable you to allow scripts on a case-by-case basis?
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
Everything between all function ( in the case of flash based sites, to the adverts not appearing.
Yes, you can allow on a case by case basis. And you can allow them for your current browser session only.
 
Posted by Eutychus (# 3081) on :
 
Thanks, I'll have to give it a try, although I suspect that by the time I get around to playing with it the immediate need will have passed...
 
Posted by Eutychus (# 3081) on :
 
(turns out easier solution was stopping the page loading before the javascript kicked in)

Now either a really dumb question or a really dumb feature:

Is there a way in Windows 7 to sort the bin solely by date of deletion?

I can't persuade it not to sort first by file type, which is maddening. Can anyone else?
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
Eutychus,

In Windows Explorer, there is a sort by and a group by. Probably need both set to display the same way.
 
Posted by Eutychus (# 3081) on :
 
I can't see these options in my bin. Clicking on "file type" sorts the bin into alphabetical file types. Clicking on "date" only sorts within those groups. There is a left-click option to collapse the file type groups and a right-click option that says "delete", but it isn't clear if this deletes the group or all the documents in it.

The bin is the only one of my Windows folders to display arranged by type in this way. In all the others files are displayed, by default, by file name, irrespective of type, and I can toggle sorting for all the usual categories.

[Confused]
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
Alright, try this.
There should be a small button on the upper right of your recycle bin window. Click on it to cycle through the various view modes until the Details view appears. Go to this link to see what I am attempting to explain. Or right click on a blank space in the window and click on View then select Details.
Or, in the upper left, click on View then details.
No matter how you have your Windows Explorer set, one of these should get you there.
 
Posted by Eutychus (# 3081) on :
 
Here's a screenshot of my own (yours is not actually visible without a password!).

I have the window set to "Details" view. But it's still impossible to sort by date of deletion before file type. I have collapsed most of the file type groups for the sake of the screenshot, but of course this means you can't see the deleted files in these groups.

If you know what file type you are looking for, I suppose this is just about bearable, but if you're simply looking for a file you might have deleted in the last couple of days and for which you're not sure of the type, it's maddening. In particular, folders containing files count as a whole different group... so can I turn this "group" thing off somehow? I can't see where.
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
One thing that might help is to turn the menubar on. To do this click on Organiser, go to Layout then click to show the Menu Bar. then click view and you should see Group by as well as Sort by. Make certain both are set to date deleted.
 
Posted by Adeodatus (# 4992) on :
 
I have a couple of questions related to acquiring a website.

I think I've figured out how to register a domain name. Am I right in thinking that the next thing to look for is a web host? If so, who are the good ones?

Finally, I've seen some good reviews of the (free) web design software KompoZer. Does anyone have any experience / reviews / tips relating to it?
 
Posted by Eutychus (# 3081) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Adeodatus:
I think I've figured out how to register a domain name. Am I right in thinking that the next thing to look for is a web host? If so, who are the good ones?

Not sure about the other questions, but it's a good idea to rent your domain name from someone other than your web hosting provider.

This may make it a little trickier to get the one to point to the other but both parties were very helpful when I did it. The advantage is that you can then change one without compromising the other.

I'm not sure about their web hosting, but I've found Rackspace to be relatively inexpensive and very, round-the-clock helpful (via chat interface) for e-mail hosting, and I know they do web hosting as well.
 
Posted by Jengie Jon (# 273) on :
 
After bad experience with others I went to Zen and been happy with them ever since, although they are not the cheapest. They are also a Manchester firm.

Jengie
 
Posted by Eutychus (# 3081) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by lilBuddha:
One thing that might help is to turn the menubar on. To do this click on Organiser, go to Layout then click to show the Menu Bar. then click view and you should see Group by as well as Sort by. Make certain both are set to date deleted.

Thanks. That was it [Cool]

[ 02. February 2012, 20:19: Message edited by: Eutychus ]
 
Posted by Drifting Star (# 12799) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Adeodatus:
I have a couple of questions related to acquiring a website.

I think I've figured out how to register a domain name. Am I right in thinking that the next thing to look for is a web host? If so, who are the good ones?

I can't speak highly enough of Dataflame. I've been with them for a good few years. Their customer service is excellent, and they're really helpful even when the problem is yours and not theirs. I have my domain names through them too, which does make life easier.

[ 02. February 2012, 20:46: Message edited by: Drifting Star ]
 
Posted by Wesley J (# 6075) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Drifting Star:
[...] I have my domain names through them too, which does make life easier.

And which means your name and contact details don't show up in Whois? (I'd find that essential if I had my own domain.)
 
Posted by Drifting Star (# 12799) on :
 
Yes they do (or on Nominet for most of mine, being .uk ones) - it's mine just as much as if I'd got it somewhere else, so I'm the registrant.
 
Posted by Drifting Star (# 12799) on :
 
Forgot to say that you can get your details removed as long as you're a 'non-trading individual'.
 
Posted by Wesley J (# 6075) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Drifting Star:
Forgot to say that you can get your details removed as long as you're a 'non-trading individual'.

Excellent news. Listing your details is a spam magnet. Will enquire. [Smile]
 
Posted by Adeodatus (# 4992) on :
 
Thanks for the tips, folks. I'm going to carry on researching for a while before I take the plunge, I think.

If I'm selling paintings, prints, etc., I assume that makes me a "trading individual"?
 
Posted by Sarah G (# 11669) on :
 
I've researched this one, but I'm still confused. Microsoft ends mainstream support for Windows Vista SP2 in April, but is continuing extended support. Will they continue to send out vulnerability patches and other essentials?

Should I upgrade to Windows 7?

Thanks for your replies.
 
Posted by Snags (# 15351) on :
 
Adeodatus: whether you can have the who-is opt-out on a domain depends on who the domain's registered to. So if you register to yourself as "UK Individual", you can opt-out. If you register it as "Limited Company" you can't. What you do with it afterwards is, to most practical extents, academic.

Sarah G: your Vista machine will continue to work fine when support ends; all it means is that there will be no automatic Windows Updates to fix bugs or security issues that may come to light. So it's really a choice based on how you use your PC, and how happy you are with it currently. For a machine with good antivirus, behind a decent and properly configured firewall (or even NATting router), operated by a responsible adult without an uncontrollable lust for porn or stupid joke sites, your risks are relatively minimal.

On the bigger question, Windows 7 is what Vista should have been if they'd done it properly, so given the choice, Windows 7 is preferrable. To counter that, in-place upgrades are always the worst way forward, so if your current machine is stable and doing what you want, I wouldn't bother unduly. If it's a bit of a bag of nails, it might be worth getting all your data off, wiping, and moving to Win 7 anyway (as long as the hardware's up to it), regardless of the support position [Smile]
 
Posted by Eutychus (# 3081) on :
 
Susan G: upgrading from Vista to 7 is a no-brainer [Smile]

Question for UK shipmates: I have heard that in some countries you can get a 3G dongle for internet access for not very much. I have an assignment in the UK next week for which I'm not very confident about having good internet access, and wondering if there's anything available for such a period. Suggestions welcome!
 
Posted by Morlader (# 16040) on :
 
Depends on:

Where you are in the UK. Some areas have strong enough 3G signal to enable reasonable speeds, but...

What do you think of as "good"? No 3G signal competes on speed with ADSL/WiFi. If you need access to Cloud applications or large graphics/videos you are going to be waiting around. Email may be OK though. Also ...

Local obstacles can make 3G signals unusable in even nominally good signal areas. The ground floor of some buildings have no 3G coverage but first* floor up are fine (e.g. my 'local' big hospital [Frown] ). Other buildings have meshes/foil which act as screening.

If you know there's WiFi in the places you are going to be, I would say try to fix up WiFi access in advance. Always assuming you've got WiFi now. Also WiFi may be free but 3G probably not, if that's a consideration.

HTH. Good luck!

* You know, of course, our Ground, 1st, 2nd ... = US 1st, 2nd, 3rd ...
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
Consult a coverage map for 3G and wifi for the area(s) in which you will be. Avoid the mobile providers' claims as the label on the tin is not always reliable.
 
Posted by Eutychus (# 3081) on :
 
I can get away with 2G. I have a dongle which I use here (France) and am aware of its limitations, but I would like an alternative solution to wifi in case the latter turns out to be less than ideal. My question is whether such a product exists.

(For the way translators think about internet access, see here. This is very close to my home setup, apart from the pigeons.)
 
Posted by Wesley J (# 6075) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Eutychus:
[...] (For the way translators think about internet access, see here. This is very close to my home setup, apart from the pigeons.)

[Killing me]
 
Posted by Jengie Jon (# 273) on :
 
Do you mean something like these?

Jengie
 
Posted by Eutychus (# 3081) on :
 
Yes. The coverage doesn't look too good where I'm going to be, though (darkest Kent). Can you get them from bricks-and-mortar stores?
 
Posted by St Everild (# 3626) on :
 
Yes you can.

Orange, T-Mobile, 3, and Vodafone all sell them, AFAIK. There may also be others...

It would be worth looking at each company on-line and putting in the postcode of where you are staying to get some idea of the coverage. Then visit the shop of your preferred provider and ask again before handing over your cash and actually getting hold of your dongle. If they say it will be iffy try another provider.

(This is what I did last year when my mum died and I had to stay with my father. I needed internet access, and only 1 of the "big 4" listed above showed that it could provide coverage where my dad lives. I bought a dongle and it worked fine, once I'd worked out how to use it.)
 
Posted by Morlader (# 16040) on :
 
Apologies, Euty, for assuming you are in the US. [Hot and Hormonal]

Yes, lilB's linked BBC report gives a better overview than operators' coverage maps (these are marketing claims, of course, and should be treated as such).

IMNSHO, WiFi should be regarded as the "main" access method for transportable terminals. There are public WiFi networks in some places, a company called "the Cloud" provide some*. True mobile use needs 2 or 3G, of course, and if 2G is familiar, suggest you negotiate a roaming arrangement with your current supplier.

* BT have something called BTFON which is some sort of community WiFi. But I have an allergy to BT - past dealings at the time of BT privatisation - and I can't tell you more.
 
Posted by Eutychus (# 3081) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Morlader:
suggest you negotiate a roaming arrangement with your current supplier.

[Killing me] that's of the order of £45 a day.

Maybe I'll just go for a more traditional solution. Or not.
 
Posted by Sarah G (# 11669) on :
 
Thanks for the advice with the Vista -> Windows 7 upgrade.

What do I need to backup if I'm doing an upgrade, or will it all go smoothly without destroying anything?
 
Posted by Drifting Star (# 12799) on :
 
BTFON hotspots are for BT customers, so I'm guessing that rules Euty out. Basically, you allow BT to use a bit of your signal to provide a hotspot for others, and you can then use hotspots all over the country. I haven't yet found one in a convenient place for us (although my phone has grasped at them whilst driving through towns), but to be fair we do tend to go to rather remote places.
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sarah G:
Thanks for the advice with the Vista -> Windows 7 upgrade.

What do I need to backup if I'm doing an upgrade, or will it all go smoothly without destroying anything?

Always backup your data. For my upgrade, it was required if I wished to keep anything. But I went from Vista 32 bit to Win 7 64 bit. Have available install discs of your programs as well. These might require reinstallation or repair afterwards.
 
Posted by thomasm (# 4618) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Drifting Star:
BTFON hotspots are for BT customers, so I'm guessing that rules Euty out. Basically, you allow BT to use a bit of your signal to provide a hotspot for others, and you can then use hotspots all over the country. I haven't yet found one in a convenient place for us (although my phone has grasped at them whilst driving through towns), but to be fair we do tend to go to rather remote places.

For a fee you can use them even if you are not a subscriber. Prices are about the same as say BT Openzone (their commercial version).

T
 
Posted by Drifting Star (# 12799) on :
 
That explains why our hotspot appears as both BTFon and something else (probably Openzone) in the list of available networks here - thanks!
 
Posted by Eutychus (# 3081) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by thomasm:
quote:
Originally posted by Drifting Star:
BTFON hotspots are for BT customers, so I'm guessing that rules Euty out. Basically, you allow BT to use a bit of your signal to provide a hotspot for others, and you can then use hotspots all over the country. I haven't yet found one in a convenient place for us (although my phone has grasped at them whilst driving through towns), but to be fair we do tend to go to rather remote places.

For a fee you can use them even if you are not a subscriber. Prices are about the same as say BT Openzone (their commercial version).

T

That might be worth it. Our ISP here does that automatically, and it's really useful (although not completely reliable). You often get better service than, say, hotel wifi in built-up areas.
 
Posted by moonlitdoor (# 11707) on :
 
I have inherited a 5 year old Toshiba laptop computer from a relative's will. It has Windows Vista but obviously not enough cpu or memory to run it, as it generally takes 30 - 45 seconds between clicking on something and anything noticeable happening on the screen, so it is impossible to use sensibly.

My own pc is a 12 year old Compaq running Windows 2000 which works fine, and the laptop has double the cpu speed and double the memory so I am reluctant to discard it as useless, but I am not in a position to spend a lot of money on it. I wondered about trying to install a linux on it instead of vista. How feasible is this for someone who is not very knowledgeable ? Would it be difficult to get it to connect to my existing broadband ?
 
Posted by Snags (# 15351) on :
 
moonlitdoor, what's the exact model of the Toshiba? The family will be one of:

- Satellite
- Satellite Pro
- Portégé
- Tecra

And then there'll be something like "C660D" or "U500" usually with a three character suffix e.g. U500-4RT or similar.

Failing that, what's the full model number (will start with P or PS from memory)?

That will give us a better idea as to the spec. of the machine.

I suspect that on a 5 year old Vista machine, there's so much crud on it that a vape and re-install, or even just a knowledgeable spring-clean (with free tools) would make the world of difference.

In the general case, though, Vista is a big fat useless memory hog so either going back to XP or forwards to Win 7 (if you have the funds/media) would probably improve it either way.

Failing that, Ubuntu seems to go on stuff pretty easily, although if you do the lazy-friendly install with a full GUI, it really needs the same kind of baseline spec as Windows to be properly nippy.
 
Posted by moonlitdoor (# 11707) on :
 
It is called Toshiba Satellite 1400, and has 1.33 ghz processor and 1 gb memory. It belonged to a lady in her late 80s and I don't think it was used very much. Is there a way of telling whether a clean up would do any good or whether it is just not up to the task ? What sort of tools should I be looking for ?

I don't have any other operating system to put on there, and am a bit reluctant to spend a lot on buying one, as I do already have a working pc and would prefer to spend any money on something I don't already have. I don't need any special performance from the laptop. My existing pc is 533 mhz and 256 mb and is fast enough for me under windows 2000 unless I try to view any video content like youtube, which it struggles with.

Do you think Ubuntu will be able to do ok on the Toshiba spec ? I have also heard there is a special linux for lower powered pcs.
 
Posted by no_prophet (# 15560) on :
 
There are several (perhaps endless) linux versions to put on old hardware. If you have a CD burner or a USB thumb drive, a good place to start is with a live (runs off the thumb drive or CD) version.

For someone with no experience, my tendency would be to suggest something in the Ubuntu family, but not Ubuntu itself. They have decided to make it pretty unique in latest versions. I tend to use Linux Mint which seems to work quite well on older hardware if you try out a 32 bit CD. You can get codecs (thingies that let you play various versions of media, later). Realize that if you go to Linux, it is a learning curve because although it will look somewhat like Windows for example, it is a bit different.

If you make your computer boot from the diskdrive (or thumb drive - though given the age of this machine, may not be available), you can run the Linux operating system without installing it, just from the disk and play with it a little. It will run quite slowly from a disk, but the bonus is you don't have to commit to using it right away.

Another possibility is to see if any local computer shops have any windows XP cds sitting around. You may be able to bargain your way to a cheap home version - the professional ones usually are not available.
 
Posted by Jengie Jon (# 273) on :
 
Moonlitdoor

I would do the following if I was in your situation:

  1. A full virus scan, older people are less likely to get computer viruses but are also less likely to spot when they have in my experience.
  2. Download Malwarebytes and let it scan for any malware not picked up by the anti virus.
  3. I have found Piriform useful and they do ccleaner for free. So I would download that and run it so it pick up anything that is slowing the machine down due to programmes loading unnecessarily.
  4. Once you have done that run a disk clean
  5. then defrag (using the tools from Windows will do although there are plenty out there as well).

I can't guarantee that this will speed it up, I share people's view of Vista and if you can find someone with XP disks who will install (I believe legal as you are downgrading your license for Vista), then I would.

Jengie
 
Posted by moonlitdoor (# 11707) on :
 
Thanks very much to everybody for their suggestions, I appreciate it.
 
Posted by Snags (# 15351) on :
 
Vista really needs 2GB RAM to be responsive, but what Jengie said is good advice to get the best out of what you have.

If you use ccleaner to purge the registry, DO take the backup option [Smile] Also DON'T let anything compress the drive, as this will slug it even more.
 
Posted by Wesley J (# 6075) on :
 
I'm having problems opening my MS Work 7.0 Calendar - which is strange, as all the other Works elements are fine (I only use the calendar much really).

I'm getting the classic
quote:
Works cannot access one or more files it needs to run the Calendar. The files may have been renamed, deleted or moved. Try reinstalling Works, and then starting the program again.
Which I did, alas to no avail. I also followed instructions to that purpose from MS and other expert fora. Result = nil.

Any suggestions? Even just the retrieval of the calendar data, and transfer to some other calendar application would be lovely. Would be silly to lose them.

Thank you. [Smile]
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
You might try a restore point from before the calendar started giving trouble.
Caveat:you may lose data from between now and then.
 
Posted by Wesley J (# 6075) on :
 
Ta. Will try later.

Sadly enough, on both my Win XP SP3 machines (this one is Pro, the other Home) the Restore Point seems to have died many eons ago: 'Cannot be restored to the time and date desired'. - Still works on the new Win 7 Ultimate though, luckily.

Will try nonetheless and report back. Thanks!
 
Posted by Amanda B. Reckondwythe (# 5521) on :
 
Whoops! This sounds like a virus to me.
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
Miss Amanda may well be correct. Run a malware and a virus check.
 
Posted by St Everild (# 3626) on :
 
Has anyone upgraded to Lion from Snow Leopard? What are the pitfalls - and the good things? Have the early glitches been ironed out - or weren't there any in the first place? (I'm guessing that the already-announced Mountain Lion is an improvement - or maybe that's just cynicism born of too long with Microsoft!)

(I have a MacBook Pro which is just over 1 year old, and I'm thinking about upgrading to Lion. I use Office for Mac, and I sync to an iPad 2 and an iPhone 4S. I'd quite like to use iCloud...)

Lots of questions - sorry. I have tried to look elsewhere...
 
Posted by Wesley J (# 6075) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by lilBuddha:
Miss Amanda may well be correct. Run a malware and a virus check.

Thanks for your concern. As I keep running several AV scans daily, and at least one full scan every week (Norton Internet Security, Spybot S&D, Windows Defender), I'm fairly confident it ain't one of the nasties. Nothing has shown up, neither now nor in the recent past, apart from the odd IE tracking cookie.

I have now read, however, that Norton IS/AV may block system restore, so may try turning it off for the occasion and see what happens.

I currently work around the lack of MS Works Calendar, and am once again backing up all files (which I'm doing anyway on a regular basis) and am looking into creating a bootable MS Win XP SP3 CD, as the harddrive seems to have problems starting very occasionnally. This may, or may not, be related. Luckily I've got several machines, so wouldn't be puter-less even in a worst case scenario, but fingers crossed...!

Watch this space. Thanks again. [Smile]
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
Norton is of the devil, but it is better than no virus protection. Barely, but....
 
Posted by Latchkey Kid (# 12444) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by moonlitdoor:
It is called Toshiba Satellite 1400, and has 1.33 ghz processor and 1 gb memory.

A search for Linux installation has not been encouraging, but the results are from old attempts with old versions of Ubuntu and puppy Linux.
The processor and memory are fine for Ubuntu Linux. The problem is more the drivers for networking (internet).
The specs show XP as the original OS, so it is strange for you to have Vista. If you could get the recovery disks you may be able to reinstall XP.
Look for an XP sticker with a product code. You can probably use any installation disks as they are XP Home if the sticker is XP Home etc.
XP drivers appear to be available to download.
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
Has anyone installed an HP LaserJet 4100N on to a Win7 machine? I failed yesterday.

It's on a network cable rather than a USB. The printer drivers installed - as HP LaserJet 4100 PS? series drivers - manually requested. I installed it as a network printer and used the printer's IP address (after googling and interrogating the printer - the number is in the format 192.#.#.###). The error message was that IP number was not valid and the printer was not recognised.

The USB printer (HP 7200 series) is installed, but it's very, very expensive to run compared with the LaserJet and installing the LaserJet would be far better if possible. I know I've got a similar problem brewing with another printer (this is church office) which needs a parallel port to USB cable before trying - that one is the only one that prints A3.

Any ideas as to ways of solving this one? When I googled one of the answers came up with coding strings, which is not something I'd want to do on something that isn't mine.
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
CK,

Not on my computer just now, so forgive the vague instructions. When you click to add the printer, try add local printer. There will be a subsequent drop down for creating a port on which to add the printer. I forget the labels t the moment. Gods, sorry cant think at the moment, migraine. Need to get off iPad
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
I put it on the TCP/IP label, sorry forgot to say that, because that's what the instructions I found on line to install that particular printer said to do. (All this is third and fourth hand kit, barring the new Win7 PC, so goodness only knows where the instructions are)
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
Not certain how to help further, CK.
Here is the official HP install guide. If that is not what you used initially.
 
Posted by Amanda B. Reckondwythe (# 5521) on :
 
Are you sure you have the printer's correct IP address? I wouldn't rely on querying it via Google. I would go to the printer itself and print a test sheet showing the network configuration, including IP address.

You do have to define it as a local printer and then create an IP port using the address in question. Of course, you must have administrative rights to the PC in order to do this.
 
Posted by mousethief (# 953) on :
 
Hey geeks! Do any of you speak CPU? I'm looking at high-performance laptops for school. I am not interested in high-speed gaming, but I'll basically be running two operating systems simultaneously (one in a VirtualBox).

These CPUs came up among the options but I can't find any place online that compares them directly. Do any of my geeky friends have knowledge or experience on these? Here's the CPUs under consideration:


Is it worth the extra $80 or $100? Assume the same memory, HDD, etc.
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Amanda B. Reckondwythe:
Are you sure you have the printer's correct IP address? I wouldn't rely on querying it via Google. I would go to the printer itself and print a test sheet showing the network configuration, including IP address.

You do have to define it as a local printer and then create an IP port using the address in question. Of course, you must have administrative rights to the PC in order to do this.

Sorry, I wasn't clear, I googled how to interrogate the printer to find it, and that's the IP code I used - from the printout the printer gave me.

I suspect it's to do with how you install a network printer on a Win7 machine, but I have to organise access. There was a throwaway line on the link from lilBuddha that says in passing you have to do it in a certain way. But without the machine in question in front of me, I can't check if that's what I've done.
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
mousethief, I'd have to check with my tame geek, who is currently offline until her internet connection is set up, hopefully next week - but I'm pretty sure she'd go for Intel processors over MD - it's what she was choosing when she was advising on a new computer (the one that I'm now trying to set up - and not the one she suggested!) Not sure about the Turbo charging.
 
Posted by Snags (# 15351) on :
 
MT, at the end of the day, any of them will probably do the job, but in the general case in my experience AMD chips always 'under perform' in laptops, and also tend to run hotter. Admittedly it's slightly old experience, as it put me off AMD in laptops so we've gone Intel for the last 6 years or so. Even when we were exclusively AMD in desktops and servers.

If you're upping the ante anyway, I'd suggest that the i5 is worth the extra over the i3, unless those additions are cumulative, not a single jump from the AMD baseline.
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
Here is where I might disagree with Snags. Or at least not be so certain.
Spec for spec, Intel out perform AMD.
However,the AMD is Quad core, the Intels dual core.
Here is an article which breaks things down pretty simply.
Here is one comparison.
This particular AMD is designed for the entry level market, so too is the i3.
The Intels have better cache, so that speeds things up.
Not a completely simple answer and enough of an argument to start a Geek fight.
You want performance? Try this. Only about 4K US.
 
Posted by Laxton's Superba (# 228) on :
 
I'm having some issues with my wireless broadband speed. Yesterday I tried to watch something on iplayer and the programme would only show in blips of about 5 seconds at a time, and eventually it gave up and came up with an error message about insufficient bandwith. The router is located about 6 feet from the laptop and as close as I can get it to the main BT socket. No other electrical items on nearby. I tested the speed with broadbandspeedchecker and this returned the frankly risible result of 0.063 mb/s. Plugging in an ethernet cable brought that up to a slightly more bearable 0.32 mb/s but it struck me that what I have here is not a top notch connection. My ISP says I should achieve between 2 and 5M ha ha.

Does anyone have any tips on improving this, is there something obvious I have overlooked. I can't afford to change ISP - the ISP is the good honest Yorkshire one (and their customer service is brilliant btw)
thanks
 
Posted by Jengie Jon (# 273) on :
 
Laxton Superba

It was not downloading something to another machine was it?

Oh my observation is that at specific times it is very poor usually just when I expect everyone local to be using it as well.

Jengie
 
Posted by Snags (# 15351) on :
 
I'm not fighting [Smile] My real world experience of AMD in laptops is too out of date. However, if MT really does want high performance of the three it has to be the i5 and dedicated video. The core count will be a red herring unless the target software is explicitly written to take advantage, in the general case. (IME)
 
Posted by Alisdair (# 15837) on :
 
@ Laxton's Superba

Lack of bandwidth due to high contention is a highly likely reason for your problem. Time of day can often make a big difference.

Alternatively, wifi can have a local contention problem (or problems with interference). Changing the wifi channel can improve bandwidth (see link for a little app that can make this less of a blind shot in the dark):

http://tinyurl.com/6vbfhuk

Finally, your router could be on the ropes, but frankly I'd go with your conclusion, unless there is evidence to suggest otherwise: too many people all fighting for limited bandwidth.

[ 27. February 2012, 08:46: Message edited by: Alisdair ]
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
Current knowledge from the tame geek - her current laptop is using AMD and she's very rude about AMD even with massively improved spec from this laptop that's using Intel.
 
Posted by Eutychus (# 3081) on :
 
Answering a question on the question thread has generated a question of my own.

While I was composing that answer, I hit some key combination that highlighted only the text box, putting everything else in shaded grey. There were several menu tabs along the bottom of the screen. When I hit reply, it disappeared.

I'm using Firefox 7 with no relevant add-ons that I can think of. What key combination was that??
 
Posted by LeRoc (# 3216) on :
 
I think I need a wizkid! In the last weeks, I made a film of a traditional African dance group. I just used my normal photo camera (which makes MPG files), and I added these files together with Windows Moviemaker, which saves films in a WMV format.

We want to have a party where I show the film to the group. The group has a projector, but no cable to connect it to a computer. Where we are in Africa, we can't get our hands on a cable easily. The only thing we can do, is to connect this projector to the dvd player that the group has.

The dvd player has a usb entrance, but when I put the film on a usb stick, the dvd player won't play it. This doesn't surprise me much, since the WMV format is pretty much Windows only.

I have VirtualDub, with which I can transform the film in an AVI format. I also have Handbrake, which can make a MP4. I used these to convert the film. The dvd player will play the AVI, but without sound. In fact, it says something like 'The right codec is unavailable to play audio for this film.'

Does anyone have an idea what I can do?
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
ISTM the easiest solution would be a DVD authoring software. This would put the movies into a DVD native format. There are free versions, I cannot vouch for any as I do not use them.
 
Posted by Ambivalence (# 16165) on :
 
You could try DVDFab - I've used that before as a slightly shady alternative when Handbrake hasn't worked.
 
Posted by wilson (# 37) on :
 
It's been a while since I used VirtualDub but you should be able to change the audio format at the same time as changing the video. If you can find the relevant menu then try setting it to mp3 and if that doesn't work mp2.
 
Posted by LeRoc (# 3216) on :
 
quote:
lilBuddha: ISTM the easiest solution would be a DVD authoring software. This would put the movies into a DVD native format.
I'm showing my ignorance here, I didn't know that this kind of software could convert as well. My employer installed Creator Business DVD on my work computer, and that did the job splendidly.

We're probably going to have the party on Sunday evening. Thank you all.
 
Posted by Padre Joshua (# 13100) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Doc Tor:
Evening, comrades.

My ancient laptop (Acer Aspire 5101) has subtly and mysteriously Done Something, and I don't know what it means.

Previously, when the power cable was in the back, the power LED on the front panel glowed green. When it was charging the battery, it glowed orange. When it's about to run out of battery juice, it goes red.

What does blinking orange when the power cable's in mean?

My googlefu seems to indicate that it might mean that the battery's not charging, but I've recently (6 months) replaced the battery, and currently it's on 2h40m charge, from a peak of 3h, which is as good as it gets on the old thing. I'm running the battery down to see if it'll recharge.

But in the meantime, [Confused]

I'm experiencing the same problem with my new (to me) Dell Inspiron 5150. When I got it a couple weeks ago, it didn't have a battery included. A quick trip to Amazon fixed that, and it arrived a couple days ago. At first it was perfect. But yesterday and today it has stopped recognizing the battery. It'll run on battery, but it won't charge, and the battery light flashes orange (instead of the green/orange/red solid that you described above).

If I shut down the laptop and remove the battery, then reinstall it and turn the computer back on, it works like it should for a random amount of time, usually half an hour or so.

Bad battery? Bad software? (I'm runnning Ubuntu 11.10) Bad computer component?

Aggravating, because there are plenty of times when I need to be wireless!
 
Posted by The Machine Elf (# 1622) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Eutychus:
Answering a question on the question thread has generated a question of my own.

While I was composing that answer, I hit some key combination that highlighted only the text box, putting everything else in shaded grey. There were several menu tabs along the bottom of the screen. When I hit reply, it disappeared.

I'm using Firefox 7 with no relevant add-ons that I can think of. What key combination was that??

Possibly Ctrl+A - select everything on the page.
 
Posted by Eutychus (# 3081) on :
 
Nope. The screen was greyed over, if that makes any sense, apart from the text box. There were a number of options in tabs along the bottom. This all disappeared when I hit "add reply".

I'm still intrigued by this, all the more so since some Googling has not thrown up anything. I should have taken a screenshot but I was running out the door or something.
 
Posted by Drifting Star (# 12799) on :
 
I've had a screen a bit like that twice although I think the tabs were at the top, and they were definitely the f-keys with explanations. I have no idea how I got there though, which is a shame as it could be quite useful. Windows 7, and Firefox 9 or 10 (it was a while ago) FWIW.
 
Posted by Eutychus (# 3081) on :
 
Ah, found it.

It was ctrl + shift + I, "inspect". Which I found after, um, inspecting Mozilla's own list of keyboard shortcuts more closely...
 
Posted by no_prophet (# 15560) on :
 
This video, in German, but it doesn't matter, seems to reflect the title of this thread very well.

So dad, how do you like the new ipad we got you?
 
Posted by Think² (# 1984) on :
 
Anyone know how to make android work with the ship's cafe?
 
Posted by Jenny Ann (# 3131) on :
 
oooh, no but I'd like to.

I'll watch with interest...
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
T2,
I do not have any Android devices, so this is a shot in the dark. Have you tried different web browsers?
 
Posted by jbohn (# 8753) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Padre Joshua:
quote:
Originally posted by Doc Tor:
Evening, comrades.

My ancient laptop (Acer Aspire 5101) has subtly and mysteriously Done Something, and I don't know what it means.

Previously, when the power cable was in the back, the power LED on the front panel glowed green. When it was charging the battery, it glowed orange. When it's about to run out of battery juice, it goes red.

What does blinking orange when the power cable's in mean?

My googlefu seems to indicate that it might mean that the battery's not charging, but I've recently (6 months) replaced the battery, and currently it's on 2h40m charge, from a peak of 3h, which is as good as it gets on the old thing. I'm running the battery down to see if it'll recharge.

But in the meantime, [Confused]

I'm experiencing the same problem with my new (to me) Dell Inspiron 5150. When I got it a couple weeks ago, it didn't have a battery included. A quick trip to Amazon fixed that, and it arrived a couple days ago. At first it was perfect. But yesterday and today it has stopped recognizing the battery. It'll run on battery, but it won't charge, and the battery light flashes orange (instead of the green/orange/red solid that you described above).

If I shut down the laptop and remove the battery, then reinstall it and turn the computer back on, it works like it should for a random amount of time, usually half an hour or so.

Bad battery? Bad software? (I'm runnning Ubuntu 11.10) Bad computer component?

Aggravating, because there are plenty of times when I need to be wireless!

Could be problems with the chip on the logic board that controls power allocation- on Macs it's called the System Management Controller, or SMC. (Not sure what Acer or Dell call it, but it should be something similar.) If the info on that gets corrupted, it can cause weird power issues- like a battery not charging, or no power to the video output, etc. Try digging in the manual for something with a similar name and find how to reset it- on a Mac laptop (depending on the model) it can be removing all power sources and pushing the power button, or a physical reset button on the board, or a few other things. Macs and PCs are pretty much the same under the hood, so something similar may work.

It could easily be a software or firmware issue, also.

--jbohn
Apple Certified Macintosh Technician
 
Posted by Padre Joshua (# 13100) on :
 
Thanks!

I checked the manual, and all it said was that the battery could be defective; if so, contact Dell. Since it's way past the warranty date, I'll just see if perhaps I can get a replacement battery from Amazon. Maybe the one I got really is defective. If that doesn't cure it, then I don't know what will.
 
Posted by mousethief (# 953) on :
 
When I take my laptop to school, I have to log in through the school's firewall and it asks for my (school) login and password once for every website I was connected to in my browser. Some of these things are websites I had no intention of connecting to, and am not pleased to find I'm connected to.

Of course at school I can just hit "cancel" and not connect to them. But at home I have no idea what it's connecting me to behind the scenes. Most of them when I look them up have to do with advertising / ad targeting.

How can I make it stop connecting me to websites I don't want to be connected to?
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
Mt,
Many websites have links to external code(scripts). For advertising mostly, but also to run bits and pieces that are built externally. If these are the websites you are talking about, Firefox had addons to selectively block said scripts. I use NoScript.
When you block these scripts, parts of the page might not run. Ads might not show, video may not run, forms may not work. At least until you allow the script to run.
Is this helpful, did I understand your query properly?
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
If that is not, make certain you do not have a virus or spyware. Those may also attempt to connect.
 
Posted by mousethief (# 953) on :
 
Thanks, LB. I'll try that. I scan for unwanted programs regularly using AdAware, MalWareBytes, and Spyware S&D but it's been over a week now. Will do that again.
 
Posted by mousethief (# 953) on :
 
Oh, and I added Noscript. Interesting display across the bottom of scripts blocked.
 
Posted by St Everild (# 3626) on :
 
Anyone here using Lion? What has been your experience - I';d like to know before taking the plunge. (I've been quite happy with Snow Leopard, but...)

Thanks!
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
Bloody hell, it's a zoo.
 
Posted by Think² (# 1984) on :
 
I have tried Overskreen but it made no difference. The faverolle program downloads - I think the problem is the lack of a Java virtual machine. Which is odd, cost I think android is based on java.
 
Posted by Jengie Jon (# 273) on :
 
I did the googling and the answer is that Android has no JAVA engine simply because it may well conflict with the actual OS because that is built in Java. Apparently the app would need to be recompiled using Dalvik and I suspect some neat webcoding to check whether the machine was running Java or Dalvik.

Jengie
 
Posted by wilson (# 37) on :
 
It's not so much that a regular JVM would conflict with Dalvik so much as it's not worth the effort to create one. Applications would be slower and not look as good.

Technically Dalvik is a JVM it's just not a standard one, it uses its own bytecode meaning you can't just run any compiled java program against it. Also Android has a different API to regular java and it doesn't support Java Webstart which is what the cafe uses.

You'd really need an Android "cafe app".
 
Posted by Jengie Jon (# 273) on :
 
I never said Java Virtual Machines conflicted with Dalvik, afaik they don't, the usual ones
conflict with Android Operating Systems.

That is why Dalvik was developed.

Therefore using Dalvik for android phone is not because it is better than the others but because you don't have the option of the others. It is if you like a similar situation to that with pies and pasties. You may prefer pies to pasties but if you are hungry enough and only pasties are available you eat pasties.

Jengie

[ 31. March 2012, 13:32: Message edited by: Jengie Jon ]
 
Posted by wilson (# 37) on :
 
That doesn't make any sense to me. Dalvik is a component of the OS, a pretty central one. They could have chosen to implement a regular JVM instead (plenty of phone OSes do) but didn't and probably not entirely for technical reasons.

Where did you read about this "conflict"?
 
Posted by Jengie Jon (# 273) on :
 
Let me start with here, I am searching for the second site I found yesterday.

Jengie
 
Posted by Silver Faux (# 8783) on :
 
I have a computer that preceded the cursed advent of windows vista.
Recently, Bing! spread across my yahoo toolbar, and appeared to slow things down.
I clicked the x beside it; now the toolbar is skinny again.
BUT - I don't have the "page" button anymore, with the option to save, which I use to save an URL, etc.
I tried downloading yahoo toolbar again, it did so successfully, but still no "page" button.
Any advice?
 
Posted by Silver Faux (# 8783) on :
 
Just also noticed, the icon for home that lets me go to the page that comes up when I first sign on is also missing!
Windows XP is what I am using, if that helps.
 
Posted by Paddy O'Furniture (# 12953) on :
 
I have a question about laptops. Specifically, DELL laptops. Does anyone own one? Can you tell me if they're reliable and last a while? I have heard some many awful stories about Dell's bitchy tech-support and lousy customer service but my sister owns both a laptop and a desktop and has had them both for years and years with nary an issue. I'm ditching my two broken-down Macs and dead PC desktop and attempting to get financing from Dell. Any advice?
 
Posted by Grits (# 4169) on :
 
I have a Dell laptop and have had no trouble with it all. I liked being able to pick out the features I wanted. The only thing I'd change is to get longer battery life.
 
Posted by Paddy O'Furniture (# 12953) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Grits:
I have a Dell laptop and have had no trouble with it all. I liked being able to pick out the features I wanted. The only thing I'd change is to get longer battery life.

How long have you had yours?
 
Posted by Snags (# 15351) on :
 
Dell are often unpopular in TrueGeek(TM) circles because of inconsistency, and for their part in the race to the bottom in terms of price/quality. If you can scrape together enough to go up into the middle of the pro/business range you should be OK.

Personally I would take a mid/high end ThinkPad over Dell any day, and indeed do for our 100+ laptop using clients. However, as with all things IT, all brands have fans and haters, and all one can generally do is ... generalise [Smile]

If you really want awful after sales support, get a Sony [Biased]
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Can anyone recommend a good and effective free anti-virus and firewall package?

I had Avast last year which was OK but the interface was sufficiently complicated for me to spend quite some time trying to configure it. Also, you now don't get the firewall without shelling out £40.

I had AVG before that and have downloaded that again, but the updates slow this system to almost a standstill for about 10-15 minutes each time, during which the computer can't really be used, so I'm looking for something quicker that will update itself unobtrusively in the background that I won't notice. This is why I changed from AVG last time.

And finally, should I use the Windows firewall or not?

Thank you in anticipation.
 
Posted by Jengie Jon (# 273) on :
 
I use Comodo Free Internet Security on my father's machine. It had a lot of false positives initially but has settled down over the years.

Jengie
 
Posted by Morlader (# 16040) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Paddy O'Furniture:
I have a question about laptops. Specifically, DELL laptops. Does anyone own one? Can you tell me if they're reliable and last a while? I have heard some many awful stories about Dell's bitchy tech-support and lousy customer service but my sister owns both a laptop and a desktop and has had them both for years and years with nary an issue. I'm ditching my two broken-down Macs and dead PC desktop and attempting to get financing from Dell. Any advice?

My company has been almost a Dell closed shop for years. Not many desktops, but constant office hours use. Rare occasions needing Dell 'next business day' support went OK, but only after you demonstrated you knew what you were talking about. The one Sony laptop is old and isn't "stressed" much.
At home, my partner has a Dell laptop, top of the range when bought. Had keyboard probs, but local independent computer servicing folks diagnosed and fixed that. Dell support for home users - what's that??!
I have a newish Dell laptop. No complaints at all. I call it "Jehu" 'cos it drives really fast!
 
Posted by Balaam (# 4543) on :
 
I use Dell at work, and it is fine, but then it it part of their business range. Their hame computers are known for being less robust.

If you buy Dell, buy one of their business machines, they are worth the extra.
 
Posted by Balaam (# 4543) on :
 
Missed the edit window.

For those of you not in Scotland, I meant home, not hame, computers.

[Typos in 2 successive posts - Duh]

[ 08. April 2012, 12:52: Message edited by: Balaam ]
 
Posted by jbohn (# 8753) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by St Everild:
Anyone here using Lion? What has been your experience - I';d like to know before taking the plunge. (I've been quite happy with Snow Leopard, but...)

Thanks!

We're using 10.7 Server at work, and it seems to run fine- we haven't made the full plunge on our workstations, though. I've the desktop version a bit, and it seems OK, although the combination of the Dock + Dashboard + Mission Control + the alt-tab feature seems like overkill for switching between apps to me...

[ 08. April 2012, 13:14: Message edited by: jbohn ]
 
Posted by bib (# 13074) on :
 
I am very IT ignorant. I was given an iPod touch for Christmas and can't make head nor tail of it. I know how to put music on it from my own CDs and can find out what the weather forecast says, but that is the extent of my abilities. There was no how to booklet with the iPod. I googled for a how to site, but when I found same it went on forever in language I don't understand. I need a iPod for dummies book. Any ideas gratefully received.(I didn't even know what the word app meant until I asked someone under the age of 30.)I own a very basic mobile phone, certainly nothing like the smart phones that most people have these days. I have taught myself to use a computer but can't do anything fancy on it. Are there many other baby boomers out there like me in this regard?
 
Posted by Paddy O'Furniture (# 12953) on :
 
Thanks for the advice about Dell laptops. Last night I was visiting the Dell website, applying for financing help and starting the process of placing an order when suddenly...! The right hand side of my iMac G5 turned white and gray. It's a band about 2 1/2" across and completely covers the right side. Perhaps my computer sensed that its time was coming to an end and wanted to say, "Nyah nyah, nyah, nyah!" or, "Oh, you're going to replace ME, a MACINTOSH with a PC laptop?! Well, screw you, then!" LOL. Yeah...

Anyway, because my browser is so outdated, I was not able to place my order for my laptop yet. I'll have to call them today and do it over the phone.
 
Posted by Baptist Trainfan (# 15128) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ariel:
I had AVG before that and have downloaded that again, but the updates slow this system to almost a standstill for about 10-15 minutes each time, during which the computer can't really be used, so I'm looking for something quicker that will update itself unobtrusively in the background that I won't notice. This is why I changed from AVG last time.

I have had a similar experience, however I do wish to ask you one question: is your computer just updating the AVG data when you switch on, or is it performing an entire scan?

I suggest opening the AVG "interface", going to "Scan Options" and looking to see what you've got as "Scheduled Scans" - my sister had it set to do a scan every time she turned her computer on. You can "disable" this but then you do have to remember to run a scan from time to time (and, when you do, you can set the scan to run in the background - it takes longer but the computer is more usable during the scan).

Re. Dell computers in general: I've had a laptop for about 6 years and, in general, it has performed well (I've added a bit of extra memory and had to change the battery twice). But I somehow can't love it in the same way that my wife loves her HP.
 
Posted by Drifting Star (# 12799) on :
 
I had a Dell Vostro laptop (business machine) for quite a few years, and was very happy with it. It did tend to run hot, and I needed a cooling mat underneath it. The thing that did for it in the end was my using the cooling mat upside down, which basically turns it into a heating mat... I replaced it with a Toshiba Satellite, which I am very pleased with (and which runs very much cooler), but I would happily have gone with Dell again if they'd a model with the right features at the right price.

Ariel - Windows 7 Firewall seems to be very good. I've been using it for 3 months with no problems. I wouldn't use the Windows firewall from any of the previous versions of Windows though. I'm using it with Avast - I tried AVG for a while but wasn't very keen. It had a tendency to stop me from doing perfectly safe things without any apparent way of overriding it. I expect I just needed to learn how to deal with it, but I had better things to do with my time!
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Baptist Trainfan:
I have had a similar experience, however I do wish to ask you one question: is your computer just updating the AVG data when you switch on, or is it performing an entire scan?

It is actually updating - this pc's about 15 years old so things run a bit more slowly. It already tried to do the initial scan, which I cancelled.

Drifting Star - thanks! I'm on a 30-day trial of AVG but will probably go back to Avast again for the anti-virus and stick with the Windows firewall (that's Windows XP service pack 3). AVG seems to be a bit of a memory hog.
 
Posted by Baptist Trainfan (# 15128) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ariel:
quote:
Originally posted by Baptist Trainfan:
I have had a similar experience, however I do wish to ask you one question: is your computer just updating the AVG data when you switch on, or is it performing an entire scan?

It is actually updating - this pc's about 15 years old so things run a bit more slowly. It already tried to do the initial scan, which I cancelled.
Ah. [Cool]
 
Posted by Snags (# 15351) on :
 
Without wishing to start a fight, unless they've changed recently "Vostro" isn't the Dell business range (not in the UK, anyway). They slightly naughtily market it as for 'cost-conscious SMEs' and similar, but Vostro are generally the budget/entry level kit. Very cheap for what you get, and if you're the kind of person who's careful with stuff, could do you well.

The actual business class stuff is Lattitude/Precision (?) in the laptop ranges.

And I'd still get a ThinkPad [Biased]
 
Posted by Drifting Star (# 12799) on :
 
"Dell Vostro™ laptops are built specifically for small business"

That's from their UK website. The model I bought was only available through a business account at the time.

[ 09. April 2012, 21:50: Message edited by: Drifting Star ]
 
Posted by Paddy O'Furniture (# 12953) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Snags:
Without wishing to start a fight, unless they've changed recently "Vostro" isn't the Dell business range (not in the UK, anyway). They slightly naughtily market it as for 'cost-conscious SMEs' and similar, but Vostro are generally the budget/entry level kit. Very cheap for what you get, and if you're the kind of person who's careful with stuff, could do you well.

The actual business class stuff is Lattitude/Precision (?) in the laptop ranges.

And I'd still get a ThinkPad [Biased]

Well, for us, we had to get a laptop that we could make payments on and Dell was the company for us. Hewlett Packard had financing deals but only if you paid off the whole kit and kaboodle in 6 months and no way could we have done that. I placed my order this afternoon and am eagerly awaiting our new 17" Dell Inspiron laptop. I was only planning on getting a 15" but Dell had a really great deal on a 17" so that's what I chose. And being able to pay $40/month isn't too shabby, either.
 
Posted by Wesley J (# 6075) on :
 
My desktop harddrive appears to have given up the ghost. It's 'only' 160GB, and came with my DELL Dimension 5000, from 2005 or 2006 I think. Interestingly, my DELL Dimension laptop from early 2004 keeps working very well (!), though of course that one's a bit slow now.

Luckily, I've backed up the entire machine shortly before it called it a day, so am bound not to lose too much data.

I'm planning to re-use the desktop machine, as I customised it with rather high specs - apparently with the exception of the HDD... [Paranoid] !

Any suggestions on what type or brand of new HDD to purchase? I guess I might go for bigger storage, like 500 or 750GB, if compatible.

Thank you. [Smile]
 
Posted by jbohn (# 8753) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Wesley J:

Any suggestions on what type or brand of new HDD to purchase? I guess I might go for bigger storage, like 500 or 750GB, if compatible.

Thank you. [Smile]

I've always had good luck with Hitachi and Seagate. We had a rash of bad Western Digital drives at work about a year ago- although I've used plenty of their drives that were just fine. (The bad ones were in a batch of iMacs ordered at the same time, so it could have been just a bad run. We order machines in truckloads, so we're kind of susceptible to that problem.)

Good on you for keeping complete, up to date backups. It saves a lot of heartache down the road...
 
Posted by St Everild (# 3626) on :
 
I've just heard a clip on BBCradio 4 from Francis Wheen, whose shed burned down on Friday night, loosing books, papers, records and CDs...he said that he had backed up hs work, onto a memory stick, which he had put into the drawer of the desk upon which his computer stood, in the shed...as a consequence he has lost the back ups as well.

How, and where, do other people organise their back ups?

I have organised my MacBook to back up via Time Machine to a 1 terabyte Wedtern Digital thingy...which sits on my desk next to the laptop, so I would have the same issue as Francis Wheen.
 
Posted by Niteowl2 (# 15841) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by St Everild:
I've just heard a clip on BBCradio 4 from Francis Wheen, whose shed burned down on Friday night, loosing books, papers, records and CDs...he said that he had backed up hs work, onto a memory stick, which he had put into the drawer of the desk upon which his computer stood, in the shed...as a consequence he has lost the back ups as well.

How, and where, do other people organise their back ups?

I have organised my MacBook to back up via Time Machine to a 1 terabyte Wedtern Digital thingy...which sits on my desk next to the laptop, so I would have the same issue as Francis Wheen.

I used to carry my Western Digital "Book" with me to work and kept it in my locked car in the separate garage at night. Am no longer working so am settling for different room than computer equipment kept in.

I used to have a back up system that had data cartridges that one could remove and keep elsewhere. With the Digital Books it's rather inconvenient to do that for an individual. There's also Cloud storage available, though I'm still not trusting of their security except for non important stuff. I'm thinking of getting a 2nd WD "Book" that I can keep elsewhere for the crucial stuff.
 
Posted by Snags (# 15351) on :
 
Wesley J - I'm not going to recommend specific brands, because that way madness lies (everyone has an opinion, and different experience to support it!).

However, if the machine does data from mid-2000s it would be worth popping the service tag into the Dell website and checking a couple of bits of info:

a) is the interface IDE or SATA? And if it's SATA, is it SATA or SATA2? Chances are it's SATA/SATA2 but it can save awkwardness to check ahead of time.

b) does the BIOS have a limit on the drive size it can recognise? If it does, there may be an update that will lift it, but your date estimate is roughly in a period where anything much over 500GB might give you trouble
 
Posted by Wesley J (# 6075) on :
 
Thanks, all!

Snags, I've just purchased a 1TB Western Digital HDD - which the puter shop wizard chap said would still go with the motherboard; he checked on the DELL tech site. Although it's true what you're saying: I'll have to see about the BIOS. (I did check with the service tag myself.)

In the worst case, I'll slap the drive into an external HDD casing and so have extra storage, which I can always put to good use.

DELL have been helpful too - their European helpline is in Slovakia -, and are sending me a replacement Win XP Pro SP2 CD-ROM for a few quid, to I think about the same price as if I had ordered it together with the machine back then. This Windows is an OEM version and didn't come with a CD. - I can always upgrade to Win7 later, should I wish to, and had in fact already done the checks before.

As I was saying, the machine seems reasonably future-proof, and that's the way it was meant to be. I might buy a liddle upgraded graphics card at some point, which nowadays aren't that
expensive either.

Last, but not least: the puter shop chap doesn't sell canned air - much too expensive, he says - and he's certainly right! He suggested using a pump (bicycle pump?) from a sports shop, which he says does the trick just as well! That's really gonna save me a lot, if it works.

Will report back about progress of installation, cleaning and updating. Thanks for your encouraging words. [Smile]

(Ya know, I'm glad I don't just have most of the deskie backups, but that I've also got 2 lappies to fall back on, the old 2004 Inspiron, and my nifty Alienware M11x from last year; though the later is more of a travelling machine for me. Some people may think you don't need 3 machines, but in a case like this, that's just the backup power you wish you had!)

[ 16. April 2012, 18:37: Message edited by: Wesley J ]
 
Posted by Wesley J (# 6075) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by jbohn:
quote:
Originally posted by Wesley J:

Any suggestions on what type or brand of new HDD to purchase? I guess I might go for bigger storage, like 500 or 750GB, if compatible.

Thank you. [Smile]

I've always had good luck with Hitachi and Seagate. We had a rash of bad Western Digital drives at work about a year ago- although I've used plenty of their drives that were just fine. (The bad ones were in a batch of iMacs ordered at the same time, so it could have been just a bad run. We order machines in truckloads, so we're kind of susceptible to that problem.)

Good on you for keeping complete, up to date backups. It saves a lot of heartache down the road...

Ta! Interestingly, the drive that died is a Seagate - somehow I always thought it was a Hitachi.

Re backups, and poor Francis Wheen: good thinking to not physically having them in the same place. Must give this some thought myself!
 
Posted by jbohn (# 8753) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Wesley J:
[Ta! Interestingly, the drive that died is a Seagate - somehow I always thought it was a Hitachi.

All hardware sucks. [Biased] Any mechanical device will fail eventually. I've certainly pulled plenty of dead Seagates out of machines over the years.

quote:
Originally posted by Wesley J:
Re backups, and poor Francis Wheen: good thinking to not physically having them in the same place. Must give this some thought myself!

Indeed. Offsite backups are our friends. Preferably several. [Smile]
 
Posted by Niteowl2 (# 15841) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Wesley J:

Last, but not least: the puter shop chap doesn't sell canned air - much too expensive, he says - and he's certainly right! He suggested using a pump (bicycle pump?) from a sports shop, which he says does the trick just as well! That's really gonna save me a lot, if it works.


After spending way too much money on canned air I purchased one of these on Amazon. MicroVac/Dustblower Works well on a lot of things and I've stopped the cash hemorrhage.
 
Posted by Wesley J (# 6075) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Niteowl2:
quote:
Originally posted by Wesley J:

Last, but not least: the puter shop chap doesn't sell canned air - much too expensive, he says - and he's certainly right! He suggested using a pump (bicycle pump?) from a sports shop, which he says does the trick just as well! That's really gonna save me a lot, if it works.


After spending way too much money on canned air I purchased one of these on Amazon. MicroVac/Dustblower Works well on a lot of things and I've stopped the cash hemorrhage.
That... just blows me away! [Cool]
 
Posted by Latchkey Kid (# 12444) on :
 
I understand that HDDs that are apparently of the same type can be produced in various factories in varius factories and with very varying reliability.

It is my Seagates that have failed, but that is not a statistically significant sample.
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Latchkey Kid:

It is my Seagates that have failed

There is help available, and I believe there are support groups out there
 
Posted by Wesley J (# 6075) on :
 
Happy update: Ordered Win XP Pro OEM CD from DELL yesterday, got it today (!) by UPS, and it's XP SP3, which saves some time with the subsequent updates.

After some cleaning of the machine's somewhat dusty entrails, the new 1TB HDD was physically put into place (doesn't even need any screws!), recognised without any problems (!), and is being formatted as we speak! [Yipee]

Impressive!

Will keep you posted. [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Amanda B. Reckondwythe (# 5521) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Wesley J:
Happy update: Ordered Win XP Pro OEM CD from DELL yesterday, got it today (!) by UPS, and it's XP SP3, which saves some time with the subsequent updates.

You'll find, though, that there are well over 100 critical updates post-SP3 and that multiple reboots will be required. Congratulations, though, for deciding to stick with WinXP rather than going with Win7.
 
Posted by Wesley J (# 6075) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Amanda B. Reckondwythe:
quote:
Originally posted by Wesley J:
Happy update: Ordered Win XP Pro OEM CD from DELL yesterday, got it today (!) by UPS, and it's XP SP3, which saves some time with the subsequent updates.

You'll find, though, that there are well over 100 critical updates post-SP3 and that multiple reboots will be required. Congratulations, though, for deciding to stick with WinXP rather than going with Win7.
I'll live. With 2 other fully working machines, I'm not too much in a hurry - though the deskie has the most oomph.

Dunno about sticking with Win XP - the CD was cheap, and the support is still there for a few months. I don't see why I should spend a lot on Win7 (which is rather nice, I admit) if XP is still working, updated regularly and supported. But thanks anyway. [Biased]
 
Posted by monkeylizard (# 952) on :
 
Win 8 will be out soon anyway......
 
Posted by jbohn (# 8753) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by monkeylizard:
Win 8 will be out soon anyway......

And may be a functioning OS by a year later... [Biased]
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by jbohn:
quote:
Originally posted by monkeylizard:
Win 8 will be out soon anyway......

And may be a functioning OS by a year later... [Biased]
Optimist.
 
Posted by Jengie Jon (# 273) on :
 
Yes

It is an even number, never a good sign with Microsoft.

Jengie
 
Posted by ken (# 2460) on :
 
Ah, but Windows 7 is just a marketing name for NT 6 - so those even numbers get you both ways. [Snigger]

(Windows 7 which works well is 6.1, Vista which didn't was NT 6.0, so presumably Windows 8 will be NT 6.2)

It has long been known that the first really working version of any operating system software is 2.2

When NT came out they called it 3.1 to make it look as if it was in step the with old-fashioned DOS-based Windows, rather than a completely different OS in some ways more similar to Unix.

So if we assume that the version 3 NTs were "really" version 0 (because they were incomplete, they did not yet have all the bells and whistles needed), then NT 4 is the first fully capable version which could have been called version 1, and NT 5.2 is the 2.2 of NT. NT 5.2 was sold as Windows Server 2003, and Windows XP 64-bit Edition. Yes, that's about right. They were probably the first seriously useful versions of Windows sold.
 
Posted by Snags (# 15351) on :
 
XP 64-bit useful? Rare to catch you talking bollocks, ken [Smile]

Granted it could have been useful, if there had been any driver/software support for it. As it was, it was more of a nod towards Win 7 coming good eventually.
 
Posted by ken (# 2460) on :
 
Driver software missing? Only if you wanted to play games. The only up-to-date drivers I needed for my servers were SCSI and network cards...
 
Posted by ken (# 2460) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by ken:
Driver software missing? Only if you wanted to play games. The only up-to-date drivers I needed for my servers were SCSI and network cards...

I suppose what I really mean by "useful" was "robust". As in "If I go away for three weeks it'll still be running when I get back, nothing will be looping, and it won't have run out of memory".
No version of Windows of any kind before XP really guaranteed that. And even XP sometimes went on walkabout if you were foolish enough to be using MS Word to edit more than one file on a network drive (that bug has been in Word since the day iot came out and they never fixed it yet, its just computers have noiw got so fast it only takes a second or two to recover instead of a few minutes)


Though, perhaps surprisingly, plain old DOS could be robust. We had an old Compaq machine with 10Mb hard disk and two large floppies that ran continually for well over ten years, night and day, without being rebooted once except for the day we moved office. Hell to pay when it finally died though. The company that supplied the application software it had been running had long gone out of business. Perhaps the worst three weeks at work of my life. I ended up being able to translate modem AT control codes in my head. From source code or the sound the bleeper made. Which as far as "translating compoutereze" goes is dam near as geeky as it gets.
 
Posted by jbohn (# 8753) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Jengie Jon:

It is an even number, never a good sign with Microsoft.

It's made by Microsoft, never a good sign with an operating system. [Biased]

quote:
Originally posted by ken:
I suppose what I really mean by "useful" was "robust". As in "If I go away for three weeks it'll still be running when I get back, nothing will be looping, and it won't have run out of memory".

That's what Unix/Linux/MacOS is for...

quote:
Originally posted by ken:
Though, perhaps surprisingly, plain old DOS could be robust.

KISS principle at it's finest. What kills Windows is the attempt to make it all things to all people, whilst maintaining backward compatibility with software that's grown a long white beard, all at the same time. The more complex the OS gets, the more it's doomed to fail. DOS is simple, but it does the limited number of things that it does really well. It's the same reason embedded industrial systems last forever- they only do one or two things, but they do them well.

quote:
Originally posted by ken:
I ended up being able to translate modem AT control codes in my head. From source code or the sound the bleeper made. Which as far as "translating compoutereze" goes is dam near as geeky as it gets.

[Overused]
 
Posted by Snags (# 15351) on :
 
<Considers whistling innocently>

<Decides Heaven is not the place to induce flashbacks for ken>
 
Posted by Pigwidgeon (# 10192) on :
 
Just wondering if anyone has more information on this article that I saw in this morning's paper: Hundreds of thousands may lose Internet in July.

The Arizona Republic isn't my most trusted source of this sort of information. (I really do trust total strangers on the Ship more!)
 
Posted by jedijudy (# 333) on :
 
My mom called me this morning worried about that very thing, Pigwidgeon. I am having email conversations with my friends about whether it's real, or a giant scam or what.

I'll be watching for our wise Shipmates' info along with you! [Smile]
 
Posted by Eutychus (# 3081) on :
 
My uninformed take: if you are running up-to-date antivirus software you should have nothing to worry about.

Among those who think the site is legit, the consensus seems to be that you might still have more to worry about by visiting it than by not visiting it (depending on how evil and/or incompetent you think government agencies are)...
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
The FBI links the site directly, so legitimate in that regard. Whether or not your trust them is a separate issue.
 
Posted by Jay-Emm (# 11411) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by ken:
Though, perhaps surprisingly, plain old DOS could be robust....

In the millenium problem hell thread, I mentioned that we had an oldish computer from 88.

The floppy disk drive it boots off is failing so that's now on perpetually to save the swapping. The software it uses relies on it's processing speed, so replacing it isn't going to be quick.
 
Posted by ken (# 2460) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Pigwidgeon:
Just wondering if anyone has more information on this article that I saw in this morning's paper: Hundreds of thousands may lose Internet in July.

Its a bit of a scare story. I mean its true, but not that dangerous if you are looking after yout computer properly. This sort of thing goes on all the time. It would only be bad if the fake DNS servers were still up.

Assuming that is you clear up the trojan, which as others said you can do with pretty much any current set of security software. That's vital - but if you are infected by it and don't get rid if it then you don't deserve to be on the Internet anyway. Its like driving cars without insurance or MOT. You would be a danger to others.

If you were infected by the trojan and have got rid of it but still have a problem all you need to do is fix the DNS settings of your computer. And your ISP should have given you the information you need to do that as part of the instructions for connecting to them. Its trivial to do yourseof but you probably don't need to because if your home computer signs on directly with the ISP then its usually done automatically by DHCP. (And if not, for example if you have a wireless router between your computer and the Internet, then presumably you set it up yourself and still have the information that tells you how to do it...)

If you are paranoid about believing and FBI site, there are non-American news items about it here, and in links.
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by ken:
then you don't deserve to be on the Internet anyway. Its like driving cars without insurance or MOT. You would be a danger to others.

After the initial "Yes, yes! By all that is sacred YES!" I realized I would then need to tell my father he was no longer allowed a computer. That would be sad. Those "you will not believe what they are doing now" e-mails are not going to forward themselves.
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
Okay. So I've downloaded Endnote, following all instructions. It's disappeared. What the hell do I do next?

(The same applied to Adobe Acrobatty Whatever ... which tells me daily I can download a new thingy, and i do, and i never see it again, and then it tells me the next day i can download a new thingy, and i do, and i never see it again, and ....)

[ 24. April 2012, 06:08: Message edited by: Zappa ]
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
Oh - wait a minute ... Norton was blocking it (but didn't tell me)! [Hot and Hormonal]
 
Posted by Lothlorien (# 4927) on :
 
Zappa, there are heaps of free programs much better than Norton. My computer guru sons have always called it crap, as do very many other compute people. Someone here can probably suggest what would be better for your machine as I'm out of touch with Windows computers. It doesn't do a good job of blocking rubbish and it does nasty things in the background of your computer.
 
Posted by jbohn (# 8753) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by lilBuddha:
[After the initial "Yes, yes! By all that is sacred YES!" I realized I would then need to tell my father he was no longer allowed a computer. That would be sad. Those "you will not believe what they are doing now" e-mails are not going to forward themselves.

[Snigger]
 
Posted by WhateverTheySay (# 16598) on :
 
OK this is really annoying me. Firefox upgraded itself today, but I have a change that is absolutely driving me up the wall. I'm wondering if somebody can help me undo this one change.

I have an old laptop and my scroll wheel does not work any more. So I use the scroll bar on the right of the screen. It used to only move by about a line of text if I clicked on the downward scroll button at the bottom right of the screen. But since upgrading to the new Firefox it jumps a few lines when I just click once on the button. The result is that what I see is too jumpy and feels really out of control. Holding onto the blue bar in the middle of the scroll bar on the right is ok when it is big, but some sites I want to view (including SoF) the blue bar is so small that it is impossible for me to make really small movements.

So can anybody help me get my scrolling back in control and not jumpy. Because this is something that is really annoying me.
 
Posted by Eutychus (# 3081) on :
 
The following, gleaned (and edited) from a Mozilla forum, may or may not work:

1) In the location bar type about:config and hit enter.
2) Bypass the warning by clicking the button that says "I'll be careful, I promise!".

(At this point make sure you note down what the values you are about to change are. If the worst comes to the worst, simply return them to the original settings afterwards, in which case you'll be no worse off than you are now.)

3) In the Filter box, copy and paste the preferences below (this means the three-part code names) and change their respective values by right-clicking on each and selecting Modify:

mousewheel.withnokey.numlines to [x] (set "x" to a smaller number than it is when you get there and proceed by trial and error)

mousewheel.withnokey.sysnumlines to False (I'm not sure what this does but I think that setting it to False it stops the scrollbar jumping by a default number of lines)

No liability accepted, your warranty is void, your lifejacket is under your seat, please return your tray table to the upright position.
 
Posted by WhateverTheySay (# 16598) on :
 
OK thanks. I have tried that but it seems to make no difference, even if I close FF and restart it.

Maybe I will just have to get used to this?
 
Posted by Jengie Jon (# 273) on :
 
The upgrade may be what caused probs at work. Assuming that you want a way to scroll more slowly, I often use the up and down arrow for scrolling through a page if I am reading.

If typing in like this one the tab button will take you to the next place on the form.

Jengie
 
Posted by WhateverTheySay (# 16598) on :
 
Makes a lot of sense. Thank you. I am stupid when it comes to computers.
 
Posted by Sparrow (# 2458) on :
 
Can anyone recommend a free, idiot-proof (ie simple to use) software package for applying different effects to photographs - e.g. watercolour, oil painting and so on? I've tried Gimp but I just can't get on with it. Any other suggestions?
 
Posted by Drifting Star (# 12799) on :
 
Serif's Photoplus does those things pretty well, and they offer a starter version as a free download here.

I should say that I have a full version, and I don't know whether the artistic effects are included in the starter version, but it's worth looking!
 
Posted by Ann (# 94) on :
 
Irfanview has various effects you can use.
 
Posted by Balaam (# 4543) on :
 
Serif Photoplus is good, but you need the manual to get effects right. Otherwise like GIMP it's all trial and error.
 
Posted by Snags (# 15351) on :
 
Not sure it's idiot-proof as such but the effects bit seems fairly straight forward: Paint.Net is a kind of "I wonder if we can write Photoshop from scratch" thing which is rather handy.
 
Posted by Firenze (# 619) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by shamwari:
Anyone on the Ship invested in an Asus Transformer Prime?

Any good?


 
Posted by Balaam (# 4543) on :
 
When I start up my netbook I have to wait for Skype and Spotify to load up.

I don't use either programme all the time, but want to keep them both, but I don't want to have to wait for a program to load if I'm not using it.

Is there a way to stop them loading when I boot the computer?
 
Posted by Drifting Star (# 12799) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Balaam:
Serif Photoplus is good, but you need the manual to get effects right. Otherwise like GIMP it's all trial and error.

The 'Help' facility within the program is very good. I don't think I've ever used the Photoplus manual, and I, too, couldn't get to grips with GIMP.
 
Posted by Jengie Jon (# 273) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Balaam:
When I start up my netbook I have to wait for Skype and Spotify to load up.

I don't use either programme all the time, but want to keep them both, but I don't want to have to wait for a program to load if I'm not using it.

Is there a way to stop them loading when I boot the computer?

Assuming it is a Windows 7 machine, then you just need to remove the link in the startup folder.

Jengie
 
Posted by Snags (# 15351) on :
 
Further to Jengie's post, they may not be in the Startup folder, but could be registry entries, services etc.

So on (most) Windows machines you can type "msconfig" in the Run box (or the search box on Win 7), then go to the Startup tab and de-select whatever you don't want to run at Startup.
 
Posted by Paddy O'Furniture (# 12953) on :
 
This isn't a question but a little blurb about my new Dell laptop. We got it two weeks ago and so far it's great. It's a big laptop with a 17.3" screen running Windows 7. Wow! Windows 7 is quite a leap from XP, which is waht I've been using at my volunteer job. I'm sure I will have many questions for you computer geeks as time passes. It's been several years since I used anything other than a iMac G5.
 
Posted by Balaam (# 4543) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Snags:
So on (most) Windows machines you can type "msconfig" in the Run box (or the search box on Win 7), then go to the Startup tab and de-select whatever you don't want to run at Startup.

Yup. That worked. Thank you.
 
Posted by Balaam (# 4543) on :
 
I posted my query just after shamwari's, noe we're on another page, don't want it to be lost.
quote:
Originally posted by shamwari:
Anyone on the Ship invested in an Asus Transformer Prime?

Any good?


 
Posted by Marvin the Martian (# 4360) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by shamwari:
Anyone on the Ship invested in an Asus Transformer Prime?

No, I'm not really interested in Pokemon.
 
Posted by Wesley J (# 6075) on :
 
After my recent desktop HDD crash and successful recovery, I've reinstalled my e-mail software, via Outlook Express (looking into Thunderbird, though), and have retrieved all the previous messages from my back-ups.

My ISP seems to offer two ways of downloading my webmail now: like before, via POP, or new, with IMAP. The latter meaning that e-mails are primarily stored on the ISP server, and are regularily being synchronised between OE and webmail.

Personally, I still seem to prefer the POP e-mail system: Main e-mail storage on puter HDD (with backups, as above), and possibly leaving a copy on the webmail, for access on the road if needed.

Which system are you using? As you can access webmail (e.g. via lappie) in both, is it just a question of preference? - Thanks for your wise words. [Smile]
 
Posted by Amanda B. Reckondwythe (# 5521) on :
 
I would stick with POP. My experience has been (others may disagree) that Microsoft Outlook does not play well with IMAP.
 
Posted by Alisdair (# 15837) on :
 
Someone better informed than I may have more to say, but basically IMAP uses your ISP's/domain name host's server to hold your mail, where you can create folders, sort, store and delete mail as you would on your own computer. The advantage being that you can access all your mail anywhere and any time you have an internet connection, and use the remote server as a backup (so long as you keep copies of wanted mail on your own computer). Personally I tend to only keep current mail on the IMAP server, and archive want I want to keep locally and to backups.

With POP, once you have downloaded the mail it is deleted from the POP server.

As for playing nicely with IMAP, don't know about Outlook Express, but I've never had any problems with Thunderbird.

[ 05. May 2012, 15:38: Message edited by: Alisdair ]
 
Posted by Snags (# 15351) on :
 
Outlook is a fairly ropey IMAP client, but isn't too bad if you can live with the quirks.

Outlook Express is more even-handed, from memory, although that's a long time ago.

Thunderbird is fine as an IMAP client.

In terms of choosing IMAP v. POP, these days it's mostly down to how you access your email (always from one place, with the same device, or from various places on various devices) and how good you are with your local backups. And, I suppose, how much you trust your ISP/mail provider. Back in the day ISPs used to get the hump about too much mail on the server, but these days you tend to get scads of space bundled in, so there's not a lot to choose in the average situation.
 
Posted by ken (# 2460) on :
 
As a mail provider we vastly prefer our users to use IMAP because there is far less trouble with users who download their mail, lose it, and then come bleating to us to restore it from backup.

Also IMAP can do everything that POP does anyway, so if you want to download everything in one go you still can - and you get to decide whether to delete the server copy at that time or not.

So the advantages of IMAP are that it is safer, faster, and gives more control to the user. As well as letting you see mail from pretty much anywhere you want.

Thunderbird is better than any Outlook version ever. Main reason for me is that it makes it much easier to use more than one email at the same time. You can add as many external email servers as you want. So I can simultaneoualy see my work email and personal email.

Second reason, which is a bit geeky, is that local folders and backups are kept in more-or-less plain text files, which are easy to read from or restore to other mailers. Or even to read ore modify without a mail client at all. Outlook has those crappy .PST files which get lost, break, slow things down, and generally cause no end of trouble.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Just posted to say how cheesed off I am with AVG. Some of the updates have lasted c. 45 minutes, slowing the pc to a crawl, and removing the trial version once it had expired took a good 20m.

Any recommendations for a free firewall and anti-virus that isn't AVG, and doesn't hog resources on an old pc with Windows XP (SP3)? I'm thinking of going back to Avast, but if there is an alternative that's good and quick, and not resource-intensive, recommendations would be welcome.
 
Posted by Baptist Trainfan (# 15128) on :
 
No ideas, but I share the cheesed-offness. And it's not just with XP - my wife has the same problem and she's on Vista Home Basic.

She keeps saying "there's something wrong with the computer" and shouts at it. When I say that there isn't, it's just AVG, she shouts at me instead, and says, "Surely there's something you can do". Which there isn't.

PS This is with the "free" version - which are you on, Ariel?

[ 06. May 2012, 16:03: Message edited by: Baptist Trainfan ]
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
I had the free trial version of AVG which then reverted to basic free. It used to be good. [Frown]
 
Posted by Meerkat (# 16117) on :
 
I used to use ZoneAlarm before I paid for Norton 360. It worked ok for me. We use AVG at work without problems, though. YMMV
 
Posted by Trudy Scrumptious (# 5647) on :
 
Anyone here know much about YouTube? I've been using it to upload various homemade videos with no problem for several years. Since we got our newer, better, faster computer everything works better, except that I can't upload videos to YouTube anymore -- they get hung up partway through the uploading process. Anyone got any clues as to what we might be doing wrong?
 
Posted by Sparrow (# 2458) on :
 
Question for the Kindle users out there: is it possible to "hide" a collection on Kindle so that it doesn't show to the casual user? I want to be able to lend mine to a friend who is interested in getting one, but I have a lot of personal stuff on there I would rather he didn't see!

I know I could always delete it all and put it back afterwards, but I'm lazy ... [Snore]
 
Posted by Snags (# 15351) on :
 
The Kindle user in my life says "No"; apparently collections are really just tags, rather than actual containers, so it looks like you be stuffed :/
 
Posted by luvanddaisies (# 5761) on :
 
Another Kindle question...
There're a few old threads I'd like to read, but that are rather long, and I was thinking it'd be good to have a Ship of Fools file on my Kindle. I tried to put the Dead Horses 90-page epic about homosexuality & Christianity onto it earlier, using the USB connection between it and my MacBook, but it didn't format very well. What's the easiest way of popping Ship threads onto my kindle in a nice readable format?
 
Posted by Alex Cockell (# 7487) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by luvanddaisies:
Another Kindle question...
There're a few old threads I'd like to read, but that are rather long, and I was thinking it'd be good to have a Ship of Fools file on my Kindle. I tried to put the Dead Horses 90-page epic about homosexuality & Christianity onto it earlier, using the USB connection between it and my MacBook, but it didn't format very well. What's the easiest way of popping Ship threads onto my kindle in a nice readable format?

Can the Kindle read PDFs? If so - get a PDF Creator tool, go to the printer-friendly view, print to PDF then move that?
 
Posted by PeteC (# 10422) on :
 
Sometimes, not often, I wish to look at a video - there is this annoying box which keeps popping up wanting to use local storage on my computer. Many organisations want to do this. I keep pressing deny and it still pops up becoming an annoyance. I am reluctant to let any public organisation have access to my computer. bbc,UTOOB, whatever.

Is there any danger implied in allowing access?
 
Posted by passer (# 13329) on :
 
I think that's probably all covered in this link Pete. Personally I wouldn't just trust just any old site requesting it, but I tend to err on the side of caution.
 
Posted by luvanddaisies (# 5761) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Alex Cockell:
quote:
Originally posted by luvanddaisies:
Another Kindle question...
There're a few old threads I'd like to read, but that are rather long, and I was thinking it'd be good to have a Ship of Fools file on my Kindle. I tried to put the Dead Horses 90-page epic about homosexuality & Christianity onto it earlier, using the USB connection between it and my MacBook, but it didn't format very well. What's the easiest way of popping Ship threads onto my kindle in a nice readable format?

Can the Kindle read PDFs? If so - get a PDF Creator tool, go to the printer-friendly view, print to PDF then move that?
It can, but when I tell my mac to save the 'printer-friendly view' of that thread as a pdf it seems to lose the will to live by about thread-page 5, and all that remains afterwards is the smilies and lines between the post [Frown]

Send to Kindle, the Mac version, needs a MacBook with newer OS than mine.

Maybe I need to resign myself to reading it online. Up to page 9 or 10 so far. It's interesting, but would be so much nicer to read on a kindle screen!
 
Posted by Wesley J (# 6075) on :
 
Anyone know of a reliable, free calculator programme that displays all the intermediate steps? I'd occasionally like to do things where all the numbers entered remain visible, and don't just get to the end result.

The MS XP-own calculator, even if switched to advanced view, doesn't seem to display these. (In advanced mode, it does show the steps, but they get erased as soon as you get to a total.)

My mobile phone calculator, interestingly, shows it all, but it certainly would be handy to have on the puter too.

Thanks. [Smile]

[ 06. June 2012, 05:29: Message edited by: Wesley J ]
 
Posted by the giant cheeseburger (# 10942) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Trudy Scrumptious:
Anyone here know much about YouTube? I've been using it to upload various homemade videos with no problem for several years. Since we got our newer, better, faster computer everything works better, except that I can't upload videos to YouTube anymore -- they get hung up partway through the uploading process. Anyone got any clues as to what we might be doing wrong?

I use YouTube a lot, uploading HD sermon videos for church which can be as large as three gigabytes.

Internet connections drop out from time to time, usually when your modem/router loses sync with the ISP. This can derail a YouTube upload, and since I live about 4.5 km from the exchange it happens a lot. Most of the time when this happens it's only for a few minutes, so if I just wait then the YouTube uploader will eventually get going again without needing to do anything.

It's easily fixed if it does stall completely or a misguided multi-tasking effort causes it to be stopped. If you're using the standard upload method (i.e. in a web browser, not an export direct from a program like iMovie) and have the current version of Mozilla Firefox or Google Chrome you can resume an upload which has not been completed. To fix it in Firefox, close that tab/window (you will get asked if you really want to leave the page, click 'leave page') and then go to the upload page again. Select the same video file you were uploading before, and within a couple of minutes it will pick up where it left off. It should be the same in Chrome but I don't use that so I can't be sure.


Having the Activity Monitor (Mac OSX) or Task Manager (Windows) open and the network page selected is a good way of telling whether it has stopped completely or just running very slowly. You'll be able to see a graph of your internet connection speed. If you get dropouts a lot, try contacting your ISP to find out how to pick a more conservative performance profile which will sacrifice a bit of speed for increased stability.
quote:
Originally posted by Wesley J:
Anyone know of a reliable, free calculator programme that displays all the intermediate steps? I'd occasionally like to do things where all the numbers entered remain visible, and don't just get to the end result.

The MS XP-own calculator, even if switched to advanced view, doesn't seem to display these. (In advanced mode, it does show the steps, but they get erased as soon as you get to a total.)

My mobile phone calculator, interestingly, shows it all, but it certainly would be handy to have on the puter too.

Thanks. [Smile]

Try the Dashboard widget PEMDAS if you're on a Mac.

Try http://www.dreamcalc.com/ if you're on Windows.

Or learn how to enter formulae in a spreadsheet program! Calc (OpenOffice), Numbers (iWork) and Excel (Microsoft Office) all work in roughly the same way for the basic stuff.

[ 06. June 2012, 18:57: Message edited by: the giant cheeseburger ]
 
Posted by PeteC (# 10422) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by passer:
I think that's probably all covered in this link Pete. Personally I wouldn't just trust just any old site requesting it, but I tend to err on the side of caution.

thanks. I cleared out some, but "allowed" a few important ones. The list is long; so I got bored doing it one by one,
 
Posted by Wesley J (# 6075) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by the giant cheeseburger:
quote:
Originally posted by Wesley J:
Anyone know of a reliable, free calculator programme that displays all the intermediate steps? [...]

Try the Dashboard widget PEMDAS if you're on a Mac.

Try http://www.dreamcalc.com/ if you're on Windows.

Or learn how to enter formulae in a spreadsheet program! Calc (OpenOffice), Numbers (iWork) and Excel (Microsoft Office) all work in roughly the same way for the basic stuff.

Very nice Dreamcalc thingy there. And yes, of course, spreadsheetiness would be an option.

quote:
Originally posted by Wesley J:
[...] Thanks. [Smile]

[Overused]
 
Posted by ChaliceGirl (# 13656) on :
 
Hi, I have a question/issue and I hope someone knows an answer:

When I run a program- especially when I run a CD or DVD, and sometimes if I am watching You Tube you can hear what sounds like the motor (or fan?)speeding up. It gets louder. If it runs too long the computer shuts down. I suppose it's a safety feature to keep the motor from burning out. I then wait 5 minutes and restart the computer and its ok again. But this is mighty frustrating if I want to watch something!
Is there anything I can do about this? It is a sign that it may be time to think about a new computer? I got it when Vista was new (so I guess about 5 years ago) It is an Acer brand- tower type. Do you think opening it up and cleaning it will make a difference?
 
Posted by Amanda B. Reckondwythe (# 5521) on :
 
My guess would be it's overheating. Be sure the computer is well ventilated -- not resting on a carpet or in an area where air can't circulate freely around it. You can also open it up and blow out the insides with a can of compressed air -- be sure to blow out any vents in the case as well.
 
Posted by monkeylizard (# 952) on :
 
I'm with Amanda on this. The whirring you hear is probably a fan on the CPU that is increasing its speed to increase airflow, but it's insufficient to keep the temps down. The PC shuts down to prevent heat damage to the CPU.

I'd try to download something like Speed Fan that will give you your temps. If it's a heat problem, you'll see the temps start to climb. You want to be below 50C for sure. I keep mine in the low 30s.

If that 's the case (and your symptoms point to "YES"), you have 2 things to try if cleaning the dust out doesn't work. The good news is that doing the 1st one is not a waste of time, as it should be done anyway when doing the 2nd if you need to go that far.

You either have a problem with the fan, or with something called thermal grease. That metal block under the fan (the heatsink) can't go bad (no moving parts, it's just a block of copper or aluminum). It sits on top of the CPU and works like a car's radiator to keep the CPU cool while that fan blows fresh air over it. The problem is that heat doesn't conduct from the CPU to the heatsink very well by itself. So in between the two on the bottom of the heatsink is something called thermal grease or thermal paste.

Let's start with the easy fix.

1) Replace the CPU fan. Unplug everything from the back of the tower and pop open the case. Some people are sticklers about using an anti-static wrist strap when working inside a PC. I'm not, but get one if you want to. They're cheap and can be found online or at most electronics stores. You're looking for a fan on a block that will be silver of black. If there is more than one fan on a block, this will probably be the largest. Look at how the fan is attached to the metal block. It may be a simple clip, or there may be a couple of screws. Remove it and take it to your local computer/office supply/electronics store and get another one of the same size. Put it on. Don't forget to plug it in to the same place the old one was plugged in. Take a picture before removing the old one if you want. The plugs on the motherboard will probably be labeled "CPU FAN" or "CPU".

fire it back up and watch your temps again in Speed Fan. If that fixes things, you're good to go. The old fan just wasn't keeping up. It happens. I tend to replace all of mine every 3-4 years. Which reminds me....time to order some fans.

If that doesn't fix it, you're on to:

2) Replacing the thermal grease. This one's harder, but not terribly so. Still, you may want to bribe a nerdy friend with some baked goods or some beer to be consumed after the job is done.

Take the fan back off again, and gently remove the heatsink. Be careful with a flat head screw driver trying to pop the latches off. If it slips, you can drive that flathead into the board and you could be done, but not in a good way.

Search You tube for some vids on removing a heatsink and how to clean one and how to apply thermal paste. tons of em out there.

Don't forget to do the cleaning on the top of the CPU, not just the bottom of the heatsink. I'd recommend removing the CPU. That's easy. Pop the arm and it come out. When applying the paste again, don't use too much. Somewhere between the size of a grain of rice and a pea is the right amount. I like something called Arctic Silver.

Plug it all up, and check your temps again.
 
Posted by Snags (# 15351) on :
 
To add to the fan comments, it may also be a dead Northbridge fan. That's a much smaller fan on a smaller chip, and they tend to gum up/die after a few years. Not all systems have them - better boards will have passive cooling for the Northbridge chip, but where present after 5 years it's another suspect.
 
Posted by Sandemaniac (# 12829) on :
 
Is there a way of using an outside search engine to search Ship text?

Someone's sig came bursting out of my stereo last night, and I'd love to find out who, but can I remember where I've seen it...?

AG
 
Posted by Drifting Star (# 12799) on :
 
If you put the text followed by site:http://forum.ship-of-fools.com into Google it will search for you. [Smile]
 
Posted by Sandemaniac (# 12829) on :
 
Brilliant - worked just like that. Thank you very much!

AG
 
Posted by monkeylizard (# 952) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Snags:
To add to the fan comments, it may also be a dead Northbridge fan. That's a much smaller fan on a smaller chip, and they tend to gum up/die after a few years. Not all systems have them - better boards will have passive cooling for the Northbridge chip, but where present after 5 years it's another suspect.

This.

The SpeedFan app that I mentioned earlier is a free download. It will help you understand what is overheating. Definitely start there.
 
Posted by Eutychus (# 3081) on :
 
Help!

My Google calendar is broken on my laptop (Windows XP). It won't display anything other than the current week. It will scroll through the months on the calendar on the left, but won't do anything else. All the menu buttons are inactive.

This appears to be a client-side problem, because it all works fine on my PC.

I was recently on a network that required a specific proxy setting. Could this have made a difference? And how can I resolve this??

[ 12. June 2012, 17:03: Message edited by: Eutychus ]
 
Posted by Snags (# 15351) on :
 
Have you undone the proxy setting?

Also, have you tried it in different browsers, checked for updates etc.?
 
Posted by Eutychus (# 3081) on :
 
It's browser-related. Works in IEX and not in Firefox even after removing proxy settings.
 
Posted by Snags (# 15351) on :
 
My Google-Fu must be getting rusty. Only thing I can find is a suggestion to clear your Google cookies. Seems to be the standard response to any FF/Google Calendar issue, but doesn't look wildly current ...
 
Posted by Eutychus (# 3081) on :
 
Didn't work, either [Waterworks]
 
Posted by Eutychus (# 3081) on :
 
Disabling an extension - AVG security toolbar, which I don't use but which has long been installed and which has never caused problems before - has fixed it though. Thanks for looking!
 
Posted by the giant cheeseburger (# 10942) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Eutychus:
Disabling an extension - AVG security toolbar, which I don't use but which has long been installed and which has never caused problems before - has fixed it though. Thanks for looking!

AVG is a pest, and an unfortunately hard to uninstall pest at that.

The only good thing about it is that it's not Norton, over which I would rather have an infected computer.

If you're needing a free security solution and you're not able to use Microsoft Security Essentials, I would suggest using Avast! Antivirus free edition.
 
Posted by Think² (# 1984) on :
 
Hi guys, I have - with the sainted Alex Cockell's help - worked out that my cafe access problem is down to my bt homehub 2.

I have found my admin password and managed to find out how to open ports. But. What are the ports I need to open for the cafe ?
 
Posted by Alex Cockell (# 7487) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Think²:
Hi guys, I have - with the sainted Alex Cockell's help - worked out that my cafe access problem is down to my bt homehub 2.

I have found my admin password and managed to find out how to open ports. But. What are the ports I need to open for the cafe ?

'Fraid I don't know what ports to open - but you could try opening UPNP ports on demand at the router...
 
Posted by St Everild (# 3626) on :
 
In faffing around with iCloud (a Mac invention I have discovered I can live without, thank you!) I have deleted the iCal entries from my Mac. They are still on my iPad and iPhone. There must be a way of restoring them to the Mac...somehow.

I use Time Machine as well, but I can't discover how to restore from that, either.

Grrr.
 
Posted by ken (# 2460) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Alex Cockell:
quote:
Originally posted by Think²:
Hi guys, I have - with the sainted Alex Cockell's help - worked out that my cafe access problem is down to my bt homehub 2.

I have found my admin password and managed to find out how to open ports. But. What are the ports I need to open for the cafe ?

'Fraid I don't know what ports to open - but you could try opening UPNP ports on demand at the router...
Not the safest way to run a firewall...

I think the ports used can be configured on the chat server so the only way to be sure is to ask the admins.

Though if its using DigiChat, the default might be 8396 (I dont know for sure as I don't use the cafe)
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
It uses Faverolle and Java - not sure if that's helpful or not.

Not sure how to interrogate my BT Internet router from Linux to see which ports are being used. The obvious bits don't give me the information, so I probably need to download the right programme
 
Posted by Jengie Jon (# 273) on :
 
Not sure this is all of them but for JAVAW the remote port is 25424. This was done via my anti-virus

I can't see anything for Faverolle

Jengie

[ 16. June 2012, 18:44: Message edited by: Jengie Jon ]
 
Posted by Jengie Jon (# 273) on :
 
Local port is 61156 in case that is what is needed.

Jengie
 
Posted by Think² (# 1984) on :
 
Thanks, I'll try that.
 
Posted by Doc Tor (# 9748) on :
 
This one will probably drive you all mad... [Razz]

The embedded video content on the BBC website mostly doesn't work for me any more. I'm running Firefox13 on the big computer. Flash and Java are up to date, there are no known issues with the firewall. The news video clips refuse to play - "content not available" and most iplayer programs, including the radio pop-out refuse to work.

When I check my connection speed to iplayer (on this page) I'm getting 10000kbps except on Streaming Speed 1 where I getting 0kps. I have no idea why this might be. The same thing happens on IE9 and Chrome.

I am running a reasonably old router/modem and I thought that might be the problem, but of course everything works fine on the laptop, working from the same connection but using older versions of Firefox and Flash.

Flash seems to work fine on other sites: I get itv.com and 4od.com without any problems at all.

What am I missing?
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Doc Tor:
(on this page)

Oooh - what fun! Good luck.
 
Posted by ken (# 2460) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Doc Tor:


What am I missing?

You say its the same on all three browsers? If so its not the browser version.

You say the laptop works in the same connection? Is it exactly the same connection (pull cable from one machine and stick it in the other) or is one wireless and one not?

If the same then its some difference between one computer and the other.

Do laptop & the other machine have same operating system release and version? Networking settings? Same virus checking? Local firewall? Java runtime?

Maybe something is blocking streaming traffic on one machine but not the other - I'm not saying its a firewall setting (though it could be) but if it was there might be some clues here.
 
Posted by Doc Tor (# 9748) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by ken:
quote:
Originally posted by Doc Tor:


What am I missing?

You say its the same on all three browsers? If so its not the browser version.

You say the laptop works in the same connection? Is it exactly the same connection (pull cable from one machine and stick it in the other) or is one wireless and one not?

The lappy is wireless, but it's coming from the same router as the desktop.

quote:
Originally posted by ken:
Do laptop & the other machine have same operating system release and version? Networking settings? Same virus checking? Local firewall? Java runtime?

The laptop is old, runs WinXP, FF3.6 and and compatible version of Flash. Same firewall though (Bullguard) as the desktop, which runs Win7(64-bit).

I'm reasonably certain it is something about the desktop, but am frustrated by the fact that the same OS/browser/flash configuration allows everything else that works with Flash through. It's something specific to iplayer, but I don't know what it is.

quote:
Originally posted by ken:
Maybe something is blocking streaming traffic on one machine but not the other - I'm not saying its a firewall setting (though it could be) but if it was there might be some clues here.

That's an excellent resource, but I'm getting all ports connecting on their checker.
 
Posted by Snags (# 15351) on :
 
Have you configured any king of proxy on the desktop that's giving you a non-UK IP address?
 
Posted by Doc Tor (# 9748) on :
 
No. My IP geolocates close to my home.

That should come up with the error "this content is unavailable in your country".

It's seriously bizarre though. I have massive bandwidth, except for the iplayer, when I have nothing. If I turn the firewall off, nothing changes.

I might roll back Flash or clean install an earlier version, and see if that does anything. Don't have time now, unfortunately.
 
Posted by Amanda B. Reckondwythe (# 5521) on :
 
Have you installed any Microsoft "critical updates" lately? If so, try rolling them back one at a time until the problem is solved.
 
Posted by Doc Tor (# 9748) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Amanda B. Reckondwythe:
Have you installed any Microsoft "critical updates" lately? If so, try rolling them back one at a time until the problem is solved.

Yes. Yes I have.

I'll try that, too, but tomorrow. Thanks.
 
Posted by Alex Cockell (# 7487) on :
 
Running System Mechanic 10 Professional on 64-bit Win7... it started getting into an endless loop when attempting to download AV and antimalware definitions that weren't there (most recent updates were on friday)... had to switch off anutomatic checking for updates - apparently this is a known issue on 10.8.5 (which is the version I think I'm on). Didn't have an issue before - would pop out - ask - Ok - none there... OK shut up.

Notified iolo - will keep folks posted... but should be OK.
 
Posted by Doc Tor (# 9748) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Doc Tor:
quote:
Originally posted by Amanda B. Reckondwythe:
Have you installed any Microsoft "critical updates" lately? If so, try rolling them back one at a time until the problem is solved.

Yes. Yes I have.

I'll try that, too, but tomorrow. Thanks.

I did try it. I broke my computer. So I stopped.

I did find a day-old ticket on the Adobe website about the latest release of Flash screwing with iplayer. So it's a known issue, and it's not just me. I think I'm going to wait for a workaround, and if I need to listen to a radio programme, do it lo-fi on the laptop.
 
Posted by Amanda B. Reckondwythe (# 5521) on :
 
[Miss Amanda's face goes red, but she continues on after she's recovered her composure] You probably don't want any more advice from me, but try booting in safe mode and do a system restore to an earlier date when everything was working.
 
Posted by Doc Tor (# 9748) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Amanda B. Reckondwythe:
[Miss Amanda's face goes red, but she continues on after she's recovered her composure] You probably don't want any more advice from me, but try booting in safe mode and do a system restore to an earlier date when everything was working.

Don't fret. I malletted it back to life, and apart from the iplayer thing, it's fine.

I'm going to try and install an earlier version of flash next.
 
Posted by Think² (# 1984) on :
 
Having searched old geek threads, I have discovered he said in 2008 to open port 25424 in one's firewall. So I did this on both windows and router firewalls, no joy [Frown]
 
Posted by Think² (# 1984) on :
 
(This thread.)
 
Posted by Amanda B. Reckondwythe (# 5521) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Think²:
Having searched old geek threads, I have discovered he said in 2008 to open port 25424 in one's firewall.

Who is this "he" of which you speak?
 
Posted by Think² (# 1984) on :
 
Melon
 
Posted by Doc Tor (# 9748) on :
 
In other news...

Adobe and Mozilla unable to fix Flash video crash problem

And inexplicably, my iplayer is working again, without doing anything further to it. [Confused]
 
Posted by Beethoven (# 114) on :
 
Mr Beets had a problem a couple of nights ago with iPlayer not playing most of the things he was wanting via his iPod, with the same error message you mentioned. Don't know if it's any better now, but it seems odd that it's the same error at the same time on different equipment...
 
Posted by Doc Tor (# 9748) on :
 
It looks like Flash 11.3 is borked. If you haven't updated an earlier version, don't.
 
Posted by the giant cheeseburger (# 10942) on :
 
People are still using Flash?
 
Posted by Doc Tor (# 9748) on :
 
Everybody is using Flash.

It powers the BBC iplayer, youtube, vimeo, online games and a whole host of other applications.
 
Posted by Amanda B. Reckondwythe (# 5521) on :
 
My friend R. who is a professional web designer tells me that there are other, much better, ways of animating websites than via Flash, and that in fact Google will "punish" Flash websites by ranking them beneath sites that don't use Flash.

Here's a website that explains the pros and cons of Flash as best as any does.
 
Posted by BessHiggs (# 15176) on :
 
I'm looking for some advice. I am interested in changing over to a point of sale system at the bar. What I've been seeing in my (limited) on-line research all seems geared towards a larger operation than mine.

Here's what I'm looking for:

-touch screen input (one terminal to start, but expandable if necessary)
-easily updated menus
-real-time inventory tracking
-able to communicate with my accounting software
-not a gazillion dollars.

Any pointers, tips, advice etc? PM me if y'all don't want to clutter up the thread.
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
Try looking for iPad or android apps. There are some that claim realtime inventory tracking. Just type iPad point of sale realtime inventory into Google. Many small businesses are using these, even in a fixed retail location.
 
Posted by monkeylizard (# 952) on :
 
What lilBuddha said. You can even get a card reader that will attach to the iPad (or even iPhone) for scanning credit/debit cards.

http://www.usatoday.com/tech/news/story/2012-03-05/square-register-ipad-app/53356522/1
 
Posted by Snags (# 15351) on :
 
Almost all of the advertising blurb is geared towards MegaCorps, IME, but there are plenty of things out there that suit a single-till kind of operation.

Integration with accounts/stock control is going to depend on what existing software you use, to a large extent. We have a couple of retail clients (UK) and one leases their EPOS system (posh way of saying "till that talks to Sage") so that it comes with some support for when it inevitably screws up.

Our landlord operates on a much cheaper basis, bought an ancient till off Ebay and has kept it running ever since. Caused me some amusement when he had an issue with it recently, as I had to remember how the hell to do stuff in NT4, which is what it runs underneath the till interface!

[ETA]
Buggrit, meant to say it would probably be worth sussing out a couple of local suppliers and just giving them a ring. Anywhere half-decent will be used to people with modest needs - they're not fitting out department stores all the time, after all.

[ 22. June 2012, 14:49: Message edited by: Snags ]
 
Posted by Lyda*Rose (# 4544) on :
 
I'm late to the party, but I was rather shocked that the sound of YouTube went out on me- picture and motion are fine- this morning. Obviously I was attacked by a nasty Flash download. And me in my wisdom checked "allow" to the thing last night. Why are they still downloading a problematic "upgrade" (hollow laugh) weeks later? Damn my trusting heart! [Waterworks]

Having no confidence in my own fix-it abilities beyond rebooting, I think I'm off to the local geek shop.
 
Posted by Pigwidgeon (# 10192) on :
 
I just had work done on my computer, so of course all sorts of settings have been changed. Two things are particularly bugging me, and I can't find the answers. (And, yes, I use Outlook Express and Internet Explorer. I like them, and I have no plans to change then until I get a new computer and have to.)

In Internet Explorer (IE8) my tool bar -- the one with File, Edit, View, Favorites, etc.) is now black. If I hover my mouse in the correct spots, the words show in blue and white on black, but I'd like my old tool bar back.

In several programs and displays (e.g., Outlook Express, My Pictures, My Documents -- and even Solitaire -- the display is much smaller than it was and the fonts are almost too small to read. I went to Control Panel, Display, Appearance, but that didn't seem to make any difference when I chose Large Fonts.

Any help would be appreciated. Thanks!
 
Posted by Pigwidgeon (# 10192) on :
 
Well, the tool bar is now back to normal.
[Confused]

But the fonts and displays are still too small.
 
Posted by Alisdair (# 15837) on :
 
Sounds as though your screen resolution may have been changed. I don't use Windows, so am a bit rusty, but back to Control Centre > Hardware > Display (or whatever the path is) and find where you can set the Screen Resolution. Try opting for the next step down from what it is set for. IIRC Windows will give you a few seconds on the new setting to let you decide if you want it. Unless you confirm your choice, it'll revert to whatever it was before you fiddled around. That's my best shot, but others may have other ideas.
 
Posted by Pigwidgeon (# 10192) on :
 
Thanks, Alisdair -- I'll try that.
 
Posted by Morlader (# 16040) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Alisdair:
Sounds as though your screen resolution may have been changed. I don't use Windows, so am a bit rusty, but back to Control Centre > Hardware > Display (or whatever the path is) and find where you can set the Screen Resolution. Try opting for the next step down from what it is set for. IIRC Windows will give you a few seconds on the new setting to let you decide if you want it. Unless you confirm your choice, it'll revert to whatever it was before you fiddled around. That's my best shot, but others may have other ideas.

Double clicking the desktop should enable you to see, and select a new, resolution. Yes, you should get a few seconds to confirm you like a new setting. Your desktop icons will all probably move about, though [Frown]
 
Posted by Alogon (# 5513) on :
 
This might be a strange place to ask, but so many Shipmates are multilingual that I bet my problem is not unique.

In the pre-computer days, typewriters with dead keys were standard equipment in academic libraries. These keyboards had about half a dozen keys that produced diacritics only. We typed the diacritic first (e.g. the grave or the umlaut) and the carriage did not advance. Then we typed the underlying letter normally. By this means, many languages using the Latin alphabet could be accommodated with only a few extra keys to remember.

By contrast, Microsoft's layouts are a mess. For any foreign language, many keys are re-mapped with some combination of a letter and an accent. While the flexibility that this coding provides for fonts is very understandable, it is a pity that there are so many combinations to remember and the normal meaning of keys is supplanted.

Yearning for the simplicity of the old dead-key system, I recently discovered Kbdedit.com, whose program looks highly configurable (perhaps so much that it is complex and overkill). Does anyone have experience with this software, or can you suggest an equivalent that you like better?
 
Posted by Lamb Chopped (# 5528) on :
 
We use VNI, which was originally for Vietnamese (roman alphabet with pitch marks) but now apparently covers an array of Asian etc. languages. I think their website is vnisoft.com or similar. It has a little add-on thingy that you can click on or off to make it work with Word, InDesign, and probably other programs, and I'm pretty sure you can set it to output Unicode rather than the proprietary coding we've always used. Basically you type the letter first, then one of the number keys, and the diacritical whatsit pops into existence above/beneath/as part of the letter (whichever is most appropriate).

I have to use Microsoft layers upon layers of keyboard maps to do Greek and Hebrew at work, and I loathe & detest it with a purple passion. What human being should have to deal with that crap?
 
Posted by Alisdair (# 15837) on :
 
This is an area I only have occasional need of, but I usually resort to 'Character Map' and a UTF8 font with an appropriate character set which usually supplies me with anything I need. This is in Linux, but presumably there are similar utilities available for Windows/OSX.

LaTeX, of course makes it all simple, in it's usual complicated way. ;-)
 
Posted by the giant cheeseburger (# 10942) on :
 
Using Mac OSX, I can add an umlaut by pressing Option+U and then the vowel over which I want the umlaut placed. Other keys (mostly the vowels) work the same way with other marks. It's effectively a way of adding a typewriter-style dead key without adding an extra physical key, which I approve of since the Apple Wireless Keyboard is the perfect size already.

This is how it works in Mac OSX for standard US/Australian/Canadian keyboard layouts and British layouts where a pound symbol comes from pressing Shift+4 instead of a dollar symbol. It's a feature of the operating system that has been there ever since OS 10.1 which means it works in all applications, you don't need any special utilities.

Ironically, I can't do it right now because I use Boot Camp to run Windows 7 on my iMac for a number of programs I have which are Windows-only, and at the moment I'm in Windows!
 
Posted by Sparrow (# 2458) on :
 
Embarrassingly stupid question coming up ... I've just replaced my old PC monitor with a new, widescreen one. I think I need to change the resolution or whatever, because pictures are now stretched across the width of the screen so, e.g. what should be a circle looks like an ellipse. What do I need to do?
 
Posted by Drifting Star (# 12799) on :
 
Control Panel > Display > Adjust Resolution then choose the one that works. If you don't know the resolution you may have to experiment. There's a bit of advice at the bottom of the screen if you click on 'What display settings should I choose' (or something like that).
 
Posted by Snags (# 15351) on :
 
What DS said. Generally the best resolution to use is the maximum the monitor is capable of, which it no doubt shouts proudly on the packaging.

If you find you don't have that option available it can be a couple of different things:

a) the system incorrectly identifying the monitor's capabilities

b) the video card/system not having enough oomph to drive high-res widescreen and/or needing a driver update to cope with newer resolutions if it's quite an old system
 
Posted by Sparrow (# 2458) on :
 
Thanks, I think that has worked!
 
Posted by Stejjie (# 13941) on :
 
File this problem under "should've backed up". [Hot and Hormonal]

I was having problems last night with my new PC - it was being really slow at certain things, like (seemingly) connecting to the network, accessing my external hard drive and when I tried to shut it down, it just wouldn't, I just had the Win7 shutdown screen and my external HD clicking from time to time. I've tried it again today after unplugging the offending HD and it works fine - which strongly suggests that there's something wrong with that HD (which isn't surprising as it's quite a few years old).

Which is OK, at least my computer's working now. The trouble is, that had drive has got all my documents, photos, music - everything that's not program files etc. I'm loath to plug it back into the computer as is as I don't want all the old problems coming back - is there another way I can get the stuff of it and onto my computer?
 
Posted by Alisdair (# 15837) on :
 
@Stejjie -- I'm not really a technical guru, but here's some suggestions. You don't say how the hard drive is/was connected (SATA,USB,...), but you could try using an alternative interface and see if the system handles the hard-drive better.

If it's USB and the drive is normally a 'fixture', you could try only plugging it in once the system is fully booted. Some systems will set up an already attached drive differently to one that is hot-plugged.

You could try setting the drive up on a different machine and seeing if that deals with it more gracefully, then copy/backup all your stuff.

If the drive has recently begun making an odd ticking noise death may be immanent, so backup/replacement measures will be urgently required.

There is plenty more technical stuff that could be said and done, but maybe that'll do for a start.
 
Posted by maryjones (# 13523) on :
 
Re Lion OS. I transferred to this with great caution after reading all the scare comments. It was a doddle to install (although it took ages) and everything works fine - all the apps, the printer, everything [Smile]
 
Posted by Wet Kipper (# 1654) on :
 
Our laptop is now suddenly telling us that the copy of Windows Vista is not genuine.
It's been genuine enough for the past 4 years, anyone heard of this suddenly happening or have any ideas ?
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
WK,

This might be scareware. Run your atni-virus and anti-spyware first.

Though it might be another issue. Have you changed hardware? Other people have had this problem, I have not. Here is a Google search which might help. I claim no certainty about the suggestions contained therein as I have not tried them.
 
Posted by the giant cheeseburger (# 10942) on :
 
WK, can you copy in exactly what the message is saying word for word? And can you also check what the title at the top of the window shows?

[ 25. July 2012, 13:44: Message edited by: the giant cheeseburger ]
 
Posted by ken (# 2460) on :
 
Also, as well as the exact wording, when does it say it and in what window? At boot time? At login? Some minutes after login? When you start a browser?
 
Posted by Wet Kipper (# 1654) on :
 
can't check the wording at the moment, but when you turn on, and choose your account (we have one for us and one for visitors/children with privileges revoked) it comes up with a screen for windows activation, asking you to chose between "activate now" and "activate later"
If you choose "activate now" it says the key supplied is invalid and gives you options to enter another key, or contact HP for help, which leads to a dead page on the HP support website.
If you choose activate later, everything continues as normal, except the background is black and in the bottom left hand corner it says
"Windows Vista (TM)
Build 6002
This copy of windows is not genuine"
 
Posted by Latchkey Kid (# 12444) on :
 
WK,

Have you tried 'phoning HP for support?

I had a similar problem with a friend's WinXP Home which directed me to Microsoft support. Their diagnosis was that the product id was, in fact, valid; but I would have to pay about $90 to them to eliminate the problem! Instead, I took off the data and had a clean install of WinXP Prof done instead.
 
Posted by Latchkey Kid (# 12444) on :
 
WK.

Another option to look into is whether you can restore the laptop to factory conditions. This sort of option may be found at boot, usually with a function key, but which one can vary with model.

You should back up your data before doing this. You will then have to do updates for the installed software and re-install any software you have added.
 
Posted by Wet Kipper (# 1654) on :
 
Thanks everyone for your comments.
Given that a week before this started happening , we had already bought what is to be the replacement for the reluctant laptop (so far the battery doesn't charge, the fan is permanently running at high speed, and more often than not it makes a strange ticky sound) it doesn't seem worth it to go to any hassle sorting it out. Everything still works, and I think the hardware part of the machine is going to die before long...
 
Posted by Eutychus (# 3081) on :
 
OK, a telecoms/IT convergence question.

My cable internet/VOIP connection has been playing up. I've swapped modems and had a technician change a splitter in my home, but it's still not working properly.

A few hours before the most recent failure, and not long before the previous one, I was in mid-conversation on the VOIP phone and got what sounded like an incoming fax/modem signal, following which the call was dropped.

Does anyone have any idea what might cause an incoming fax/modem signal and whether this might be related to my modem falling over and not being able to get back up?
 
Posted by Pearl B4 Swine (# 11451) on :
 
Problem with my monitor: After I turn the machine on, my screen is filled with vertical ribbons of thin lines, grouped in colors. Its very pretty, but very hard to get rid of- I want to go to the sign on screen. We had a 12 hour electrical blackout on Saturday- is this connected? Is this monitor about to self destruct? I despise it anyway- It has 'touch controls on the right edge which only work once in a while. Thanks for any info.
 
Posted by Snags (# 15351) on :
 
Pearl, is it an LCD or a CRT (flat or ye olden style)? Although either way it's probably knackered.

The only possible cause for doubt is that it might be the video card, not the screen. The usual "simple" check is to plug in another screen (or put that screen on another machine) and see if the problem goes or stays. Of course, that assumes you have multiple computers/screens to hand ...
 
Posted by Pearl B4 Swine (# 11451) on :
 
Thanks snags. I looked around the place for another monitor- no go. Plenty of old keyboards tho, haha.
 
Posted by monkeylizard (# 952) on :
 
Have you tried disconnecting the monitor from the PC, and then reconnecting it? Sometimes a loose pin connection can cause that.
 
Posted by Pearl B4 Swine (# 11451) on :
 
Yes, MonLiz- TY - I've done that too. (its a Westinghouse flat screen, btw)- and its no better. Taking it to the fixit shop tomorrow morning. He wants the whole deal, tower & monitor. OOOh my back :-/
 
Posted by jedijudy (# 333) on :
 
*Bump*
 
Posted by Sparrow (# 2458) on :
 
Is there any way of recording and keeping a programme you have downloaded from BBC iPlayer?
 
Posted by Garasu (# 17152) on :
 
Um... don't you just save it when you download it? Am I missing something?
 
Posted by Jay-Emm (# 11411) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Garasu:
Um... don't you just save it when you download it? Am I missing something?

It's only valid for a limited time.
(I'm not quite sure how it enforces that, I suspect it has to send a request for a key, or it might just rely on the honesty of the viewer).

On the plus side, it is freely available from a legitimate source for a limited time. But there's no simple legitimate internet equivalent to the VCR.

I've recorded the screen capture before (for things that are nigh impossible to find, and so as not to take their bandwidth for christmas TOTP every day in December). It's bulky and not brilliant quality, and so not simple. It's a shame you can't pay an extra license fee...(or indeed a foreigner one) but I guess it would be abused. Or create a cheap DVD from BBC's own programs.
 
Posted by Garasu (# 17152) on :
 
This may be what I'm missing: I've just listened to a radio broadcast from April that I'd saved; is it different for TV? Or am I due to lose my radio broadcast?
 
Posted by Sparrow (# 2458) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Jay-Emm:
quote:
Originally posted by Garasu:
Um... don't you just save it when you download it? Am I missing something?

It's only valid for a limited time.
(I'm not quite sure how it enforces that, I suspect it has to send a request for a key, or it might just rely on the honesty of the viewer).


It just expires and disappears after a set period, you click on BBC iPlayer and it just isn't there any more.
 
Posted by The5thMary (# 12953) on :
 
Oh, God, ohhhhh God, woe is me! Sometimes I just want to scream.... I was a Mac user for years and years until last winter when our comparatively new iMac went on strike and refused to cooperate... we didn't have the money to get it fixed so we bought a Dell laptop and are paying that off, slowwwwly....

Anyway, it seems as though any time my partners Kristine or Jennifer get on the internet and download one of those free sites that let you play games, something downloads to our hard drive as well and gums up the works! Every damn week I have to go in and physically remove some numb-nuts program or utility that decided to move in and stay. I confess I am woefully ignorant about how to get the original system to go back to what it was when we first got the computer this last April. I have done a System Restore but that only restored things since June, not the full monty. Are there books I should be reading/people I should be talking to? Macs just don't have these problems and if I can afford it, I'm going to try to get our Mac fixed and leave the PC laptop to one of my wives. Sorry for the long-ass post!

Also, is McAfee any good? It's what we have installed from Dell.
 
Posted by Snags (# 15351) on :
 
This may start a fight but MacAfee is utter crap. Replace with Avast for a freebie or Kaspersky for cheap paid.

You can do a factory restore on the machine but you will lose all data/apps so make sure you have good backups if you do this.

Your user accounts are probably all running as admins. Stop that now. Set all day to day accounts to Limited and have a known admin account to do admin tasks via elevation.

when installing free stuff, pay attention to the extra crap it will push at you - toolbars, security scans - refuse it all, it's shite.

stop the ladies going to shitty free game sites! These, and porn sites, are notorious for dropping rubbish on you.

Grab a copy of malwarebytes (www.malwarebytes.com)and don't accept the trial, manually update and do a full scan.
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
A note on anti-virus/anti-malware software:

None can prevent every infection. None can protect you from yourself, so exercise common sense. Constantly update your anti-virus as the authors of virus/malware are constantly writing new programs.

Side note to smug Mac users: your systems are not inherently more secure. You have largely been ignored due to a, relatively, small user base. This is already changing so you be careful as well.
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Curiosity killed ...:
Has anyone installed an HP LaserJet 4100N on to a Win7 machine? I failed yesterday.

It's on a network cable rather than a USB. The printer drivers installed - as HP LaserJet 4100 PS? series drivers - manually requested. I installed it as a network printer and used the printer's IP address (after googling and interrogating the printer - the number is in the format 192.#.#.###). The error message was that IP number was not valid and the printer was not recognised.

<snip>

Any ideas as to ways of solving this one? When I googled one of the answers came up with coding strings, which is not something I'd want to do on something that isn't mine.

Digging this one up from the depths, because we now have a new team administrator who is most unhappy the laser jet doesn't work.

I am pretty certain (after digging around and talking to the tame geek) the problem with this is to do with the network cable not talking to the Win7 network socket, because Win7 is now using a different operating system. HP haven't got a whole lot of incentive to recode the printer to allow this interface because it's old and from their point of view it's more sensible to sell new ones set up to the new operating systems. And Windows are going to say it's HP's problem.

Has anyone got any idea if anyone has written any functioning coding to deal with this? The boards I tripped over looking were pretty much giving up, but some people had a lot of these printers to install.
 
Posted by Snags (# 15351) on :
 
CK, at what point does it fail? I'm seeing a lot of failures of HP installers to detect their own printers over a network, but you can usually work around it if you go old school on them. Obviously you do need to have the 64-bit driver if it's a 64-bit OS, but that aside the standard trick is:

- look in %temp% to find the folder that the installer extracted everything to (normally a *7z folder as I think they use 7-zip to create the self-extractor) and copy out the relevant drivers section

- go to Device & Printers and Add A Printer manually

- choose "Local" and "New port" then set up a Standard TCP/IP port on the IP address assigned to the printer (make sure this is reserved in DHCP on your DHCP server so it doesn't change in the future)

- carry on, and when prompted point the system at the drivers you liberated at the first step

That normally works. Of course, if the problem's something else ...
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
The problem in this one is that it uses a network cable not a USB cable. Installation gets a long way through - I did write it down back in February when I was trying.

The problem has gone away, the new team administrator bought a new laser jet printer.
 
Posted by jedijudy (# 333) on :
 
I had the same problem with my nice (older) do-everything printer. When I got the new laptop (Windows 7) I fussed and fiddled with it and finally got it to print. No more scanning or other such tricks. And it was thus for almost a year.

So, this past weekend, I found a new (wireless!!!) printer for a decent price at Sam's Club. It installed nicely, and I took the old printer to w*rk and donated it to the music department. (My work computer!) Now my old XP computer there has a printer that actually works!!

This was my win-win solution to the problem.
 
Posted by Snags (# 15351) on :
 
Sorry about that - searching back to February when posting in a rush from the phone is a little, er, challenging [Smile]

If by any chance you still want to get it to work, then if the following description matches the problem, the details below will (probably) help. I'll post them here in case it helps anyone else as it's obviously not relevant to your immediate issue any more.

Scenario
- You have an HP network-ready printer.
- You have the correct installer.
- The printer is correctly joined to the network (via cable or wireless) and has an IP address (you can check this on your DHCP server, or on the printer itself via the screen or by pressing a special combo of keys to get a status sheet)
- you can "ping" the printer successfully (Start > Run "cmd"; type "ping <ip address>" e.g. "ping 192.168.1.10")

Symptom
You run the installer, you choose 'network' but when it comes to the installer finding the printer either it can't, or it errors and you get stuck in an endless retry loop.

Workaround
You can work around the issue by doing a manual install. Note that this will only work for printing - if it's a multi-function it won't sort out the scanning side of it.

If you have the CD, you can skip the first step below.

(1) If you downloaded the installer, when you first run it, it extracts all of the install files and drivers to your temporary directory. You'll need (some of) these to do the install, so go find where they are by typing "%temp%" into the address bar in Windows Explorer (not Internet Explorer!) then looking for a folder ending in "7z" created on the day you run the installer. Poke about in those until you find the one that's obviously the HP install stuff (it is obvious) and copy it out to somewhere more memorable.

(2) Go into "Printers and Faxes" or "Devices and Printers" (XP/Vista & 7) and choose to "Add a printer"

(3) Choose "Local Printer" but de-select auto-detect

(4) When it asks for the port, choose "New Port", then "Standard TCP/IP port"

(5) Set the port's address to the IP address of the printer

(6) Continue with the installation and use "Have Disk" to point the wizard at the driver location (either the CD, or wherever you put the files at (1) above)

That ought to work, all other things being equal.

Note: assuming the printer is getting its address via DHCP you will want to go in to your DHCP server and reserve the address so that the printer always gets the same IP address, otherwise you may find it all stops working for no obvious reason. In a domestic/small office setup you are probably getting your addresses direct from your router; there will be a way to reserve address on it if this is the case, but it varies from model to model, so you'll have to do some research.

If you're running a proper DHCP server, or know enough to give the printer a decent host name and create appropriate local DNS records then you don't need me to be telling you any of the above in the first place [Smile]
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
I did all of that down to step 5, by following the instructions I'd found by googling. I then, having done everything, got a message that said the printer wasn't recognised - no such IP address. So I tried again a couple of times, making sure I'd done it right, but googling further found that a lot of other people had had the same problem and were talking coding strings to resolve. As it really isn't my problem any more I gave up. I had been dragged in to deal with quite a lot of other things - set up the e-mail, sort out the other printers and had dealt with everything else on the list.
 
Posted by Snags (# 15351) on :
 
That sounds suspiciously like the printer was on the fritz, then. You can normally do a quick test by browsing to it by IP - they all have little internal web servers, and if they don't respond/turn up errors than all bets are off.

Still, as you say, not your problem any more, and they're the best kind!
 
Posted by Eutychus (# 3081) on :
 
So I've bought a mini-PC running Android, basically because it was marked down from 100 EUR to 60 EUR and I thought it might be fun to play with.

The first thing I've discovered is that I need an SD card to do just about anything. Once I've got that, what else can I do with it?

256MB RAM, Android 2.2, 4GB internal memory.
 
Posted by Wesley J (# 6075) on :
 
Regarding the SD card, try to go for the max it allows (see specs in the manual). This will basically serve as its extra harddrive; in this case, a solid state one.

I've just upgraded my own mobile phone memory card from the 8GB it came with to the maximum of 32 GB. Which is nice! [Cool]
 
Posted by Alex Cockell (# 7487) on :
 
CK - do you have a fileserver on that network? Or a machine running a server version of Windows designated as your print server?

On THAT machine, load the drivers, and add the printer on an LPR port. Depending on how the printer has its IP address assigned, you may need to get its MAC address and define it an IP address on your DHCP server.

I'm remembering the way I did it on XP on our work network - but you need to add an LPD or LPR port (TCP connection to the printer) and add the printer, pointing to that one, and give it a queue name. Assign rights accordingly, then give it a sharename.

Workstations then add the network printer as its UNC - aka "\\printserver\printername".

Also means the printer itself only needs to deal with data coming from one place - its print server.
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
Alex, it's no longer a problem for me - I was flagging it up to those who are interested. And I remembered, the reason I was convinced it was the network cable driver was that was what the error code I got translated to. But I don't have to deal with it any more ever again.
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
And the whole problem was that this printer worked on 98/XP and probably would on Vista, but not on Win7 - where the new DOS meant the network driver didn't work for this printer
 
Posted by cattyish (# 7829) on :
 
I have a PC and an old ipod nano, and I've been getting itunes to do all the work of synching music and audiobooks for me. Since I've started recording my singing lessons I want itunes to keep hold of the recording, then stick it onto my i-gadget.

I've created an mp3 of yesterday's lesson, manually added it to itunes and then tried to view it in itunes. It won't show up there, but is in the folder when I look using the file explorer thingy in Windows 7. I've tried making it its very own folder, but it still won't show in itunes. Any suggestions?

Cattyish, humble novice.
 
Posted by cattyish (# 7829) on :
 
Eureka! Managed to sort it out by adding the recording to a playlist. At least, I think that's what I did.

Cattyish.
 
Posted by Eutychus (# 3081) on :
 
Any recommendations for getting rid of a nasty popup piece of malware that opens Firefox secretly in the background and keeps popping ads up on it? My usual malware remover has not got rid of it [Frown]
 
Posted by ken (# 2460) on :
 
Is this Windows?

Does it happen when you have never started Firefox at all since the last time you shut the machine down? If it does can you see Firefox in the Task Manager after restarting the machine?

Does it still happen if you delete all add-ons, cache, history, etc from Firefox?

Does it happen if you turn javascript off?
 
Posted by Wesley J (# 6075) on :
 
Get the following add-ons for Firefox: Adblock Plus, Adblock Plus Pop-Up Addon, Element Hiding Helper for Adblock Plus; then also Flashblock

These are 4 of the best to block ads and pop-ups.
 
Posted by The5thMary (# 12953) on :
 
Well, thanks for the advice, all you geeks! I removed McAfee from our new laptop, installed the free Microsoft program that was recommended and wow! I also ditched Google Chrome because it doesn't want to work properly and also Internet Explorer, which only works once in a while. I downloaded a PC version of Mozilla's Firefox and our laptop is so much quicker.

The only problem I'm noticing, right off the bat, is that without McAfee, all these pop-ups are suddenly warning me, "Your computer is at risk for a virus! Click this box to run a scan!" or, "We have detected a potential internet phishing and/or security threat! Please allow Blah Blah Blah company to run a complete diagnostic!". I figure, if Microsoft sends me alerts, that's one thing but if The Joe Blow company wants me to drop everything right this instant and do a complete security scan, it's more likely a scam.

Am I correct in thinking this? McAfee threw pop-up warnings at us every time we turned on the computer but Microsoft just sits in the background, doing its thing. When I first installed it, it took about thirty minutes to do a real intensive scan and then after that it seemed to be fine.
 
Posted by The5thMary (# 12953) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Wesley J:
Get the following add-ons for Firefox: Adblock Plus, Adblock Plus Pop-Up Addon, Element Hiding Helper for Adblock Plus; then also Flashblock

These are 4 of the best to block ads and pop-ups.

Oooooh! Goodies! Thanks for this tip. I'm gonna get all of these. [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Lyda*Rose (# 4544) on :
 
Well, I'm awfully late out of the gate on this one, but I'd like to buy the core edition of Sims 3 on dvd. (Never played any version of the Sims). I've been shopping online. It seems your straight pc platform on dvd generally costs about $60. But the same edition of pc/mac on dvd costs $20. I have a pc with Windows 7. Is this edition really for use on both pc and mac, or is it really just for mac? Or is it theoretically for both, but really a problem child for pc?

Thanks, folks. [Smile]
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
Short answer, no difference.
Explanation: As PC* and Mac refer to different operating systems, therefore requiring different installers, the installers for windows on either disc should be identical.
A quick glance shows multiple variations, "special editions" and add-ons, so this could be the price difference.
BTW, the download version on Amazon is $12.

* Pedantic note: A Mac is a PC. Should be Windows vs. Mac. Or Linux.

[ 04. September 2012, 14:57: Message edited by: lilBuddha ]
 
Posted by Lyda*Rose (# 4544) on :
 
Thanks, lilBuddha. Yeah, I realize downloads are cheaper but I've had bad luck with downloads and I'm afraid a program this complex might give me problems.

So, would getting the Windows/Mac version mean I'd need to get the Windows/Mac versions for any add-ons? Or would Windows versions do?

Thanks again!
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
The only version issue you need worry about is the software being compatible with the version of Windows you are using.
 
Posted by Lyda*Rose (# 4544) on :
 
So, if the program states it's compatible with Windows XP and Vista, do you think it would be compatible with Windows7 ? IIRC, you can't add a program to an earlier version than one specified eg such a program couldn't work with Windows98. But a later version like Windows7 should be alright. Do I have this correctly?

Thanks for your patience. I'm a computer doofus. [Hot and Hormonal]
 
Posted by Snags (# 15351) on :
 
Most software that works on XP can be persuaded to work on 7; especially if it's Vista compatible. However, amongst the items I'd be cautious with are ... games. Games often use system features that don't necessarily translate across OS versions. Might be worth asking on a Sims forum just to be completely sure, unless there are Sims junkies on the Ship.
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
Tame geek was into SIMS for a while - mostly hacking and improving it, but she was using it on XP, I'll e-mail and ask about Win7.
 
Posted by Lyda*Rose (# 4544) on :
 
That would be great, Ck... Much appreciated!

ETA: I'm wavering between Sims 2 and 3, so either of those would be fine. THX again [Smile]

[ 05. September 2012, 04:04: Message edited by: Lyda*Rose ]
 
Posted by Jenny Ann (# 3131) on :
 
I use the sims3 on win7, it's fine.

You need decent graphics card tho, and memory.

Also - it will eat your life, are you prepared?
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
Tame geek says:
quote:
Sims2 is [Win7 compatible] provided you're using 1 expansion pack that isn't University. You have to set it to run as XP/Vista. Click on the icon, properties, compatibility, Run this program in compatibility mode for: then select XP service pack 3.

 
Posted by Lyda*Rose (# 4544) on :
 
Jenny Ann- got lots of memory. Not sure about the graphics card. It's never been an issue. And time-sucking-addiction is my middle name. [Biased]

Curiosity killed...- Those are definitely specifics which will help me immensely. Thank you, thank you, thank you!
 
Posted by The5thMary (# 12953) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Lyda*Rose:
Well, I'm awfully late out of the gate on this one, but I'd like to buy the core edition of Sims 3 on dvd. (Never played any version of the Sims). I've been shopping online. It seems your straight pc platform on dvd generally costs about $60. But the same edition of pc/mac on dvd costs $20. I have a pc with Windows 7. Is this edition really for use on both pc and mac, or is it really just for mac? Or is it theoretically for both, but really a problem child for pc?

Thanks, folks. [Smile]

Heyyyyyyyy! One of my significant others bought Sims 3 for our new laptop about a month ago from Amazon.com and is just addicted to it. She buys all the add-on things whenever she can and had us drawing her all these rooms and stuff on graph paper... I can't get into it the way she does, I mean, she wants to make a town now of cat people! Cat people! And the cat people all have to have feline names! And they all have to be Gay!
[Killing me] anyway, this had nothing to do with your post but as soon as I saw the word Sims 3 I just had to throw this in.
 
Posted by The5thMary (# 12953) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Jenny Ann:
I use the sims3 on win7, it's fine.

You need decent graphics card tho, and memory.

Also - it will eat your life, are you prepared?

Yes. I can completely agree that it will eat your life. Significant other #2 is practically glued to this computer that I am currently using. She spends hours and hours dreaming up all the townspeople and their outfits, their names, their professions, etc. etc. I remember when "Everquest" was known as "Evercrack" and lived with a guy who played it for FIVE days straight! I think my s.o. #2 is so into it because she has major PTSD from being in combat during the first Gulf War and this helps her not think about it but it's kind of annoying to hear her just go on and on and on about Sims this, Sims that... I am a Sims widow!
[Waterworks] [Biased]
 
Posted by mousethief (# 953) on :
 
Win 7 sound problem here. I use the volume mixer to set the noise that Skype makes when somebody posts a comment to a running conversation. I set it to 8. Then I brought another window to the fore, and before long, the mixer had re-set the volume for skype to the maximum (i.e. same as the "Speakers and Headphones" level).

I've done this several times. My google-fu being what it isn't, I haven't been able to find a page online addressing this issue.

Anybody know how to make it stop doing that, or if it's even possible?
 
Posted by Wesley J (# 6075) on :
 
Skype, IMHO, has become less and less helpful when taking their semi-geeky customers into account. The number of options you can fiddle with are very limited, and I can well imagine that they just don't bother with a case like yours. Meaning, their software may often try to override your own preferences.

I'll try and see if I encounter the same problem on my Win7 machine. I wouldn't be surprised. I'll report later.

ETA: Did you have the same problem on WinXP, too?

[ 15. September 2012, 05:48: Message edited by: Wesley J ]
 
Posted by mousethief (# 953) on :
 
I've only had the same problem since yesterday. I'm wondering if it's an update thing -- MS updated this week, and maybe Skype updated without informing me. As you pointed out earlier (off ship), they have this annoying window you can't get rid of without a third-party app. This may be part of the same upgrade.
 
Posted by LeRoc (# 3216) on :
 
I have one of these small Acer netbooks, running Windows 7. I often bring it along on work trips, where I link it up to the hotel's wireless network. On most of these networks you pay per megabyte, and here in Africa this can become quite expensive. That's why I normally turn pictures off in Firefox when I'm travelling like this, and only download documents that I need to. This already helps a lot to reduce costs.

However, what I would also like is one button that I could click that would temporarily turn off all automatic updates on my computer: those of Windows, my antivirus, my programs... I don't want them to update that day, because I can do that for free in my office 2–3 days later.

I know that I could probably go to each program and turn automatic updates off, but that would be quite cumbersome. Is there an easy way of doing this all at once?
 
Posted by Moo (# 107) on :
 
I have a strange problem sometimes when I click on a link (not here on the ship). The same tab opens repeatedly and won't stop. I can't turn off the browser either. The only way I can stop it is to hit Ctrl, Alt, Delete.

I would suspect the website to which I am trying to link, but today I tried to send a reply to the author of a scientific paper, and it happened.

Can anyone tell me what's going on and what I can do? If you have advice for me, please make it step-by-step specific. I am computer illiterate.

Thanks.

Moo
 
Posted by monkeylizard (# 952) on :
 
Moo, what browser do you use?
 
Posted by Moo (# 107) on :
 
Firefox.

Moo
 
Posted by Wesley J (# 6075) on :
 
I got some external HDDs for back-up and storage. They're all Iomega, came in entirely closed aluminium cases, and have worked quite well so far, never the slightest problem.

The latest HDD I bought, LaCie Porsche design, comes aluminium-clad as well, has however numerous air vents at the bottom, which I wasn't aware of when I bought it. (The model exposed in the shop was fixed on its display, so I couldn't look at it from all sides.)

I realise that a regular computer, deskie or lappie, needs air vents and a fan, but so far the external HDD all-alu casings have been sufficient to get rid of excess heat.

I don't like the thought of having a back-up drive's insides exposed to dust. Any comments on my new purchase? Shall I take it back to the shop and go for a closed one?

ETA: Upon closer inspection, some of the Iomega ones have very tiny air vents too, but definitely much smaller than the LaCie one, whose underbelly seems rather exposed... [Paranoid]

Thanks. [Smile]

[ 19. September 2012, 08:26: Message edited by: Wesley J ]
 
Posted by Haydee (# 14734) on :
 
Does anyone know how to modify the citation styles in Word 2010? I have to use a style that is almost but not quite Chicago in Word 2010 - I need to exchange a comma for a colon. (They are .xsl files)

I have tried to download other styles from bibword but they are not showing up. I tried 'extract to specified folder' from the zip file, but they didn't appear in the folder I specified. If I repeat then I get told that it's already there and am asked if I want to overwrite it. But it isn't visible in the folder and doesn't get added to the selection available in Word.

Any ideas, or do I need to carry on doing it manually ( [Frown] )

[ 19. September 2012, 11:45: Message edited by: Haydee ]
 
Posted by monkeylizard (# 952) on :
 
Wes, don't worry about it. The aluminum part you see is just an outer shell. Inside that is the actual HDD that would look pretty much like a standard PC HDD if you opened up the aluminum body. You may find a small fan in there too. The HDD itself is sealed up tight. That's where the platters and heads are located. No dust will get inside there. Worst case from dust is that the fan blades would get a bit gunked up.
 
Posted by Wesley J (# 6075) on :
 
Thanks, Monks. So it's more of an aesthetic thing really. I was just a bit surprised that a 'design' HDD seems of poorer layout than the ones I got so far.

The new one is a 3TB one, and we'll see how long that one lasts...
 
Posted by monkeylizard (# 952) on :
 
Correct. Here's a look inside. The vent slots are just to allow air to get into and out of the enclosure. A small fan inside to move the air would be uncommon, but not unheard of. Mostly it's just a natural movement of hot air to cool air circulating around the drive inside the enclosure.
 
Posted by jbohn (# 8753) on :
 
In any case- a quick pass with the vacuum cleaner will solve any dust contamination that can happen inside an external drive enclosure. Nothing to worry about.

[eta]

Incidentally, you can sometimes save a bit of money by buying enclosures and drives separately, and doing your own install. It's pretty basic stuff- no need for a great amount of geekery. [Smile]

[ 20. September 2012, 20:16: Message edited by: jbohn ]
 
Posted by Wesley J (# 6075) on :
 
Indeed. I'm sorely tempted.

Though I must have way over 6TB* external storage by now. Which should suffice for a while. [Biased]

ETA: Make that way over 8TB. [Big Grin]

[ 22. September 2012, 03:50: Message edited by: Wesley J ]
 
Posted by jbohn (# 8753) on :
 
Is there such a thing as too much storage? [Biased]
 
Posted by Jay-Emm (# 11411) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by jbohn:
Is there such a thing as too much storage? [Biased]

Yes

Windows and Games seem to grow faster than space
(in spirit of [Biased] )

Also (kind of related) I suspect there is an uncanny valley where you have two much space to force organisation, but not enough to keep everything.
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
holey moley I think I need an aspirin and a good lie down [Ultra confused]
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Jay-Emm:
quote:
Originally posted by jbohn:
Is there such a thing as too much storage? [Biased]

Yes

Windows and Games seem to grow faster than space
(in spirit of [Biased] )

ISTM, operating systems and applications grow because storage is so cheap.
quote:
Originally posted by Jay-Emm:

Also (kind of related) I suspect there is an uncanny valley where you have two much space to force organisation, but not enough to keep everything.

Truer words have seldom been spoken.
 
Posted by Sparrow (# 2458) on :
 
I have a 2g USB memory stick which seems to be unusable at the moment, if I try to add anything to it or try to reformat it, I get the message saying the drive is write-protected. Is there any way of removing the write protection?
 
Posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider (# 76) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sparrow:
I have a 2g USB memory stick which seems to be unusable at the moment, if I try to add anything to it or try to reformat it, I get the message saying the drive is write-protected. Is there any way of removing the write protection?

Either it's got a little switch on the side that you've inadvertently moved to the "protect" position, or it's got corrupted and needs reformatting.
 
Posted by Sparrow (# 2458) on :
 
There's no little switch on the side, but when I try to reformat I just get the same message about it being write protected.
 
Posted by Doc Tor (# 9748) on :
 
With the drive inserted, open up the file manager so you can see its drive letter (c will be your hard drive, d your CD-Rom etc). If you right click on that, you'll open up a menu that'll have an option of 'properties' at the bottom.

If you then click on 'tools', you'll have the option to check the drive for errors. There may also be (depending on your drive) a read-only check box you can untick.
 
Posted by Meerkat (# 16117) on :
 
In the depths of memory, I seem to remember right-clicking and going to 'Properties' There could be a 'Read-only' option which has been 'ticked'??
 
Posted by Sparrow (# 2458) on :
 
There's no read-only option to tick or untick. I tried checking for errors but it said it was unable to complete the check because the volume was write protected.
 
Posted by Morlader (# 16040) on :
 
Hm. Check shouldn't need to write to it [Confused]

Have you ever written to it? Can you display its contents? Can you read the files on it?

If you can copy off anything vital, are you prepared to give up? 2G sticks are very cheap.
 
Posted by Sparrow (# 2458) on :
 
Yes I think I have used it in the past, but come to think of it, it was always unreliable. I'll just ditch it.
 
Posted by Earwig (# 12057) on :
 
Aaargh! I need to convert some .mts files to .wmv files, ideally without paying any money. I can find free converters that will do that for me, but they only seem to be for converting them to ipods etc? I need to be able to save the files back on my computer.

Can anyone help?
 
Posted by Earwig (# 12057) on :
 
Answered my own question! Found it was easier to find an online site than download free software - www.convertfiles.com seems to be useful.
 
Posted by Adeodatus (# 4992) on :
 
Ok, here's the thing. Probably due to virus / spyware intrusion, I find myself in the unenviable position of having to do a full system restore on my laptop. In itself, not a technical problem. The problem is, last time I had to do this (February-ish), it took me about 3 days. It wasn't the reinstallation of all my acquired software that bothered me, so much as the fact that I'm still using the Vista* operating system and it took flaming well forever to download all the updates that had come about since my computer left the factory.

So, does anyone have any tips to minimise the time and effort of a full system restore? (I should add that to be on the safe side, it's going to be a full-restore-with-disc-format.)


*Footnote: "Change your operating system" is not an acceptable answer on this occasion. Anyone who suggests it will not only get ignored, I'll also add them to my very special prayer list. [Razz]
 
Posted by Snags (# 15351) on :
 
Find out what service pack the restore will put you back to, and if it's not the most recent, pre-download it and stuff it on a spare disk/CD. Once you've done the restore, run the service pack from that, and it will take a huge chunk of updates out.

Failing that you could try slip-streaming the install, but if you're doing a factory restore process that's likely to be courageous.

Oh, and wherever/however you get the necessary updates, cables not wireless for the downloads. Chances are that your broadband connection is well below the wireless speed anyway, but you'll at least get subjectively better performance (and in real world experience, probably objectively too).
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
Can someone tell me (and I am incredibly thick) how to get rid of the unbelievably stupid and annoying and persistent "incredibar" My Start thingy? I've googled answers but most seem to say oh dear we're not sure or oh dear that didn't work ... [brick wall]
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
In the mean time I've eradicated something called Google Chrome [Mad] [Mad]
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
possible instructions from the removal of My Start Incredibar - looks as if it will need removing from a number of places
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
so far, so good ... it is showing signs of death throes ...
 
Posted by Adeodatus (# 4992) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Snags:
Find out what service pack the restore will put you back to, and if it's not the most recent, pre-download it and stuff it on a spare disk/CD. Once you've done the restore, run the service pack from that, and it will take a huge chunk of updates out.

Failing that you could try slip-streaming the install, but if you're doing a factory restore process that's likely to be courageous.

Oh, and wherever/however you get the necessary updates, cables not wireless for the downloads. Chances are that your broadband connection is well below the wireless speed anyway, but you'll at least get subjectively better performance (and in real world experience, probably objectively too).

Great advice, thank you, Snags - I've now downloaded SP2 and SP1. I reckon it'll save me about 8 hours of downloads chugging away in the background. And I've hunted out an old cable connection because you're right, Wi-fi just isn't up to the job.

I've taken the usual precautions of making notes of all the usernames and passwords I use, because they'll be lost. I'm pretty good at backing things up, so that won't be too onerous. And I'm also stocking up on some top quality coffee, Danish pastries, and sorting out my favourite music.

Has anyone any further recommendations?
 
Posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider (# 76) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Adeodatus:
quote:
Originally posted by Snags:
Find out what service pack the restore will put you back to, and if it's not the most recent, pre-download it and stuff it on a spare disk/CD. Once you've done the restore, run the service pack from that, and it will take a huge chunk of updates out.

Failing that you could try slip-streaming the install, but if you're doing a factory restore process that's likely to be courageous.

Oh, and wherever/however you get the necessary updates, cables not wireless for the downloads. Chances are that your broadband connection is well below the wireless speed anyway, but you'll at least get subjectively better performance (and in real world experience, probably objectively too).

Great advice, thank you, Snags - I've now downloaded SP2 and SP1. I reckon it'll save me about 8 hours of downloads chugging away in the background. And I've hunted out an old cable connection because you're right, Wi-fi just isn't up to the job.

I've taken the usual precautions of making notes of all the usernames and passwords I use, because they'll be lost. I'm pretty good at backing things up, so that won't be too onerous. And I'm also stocking up on some top quality coffee, Danish pastries, and sorting out my favourite music.

Has anyone any further recommendations?

To save you some time - you don't have to install SP1 to install SP2.
 
Posted by Adeodatus (# 4992) on :
 
Really? I didn't know that. That's a couple less Danishes and maybe skip a couple of Beethoven piano sonatas. Thanks, Karl.
 
Posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider (# 76) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Adeodatus:
Really? I didn't know that. That's a couple less Danishes and maybe skip a couple of Beethoven piano sonatas. Thanks, Karl.

Another tip - install the SP and put the latest version of IE that you intend to use on before you download any patches. That way you minimise the number of patches that will be required as the updated versions and SPs will include a lot of the functionality of the patches.
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Zappa:
so far, so good ... it is showing signs of death throes ...

Nope. It's back. And every day it tells me I really probably have won an ipad. And every day it PISSES. ME OFF. [Mad]
 
Posted by Jengie Jon (# 273) on :
 
This might be worth a thread on its own, but I will start it here.

My congregation is undergoing structural reform. Stage 1 (i.e. the changing of the committee structure) is complete

Stage 2: (i.e. implementing new governance methods is work in progress)

Now we want to implement open governance as far as possible and are willing to try to use computers/internet to do so. Many of the elderly members are using computers, and care will be taken to include those without computers.

What we want is basically a common store for documents which can be open to all members. I think one person would like open editing. I would be more cautious and give open editing to sub groups for specific documents but open viewing to all.

Being a small congregation the cost needs to be minimal but it also needs to be robust so not dependent solely on me.

Ideas welocome!

Jengie
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Does anyone have any idea why Opera takes so long to close down, and why, if you look at Task Manager, you can see the memory usage for Opera escalating over a period of minutes, instead of just decreasing quickly and vanishing? Sometimes it doesn't close down at all of its own volition and has to be helped along.
 
Posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider (# 76) on :
 
Because it can't finish until the fat lady sings?
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
JJ,
If I am understanding you, you wish a group(s) of people to be able to view documents from multiple locations? There are various "personal cloud" drives such as this one.* The software allows those you choose to log in from anywhere. There should be variable levels of permission, but be certain before purchase.


*Not a recommendation, pro or con, of this drive. Just an example.
 
Posted by Jengie Jon (# 273) on :
 
Intriguing as actually I own one of those already! I do not have the cloud software active on it as it is my first backup for my home computers but I may have a closer read of the manual.

Slight caution in that first I had to return my initial one under warranty fairly soon after I started using it. I think I got one back with double the capacity.

Jengie
 
Posted by jbohn (# 8753) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Jengie Jon:

What we want is basically a common store for documents which can be open to all members. I think one person would like open editing. I would be more cautious and give open editing to sub groups for specific documents but open viewing to all.

We've had good luck with Google Docs at work.
 
Posted by Starbug (# 15917) on :
 
I had to reboot our Sky Broadband router over the weekend, as my ipad had stopped talking to it. The ipad is now working, but now my Blackberry Curve won't connect to our home WIFI - it says 'failed to obtain an IP address'. The Blackberry is the only thing that won't connect. Everything else is ok - ipad, PC and my husband's laptop, so it isn't a router problem.

I've tried the old taking the battery put routine. Also tried deleting the WIFI connection on the Blackberry and searchig for a new connection, but nothing works. Can anyone advise, please?
 
Posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider (# 76) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Starbug:
I had to reboot our Sky Broadband router over the weekend, as my ipad had stopped talking to it. The ipad is now working, but now my Blackberry Curve won't connect to our home WIFI - it says 'failed to obtain an IP address'. The Blackberry is the only thing that won't connect. Everything else is ok - ipad, PC and my husband's laptop, so it isn't a router problem.

I've tried the old taking the battery put routine. Also tried deleting the WIFI connection on the Blackberry and searchig for a new connection, but nothing works. Can anyone advise, please?

Check the DHCP service on the router is responding to requests. You may need to clear old entries out of the table.

How to do this is device specific, so you may need to follow your nose.

Ensure your Blackberry is trying to connect to your network and not the neighbours'
 
Posted by Dafyd (# 5549) on :
 
I have a new Samsung laptop running Windows 7. Samsung have kindly installed three start up programs that need administrator rights to run. I want to run my computer from day to day use with a non-administrator account, strangely enough. This means that every time I log on I get three requests for the administrator password.

Is there a way to store the administrator password for the three programs in question, or should I just disable them altogether?
 
Posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider (# 76) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Dafyd:
I have a new Samsung laptop running Windows 7. Samsung have kindly installed three start up programs that need administrator rights to run. I want to run my computer from day to day use with a non-administrator account, strangely enough. This means that every time I log on I get three requests for the administrator password.

Is there a way to store the administrator password for the three programs in question, or should I just disable them altogether?

You can't store the admin password and make the programs autorun. Disable them. Any app requiring admin permissions to run is by definition a pile of shit.

[ 09. October 2012, 15:23: Message edited by: Karl: Liberal Backslider ]
 
Posted by Sparrow (# 2458) on :
 
I know I've asked about this before so I apologise ... I 'm planning to get my first smartphone, and I would like one that I could connect to my PC and synchronise my calendar (I use Outlook Express) so I can keep track of my appointments when I'm not at home. Does that mean I need a Windows phone? And does anyone have any recommendations?
 
Posted by Jengie Jon (# 273) on :
 
I have not done it but here is a how to for Android phones.

Simple answer is no you can synchronise and have been able to for a while, more complex one that there are a variety of ways of doing it across all platforms and you need to find ones that suits you.

Jengie
 
Posted by Latchkey Kid (# 12444) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider:
Any app requiring admin permissions to run is by definition a pile of shit.

The app to install new apps requires admin permission. Hardly anyone could avoid that one. And it's there for security reasons.
 
Posted by Alisdair (# 15837) on :
 
@ Sparrow -- if you have no worries about letting Google 'own all your stuff' then the Google a/c sync with contacts, calendar, and gmail is definitely the way to go, and plenty go that way (including me ;-) ), but...

...if you prefer to keep some things between yourself and your hard drive, i.e. under your control and nobody else's then there are various options:

1. apps like 'Wifi File Explorer' allow your desktop to network with your Android phone and copy, move, backup selected files;

2. something like 'Owncloud' takes it a step further and allows you to run your own private 'cloud' service, either locally or across the internet, giving you the same kind of access as 1. but with the ability to sync your phone's calendar to other calendars. Whether any of this hooks up with 'Outlook Express', I don't know; but that is just two alternatives to the Google route.
 
Posted by mousethief (# 953) on :
 
Is it possible to make relative file shortcuts in Windows? I have my rather large collection of mp3's both on my computer and on a USB external drive. I'd like to be able to make shortcuts to the files so that I can have a song in two different directories without it actually being in two different directories, but of course when it's on my hard drive it's on

c:\users\mousethief\music

and on the backup drive it's

g:\music

It would be nice if I could create a shortcut that was relative so it worked in both places, and if I took my backup drive somewhere and plugged it into somebody else's computer, it would still work no matter what drive letter their computer assigned to the drive.

Thanks!
 
Posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider (# 76) on :
 
It would appear not. I just tried it and it doesn't work.
 
Posted by The Machine Elf (# 1622) on :
 
Open a command line (cmd.exe) and type

subst g: c:\users\mousethief

This makes g:\ point to c:\users\mousethief, and so g:\music will be c:\users\mousethief\music

Then your shortcuts can be to the same location.

You can add a batch file with the command in it to your start-up programs so it happens when you log in.
 
Posted by Amanda B. Reckondwythe (# 5521) on :
 
Machine Elf, that wouldn't work because g: is already in use. You'll get an "invalid parameter" error.

quote:
Originally posted by mousethief:
I'd like to be able to make shortcuts to the files so that I can have a song in two different directories without it actually being in two different directories

I'm puzzled. Why would you want to access a file from two different locations at the same time?

[ 19. October 2012, 11:13: Message edited by: Amanda B. Reckondwythe ]
 
Posted by The Revolutionist (# 4578) on :
 
What you need are symbolic links, Mousethief. There are instructions on How to Geek on how to set them up on various systems, including Windows.

I used to do the same for Music, Video, etc. on an external hard-drive - they were useful for making the folders appear as part of my user profile, even though they were actually stored externally.
 
Posted by Alisdair (# 15837) on :
 
You may find the problem is that that Windows traditionally allocates drive 'letters' to external/hot-plugged drives on an ad hoc, first come first served basis, which means you cannot guarantee a given device will always have the same identity when it is plugged in.

More recently drives are/can be identified by an identifier that belongs to, and is unique, to that device. If your OS uses this ID (Linux, prob. OSX, maybe Windows now---if told to!), then you can set up 'symbolic links' (usually called 'shortcuts' in Windows), that will always point to the correct device and location, when ever that device is plugged in.

Time to go and do some research perhaps. :-)
 
Posted by Snags (# 15351) on :
 
Minor point of order: strictly speaking a Windows shortcut isn't really equivalent to a Linux symbolic link. Or rather, IME Linux users tend to use symlink to mean a hard link, whereas a Windows shortcut is more of a soft link, and you have to ponce about to make a hard link.

This page has quite a nice summary (based on a quick glance) of what you can do, how, and why.
 
Posted by Alisdair (# 15837) on :
 
@ snags -- I must admit in Linuxland I've always equated soft/symbolic link with a Windows 'shortcut', and a 'hardlink' as something altogether more serious---delete a hardlink and the file it links to goes as well (and I think a hardlink can only exist within a disk, not across disks), but it's years since I've chased the details down, so am quite happy to stand corrected.
 
Posted by mousethief (# 953) on :
 
This all requires doing something to the computer. I don't want to have to program something on my friend's computer (if they'd even let me); that's why I inquired about a "relative" link, where the link information is stored in the link itself, and doesn't require something on the computer to make it work. Sigh. Windows can be so primitive.

quote:
Originally posted by Amanda B. Reckondwythe:
I'm puzzled. Why would you want to access a file from two different locations at the same time?

I might want to have a song in a directory with the album it came on (soundtrack to Forrest Gump, for example) as well as in a directory by the performer's name. So if someone says, "Do you have such-and-such a song by so-and-so" I can go to the so-and-so directory, and if someone says, "I can't remember the song or the performer, but it's on the soundtrack to Forrest Gump, do you have that?" I can look it up that way. A shortcut in the performer's directory back to the soundtrack directory, or vice versa, would allow me to do that.

Playlists are software-specific; I use Winamp but my friend might use something else.

[ 20. October 2012, 15:44: Message edited by: mousethief ]
 
Posted by Amanda B. Reckondwythe (# 5521) on :
 
But even if you could create a shortcut to do what you want, how would that shortcut get to your friend's computer in the first place? Wouldn't you have to "do something" to make it appear on his desktop?

Plus, your friend's computer would not have the c:\users\mousethief\music directory on it that you have on your computer unless both your computer and your friend's computer were members of the same domain, and you logged onto it using your domain account, and your account was configured to use roaming profiles.

In which case, both the c:\users\mousethief directory and the shortcut that pointed to it would be part of your profile and would automatically appear on your desktop when you logged in, regardless of which domain computer you logged into. Although I'd hate to be the administrator of a domain whose users were allowed to store music files in their roaming profile.

[ 20. October 2012, 15:55: Message edited by: Amanda B. Reckondwythe ]
 
Posted by Snags (# 15351) on :
 
@Alisdair the fault could well be with me; I still get my knickers in a twist over linuxy stuff [Smile]
 
Posted by Jengie Jon (# 273) on :
 
I wonder if it is there and all that has happened is with increased complexity of the system some of the old shortcuts have been forgotten.The old "cd" command in dos used to allow you to do cd \music which would change you to the music subdirectory of your current directory.

I think that is basically what you want.

In that case and I have not tried this, create a short cut, then edit off the front part of the command so it only has the relative subdirectory and the file bit.

I have no idea if this would work but suspect it might. It used to in dos days.

Jengie
 
Posted by mousethief (# 953) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Amanda B. Reckondwythe:
But even if you could create a shortcut to do what you want, how would that shortcut get to your friend's computer in the first place? Wouldn't you have to "do something" to make it appear on his desktop?

Not a desktop shortcut. A shortcut in the directory. Surely you've created those or at least used them?

quote:
Plus, your friend's computer would not have the c:\users\mousethief\music directory on it
Precisely my problem and why I want relative rather than absolute shortcuts.

quote:
Originally posted by Jengie Jon:
In that case and I have not tried this, create a short cut, then edit off the front part of the command so it only has the relative subdirectory and the file bit.

Tried that, alas, didn't work.

[ 20. October 2012, 17:44: Message edited by: mousethief ]
 
Posted by Snags (# 15351) on :
 
Having actually read what you want to do (always helpful!) you may find the following helpful:

Relative Shortcut utility

I haven't tried it, and the pre-requisites may render it useless, but it's the best I've found. There are also some kludges with environment variables, but I'm not convinced they'd work for what you want to achieve [Frown]
 
Posted by mousethief (# 953) on :
 
I'll give it a go. Nothing to lose.
 
Posted by mousethief (# 953) on :
 
Alas and fooey, can't seem to make it work. It seems to recognize it as a shortcut (puts the little swoopy arrow in the icon), but when I click on it nothing happens. If I do an "open with" and choose winamp, it opens winamp and puts the file in the queue, but doesn't play the target.

Thanks though.

The search continues...
 
Posted by mousethief (# 953) on :
 
Report #2: Okay, I figured out how to make it create a shortcut, but when I copied it onto the G: drive, the length of the "shortcut" file was 5.4M -- the size of the target file. Which kind of defeats the purpose of having the shortcut in two different places pointing relatively to two different mp3 files.
 
Posted by Snags (# 15351) on :
 
That might be down to how Explorer calculates file size. As in, it may be an untruth.

AIUI if you use the equivalent of a hard symbolic link then as far as Explorer is concerned the file is actually there, so when displaying file size info it displays that actual file info, not the shortcut info. But it isn't really taking up that much space.

The same issue occurs with the SXS stuff in Windows 7, where to avoid DLL Hell loads of hard links are used to refer to DLLs that exist elsewhere. This can lead to an almost doubling in the reported size of the Windows hierarchy against what it's actually using on disk.

I think the SysInternals "disk usage" utility can be told to give you the real size, not the hard link size.
 
Posted by mousethief (# 953) on :
 
A little testing determines that it is, in fact, an mp3 file -- I renamed both of the targets, and the "shortcut" still plays.
 
Posted by mousethief (# 953) on :
 
Got a nice letter back from the author of the software:

quote:
That's an interesting problem. It looks like the shortcut isn't relative at all.
First of all, are you running on XP, Vista, or later? (The XP version of Relative
is a totally different program.)

Let me know so I can figure out what to do next...

Thanks in advance for helping me get this fixed. What you're trying to do is exactly what relative should do correctly.


 
Posted by Snags (# 15351) on :
 
There's still hope then!
 
Posted by Chamois (# 16204) on :
 
Please can anyone help me understand about software updates on my new iMac?

I've finally had to upgrade to a new iMac after 6 happy years with my Macbook for the one and only reason that my old operating system will no longer run the current version of Firefox. I can't understand the method for offering software updates on my new machine. On my old operating system the "updates" app used to open automatically from time to time, and then I could download patch updates for free. On the new operating system a window pops up telling me that there are "Updates Available" but when I request details it tells me to log on to something called iTunes and put in my credit card number. Is Apple no longer providing free patch updates for its software? What is this iTunes site? Can anyone explain?
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
iTunes is a program that serves as a storefront for Apple. One needs an account and a credit card on file to set up the account, even for downloading free stuff. As far as I can tell at least. Would have thought it would come pre-loaded on a Mac. Not surprised Apple run you through it for updates. These days they make more from iTunes then they do from the sale of computers.
 
Posted by Chamois (# 16204) on :
 
Thanks for the explanation.

Hmmm. Not sure I want my credit card details logged on an unknown site. Is the iTunes program secure?
 
Posted by monkeylizard (# 952) on :
 
It's as secure as anything else. It's one of the most widely used programs in the world. Millions of people around the globe use it daily.
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
I've not yet had a problem with my credit or identity with iTunes. My soul, perhaps, but not my monies.
 
Posted by Sparrow (# 2458) on :
 
Does anyone know if it is possible to save webpages to read later on your Kindle?
 
Posted by Snags (# 15351) on :
 
Are your browsing on the Kindle itself, or on something else? If something else, print them to PDF?
 
Posted by Sparrow (# 2458) on :
 
It's pages I'm looking at on the PC but need to take with me when I am travelling to read on the Kindle. I don't like reading PDF pages on the Kindle as the text comes out too small, so I was wondering if there was a way of saving the webpages direct to the Kindle.
 
Posted by Wesley J (# 6075) on :
 
Google is your buddy. Try searching for 'save webpages kindle', which provides several hits.

Hope this might help you.
 
Posted by jbohn (# 8753) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Chamois:
Please can anyone help me understand about software updates on my new iMac?

I've finally had to upgrade to a new iMac after 6 happy years with my Macbook for the one and only reason that my old operating system will no longer run the current version of Firefox. I can't understand the method for offering software updates on my new machine. On my old operating system the "updates" app used to open automatically from time to time, and then I could download patch updates for free. On the new operating system a window pops up telling me that there are "Updates Available" but when I request details it tells me to log on to something called iTunes and put in my credit card number. Is Apple no longer providing free patch updates for its software? What is this iTunes site? Can anyone explain?

Here's some instructions for setting up an iTunes account without a credit card, if that helps:

quote:
How to create an iTunes account for your iPod or iPad that is not associated with a credit card

Step 1 - Create an email account, such as gmail, to associate with an iPad

Step 2 - Create an iTunes account for your iPad that is not associated with a credit card

http://support.apple.com/kb/ht2534

• Open iTunes on a computer
• Go to the iTunes store
• Click App Store
• Find a Free App to purchase
• Click Free
• Choose "Create New Account"
• Continue to go through the steps to set up a new iTunes account- your password must have at least one uppercase, one lowercase and one number
• You will have a choice to choose “None” on the “Provide a payment method screen”

Hope that helps!
 
Posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider (# 76) on :
 
iTunes is Satan's own way of organising your music collection and you will burn in Hell for all eternity if you tempt just one person to use it.

It's a worse sin than getting off your bike and pushing it up a hill.
 
Posted by Chamois (# 16204) on :
 
Thanks very much for all the advice about iTunes.

As I'm not musical I don't have a personal music collection (apart from some old vinyl records which belonged to my father that I keep for sentimental reasons).

I'd better go away and mull this over quietly by myself. I don't like leaving details of my credit card all over the internet for no good reason.

Thanks again
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Does anyone have any idea why from time to time a Word document will suddenly turn into Read-only (without my doing anything to it other than typing in it) and need to be saved under a new name?
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
Ariel, do you have two copies open? or does the computer think so? It's under properties the tick box that changes it.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
No, only one copy is ever open. It will save OK for a while then suddenly my open document will shift to being read-only and need to be saved under a new name or I lose all my changes. Not sure why this has started happening.
 
Posted by Snags (# 15351) on :
 
As CK says, when it does it, quit the file, then find it in Explorer and right-click on it, and choose "Properties". At the bottom of the "General" tab are Attributes check boxes, one for Read-only and one for Hidden. If the "Read-Only" one is ticked then your system thinks it's read only, and some process or other has caused that flag to be set (you can unset it manually). In that case, you'll need to track down the process that's doing it, so look at scheduled tasks etc. as well as doing the usual malware scans.

If that flag isn't set, then it's down to Word thinking the file's already locked by someone else. Normally (IIRC) it will say as much to you, but not always. In this case, depending on how you work/use the computer, it might be that you do have another copy open, you just don't realise it. If you've had the file open since the last reboot, it's possible that there's a hung, invisible instance of Word that's holding it open.

To check this, close all oepn Word docs apart from the one giving you grief. Then bring up Task Manager (Ctrl+Shift+Esc, or right-click on the task bar and pick it from the menu), switch to the "Processes" tab, sort them by name by clicking on the Image Name header and see how many copies of "winword.exe" there are. If more than one, you've probably got a stuck instance. Close the one you're working on so as far as you're concerned there's not Word open at all, and check the processes list again. If there's still a "winword.exe" entry you'll need to "End task" it to kill it off properly.

If it's neither of those, then unless you're somehow triggering protection on the file, I'm at a loss.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Thanks for this, CK and Snags. At present the "read-only" file that I had to save under a new name is back to normal again. Very odd. I'll follow your advice next time this happens (as I'm sure it probably will at some point).
 
Posted by Wet Kipper (# 1654) on :
 
a question I should probably know the answer to already, and suspect is not the answer I want.
Years ago I bought a copy of Adobe CS2 and installed on what was then our new "whizz-bang fancy" laptop.
Years go by and it is now our "at death's door and about to fall over" laptop.
Can i just re-install on our newer "whizzbang etc" machine ? will it ask me to register and then if I do, it will claim someone is already using it ?
 
Posted by Drifting Star (# 12799) on :
 
Having done something similar with Photoshop a year ago, memory tells me that you can de-register it from one computer, or, if the computer has bitten the dust, you can sort it out with Adobe. I don't think it can have been difficult or I would be able to remember it better... sorry I can't be more precise.
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
You may install your CS suite on two computers concurrently.
From the CS2 licence agreement
quote:
2.4 Portable or Home Computer Use. The primary user of the Computer on which the Software is installed may install a second copy of the Software for his or her exclusive use on either a portable Computer or a Computer located at his or her home, provided the Software on the portable or home Computer is not used at the same time as the Software on the primary Computer.
Bold and italics mine

I would deactivate the licence on the dying machine. Otherwise you will lose the potential of installing on a second machine should you so wish.
The deactivation button is under the help menu.
 
Posted by The Kat in the Hat (# 2557) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ariel:
Does anyone have any idea why from time to time a Word document will suddenly turn into Read-only (without my doing anything to it other than typing in it) and need to be saved under a new name?

That happened to me - I was using an external hard disk and suddenly had to save as a new file. In the end I had about 5 versions of the same document. It was very annoying!
 
Posted by Wet Kipper (# 1654) on :
 
Thanks for your help. I'll give it a try and see what happens. Will I need to open each part of CS2 to deactivate, or can I just open, for example, photoshop and do it from the help menu in there ?
 
Posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider (# 76) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by The Kat in the Hat:
quote:
Originally posted by Ariel:
Does anyone have any idea why from time to time a Word document will suddenly turn into Read-only (without my doing anything to it other than typing in it) and need to be saved under a new name?

That happened to me - I was using an external hard disk and suddenly had to save as a new file. In the end I had about 5 versions of the same document. It was very annoying!
It happens if Word loses contact, even if briefly, with the location where the file is stored. It's more likely therefore to happen with external hard drives and over networks.
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
Not certain, WK, sorry.
 
Posted by Wet Kipper (# 1654) on :
 
it appears to be deactivating the whole thing from within the single option in Photoshop.
 
Posted by the giant cheeseburger (# 10942) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Chamois:
Thanks very much for all the advice about iTunes.

As I'm not musical I don't have a personal music collection (apart from some old vinyl records which belonged to my father that I keep for sentimental reasons).

I'd better go away and mull this over quietly by myself. I don't like leaving details of my credit card all over the internet for no good reason.

Thanks again

Just to add to this issue again with some more accurate information (I used to provide tech support to Apple users for a living, as an employee of a local independent computer store), it appears that you've come across the Mac App Store which is used to manage applications (including OSX itself) so they are tied to your Apple ID and can be accessed by you even if you choose to switch to a different computer. The relevance of iTunes to this is simply that you can also use your Apple ID to make music/video purchases on iTunes if you want to, but you don't need to if you don't want to. The Mac App Store is required for packages like iLife (iPhoto, Garage Band etc) because that's how they administer the licensing being tied to your Apple ID, and it's generally regarded as quite secure. I used it to buy Final Cut X (professional video editing software) the other day, which made for a very smooth process and no need to worry about entering serial numbers or other copyright mechanisms, although it was a rather large download which took about as long as a season of ... not going there!

Updates to content you do have by default (the system itself, iPhoto, Garage Band) are not paid purchases you'll need to make, but the Apple ID account system is used to restrict that use to you alone. The flip side of that inconvenience is that if you switch to a different Mac for some reason you can just log in and download the programs you've linked to your account previously without worrying about activations/de-activations, serial numbers etc like Wet Kipper is dealing with for his Adobe software licenses.

I would suggest using it, but connected to a VISA or MasterCard debit card which deducts money you do have from an account rather than a credit card which writes an IOU to be sorted out later on. A debit card will decline any attempt to make a purchase (including any hypothetical hackers' attempts) if there is no money (or not enough money) in that account, so if you keep that account empty except for transferring in funds when you want to make a purchase it is perfect for online purchases. You can also get pre-paid cards that work in a similar way and can be 'reloaded,' kind of like a VISA/MasterCard version of a store's gift voucher.

You can also purchase an iTunes gift voucher from many bricks-and-mortar retailers, which will enable you to redeem that and set up an account without enduring payment details.

I would suggest that you make sure you register it with an email address you'll be keeping for a while, and not one that is tied to your internet service provider which you might change later on. If you forget your password, you'll need this email account to get it back again, and it will also be used by Apple to inform you in the unlikely event there's a recall of the particular computer model you own.

quote:
Originally posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider:
iTunes is Satan's own way of organising your music collection and you will burn in Hell for all eternity if you tempt just one person to use it.

It's a worse sin than getting off your bike and pushing it up a hill.

It works for some people, doesn't for others. Just like most things in the computer world.

I must protest about your labelling of that practice in the world of cycling. It's perfectly acceptable to do that if you're on one of those rare hills where a 15% gradient sign comes as a relief because it means the 20% bit is over. That's about 1/7 and 1/5 for those of you thinking in the old money.
 
Posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider (# 76) on :
 
God's way of telling you you need lower gears. Or a different route. Or to MTFU. Everyone knows that.
 
Posted by Sandemaniac (# 12829) on :
 
Can anyone suggest a relatively low-priced but physically sizeable data storage medium?

My terrible Luddite* mother has finally gone digital, and is using my brothers laptop for downloading photos and burning them to CD. Given the faff involved, and the high likelihood of losing said CDs, I thought of getting her a portable hard drive for Christmas to put them on. A memory stick is far too losable especially with grandchildren and a Jack Russell about, but I figured something like my Seagate Freeagent Go drive - sort of slim paperback size - would probably be about right.

So... the rub of the question (at last!). These seem to start price-wise in the £50-60 range, and I'd rather not spend much more than £30 if I can help it. Has anyone any suggestions that might fit the criteria?

Thanks,

AG

*ie worse than me - which is bad!
 
Posted by the giant cheeseburger (# 10942) on :
 
I would suggest sticking with looking for a 2.5" external hard drive as you've pretty well ruled out other options.

Shop around, you'll be able to find a cheaper deal at some point. a word about Seagate products the - FreeAgent GoFlex drives are very much premium products with bells and whistles that 95% of users will never need (like swapping the interface for a different one) so you can afford to look for a lower-end Seagate drive like the Seagate Expansion. The equivalent lower Western Digital model would be the WD Elements - both WD and Seagate drives are of equally high quality (Seagate seem to have recovered after sitting on their laurels for a few years) and I wouldn't ever suggest anybody buy any other brand of hard drive.

I would suggest shopping around online over the rest of this weekend and buying from somebody reliable* - with Black Friday and Cyber Monday you will be unlikely to get a better deal until after Christmas.

The best tests for whether an online vendor is reliable I can suggest would be...
1. the site has a "select your location" button somewhere.
2. it can show pricing in your local currency with the applicable sales taxes like VAT or GST included.
3. the shipping address detail page has the correct options for your country's postal system, for example offering Australian customers a choice of Australian states/territories instead of US states and postcode instead of Zip Code.
4. they offer shipping options which name which real provider in your country will be used, not generic "standard," "express" or whatever.
5. if you're a very cautious person who would prefer to pass up some of the best prices and be more sure of what's going on, limit yourself to companies with a 'real' presence in your own country, whether that be an office, a business registration number or being the online operation of a company that has bricks-and-mortar stores.
 
Posted by Jengie Jon (# 273) on :
 
You are limited to 500GB but just checking on Amazon and the do exist for around £40.

Jengie
 
Posted by Sandemaniac (# 12829) on :
 
500GB will last her out! I don't really want to use Amazon, but as with so many things they're just so much cheaper it's hard to resist... [Mad]

AG
 
Posted by Sandemaniac (# 12829) on :
 
Sorted, and without using Amazon. It turns out after a great deal of rummaging (and trying to buy something from a firm whose web page would let you add it to the basket, but then refused to let you go to checkout... very sensible!) that Maplins* have an ebay store, and I've bought from there. I presume that they are selling surplus stock that way rather than in store.

Thanks, everyone!

AG

*UK chain of electronics, and DIY electronics, stores - who I've always had good experiences with. While I've found a page of shit reviews online, it took a lot more finding than any other firm's bad reviews.
 
Posted by the giant cheeseburger (# 10942) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sandemaniac:
Sorted, and without using Amazon. It turns out after a great deal of rummaging (and trying to buy something from a firm whose web page would let you add it to the basket, but then refused to let you go to checkout... very sensible!) that Maplins* have an ebay store, and I've bought from there. I presume that they are selling surplus stock that way rather than in store.

Thanks, everyone!

AG

*UK chain of electronics, and DIY electronics, stores - who I've always had good experiences with. While I've found a page of shit reviews online, it took a lot more finding than any other firm's bad reviews.

Lots of retailers have eBay storefronts which are just as much a part of regular business (not just dumping surplus stock) these days. The retail industry does not do any favours to businesses that refuse to move with the times.

I wouldn't worry too much about online reviews, nobody should be taking them seriously unless they are consistently referring to a particular shortcoming and also verifiable by other means. In the world of tourist accommodation, for example, it is quite common for people to try and blackmail places into giving them upgrades or extras by threatening to post a bad review on TripAdvisor!
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Well, that was interesting. I deleted my free trial run of a particular anti-virus software after its expiry, and suddenly Outlook is now loading within 2 minutes instead of 15, despite my having tried to turn off add-ins, email shields and so on, and the computer is starting up very speedily.

Any recommendations for a quick, light, friendly (preferably free) anti-virus software for an ageing computer running Windows XP SP3?

AVG and Avast are both off the list now. I don't need anything fancy, just something that does the job and doesn't have a complicated interface.

[ 02. December 2012, 12:18: Message edited by: Ariel ]
 
Posted by Doublethink (# 1984) on :
 
What's wrong with avg ?
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Slows the pc noticeably and is difficult to uninstall. I was picking bits out manually for quite some time after the uninstall.
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
My daughter uses Komodo for Windows
 
Posted by Alisdair (# 15837) on :
 
@Ariel -- alternatively set everything up the way you want it; keep your personal files on a separate drive (and back up regularly); make a disk image of the set up, and then simply run free without any anti-virus or other 'safety' clutter. Chances are you won't pick up anything nasty if you. or yours, are not in the habit of visiting the more suspect parts of the web. Should disaster strike, wipe the system disk clean, restore the system from the image (or images) you have created for just such a situation, and away you go again. Not quite easy peasy, but actually not that hard either, and as already mentioned, you may well find not something you have to do very often, if at all.
 
Posted by Wesley J (# 6075) on :
 
Norton Internet Security 2013 works quite fast for me on all three machines (XP SP3 and Win7). I know it's not everyone's taste, but hey...
 
Posted by the giant cheeseburger (# 10942) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Doublethink:
What's wrong with avg ?

It's adware, the free version consumes lots of system resources but doesn't detect anything, and computers infected with it can perform even worse than if they have a 'real' virus. It's such a shit product that it couldn't possibly be any use as a good advertisement for their paid version so I would be worried about what their real motivation is with providing it for free and what it's doing that I don't know about.

I agree with Alisdair, ditch the lot and use a good backup solution instead to reclaim the computer's performance, and be careful what you download (i.e. no pirated software with key generators). Or upgrade to Windows 7 while you still can and use Microsoft Security Essentials.

I would also suggest using an email provider which provides the virus scanning of attachments for you, such as Gmail or Fastmail.net, something that ISP-based POP email accounts generally don't provide.
 
Posted by Doublethink (# 1984) on :
 
I have used avg for years with out any noticeable infections.
 
Posted by the giant cheeseburger (# 10942) on :
 
Correlation ≠ Causation.

If you haven't downloaded anything that turns into a noticeable infection then you won't have a noticeable infection. Running AVG free edition, disconnecting your internet at the plug when you're not using it or cleaning your teeth at least twice a day would not make any difference to that.

The difference between the AVG free edition and other internet security packages like Avast, Kaspersky is that the others include real-time monitoring to pick up the execution of malicious code, while AVG (the free edition at least) relies on doing a scan of files to pick up anything.
 
Posted by que sais-je (# 17185) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ariel:

Any recommendations for a quick, light, friendly (preferably free) anti-virus software for an ageing computer running Windows XP SP3?

Nerdy answer - Linux. Recorded Windows viruses: about 500000, recorded Linux viruses: about 30 but though none worked.

Initially I installed Ubuntu (a version of Linux) alongside Windows as I was a bit nervous. I could boot either so learned a bit of Linux and increasingly stopped using Windows.
 
Posted by Alisdair (# 15837) on :
 
I'd second that; unless you are a gamer, running Linux is not at all a bad solution to digital nasties and corporate slavery.
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
Funny thing, though. If all the Apple and Linux evangelists were successful, obscurity, a large component of their security would be rendered useless. Inherently, Apple is the most vulnerable, architecture wise. Linux is the most secure, but also requires the more knowledge in general.
 
Posted by Alisdair (# 15837) on :
 
It's the old old story: caveat emptor

Or, to put it another way, horses for courses. Either way the punter needs to be bothered/able to educate themselves about what they need and what is available to meet that need.

Computing as an appliance is fine if all we want to know is how to throw the On/Off switch, but we have to accept that beyond that all the knowledge and control will lie in someone else's hands. Not necessarily a problem at all; but it can be very useful to at least have a choice---and to know what that choice is and why it might be worth choosing.
 
Posted by que sais-je (# 17185) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by lilBuddha:
Funny thing, though. If all the Apple and Linux evangelists were successful, obscurity, a large component of their security would be rendered useless. Inherently, Apple is the most vulnerable, architecture wise. Linux is the most secure, but also requires the more knowledge in general.

Less knowledge is needed these days. Linux Mint comes with Firefox & Thunderbird and LibreOffice which lots of people are already using on Windows (well "some" in the LibreOffice case). My wife - not at all into computers - says she doesn't see any difference between Linux and Windows (except clicking once where it used to be twice). Admittedly she had me to set it up in the first place.
 
Posted by Latchkey Kid (# 12444) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by the giant cheeseburger:
The difference between the AVG free edition and other internet security packages like Avast, Kaspersky is that the others include real-time monitoring to pick up the execution of malicious code, while AVG (the free edition at least) relies on doing a scan of files to pick up anything.

I'm moving to avast because AVG keeps trying to make it the default search.

Avast has an annoying "your avast database has been updated" sound a few times a day, that I can't find how to turn off. Any clues?
 
Posted by balaam (# 4543) on :
 
Never found out how to do it. It's especially annoying when it pops up when listening to Spotify.
 
Posted by the giant cheeseburger (# 10942) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Latchkey Kid:
quote:
Originally posted by the giant cheeseburger:
The difference between the AVG free edition and other internet security packages like Avast, Kaspersky is that the others include real-time monitoring to pick up the execution of malicious code, while AVG (the free edition at least) relies on doing a scan of files to pick up anything.

I'm moving to avast because AVG keeps trying to make it the default search.

Avast has an annoying "your avast database has been updated" sound a few times a day, that I can't find how to turn off. Any clues?

It's a while since I last used it (on a Mac now) but I think back then there was a setting for audio alerts hidden somewhere.

Alternatively, look for WAV, DAV or even MP3 files in the install folder, if they are stored in any of those formats you can replace them with a 'blank' sound file that just contains silence.
 
Posted by Latchkey Kid (# 12444) on :
 
Thanks. I missed it because it called it the silent/gaming mode.
 
Posted by the giant cheeseburger (# 10942) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Latchkey Kid:
Thanks. I missed it because it called it the silent/gaming mode.

Yep, that definitely rings a bell - primarily because the one time I forgot to leave it on that setting when I was actually gaming it announced "a threat has been detected" just as my opponent's army started rolling towards my base! Useful program, helping me in my pwnage and getting rid of tracking cookies.
 
Posted by Drifting Star (# 12799) on :
 
Open Avast. 'Settings' tab, 'sounds' from the left hand menu, un-tick 'Enable avast! sounds'.

Or you can choose which sounds you want to disable and keep some of them.
 
Posted by The5thMary (# 12953) on :
 
Ohhhh, God! How I long for my Macintosh computers! Alas, both are unwell and I haven't the $$ to fix them... anyway, some PC laptop advice is needed pronto!

My wives are always playing games on the laptop (bought in April of 2012) and K. downloaded these games that Dell sells on their website. The collection is called Wild Tangent Games and she also plays all the Sims games too.

The other day I was trying to be helpful by cleaning up the hard drive and getting rid of duplicate applications and crap that is always showing up whenever we open Internet Explorer. Anyway, I accidentally got rid of the Wild Tangent application and all hell broke loose at home. You would've thought I killed one of our cats, the way K. went on and on, yelling and ranting and... CRYING! Yeah, she's emotional! Anyway, I tried to do the little trick where you go back to an earlier time to get the application/program back and it came back... but only the logo. When I try to open the damn thing it says it doesn't exist! K. paid for a lot of extras in these "Virtual Villagers" sim-type games and now can't get her account even to be recognized. What the hell can I do to fix this? She has the receipts for the games and extra items she purchased but I don't see anyplace on the Wild Tangent website where one can contact them should such a thing happen. I'm sure I'm not the only one that this has happened to... I hope, anyway! I already feel like an idiot.

We're using Windows 7-Premium Home Edition, if that helps. Please save me from more marital strife!
Geeks, you're my only hope! [Waterworks]
 
Posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider (# 76) on :
 
I can only shut the stable door - create an admin account that only you know the password to, and demote all other accounts to standard user. Then they can't install rubbish that'll suddenly be your responsibility in the future.

In the short term, if system restore doesn't bring it back, then it's likely that nothing will.

[ 12. December 2012, 08:57: Message edited by: Karl: Liberal Backslider ]
 
Posted by Snags (# 15351) on :
 
Absolutely agree with K:LB

Although it should be noted that if your partner has an actual account with Wild Tangent then there ought to be a mechanism to re-install the software and restore the add-ons/enhancements.

Wild Tangent is just an online games company, part of the point of which is that you can install the game onto any old machine, log in with your credentials, and get all your crap back because it's all stored centrally.

So I'd be getting on to Wild Tangent customer support and saying "We had a whoops, I've reinstalled, WTF isn't it working?"
 
Posted by The5thMary (# 12953) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Snags:
Absolutely agree with K:LB

Although it should be noted that if your partner has an actual account with Wild Tangent then there ought to be a mechanism to re-install the software and restore the add-ons/enhancements.

Wild Tangent is just an online games company, part of the point of which is that you can install the game onto any old machine, log in with your credentials, and get all your crap back because it's all stored centrally.

So I'd be getting on to Wild Tangent customer support and saying "We had a whoops, I've reinstalled, WTF isn't it working?"

Yeah... we tried to contact Wild Tangent about this but even though my wife is a registered user (hell, she gave them enough of her money, dammit!), the Wild Tangent website keeps saying "User Not Found" so we've given up with downloading games. This morning we found all her downloadable games are also on disks (discs?), so we're going to purge our laptop of ALL downloadable games and just buy the ones we want in a hard copy and then, in the future, back everything up to an external hard drive. Too many weird things seem to happen with buying downloadable content on the PC--it's just not worth the heartache.

Thanks for the advice, though! As soon as we discovered all her games were available on disk, happiness and tranquility replaced hours upon hours of hand-wringing and angst. Wife Kristine is a disabled veteran and has many PTSD issues, playing computer games really helps her deal with a lot of things, so not being able to access those games really took a toll on her. Sheesh! I hope I don't have to go through this again, any time soon! [Ultra confused]
 
Posted by The Rogue (# 2275) on :
 
Discs for me. YMMV.

This Christmas I am keen to learn to touch type - at the moment I am staring at my keyboard and not spotting things like cAPS lOCK and reaching the end of a line (not everything I do has word wrap!). I will be off work and have some time.

When I Google touch typing courses about a zillion come up. So I am asking if anyone has any recommendations which have worked for you. I don't know how realistic my ambition to pick it up over a week or so is but hopefully I will learn enough to get me going. As they say: practice makes perfect.
 
Posted by Firenze (# 619) on :
 
Back in the days when I learnt, it was not so much touch type as thump type, since it was on a manual typewriter. As I recall, we started with the letters under the index fingers plus the thumb for spacebar, then the middle fingers and so on. And it was just practice, practice, practice. And now of course I mainly use a virtual keyboard and it's back to one finger pecking....
 
Posted by The Machine Elf (# 1622) on :
 
I failed to learn to touch type for years on qwerty and got fed up with trying.

So over the Christmas holidays one year, I switched my keyboard settings to Dvorak layout, and by the time I returned to work I wasn't much slower than I had been. Because the keys are not what is marked on the physical keyboards, I pretty well have to touch type.

I don't know whether I actually am faster than if I had learned to touch type on qwerty, but I didn't. It certainly made spelling 'manoeuvring' easier, which was useful when I worked writing aircraft simulations, and possibly explains why the tests done on military personnel are more positive than others.

On the other hand, I have worn out the pips on the home row of a couple of cheap Dell keyboards since.
 
Posted by Sparrow (# 2458) on :
 
Can anyone recommend FREE photo editing software that enables you to batch resize photos? If possible not Picasa because I have tried that and just can't get on with it.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
There's usually some kind of photo editing software that comes with your digital camera. It might be worth having a look at that to see what it can do, as some do offer batch operations.
 
Posted by Latchkey Kid (# 12444) on :
 
My stock editor is Irfanview. Download both it and its plug-ins. I use it because it manipulates my 125Mbyte slide scans easily and keeps them with 14 bit depth, whereas GIMP always converts them to 8 bit. Oh, Yes. It does work in batch-mode.

[ 20. December 2012, 09:14: Message edited by: Latchkey Kid ]
 
Posted by Mr. Spouse (# 3353) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sparrow:
Can anyone recommend FREE photo editing software that enables you to batch resize photos?

Faststone Image Viewer.
 
Posted by chive (# 208) on :
 
Complete non geek checking in here. I've just bought my first ever laptop. Will it damage the battery if I leave it plugged in most of the time? Also, is it ok to leave it on standby most of the time or should I turn it off when I'm not using it?
 
Posted by chive (# 208) on :
 
Just got my first ever laptop. Will it damage the battery if I leave it plugged in most of the time and will it be a problem to leave it on standby instead of switching it off?
 
Posted by lily pad (# 11456) on :
 
I tend to use the battery power until it goes right down and then charge it up. Otherwise, I leave it plugged in. I try not to let it only partially charge and then unplug it. I have no idea if this is advisable or not for today's laptops but that is what I was told to do when I bought my first one and now it is a habit. [Smile]

Standby or hibernate is fine. I think hibernate uses less power. Every so often it is a good idea to reboot.

Hope you enjoy your new level of portability!
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
Lithium batteries, which I assume your laptop has, do best when stored at ~40% capacity. Since you do not need the battery to run the laptop* it is recommended by some that it be removed during normal operation. Leaving it plugged constantly will shorten the life of the battery, not sure how fast. FWIW, I leave my battery installed and the laptop plugged in.

I do not like standby. If you do not completely turn the computer off, small errors can accumulate, causing programs to not run efficiently. As long as you do not have too many thing running on startup, it should boot fairly quickly as it is new.

*unless you have power drops.
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
Lily Pad,

No! That advice is for nickel based batteries. Lithium based do not care to be run down all the way. And there is no benefit to doing so. This can actually
shorten the batteries life if run down too far.
 
Posted by lily pad (# 11456) on :
 
I stand corrected! And will be the better for it. Thanks!
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
No worries.
More than nearly anyone wishes to know about batteries.
 
Posted by Alisdair (# 15837) on :
 
FWIW, my experience of lithium laptop batteries is that if you always use the laptop on mains power (and so never discharge the battery very much), the battery will have a much reduced lifespan. They like to be used, so if you fairly regularly run the laptop on battery only (no need to drain it to the dregs), it will be a happy battery for a lot longer.

Taking the battery out of the laptop may be okay on some models, but in my experience laptops don't like it and either won't run at all, or lose some functionality, i.e. the base system expects a battery to be present, even if it's dead, and won't run at all/fully if one is not in place.
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
I have had several work with no battery present. Depend upon how the power is routed, I would guess.
If a battery in a plugged in laptop were not drawing and sending power, it would be akin to storing said battery at full charge. Not the best for maximum life, but not the worse.
Lithium batteries have a finite number of full cycles, regardless of the depth of the discharge. (Save for complete drain)
So, I think it likely your computers were constantly charging and discharging in tiny amounts.
 
Posted by Mr. Spouse (# 3353) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by lilBuddha:
Lithium batteries, which I assume your laptop has, do best when stored at ~40% capacity. Since you do not need the battery to run the laptop* it is recommended by some that it be removed during normal operation.

Some manufacturers do not recommend this. Multi core and graphics processors require a lot of power, which the power adapter may not be able to supply on its own. Macs, for example, can run without a battery but slow down the processor speed to prevent excessive power drain. It's also not advisable to run a Macbook with a Magsafe adapter without a battery as the things can detach very easily so you risk losing work!

http://support.apple.com/kb/HT2332?viewlocale=en_US&locale=en_US

[ 22. December 2012, 09:39: Message edited by: Mr. Spouse ]
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
[Confused] How can a battery supplement the power adaptor which is both keeping it charged and running the computer? By that logic, one could only operate the computer for short intervals. One would then need to shut down the computer and recharge the battery.
The potential for the power adaptor becoming disconnected is a real and valid point. I manage to knock mine loose occasionally.

ETA: I read the link on the Apple site. And, thinking about it, realise they are likely referring to short bursts of activity, rather than sustained. Which is rubbish if true as it means they have under-designed their power adapters. Cheap bastards.
My laptop is designed for gaming and does have a massive power adaptor.

[ 22. December 2012, 13:55: Message edited by: lilBuddha ]
 
Posted by the giant cheeseburger (# 10942) on :
 
It's a moot point anyway, Apple have not been selling computers with removable batteries for nearly four years now, that's work that needs to be done at a service centre.

What I'm struggling to work out is how many peripherals you would need to be running to draw more power than a 85W Magsafe charger could supply, and whether any MacBook or older-style MacBook Pro even has enough ports to do that. I suppose it might be theoretically possible with one of the old 17" MBP models with the first i7 processors, but the 85W Magsafe charger is more than adequate for 99% of the time. An MBP is not a gaming laptop like Dell's Alienware range, it's designed for portability which demands having a power supply that does not require a large truck to transport.
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
ISTM, their advice not to remove the battery, when that was possible, is to prevent "you did not tell us we could not remove both the batter and power adaptor and still run the computer." comments.

I believe in some systems, the battery can help condition the power. Not sure if laptop batteries work this way.

[ 22. December 2012, 14:50: Message edited by: lilBuddha ]
 
Posted by Latchkey Kid (# 12444) on :
 
It's only USB that powers peripherals and the computer limits that power anyway. If you have many then the peripherals need their own power or a powered hub.
 
Posted by Jahlove (# 10290) on :
 
Don't know if anyone has any ideas (I've tried googling various sites for answers but none works). I have a mac, running OSX Lion 10.7.5 - my skype allows video; I can see and hear my correspondents; they can see but not hear me - they can, however, hear any *tapping* noises (e.g. tapping a biro on the screen or on the desk my computer sits on but not my voice).

[Confused]
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Jahlove:
I can see and hear my correspondents; they can see but not hear me - they can, however, hear any *tapping* noises (e.g. tapping a biro on the screen or on the desk my computer sits on but not my voice).

I have no idea about Macs or Skype. But if the people on the other end can hear tapping but not your voice, it suggests that only certain frequencies are being relayed - which might be a microphone problem. If you have an external one and can change it for a spare maybe that might make a difference?
 
Posted by the giant cheeseburger (# 10942) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Jahlove:
Don't know if anyone has any ideas (I've tried googling various sites for answers but none works). I have a mac, running OSX Lion 10.7.5 - my skype allows video; I can see and hear my correspondents; they can see but not hear me - they can, however, hear any *tapping* noises (e.g. tapping a biro on the screen or on the desk my computer sits on but not my voice).

[Confused]

Assuming you're using an iMac or a MacBook Air/Pro with a built-in microphone, this is probably as simple as the standard input volume setting from the factory being too low. The fact it's picking up tapping noises would tend to indicate it's not a hardware issue, I can easily make my 21.5" iMac's input level max out by tapping on the desk as this is picked up as being a fair bit louder than my normal speaking voice (due to sound being transmitted better by the rigid aluminium chassis of the computer).

To solve this, open System Preferences, go to "Sounds" (end of second row) and hit the "Input" button. First check that "Internal Microphone" is selected rather than the line in. Now start talking as you would when you're on Skype, and see how high the input level meter. Raise the input volume until you're regularly getting it as high as about three quarters of the way across.

See my image here for a view of the settings mentioned above.

If you are using an external mike, do everything the same except for checking that "Line in" or "USB audio input" is selected instead of the Internal microphone.


To tell if it works before using Skype again, try making a movie of yourself speaking in Photo Booth. You'll need to hit the "movie" mode button which is the third one in the group of three on the bottom-left. Once you've recorded it and stopped, you can play it back again to hear the result.
quote:
Originally posted by Ariel:
If you have an external one and can change it for a spare maybe that might make a difference?

Just about everybody using a Mac less than six years old would be using a built-in mike. If this is not working it should be covered by Apple's standard warranty, but it's a relatively major service job that would need a large amount of disassembly to replace. In my experience a defective built-in mike is extremely rare, in the three years I worked at an Apple Authorised Service Centre we didn't even have one job with a dead microphone outside of user-caused damage from water or cigarette smoke* - and in those cases the microphone was of the least concern.


* just about the nastiest thing you can expose a computer to, and a great way to void your warranty.

[ 26. December 2012, 11:58: Message edited by: the giant cheeseburger ]
 
Posted by Jahlove (# 10290) on :
 
Thanks Ariel & TGB - much appreciated. Even with the input setting up to 11, nothing happens [Frown] Machine is a refurb and warranty is expired now. I have ordered a Logitech desk mic which I hope will resolve the problem.
 
Posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider (# 76) on :
 
Chaps and chapettes;

This may surprise you, as I'm a musician, so should have accurate fingers, and an IT pro, but fact is I struggle with mobile phones. I struggle with navigating their menus. I struggle with accurately using the silly little keys. I turn into a clumsy technophobe the moment one is in my grubby mitt.

Mine's up for renewal, which is just as well as it's knackered, but given my above inadequacies, what am I best going for? Touchscreen? Conventional buttons? Am I better with a big as screen as possible to get bigger buttons that I can actually press accurately? My particular bugbear is large multifunction buttons - you know the sort of thing, press the top to do one thing, the bottom to do something else, the middle to delete everything you've just entered into the text field...

Nothing pricey; I send about 50 texts a month and make/receive about half a dozen calls. Internet and camera functions I'm totally meh about.

[ 27. December 2012, 08:30: Message edited by: Karl: Liberal Backslider ]
 
Posted by Wesley J (# 6075) on :
 
Just a quick, first reply here: I've only had 2 mobile phone models in my life, so guess I'm somewhat of an exception.

I started with a SonyEricsson j300i, prepay, and only as it was on special sale back then. This is one of those you and me both hate: teenytiny keys, and very fiddly. No internet or camera. I still have it as a backup phone, but rarely use it.

The 2nd model is a SonyEricsson smartphone, with internet access, pressure-sensitive screen and a superb camera, the fabulous Vivaz, from 2010. I upgraded the microSD memory to the max of 32 GB (!), which is huge, and still 2/3 unused. [Smile]

To your question: I chose mine after going to several phone shops, taking my time trying out and fiddling with the phones, and getting an impression of how they feel in my hand, and when making calls. This was, and still is, the only phone of those I looked at that perfectly fits my hand and has no sharp edges (quite unlike the current Sony Xperia range...!).

IMHO, if you're planning to use your phone reasonably often, and are perhaps less into all the latest gadgets and features, the most important thing seems to be the handling, which you can only find out if you go to a phone store and hold them in your hand and compare.

I'm very happy with my choice, as I can do as good as everything I want with it - and mainly it snuggles very nicely into my hand. Smartphones tend to get bigger and bigger, and I feel, thus strangely somehow less practical.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider:
I struggle with navigating their menus. I struggle with accurately using the silly little keys.

Do not get a Blackberry. I'd been wanting one, as they have one key per alphabet letter, but when it came to trying it out in the shop, the keys were so small and the lettering so tiny that it was very easy to mistype unless you have nimble fingers and really good eyesight.

My priority when getting a new phone recently was to find a phone that didn't have a touchscreen (you have to be spot on with these and the menu interface can be a bit confusing), and which did have a sliding front which reveals an average-size keypad. I've had non-sliders, and if the phone knocks against anything in pocket or bag there's a likelihood that it'll dial something without your knowledge. This has happened quite a bit.

It also needed to have clear, easy to read displays. My new one lets me change the font size.

Have a look round in your local phone shops and see what takes your fancy. As a basic rule the less you pay, the fewer options you get so if you don't want lots of fancy functions and complicated menus, adjust your budget downwards. There are some inexpensive ones (i.e. under £35) which will do the job - including some with larger buttons - but you really need to see them for yourself to know whether you'd get on with them.
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
I'll second Ariel on havin a look. All our suggestions are for naught if they don't fit your preference.
However, if I my offer a suggestion, I would say give the Windows phones a thought. There interface is my favourite at the moment. If I did not have so much invested in apps, it'd be what I would use. May yet heave iOS and go that way regardless.
 
Posted by BroJames (# 9636) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider:
<snip>I send about 50 texts a month and make/receive about half a dozen calls. Internet and camera functions I'm totally meh about.

I have been very impressed with the Doro range of phones. (In the UK they are recommended by RNIB for those with sight impairment, and for this reason we looked at them for my M-in-law.) What impressed me about them, however, was the thought that had clearly gone into the arrangement of menus etc. to be intuitive and easy to use. If you are really only going to use your phone for telephony functions (voice calls and texts) then I wouldn't wast your money on paying for the capabilities of a smart phone which you will not use.

HTH [Smile]
 
Posted by Snags (# 15351) on :
 
I second the Windows Phone recommendation, and am typing this on a WP7 device. I use most handsets through work, and for general purpose use I reckon Windows Phone has it cracked. It is worth getting the higher end handsets though.
 
Posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider (# 76) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Snags:
I second the Windows Phone recommendation, and am typing this on a WP7 device. I use most handsets through work, and for general purpose use I reckon Windows Phone has it cracked. It is worth getting the higher end handsets though.

Yeah, but for the usage I get out of it (very little ) it makes no sense to go for anything above the cheapest contracts.
 
Posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider (# 76) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by BroJames:
quote:
Originally posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider:
<snip>I send about 50 texts a month and make/receive about half a dozen calls. Internet and camera functions I'm totally meh about.

I have been very impressed with the Doro range of phones. (In the UK they are recommended by RNIB for those with sight impairment, and for this reason we looked at them for my M-in-law.) What impressed me about them, however, was the thought that had clearly gone into the arrangement of menus etc. to be intuitive and easy to use. If you are really only going to use your phone for telephony functions (voice calls and texts) then I wouldn't wast your money on paying for the capabilities of a smart phone which you will not use.

HTH [Smile]

I know where you're coming from there, but I'm struggling with coming to the conclusion that I actually need something designed for the elderly, at least going by the testimonials.

Am I really that hamfisted?
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
I have Pay As You Go. There wasn't much point in having a monthly contract for infrequent use - though the internet bit is useful for traffic/train alerts. I probably only need to top up with about £10 a month. Sometimes more, sometimes less.
 
Posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider (# 76) on :
 
My current contract is £8 a month and the new one I'm looking at would be £7.50. The only problem I have with PAYG is the upfront cost of the handset. Oh, and navigating the menu system to add credit to it, of course.
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
Perhaps, Karl, there is the perception that if you were not, ahem, challenged, you'd not be having an issue in the first. [Biased]
 
Posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider (# 76) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by lilBuddha:
Perhaps, Karl, there is the perception that if you were not, ahem, challenged, you'd not be having an issue in the first. [Biased]

Yeah, I imagine so. Thing is, I'm not old, not disabled, can play various musical instruments, can do things with my hands, appear pretty normal, but I find smartphones and, for that matter, standard mobile phones, a frustrating process of hitting the wrong button, finding myself in the wrong place, inadvertently deleting the whole bloody lot, and wanting to slowly and painfully kill the person who made "switch off" the default option on the menu of my current phone. Why, for feck's sake? Why?

Part of it is possibly that I can type at 70wpm+ on a standard keyboard, and I'm a pedantic bastard who loathes textspeak, so I find myself using the poxy numeric keypad to type things out properly, in full, with punctuation, and it's S.....L......O......W...... even without my dyslexic fingers.
 
Posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider (# 76) on :
 
p.s. - having similar issues with the trackpad on my W8 laptop - I want to turn off everything except "move the cursor around when I move my finger" and "only clicking the buttons is a click." options to disable the gestures and the tap to click thing, both of which I routinely do accidently, but SWMBO won't let me, even though she has the same issues, because she's sure they must be useful once you get used to them.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider:
My current contract is £8 a month and the new one I'm looking at would be £7.50. The only problem I have with PAYG is the upfront cost of the handset. Oh, and navigating the menu system to add credit to it, of course.

Yes, I never bother with that or the top-up card, I just do it at cashpoints. I like the idea of £7.50 a month, which provider are you looking at?

There is the upfront cost of the handset, but there are some for about a tenner to be had at present and you can get deals with credit thrown in. If you don't upgrade phones a lot, a decent one will last you for a few years.

To be honest, I think there's a surfeit of choice, and it doesn't make it easy trying to compare deals.
 
Posted by Gracious rebel (# 3523) on :
 
someone else here with similar requirements who would be interested in a £7.50 contract ... details please?!
 
Posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider (# 76) on :
 
Unfortunately it's Talkmobile. Owned by TalkTalk. Proceed at your own risk. I've had no problems with the mobile provision, but their tech support for broadband utterly sucked.
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
Talkmobile are a virtual network, they operate on Vodafone's network. The potential positive about this is you might be able to find a used phone on ebay or Amazon. This would broaden your choice without spending too much. I would suggest a phone with a slid-out keyboard in the horizontal layout.

Side note:
Your being a musician and IT person might actually be part of your issue. Look at your keyboard, it requires very little precision, the keys are HUGE. And most instruments have built-in leeway for finger placement without affecting tone.
 
Posted by BroJames (# 9636) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider:
I know where you're coming from there, but I'm struggling with coming to the conclusion that I actually need something designed for the elderly, at least going by the testimonials.

Am I really that hamfisted?

Yes (meaning I know what you mean - not that you are hamfisted!), I can see the issue about the phone 'saying' that you need an 'old person's' phone. It wasn't so much the big buttons I was thinking of as the well-designed user interface. If I weren't, for other reasons committed to a smartphone, I would think of a Doro - not least because I might be able to use it without my glasses. Currently a SMS tone on my phone sends me reaching first for my reading glasses before I get the phone out. Likewise with sending texts.
 
Posted by Adeodatus (# 4992) on :
 
Has anyone any thoughts on currently available (in the UK) tablet computers?

The reason I'm asking is that I wouldn't be surprised if my laptop - currently my only computer - dies on me this year, as it's showing signs of advanced old age. I thought that I might then replace it either with a PC and a tablet, or just with a tablet.

Cost is a factor, especially if I'm going to be buying two machines. Also, as well as being somewhat Applephobic (okay, very Applephobic), I think I'd prefer an Android operating system as I also use an Android phone, and like it very much.

(If anyone's wondering why I'm thinking of two machines, it's because with the artwork I do now I do a fair bit of image processing, and the laptop is a bit limited on screen size and general clunkiness. Hence the PC. But of course, I also need something portable - not least because since David Hockney started doing it, everybody is using their tablets as a painting tool!)
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
Depends on what programs you use and their availability on the platforms you are considering.
For myself, I purchased an ASUS Republic of Gamers 17 in laptop. Not amazingly high in the portability area, but still luggable. I tuck it and a Wacom into my rucksack and go. I did not wish to buy two systems, so this is a good balance for me.
The problem with most tablets is they are extremely underpowered. I do know people who use the Samsung Slate, but it is low on spec IMO. And fairly expensive for what you get. As an adjunct to a main computer, it is fairly nice, but a tad expensive for that.
I am looking at the Microsoft Surface Pro, when they finally launch, as a secondary computer as they appear to be more reasonably priced.
No real help on the android end, I am afraid.

Note for comparison: I use Photoshop, Illustrator, Painter, Premier,etc. quite heavily.
 
Posted by chive (# 208) on :
 
Another question from the one who knows nothing. Is there such a thing as a decent free word processing package that I can download from the interwebs?
 
Posted by Jengie Jon (# 273) on :
 
I have not used it personally but I know of several people who have used Open Office quite effectively.

Jengie
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
I use Open Office and would say it is quite capable.
 
Posted by Alisdair (# 15837) on :
 
'Open Office' is currently somewhat in the doldrums and out of favour (long story -- see below). Much better trying the forked version known as 'Libre Office', which is 'Open Office' much improved, slimmed down, and attracting a lot of developer interest.

http://tinyurl.com/aw9p6d4


A good, and much lighter weight alternative, but focussing just on word processing is 'Abiword'.

http://abisource.com/


+ For those who want to know a 'fork' is what happens when a group of software developers get a bee in their bonnet over some application, or get fed up with the way the leadership is taking the project and decide to go off on their own, with the code, and develop it in the way that they think is best. This can happen with 'open source' software as no one technically 'owns' the code.

In Open Office's case a lot of the developers got so fed up with Oracle who had bought Sun, who historically controlled Open Office, that they forked the code, set up the 'Open Document Foundation' as an organising body, and created 'Libre Office'. The pace since has been pretty hot with a lot of long-standing bugs, etc. dealt with, redundant code ripped out, and long wanted features put in place. IMO LO is well worth the monetary price of 'free'!
 
Posted by the giant cheeseburger (# 10942) on :
 
If you like it, it's also worth a donation to keep the project rolling on.
 
Posted by Alisdair (# 15837) on :
 
An excellent suggestion. [Smile]
 
Posted by the giant cheeseburger (# 10942) on :
 
Request for help here:

My sister has a Windows 7 laptop, and on the newest version of Firefox has tabs opening to advertising sites about every 15 minutes or so. Microsoft Security Essentials and AVG Free Edition both found nothing when full scans were run.

It's not something I want to experiment with on my iMac's Windows (Boot Camp) installation which I keep thoroughly locked down, so does anybody have any ideas on what I could do to get her machine sorted out? A general search has not been of much use, there are people claiming they've had it and fixed it by doing everything from changing DNS settings, deleting .dll files or fiddling about in the Registry.

Does anybody think that, given MSE and AVG* both found nothing even after full scans, that maybe there's nothing wrong and it's actually just that the new version of Firefox has advertising included? If so, I won't be updating from the version I run just for the purpose of reliably handling YouTube uploads, that's disgraceful.


* I'm no fan of AVG with its inability to do anything meaningful in the background, but I do recognise that a full system scan should work for a known infection.

[ 01. January 2013, 05:20: Message edited by: the giant cheeseburger ]
 
Posted by Alisdair (# 15837) on :
 
My version of Firefox is 17.0.1 and there are no unsolicited tabs/pages/adverts popping up here. Does it happen if she uses IE or Chrome?
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by the giant cheeseburger:
Does anybody think that, given MSE and AVG* both found nothing even after full scans, that maybe there's nothing wrong and it's actually just that the new version of Firefox has advertising included?

No, Firefox doesn't do that of its own will. Your programs will pick up viruses, but not necessarily spyware or adware. I'd suggest you try Spybot, and see if that helps.
 
Posted by Ricardus (# 8757) on :
 
Yep, Firefox 17.0.1 is ad-free for me, too. Has your sister installed a dodgy toolbar?
quote:
Originally posted by lilBuddha:
I use Open Office and would say it is quite capable.

I use LibreOffice, and I'd say it's usually good (and on occasion superior to MS Office), but IME if the document is complex and you save it in .doc or .docx format, it sometimes won't display properly if someone else opens it in MS Office.

I don't know what causes this, but I've had problems with documents that contain a lot of large images* or documents that use fields more complex than 'page number' or 'date'.

* In fairness this is probably because word processors aren't really designed to be used as desktop publishing tools. Certainly I find the wrap / positioning of images using both Word and LibreOffice Write to be very annoying ...

[ 01. January 2013, 09:07: Message edited by: Ricardus ]
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
TGC

Antivirus don't always keep up with spy/adware, especially not those which have been user installed. ( toolbars and the like)
Also, if they are running concurrently with an infection, it is more difficult for them to detect. If her antivirus has a mode in which it will scan before booting Windows, run it that way.
I second running an anti spyware program such ad spybot.
 
Posted by the giant cheeseburger (# 10942) on :
 
I got to spend a bit of time looking through her machine last night, Googling everything I didn't recognise or was recently modified. It looks like there were at least two trojans, one rookit, some rogue .dat files in Windows/System32 and some files named Google_Malware in the Firefox folder.

I didn't want to wait a few days to see if this poor computer would also receive twelve drummers drumming on top of all that, so I went for the nuclear option of formatting it and reinstalling Windows. It's now happily whirring away as it downloads every update under the sun.

I have an idea of the source of all these maladies now, I think she should limit her adventures in the world of piracy to buying dodgy DVDs in Bali.
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
TGC,

Your experience may vary, but I have found installing massive amounts of updates in small batches to be more effective than all in one go.
 
Posted by the giant cheeseburger (# 10942) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by lilBuddha:
TGC,

Your experience may vary, but I have found installing massive amounts of updates in small batches to be more effective than all in one go.

I totally agree, because when M$ f*cks it up I like to be able to "upgrade" to the previous version which worked fine and didn't need "fixing."

However, in this case real life didn't allow that. I had to go out early this morning and the owner needs her machine back again tonight so the time to babysit it through many restarts just wasn't there.

This experience is a great advertisement for me to stick with my Mac. Apple have at least learned how to do cumulative updates properly, if I restored my iMac to factory condition the process of getting it up and running would be far less painful.
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by the giant cheeseburger:
This experience is a great advertisement for me to stick with my Mac. Apple have at least learned how to do cumulative updates properly, if I restored my iMac to factory condition the process of getting it up and running would be far less painful.

It is not really about learning, it is about control. Apple have a control over their entire ecosystem that Microsoft cannot. Apple likewise have a greater control over their users.
 
Posted by the giant cheeseburger (# 10942) on :
 
If being "controlled" is what it takes to avoid the "freedom" of faffing around like this, I'll keep taking the real freedom of the controlled system so long as Apple keep doing it well.

And before anybody mentions Linux, it's not even a remotely viable option for me until there is an industry-accepted equivalent to Final Cut Pro available.
 
Posted by mousethief (# 953) on :
 
Have any of the Linuxheads made the leap to Ubuntu Precise Pangolin (12.04)? I'm moving from 10.04 to 12.04 and the new "Unity" GUI and bloody stupid and completely unpersonalizable "Launcher" and greatly complexified app menu are driving me to fits. It appears to be a zillion times less amenable to user-pleasing personalization than Lucid Lynx.

Is Canonical taking "fuck you, user" lessons from Microsoft?

I've read that if I just stick with it, I'll learn to like it, but I'm ready to jump back to Lynx, or completely jump ship to Mint, at the moment. Any reason I shouldn't?
 
Posted by Alisdair (# 15837) on :
 
I have to say Ubuntu and I parted company three or four editions ago. After a joyful, but time consuming, period with Arch I settled on Mint, with the Cinnamon desktop (which is really coming on now), and am very happy as it's low stress, but mainline Linux without being fundamentalist about proprietary codecs, etc.

There is a 'gotcha' with Mint though, which some may find off-putting: the distributors recommend doing a complete system reinstall when upgrading to a new version, and they don't support anyone who simply tries getting apt to do it via 'dist-upgrade'. Basically they don't want to be dealing with people moaning when some things get broken through doing it that way; so in a way they are keeping things simple, but by making a bit of extra work for the end user.

To be honest I don't find it a bother, and it's nice to have a clean installation every so often.
 
Posted by no prophet (# 15560) on :
 
I don't know anyone who's using Unity. I installed one of the 'buntus in the past, and went over to Mint because its business model made more sense. There's clearly a fork in the development. Shuttleworth says that Canonical is targetting mobile users, which is obviously what Unity is about.

There's also a problem with Ubuntu's business model in my opinion. Privacy in Ubuntu 12.10: Amazon Ads and Data Leaks. You can turn it off, but it should be opt in, not opt out. The problem is that when wearching for something in Dash, your computer makes a HTTPS connection to productsearch.ubuntu.com, sending along your search query and your IP address. If it returns Amazon products to your display and your computer insecurely loads the product images from Amazon's HTTP server. This means that an eavesdropper, someone sharing a wireless network with you can see what you're searching for based on Amazon product images. This is not good and looks like something M$ would do.

I've trashed Mint several times, and no worries because reinstall takes maybe 20 mins. You actually can apt-get dist upgrade but you may have to force it. No need to bother. Best idea is to partition off a section for the OS and another for data IMHO.
 
Posted by Rosa Gallica officinalis (# 3886) on :
 
Another request for help from friendly geeks.
I've just received an email from my boss which includes the word 'advertising' highlighted as a link- which goes to a site that she would not use (it's in a foreign language). I'm 99.99% certain she did not add the link herself. (I will check when I speak to her later) It was sent from an ipad using BT ISP. What is likely to be going on & does anything need to be done about it?
 
Posted by jbohn (# 8753) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by mousethief:
Have any of the Linuxheads made the leap to Ubuntu Precise Pangolin (12.04)? I'm moving from 10.04 to 12.04 and the new "Unity" GUI and bloody stupid and completely unpersonalizable "Launcher" and greatly complexified app menu are driving me to fits. It appears to be a zillion times less amenable to user-pleasing personalization than Lucid Lynx.

Is Canonical taking "fuck you, user" lessons from Microsoft?

I've read that if I just stick with it, I'll learn to like it, but I'm ready to jump back to Lynx, or completely jump ship to Mint, at the moment. Any reason I shouldn't?

You might try Xubuntu - Ubuntu under the hood, but with the (to me) far more usable XFCE window manager.
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Rosa Gallica officinalis:
Another request for help from friendly geeks.
I've just received an email from my boss which includes the word 'advertising' highlighted as a link- which goes to a site that she would not use (it's in a foreign language). I'm 99.99% certain she did not add the link herself. (I will check when I speak to her later) It was sent from an ipad using BT ISP. What is likely to be going on & does anything need to be done about it?


 
Posted by Doublethink (# 1984) on :
 
For the amusement of the geekasphere (it is worth waiting to hear the end)
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
Sorry RGo,

It is possible her system or her e-mail have been compromised. You should speak to you IT dept. They need to check. As for you, besides not clicking the link, you should ask your IT dept. to make certain you e-mail client does not allow scrips to run in your preview.
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
That was indeed funny,
DT. Unless it was aimed at my unfortunate post, in which case it was not at all amusing.
 
Posted by Sandemaniac (# 12829) on :
 
Just to ring the changes, a DAB digital radio query.

This morning the power dipped, and my DAB radio went silent. On investigation it seems that it has suddenly decided to stop receiving a range of signals - we can pick up 13 channels, but the entire BBC set have vanished. The other DAB radio, in the room next door, still picks them up fine so it's not the transmitter.

Any ideas what we should try before stumping up for a new radio?

Thanks,

AG
 
Posted by Alisdair (# 15837) on :
 
@Sandemaniac -- hopefully nothing has been fried. If not a 'system reset' may do the trick; you'll have to read the instructions, but usually involves holding down a button (or combination of), until the radio reboots and resets to its factory defaults.
 
Posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider (# 76) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Rosa Gallica officinalis:
Another request for help from friendly geeks.
I've just received an email from my boss which includes the word 'advertising' highlighted as a link- which goes to a site that she would not use (it's in a foreign language). I'm 99.99% certain she did not add the link herself. (I will check when I speak to her later) It was sent from an ipad using BT ISP. What is likely to be going on & does anything need to be done about it?

She sent the email but the link has been added?

Are you picking up the email on a web client or a thick client on your PC (e.g. Outlook)?
 
Posted by Gracious rebel (# 3523) on :
 
Any ideas on how to cure an over sensitive mouse! I have a new PC that runs Windows 7, but the mouse I am using is the same one that I had before, and worked very successfully with my XP machine. Its a HP optical mouse. I am having lots of trouble using it, particular when I single click on a link or item it sometimes repeats the operation (eg click on back button in a browser and it goes back two screens not just one, or click on a digit in calculator and it enters that digit twice). But the biggest problem is in highlighting blocks of text to edit, it wont stay highlighted most of the time, or won't allow me to click the insertion point to where I want it. Any ideas? When editing text I more or less have to rely on the arrows rather than using the mouse, to mark where I want to type, reminds me of using a dumb terminal without a mouse, back in the 80's!
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
There should be a mouse settings under Hardware settings in the control panel
 
Posted by Sandemaniac (# 12829) on :
 
[QUOT If not a 'system reset' may do the trick; [/QB][/QUOTE]

Looks like you were right, Alisdair - Celtic Knotweed did pretty much that when she got home in the evening, and we have the Beeb back. Quite why it wouldn't do it in the morning, who knows?

Thanks!

AG
 
Posted by Alicïa (# 7668) on :
 
My netbook is about 3 years old and has served me really well, but it is now getting a bit slow due to having too much software put on it. I really want to do a full system reset but the problem is that the serial number of xp which was pre-installed on it has partially rubbed off. AFAIK this is the only way. Does anyone know how to get my own serial number out of it?
 
Posted by Alisdair (# 15837) on :
 
@Alicia -- This may be what you need, but I offer the link without any assurances, however sourceforge is usually pretty reliable as a source of software:

http://tinyurl.com/7tkvk5a
 
Posted by Alisdair (# 15837) on :
 
Oops! Alicia, ignore the above---it's no longer being offered. Instead you could have a look at these choices and maybe take your pick:

http://tinyurl.com/7s2vnmt
 
Posted by Snags (# 15351) on :
 
ProduKey by Nirsoft is a staple tool at work. Be aware that most antivirus will shout about many Nirsoft tools, but they are safe - they just poke about in dubious looking places
 
Posted by Thyme (# 12360) on :
 
The product key finder works well, thanks for that info. Unfortunately if your original installation was by CD you probably need the CD to reinstall.

I decided to uninstall Microsoft Office XP which I don't need now. I lost the installation CD a long time ago. I didn't realise this would also uninstall Outlook which had a lot of my address book... on it. [Waterworks]

Well, I did a system restore but it wants me to insert the CD to complete the process so I can use it. There isn't any way to just enter the product key without the CD.

I've had a quick google to see how to reinstall it but it is all too complicated for me and I suspect it's not possible.

Oh well, never mind. I have all the email addresses on the web mail contact list and I can survive without the other info. A lot of it is on various address label docs or paper systems.
 
Posted by the giant cheeseburger (# 10942) on :
 
If you're missing the original XP install disc, I would suggest that installing Windows is one of the rare times it's acceptable to use a borrowed disc from somebody else. since there is a separate mechanism other than possession of the disc which regulates the licensing.

Technically speaking, it will work with your product activation code so long as it is the same version (i.e. XP with Service Pack 1, XP with SP2 etc) as yours came with.

Don't attempt to download a disk image off the internet, the risk of getting something nasty with it is huge.
 
Posted by Thyme (# 12360) on :
 
Just to clarify, my problem was with the XP Office not the Operating System.

Alicia, my laptop developed all sorts of glitches and got very slow and even taking it to a repair place and having it overhauled didn't improve things. I am sure it is older than yours.

I started uninstalling just about everything I didn't want, starting with browsers. Safari in particular kept freezing. I just saved a few important favourite site addresses just in case. I reckoned that with most things you can just download them again if it turns out you need them, and/or google them. Also most of them give you lots of warnings if uninstalling is a really bad idea.

And so it turned out. There were all sorts of toolbars had installed themselves which I never used.

One or two things turned out to be necessary and it was easy to reinstall them.

I also uninstalled and reinstalled some things on the basis that it wouldn't hurt to have a clean and up to date installation.

I have two programmes called Hardware Helper and Power Suite and these helped things, especially Hardware Helper which updated all my drivers. That improved things a lot even before I started uninstalling things. I've had these a while but the machine was too cluttered for them to work properly.

So now my computer is pretty fast, good enough for me anyway, and I rarely get crashes and freezes. When I do I know something has gone wrong and usually know what I have done to cause it and it is easy to uninstall.

So if an ignoramus like me can do this I am sure you could have a go. Doing a complete reset is pretty drastic. So have a go with this method and see how you get on.
 
Posted by Alicïa (# 7668) on :
 
Thanks for all the replies above. I will work through those until hopefully something will resolve this. I will report back although it might be a week or two yet.

[ 22. January 2013, 14:41: Message edited by: Alicïa ]
 
Posted by Alisdair (# 15837) on :
 
Be aware that Windows XP has almost no ability to do its own housekeeping. If left to itself it will, over time (usually c.4-5 years), get slower and slower until it becomes unusable; just the same as if you never did any cleaning and clearing around the house.

Later versions of Windows, and the various Unix type operating systems (Linux, OSX, etc.), are far more capable, and so need little to almost no hands on upkeep.

Windows XP older than c.4 years without being looked after is highly likely to be getting frustratingly slow, and/or glitchy.

By that stage it's usually better to wipe the hard drive clean, having backed up all your personal files, and re-install Windows from scratch. With XP, and even with later versions, that is not a trivial matter as you may find you have to also re-install (having first hunted around the house and internet to find), a number of device drivers for printers, scanners, wifi cards, etc. Fun if you're a geeky type, but possibly a road to the computer flying out the nearest window (sorry) if you're not.

Sorry, if anyone is now feeling depressed. I'll stop now.
 
Posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider (# 76) on :
 
But why, that's the question. Server 2003 uses the same kernel, and I've got W2K3 servers that are ten years old and have been running continuously for years and they're fine, responsive and generally OK.

I'd love to know what turns XP into a glue wading exercise. My personal suspicion is it's the constant changing of applications and settings; the distinctive thing about servers is that they are tend to be stable in configuration.
 
Posted by Smudgie (# 2716) on :
 
Good afternoon, geeky people. Can you give me some information in simple language for the poor old mother of a geeky son?

The Smudgelet - geek-in-the-making - has been given a rather good computer but it was running XP. Scathingly he installed Windows 7 onto it. Now he finds that it won't cooperate with him. He effusively explained why in long and complicated language which had me snoring by the time he got to the third bit of jargon - about three words into his tirade.

This, he says, makes it imperative that he buy Windows 8 now, while it is on special offer, as he can buy it for £30 now and it will cost over £100 after the end of the month.

He's very good at trying to give me geeky reasons why I should invest my hard earned money in his geekiness but recently he's had more than enough money spent on him and money is particularly tight (and I don't want him thinking that money grows on trees and he can have everything he yearns for immediately, even if I were rolling in the stuff).

So, my question is - is it possible that a Windows 7 upgrade is insufficient for his needs and is it an investment I should make to buy Windows 8 for him right now?

*tired mother sigh*
 
Posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider (# 76) on :
 
No, not really. Windows 8 is (under the bonnet) quite similar to Windows 7, so is unlikely to solve any problems. Nor does it introduce anything he's likely to need.

And it doesn't come with DVD playback out of the box.
 
Posted by Amanda B. Reckondwythe (# 5521) on :
 
I think I would have left it at XP.

Generally speaking, it is not a good idea to upgrade to new Windows operating systems over an old system. It is far better to wipe the computer clean and install the new operating system from scratch.

Of course, this will also wipe out all applications and data, but you'll hear very few people ever say that the Microsoft world is a friendly one -- and they're probably all employees of Microsoft.
 
Posted by Alisdair (# 15837) on :
 
Dear Smudgie, only slightly facetious answer: if he truly is a geek in the making, and the computer is his, i.e. not one you rely on, tell him 'No Windows 8' (I concur with comments above), but that he is welcome to install Linux Mint (downloadable for no money from the internet---although obviously he will need a working computer and internet connection to do that). The is plenty of straightforward instruction on-line about what to do, but it isn't difficult. This will do his geek credentials no end of good, seriously! :-D

[ 23. January 2013, 17:28: Message edited by: Alisdair ]
 
Posted by Jengie Jon (# 273) on :
 
You know what happened the last time he decided to install Linux don't you Alisdair?


I would suggest if he went that route that he had an older geek to supervise. Actually I think this might be a case where an older geek might be very useful.


Jengie
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
I don't know if it's possible to do System Restore and get XP back? Unfashionable it may be but it still works well.
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
My advice would be a completely clean install of Windows 7. Upgrades are often problematic no matter the operating system. Copy photos, documents and any other personal information to an external sick, DVD or such and reformat the drive. Then install Windows 7 clean.
Windows 8's best features are meant for touch screens. And it is best to wait until the bugs have been corralled and reduced in number, this is true of any operating system.
 
Posted by Smudgie (# 2716) on :
 
An older geek would be very useful indeed - wish we had one to hand. He is actually getting better - though still thinking he knows more than he does, and very aware that he can now blind me with science. He explained it all again to me this evening. Apparently this PC has a processor which has four hyperdoodlies or something (I did listen, and I did try to remember what he said, but I sort of hazed over!) which was something they experimented with and which worked with XP. When they invented something better than hyperdoodlies, they didn't bother building it into Windows 7. But then when all the business people upgraded their machines with hyperdoodlies from XP straight to Windows 8, Microsoft designed it so that it would cope with hyperdoodlies even better than XP did.

Apparently it won't run flash with XP or 7, but he's tested it on a trial version of 8 and it works... and apparently he needs it for all the graphics stuff he does. And apparently XP doesn't support Office 10.
 
Posted by Drifting Star (# 12799) on :
 
Two computers here running Office 2010 on XP with no problems at all.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
With Windows XP Service Pack 3 he should be able to run any version of Flash up to CS6 on the pc.

XP is unfashionable (I suspect this is probably where the heart of the matter lies) and won't be supported after 2014, but it's still good and usable.
 
Posted by Jengie Jon (# 273) on :
 
Smudgie

Having a guess what a hyperdoodlie is and a quick google. Answer is that moving to 8 will not fix it at least not the basic one which is what I suspect he is asking you to get.

Second and one very strong reason for not upgrading an XP machine to 8, is that it normally relies on old drivers for things like sound to work and it normally takes a while for non Microsoft companies who made things like the sound card to upgrade obsolete drivers.

Jengie

[ 23. January 2013, 19:03: Message edited by: Jengie Jon ]
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
Smudgie,

My machine will run Photoshop, Premiere, 3DS Max, AutoCAD, etc. and I run Windows 7. Not certain what he is trying to run that won't on 7.
 
Posted by The5thMary (# 12953) on :
 
Thank you so much to the geeks who helped me out of my last jam: The computer games that got accidentally erased and a wonky system. We finally decided to do an entire wipe of the computer and start over. One of the first things we did was jettison the dreadful MacAfee "security" program. That helped a lot. Next month we hope to buy a better security software program.

However, now we have a new (mild, but still annoying) problem. Whenever one of us starts up the laptop, we get this message: "Unhandled exception has occurred in your application. If you click Continue, the application will ignore this error and attempt to continue. If you click Quit, the application will close immediately. Object reference not set to an instance of an object".
Underneath this text there's a box that says Details, a box that says Continue, and a box that says Quit.

Why is this happening, should I be concerned, and how do I get rid of it? We are using Windows 7 Home Premium (64 bit) on a Dell Inspiron laptop. Thanks in advance for any advice! [Smile]
 
Posted by The5thMary (# 12953) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ariel:
With Windows XP Service Pack 3 he should be able to run any version of Flash up to CS6 on the pc.

XP is unfashionable (I suspect this is probably where the heart of the matter lies) and won't be supported after 2014, but it's still good and usable.

I rather liked Windows XP. When I was living in Seattle, one of my roommates worked at Microsoft, testing XP so I was able to fiddle around with it when he wasn't playing Unreal Tournament! I never buy new versions of operating systems for at least a year after they come out, although I got a chance to talk to programmers of Windows 7 and they raved about it, this was at least a year or more before 7 hit the market. It pays to hang out with computer geeks! [Biased]
 
Posted by Amanda B. Reckondwythe (# 5521) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by The5thMary:
Whenever one of us starts up the laptop, we get this message: "Unhandled exception has occurred in your application. << snip >> Why is this happening, should I be concerned, and how do I get rid of it?

The most annoying aspect of it is that you don't know what application is throwing the error.

I'm not sure about Windows 7, but if it were XP you could look at the application log (also called Event Viewer, eventvwr.exe) and find out which application it is. Then you could either remove the application via Add/Remove Programs or delete its startup command from the Registry or from the Startup folder (wherever it might be) to at least prevent it from starting upon bootup.

There may be similar remedies available under Windows 7, but as I say, I'm not sure.
 
Posted by The Rogue (# 2275) on :
 
Googling your error message, The5thMary, comes up with all sorts of possibilities of software which could be causing it, so that doesn't help identify it. If you click on quit does it become apparent that something doesn't then work?

Unfortunately there are all sorts of programs which insert themselves into the startup process, often just going out to the internet and looking to see if there is an update available.

I know Spybot has an option for examining your startup and removing anything that you don't want. No doubt there are plenty of other programs which will do the same. To run some of these requires a certain amount of know-how so that may or may not be an option. Personally I have a small amount of know-how - hopefully enough to understand when I am out of my depth!

I hope you won't wait too long to get some virus protection. There are some free ones available. I use Avast at the moment.
 
Posted by the giant cheeseburger (# 10942) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Amanda B. Reckondwythe:
I think I would have left it at XP.

Generally speaking, it is not a good idea to upgrade to new Windows operating systems over an old system. It is far better to wipe the computer clean and install the new operating system from scratch.

Of course, this will also wipe out all applications and data, but you'll hear very few people ever say that the Microsoft world is a friendly one -- and they're probably all employees of Microsoft.

If I remember correctly, using an upgrade for Windows 7 from XP is a complete wipe, but the process needs to start while XP is still installed for the purpose of validating the licensing. It's all about preventing non-upgraders from using upgrade licenses.

As for the Smudgelet's machine, I would suggest staying with Windows 7 until he can afford to purchase the upgrade himself, he needs to understand that an operating system is a means to an end (most Linux installs excepted) and that having the latest and greatest OS is not the optimum path to geek cred.

If Flash isn't working and the conventional steps of reinstalling aren't getting the job done, that sounds more like a PEBKAC or ID-ten-T error than anything else. [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Starbug (# 15917) on :
 
For The5thMary's problem, Would it be worth finding out which apps open at startup, to narrow it down a bit? According to Google, you go to C:\Users\(User-Name)\AppData\Roaming\Microsoft\Windows\Start Menu\Programs\Startup - this is a hidden file, so you need to show hidden files and folders. Then you can stop unnecessary apps opening at startup and see if that gets rid of the message.

I recommend Avast for virus protection. It's free and frequently updated.

[ 24. January 2013, 21:51: Message edited by: Starbug ]
 
Posted by Alisdair (# 15837) on :
 
Just to be a bit controversial: there's a case to be made for saying that most anti-virus software meets the definition of 'malware' in terms of: handing off control of your machine to a largely unaccountable third party, to do who knows what to your computer, in a way that often seriously degrades performance, to provide a service that may well be only marginally effective, and to be opaque to almost impossible to remove without expert help.

To a significant degree the anti-virus industry thrives on 'FUD' (Fear, Uncertainty, and Doubt) amongst users. It is in the anti-virus industry's interests to big up the risk and make sure their customers are in a constant state of anxiety over the safety of their machines and data. It's not that there isn't a risk, it's knowing exactly what the risk is, and then acting appropriately.

We currently have two Windows machines (and two Linux), in the house. Having got thoroughly ticked off over the quality (or lack of it) of anti-virus software over the years, I removed it completely from both machines; with a solemn warning to my sons that if they go cruising the less salubrious parts of the web and pick up something nasty, not to expect any sympathy from me! [Devil] Although I will be happy to sort the infection/infestation.

One of these machines has now been without anti-virus software for three years---no infections. The other is more recent, but no problems so far. Which matches my experience of virus infection generally: about three infections over twenty years.

If you contemplate doing this you need to accept that your machine may/will, in due course, pick up a virus and be willing/able to deal with it. This basically involves:
1. keeping regular backups of your data, so that when disaster (of any kind) strikes you are sanguine over the safety of your precious files;
2. have the knowledge, or know someone, who can wipe clean a hard drive and re-install the operating system and personal files from a backup; OR at very least be able to use the 'Rescue Partition', if your machine has one.

OTOH, by all means stick with anti-virus software, accept the downsides of it, keep paying the money, and hope/trust that at least it probably does work---up to a point. [Two face]

[ 25. January 2013, 05:41: Message edited by: Alisdair ]
 
Posted by Smudgie (# 2716) on :
 
Thank you all for your sage advice.
The Smudgelet laughed and thought it very unfair of me to bring in such weighty reinforcements.

He has admitted that there is a considerable amount of "want" mixed in with the small amount of "need".
He has also begun to understand that, while £30 is bargain if you were facing spending £100, it is not a bargain if you haven't got £30 to spare. It's just as inaccessible. And once that £30 is spent there's always going to be another "bargain" just waiting to leap out from behind the corner. He's been sent off to maximise what he has got. He has the capability to restore it to XP if that's his choice, and has another computer in his room (of lesser general capability) which runs Windows 7 fine and will do Flash and Word Processing which he reckons he needs for school [Big Grin]

SO thank you, thank you, thank you.
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
iPhone 5 user question.

Ever since upgrading to the newest iOS, the ship will not hold my login. Says I am logged in, but if I attempt to post, it tells me I am not and forces me to re-login.
Anyone else experience this?
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
BTW, this does not appear to happen on other websites.
 
Posted by Ricardus (# 8757) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Alisdair:
One of these machines has now been without anti-virus software for three years---no infections. The other is more recent, but no problems so far. Which matches my experience of virus infection generally: about three infections over twenty years.

I recall seeing an article in a computer magazine, where the writers had deliberately set out to give the computer a virus to see how difficult it was.

Providing you have a firewall it is (they reckoned) actually quite hard, because you do have to do something that physically installs the malware on your computer. Suspect email attachments and illegal downloads are the main sources.

That matches my experience - the only problem I've ever had with a virus was a result of doing Something Naughty, and I sorted it out with no negative consequences just with a System Restore.

(This advice is of course very much At Your Own Risk.)

[ 26. January 2013, 10:39: Message edited by: Ricardus ]
 
Posted by balaam (# 4543) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by lilBuddha:
iPhone 5 user question.

Ever since upgrading to the newest iOS, the ship will not hold my login. Says I am logged in, but if I attempt to post, it tells me I am not and forces me to re-login.
Anyone else experience this?

Looks like a mismatch between the brand new hardware and the ancient ship software.

As any fule kno iPhones don't have bugs [Two face]
 
Posted by Thyme (# 12360) on :
 
Has all the fuss about Java died down? I uninstalled it but would like to reinstall it. I think the risks were probably small for my sort of usage and I have a good firewall and anti virus package.
 
Posted by Alisdair (# 15837) on :
 
Thyme, nothing's ever risk free, especially in computing, but for what it's worth we're probably no more at risk using Java now than we ever were---go for it, I'd say.

Keep a good and regular backup regime going and whatever happens---Java, or house burning down, flood, theft (Apocalypse excepted)...---you'll be back up and running in no time. Best make sure at least one copy of all your stuff is kept elsewhere, i.e. not at home. There's an old(ish) saying that digital data doesn't really exist until there are at least two copies, plus the original, and not all kept at the same location. You don't have to be a neurotic paranoid to run a computer, but it helps. [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Thyme (# 12360) on :
 
Thank you!
 
Posted by mousethief (# 953) on :
 
Does anybody have experience in using master documents in MS Word? When I try, I find it strips the formatting in my slave documents, but it won't apply the formatting of the master documents to the slave data either.
 
Posted by Porridge (# 15405) on :
 
No. All I've learned from my own experiments is that MS Word is the work of Satan.
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
Ridiculous, porridge. Surely even Satan is not that evil.
 
Posted by the giant cheeseburger (# 10942) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by mousethief:
Does anybody have experience in using master documents in MS Word? When I try, I find it strips the formatting in my slave documents, but it won't apply the formatting of the master documents to the slave data either.

It's a while since I used Word (Hallelujah, praise Jeeeeeesus!!!) and it was also the good old Word 2003 from before they mucked up the user interface. My memory is of templates generally being more trouble than they were worth to fiddle with if you were doing anything other than starting new documents from them. Creating new text styles was generally the best way I found to control text formatting, pasting the format from another document if needed.

I have more experience with PowerPoint, but my experience there is that has always been a fair degree of inconsistency with how it would decide whether to reformat, leave it as is or do some half-arsed combination when applying a different template. Just to make it worse, just when I had worked out how to beat PowerPoint 2003 into submission I had to switch to using 2007 with the awful ribbon interface and new unpredictabilities.

Using that didn't last long, I made my next computer a Mac and used Keynote which actually does a better job of making PowerPoint slides than PowerPoint. If you need to learn a whole new interface, you might as well consider other options than just the next product from the same manufacturer.
quote:
Originally posted by Porridge:
No. All I've learned from my own experiments is that MS Word is the work of Satan.

quote:
Originally posted by lilBuddha:
Ridiculous, porridge. Surely even Satan is not that evil.

I would also expect something more competent from Satan.
 
Posted by Snags (# 15351) on :
 
I used Master Documents waaaaaaaay back in Word 2 & 97, but haven't had any need since then. Back in the day they were fine as long as you avoided a couple of things (which now escape me - I think one involved resisting the temptation to sod about with the page numbering once you'd put it in).

If/when they did break, though, they broke with epic style and putting them back together again was an exercise in futility.

IIRC the trick is to get the Master setup with everything before you start adding Slaves, but it's a long time ago, and I would hope it had improved (ha-ha!).

What are you using the feature for? You could probably skin the cat a different way, either via cunning use of templates, or by using something totally different instead - e.g. Scrivener, which I only know about from reading Charles Stross' blog - article on Scrivener
 
Posted by mousethief (# 953) on :
 
To get all of the chapters of my novel, which are stored separately, to act like a single document, without having to cut and paste into a huge document each time I edit one of the chapters.
 
Posted by Snags (# 15351) on :
 
If it's a novel, you may want to check Scrivener out, but I'm only passing on info gleaned from elsewhere, could be inappropriate.

Word Master Documents obviously still divide opinion somewhat:

Against

For - which may prove useful, or may be covering stuff you already know.
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
I am a luddite ... but have had to replace a laptop that I dropped, so I have a brand new desk top (can't drop it).

It's operating Windows 8 ( [Projectile] ...ggrrrr .... I'd love to get rid of all those ugly little pictures on the open-up screen - do I really care what the temperature is in Mumbai, or want to read MSM's FOX-like version of the news?) which, incidentally flows off the side of the screen, seemingly irreparably, so I can't get to the peripheral menus or icons on the fringes of the screen ...

But the real problem is I am constantly getting hyper-text links randomly on any internet text, linking, if I accidentally cross* it with the mouse, to ads assuring me I'll win* a iphone. This looks nasty virussy to me, but I can't get rid of it and my new Norton hasn't splatted it yet.

Any suggestions?

* In preview, for example, the word "cross" suddenly grew a hyperlink. Then next preview it had shifted to "win" ... and so on, randomly [Mad]
 
Posted by Jengie Jon (# 273) on :
 
This seems to come up every few months (last to admit being caught was Smudgie)! Not quite sure how it got onto a new machine.

I suspect that somehow you have got a machine with Browse to save adware on it. If so thenthis site seems to give comprehensive instructions on removing it.

Jengie
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
Thanks! The only problem is finding the Control Panel on Windows Eight [Confused]
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
Ah - found the control panel ... okay ... let's see
 
Posted by The Machine Elf (# 1622) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Zappa:
It's operating Windows 8 ( [Projectile] ...ggrrrr .... I'd love to get rid of all those ugly little pictures on the open-up screen

Assuming you have a mouse, right click to select the ones you want to bin, and then choose the 'unpin from start' option when it pops up. I don't know how it works in touch.
 
Posted by Snags (# 15351) on :
 
If the touch interface is the same as Windows Phone then you tap+hold and you'll get the un-pin, move etc. options.
 
Posted by ToujoursDan (# 10578) on :
 
I upgraded to Windows 8 and found going back and forth between the desktop and "Metro" interface looking for applications, the control panel, etc. too annoying. There is a free application called Classic Shell which restores the Start Button and menu back to your desktop. I've used it for several months and find it stable and adware/spyware free.

It's an option if you find going back and forth between the "Metro" interface and Desktop too disruptive. I almost never touch the "Metro" side now.

[ 22. February 2013, 23:11: Message edited by: ToujoursDan ]
 
Posted by Sparrow (# 2458) on :
 
I have a HP netbook that I am cleaning up preparatory to advertising it for sale. I've cleaned off all my documents with Eraser and now I want to reinstall Windows 7. I don't have a disk, the software is on a partition. How do I do this? I've been looking on line for instructions but can't find anything.
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
One way it to open the control panel and, in the upper right search window, type "recovery"
"Recovery" should be an option which appears in the main window. Click on that then select advanced options. After this, the choice to reset your computer to manufacturers original condition should be there.


Another method.
 
Posted by mousethief (# 953) on :
 
Why does it sometimes happen that I'll be typing away, fingers a thousand micrometers from the "Control" key, and all of a sudden it will get locked on, and all sorts of weird things will happen based on the Ctrl functions mapped to the keys on the words I am typing? (Open new windows, paste text, etc. etc.) What causes the Control function to decide out of nowhere to come on and lock in place?

Fortunately I'm a clever lad and have programmed ^F6 to shut it off, so if it happens, I just hit the F6 key, and it turns off. But still --- WHY?
 
Posted by Ricardus (# 8757) on :
 
It sounds like you've somehow pressed whatever combination of keys is set to turn on StickyKeys.
 
Posted by Wesley J (# 6075) on :
 
Any suggestions for decent, possibly free, live radio software for WinXP/Win7?

I've been using RealPlayer (which I know is Evil) for many years. The reason being that I find the sound fairly powerful without needing to fiddle a lot; it has radio and video bookmark capability - very important; it plays all BBC Radio, live or listen again, in Windows Media stream (via iPlayer converter addresses); it is generally quite reliable and hassle-free, even in its non-costly version.

RealPlayer has got negative press since at least the Noughties, as it apparently spies on you. I have since manually removed a number of its most annoying features (like automatic updates and other silly things) by placing several .exe files somewhere else. [Cool] )

The most stupid thing however is that when I connect a USB stick, RealPlayer seems to think I want to play/store/edit things with it - which I don't. It is trying to act as a library manager, for which it is utterly useless. Anyone know how I can tweak this off? (I think I've turned off everything I could in the options.)

I'm using VLC player for all other audio and video, but not for streaming really. VLC player doesn't have bookmark capability either, AFAIK, and I'd like separate software for radio stream (with bookmarks and good sound) and all other audio/video playback.

Any thoughts? (Not Windows Media Player, please, which is even worse than RealPlayer.)

Thanks muchly.

[ 27. February 2013, 00:59: Message edited by: Wesley J ]
 
Posted by the giant cheeseburger (# 10942) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ricardus:
It sounds like you've somehow pressed whatever combination of keys is set to turn on StickyKeys.

It could also be that there's a genuine sticky key - something perhaps spilled underneath the key that is connecting the circuit on one of the Control keys.

The majority of keyboards even on laptops these days have keys which are easily removed for cleaning (or to change the keyboard layout) so it could be good to check this as well. I once saw one on a laptop where a dead mosquito had gotten between the key and the spring mechanism underneath, this caused problems because the spring mechanism was so finely calibrated for it to be a quiet easy touch key.
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by The Machine Elf:
quote:
Originally posted by Zappa:
It's operating Windows 8 ( [Projectile] ...ggrrrr .... I'd love to get rid of all those ugly little pictures on the open-up screen

Assuming you have a mouse, right click to select the ones you want to bin, and then choose the 'unpin from start' option when it pops up. I don't know how it works in touch.
Ta ... I'll attack the nasty critters today.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Every half hour my Dell screen develops shadowing on the righthand sides of letters, and photos acquire chromatic aberration. This then fades (though if you look closely you can still see some of it), then goes back to sharp again. Any idea what's going on?

If this is wear and tear, I bought this screen secondhand, so it's probably had a lot of use already, but the half-hour cycle puzzles me.

[ 01. March 2013, 19:02: Message edited by: Ariel ]
 
Posted by Autenrieth Road (# 10509) on :
 
Is there any way to still get apps for an iPhone 4 when the obvious app has gone over to iPhone 5?

These are apps I have recently wanted to download. First Twitter. Then the New York Times. Most recently, Kindle. No luck, must have iOS 5. Grrrrrr. My iPhone 4 is perfectly useful and shouldn't need replacing, but this app obstruction is annoying.
 
Posted by Alisdair (# 15837) on :
 
@ Wesley J, re VLC bookmarks.

You might like to have a look at this site: http://tinyurl.com/668smmf

The bit on bookmarks is nearly two thirds of the way down.
 
Posted by the giant cheeseburger (# 10942) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Autenrieth Road:
Is there any way to still get apps for an iPhone 4 when the obvious app has gone over to iPhone 5?

These are apps I have recently wanted to download. First Twitter. Then the New York Times. Most recently, Kindle. No luck, must have iOS 5. Grrrrrr. My iPhone 4 is perfectly useful and shouldn't need replacing, but this app obstruction is annoying.

The iPhone 4 is not obsolete, it does run up to iOS 6.1.2 - the current iOS version. You just need to update the software.

You can check to see what iOS version you have by going to Settings > General > About, and it's listed as Version. If it's not the current version 6.1.2, you'll need to get the free update by connecting it to a computer with iTunes, making sure you do a full backup when prompted as part of the process.


ETA - even the iPhone 3GS supports the current version of iOS, you're not even on the second-closest iPhone to becoming obsolete.

[ 02. March 2013, 12:40: Message edited by: the giant cheeseburger ]
 
Posted by Autenrieth Road (# 10509) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by the giant cheeseburger:
The iPhone 4 is not obsolete, it does run up to iOS 6.1.2 - the current iOS version. You just need to update the software.

Oh my gosh! I had no idea! Thank you thank you thank you! Will it embarrass you if I fly to Australia immediately and give you 2 hugs and 6 kisses of thanks? Chaste kisses of Godly peace, of course. Thank you!
 
Posted by Amanda B. Reckondwythe (# 5521) on :
 
Speaking of iPhones -- someone has brought to my attention that in some Mystery Worship reports where the photo is in portrait orientation rather than landscape, the photo appears rotated 90 degrees (in other words, on its side) when the report is viewed on an iPhone. The photo appears correct when the report is viewed on a computer.

Googling the problem, I see that there are several reports of photos being rotated when viewed on iPhones.

Have any of you experienced this, and, if so, can you suggest a fix or workaround?
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
In do not have this problem, with mine. I have more issues with computers, depending on the viewing software. Windows Live Gallery cannot read the file information and leaves everything in landscape. Some viewers can.
I am going to guess this is the issue, that some cameras may encode the information differently and the iPhone viewer cannot understand. Not certain what a workaround might be, other than to use another viewer.
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
Alright, realized you were probably speaking about the web browser. I've several and ran this through all of them. All have the same problem, except Opera. The downside is Opera has the least web-like look to the Ship and was the slowest. But the pics are right side round.
 
Posted by Morlader (# 16040) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Autenrieth Road:
quote:
Originally posted by the giant cheeseburger:
The iPhone 4 is not obsolete, it does run up to iOS 6.1.2 - the current iOS version. You just need to update the software.

Oh my gosh! I had no idea! Thank you thank you thank you! Will it embarrass you if I fly to Australia immediately and give you 2 hugs and 6 kisses of thanks? Chaste kisses of Godly peace, of course. Thank you!
I am running iOS 5.1.1 - on my iPad 1 [Biased] Dunno if it runs 6.1.2
 
Posted by balaam (# 4543) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Autenrieth Road:
quote:
Originally posted by the giant cheeseburger:
The iPhone 4 is not obsolete, it does run up to iOS 6.1.2 - the current iOS version. You just need to update the software.

Oh my gosh! I had no idea! Thank you thank you thank you! Will it embarrass you if I fly to Australia immediately and give you 2 hugs and 6 kisses of thanks? Chaste kisses of Godly peace, of course. Thank you!
You don't have the gift of tongues then?
 
Posted by Autenrieth Road (# 10509) on :
 
[Razz]
 
Posted by Mrs Shrew (# 8635) on :
 
My attempts to upgrade anti virus software have completely broken, to the extent that complete operating system reinstall is the only thing we think will solve it.

Laptop is currently running Vista, which I loathe, so I am looking to upgrade at the same time.

Windows 8seems to be cheaper than windows 7.can anyone offer advice about which one is better. It is laptop of about five years ago, no touchscreen. I use it for word processing and similar, occasionally watching dvds, playing music and printing photos (with cropping but not proper editing), browsing web and like to play the odd very old and basic game (eg. Monkey island)
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
Better is subjective. However, in your situation I would recommend windows 7 over 8. No driver issues and minimal learning curve.

How is the anti-virus failed to upgrade?
 
Posted by Mrs Shrew (# 8635) on :
 
Thanks lilbuddha,

It hit an error removing the old version in the upgrade process, following which I was unable to either remove the old version or install the new version.
A couple of blue screen of deaths and several hours later I lost my temper and deleted all the files, forgetting the magic registry... Safe to say it is quite broken, and my more techy friend sighed and told me to reinstall windows.

I'm leaning towards 7 as I am looking mostly for minimum hassle, but it looks to be more expensive which is making me think twice
 
Posted by the giant cheeseburger (# 10942) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by balaam:
quote:
Originally posted by Autenrieth Road:
quote:
Originally posted by the giant cheeseburger:
The iPhone 4 is not obsolete, it does run up to iOS 6.1.2 - the current iOS version. You just need to update the software.

Oh my gosh! I had no idea! Thank you thank you thank you! Will it embarrass you if I fly to Australia immediately and give you 2 hugs and 6 kisses of thanks? Chaste kisses of Godly peace, of course. Thank you!
You don't have the gift of tongues then?
There's a very good reason I'm going out with a pentecostal girl [Biased]

Glad the software tip worked AR, it's nice to have somebody expressing a little gratitude for the knowledge I gained over two years of being abused by customers attempting to get perfectly working iPods replaced under warranty.
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
Mrs Shrew,
Microsoft are offering Win 8 on the cheap to encourage adoption.

I rather like Windows 8, however I am in no rush to adopt it as I do not own a touchscreen computer. And it is not quite compatible with all my hardware yet.
 
Posted by Gwai (# 11076) on :
 
So I got a tablet for a Christmas gift, and although I am usually pretty comfortable with computers, this is making me feel remarkably dumb. I use fbreader to read my non-kindle books, but I touched its corner for too long and now it has gone almost black. No sort of stroking I can think of will make it do anything else including stroking it up the right side of the screen which is supposed to make it brighter.
So I figured I'd download calibre instead to read my epubs. However, it comes in an exe, which instead of being pleased with my reader responds to with open as audio video text or photo? Gaah. Someone advise me before I pull my hair out?
 
Posted by Yangtze (# 4965) on :
 
I tipped the dregs of my mug og tea over the keyboard of my MacAir this morning which promptly went dead. Well it did mainly land on the power switch.

I inverted the laptop immediately which got some drips out & I dabbed some off with kitchen towel.

It's currently (12+ hours on) open, upside down and airing.

Any further advice or experience shippies? The Internet seems divided as to whether taking a hair dryer to it would be a good idea or not.

(Have appointment at Genius Bar on Sat.)
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
Gwai,

Tablet or tablet computer? What OS?

Yantze,

Sorry, clueless here. Never done that.

[ 07. March 2013, 06:40: Message edited by: lilBuddha ]
 
Posted by the giant cheeseburger (# 10942) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Yangtze:
I tipped the dregs of my mug og tea over the keyboard of my MacAir this morning which promptly went dead. Well it did mainly land on the power switch.

I inverted the laptop immediately which got some drips out & I dabbed some off with kitchen towel.

It's currently (12+ hours on) open, upside down and airing.

Any further advice or experience shippies? The Internet seems divided as to whether taking a hair dryer to it would be a good idea or not.

(Have appointment at Genius Bar on Sat.)

I've worked on Apple warranty repairs (through a third party Apple authorised service centre) with these unibody MacBook Air and Pro laptops in the past so I can definitely give some advice here.

The problem with spilling on the keyboard with those aluminium unibody Macbook Air/Pro machines is that the computer is disassembled from the bottom up, with the keyboard being the last thing taken out once everything else is removed. It's also hard to say how much of the computer it's affected without a full take apart and inspection. I would not advise going for the hair dryer, as it may actually drive moisture further into the machine where it might damage more components.

This will, unfortunately, most definitely be classed as user-caused damage, so if they offer to fix it under warranty you should be very thankful that they are covering damage they are not required to cover. One good thing here is that dealing with Apple directly through a Genius Bar might give you a slightly higher chance of getting some leniency than the black and white rules which third party authorised service centres have to deal with.

Otherwise, the cost of repairing it outside of warranty coverage will be very expensive, quite possibly more expensive than replacing it with a new one because the things are so fiddly to disassemble - I speak from experience here.

One way around that cost could be to find a third party Apple authorised service centre which is also a retailer, they may give you a good-sized discount if you trade in the old one for them to salvage working parts they can sell on to other customers needing repair jobs.

The other way around it could be to make a claim if you have house and contents insurance that covers accidental damage to contents. Before doing this, you should check what excess fees are applicable and whether it will make your premiums go up enough to make that more expensive than it should be. You'll also need to get a quote for the cost of repair and one for the cost of replacement, some insurance companies may even demand multiple quotes for each from different businesses.

Good luck, and whatever path you choose make sure you get a $10 silicone keyboard cover once it's all done - they are worth their very light weight in gold when you look at the cost of repair or replacement!
 
Posted by Pearl B4 Swine (# 11451) on :
 
What is with this Port25 problem in Windos Live Mail? I can receive mail, but not send it.
I've set up an email in Gmail, but cant find it except after a LOT of fishing around.
 
Posted by the giant cheeseburger (# 10942) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Pearl B4 Swine:
What is with this Port25 problem in Windos Live Mail? I can receive mail, but not send it.
I've set up an email in Gmail, but cant find it except after a LOT of fishing around.

You need to change the SMTP port to 465 to send Gmail messages using a third party email client, when the standard SMTP port that MS email clients use is 25. You should be able to change this in the advanced settings for that account in Windows Live Mail.

Don't ask me why, it's just the way it is.

[ 07. March 2013, 14:53: Message edited by: the giant cheeseburger ]
 
Posted by Hart (# 4991) on :
 
I'm thinking about buying this game as a post-graduation reward for myself. I've checked whether my laptop meets the requirements, and it does for all of them except I'm not sure about the graphics card. I have an NVIDIA NVS 3100M, which isn't one of the cards listed, but it's lists "so and so, or better" and I don't know how to tell whether or not what I have counts as better. Anyone know?
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
That is a lower end card, so it does not qualify as better than the recommended.
 
Posted by Gwai (# 11076) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by lilBuddha:
Gwai,

Tablet or tablet computer? What OS?

Computer, it's an android.
 
Posted by Hart (# 4991) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by lilBuddha:
That is a lower end card, so it does not qualify as better than the recommended.

Shame, but thanks for the clarity.
 
Posted by the giant cheeseburger (# 10942) on :
 
Cross-post, but if you want a bit more detail read on...
quote:
Originally posted by Hart:
I'm thinking about buying this game as a post-graduation reward for myself. I've checked whether my laptop meets the requirements, and it does for all of them except I'm not sure about the graphics card. I have an NVIDIA NVS 3100M, which isn't one of the cards listed, but it's lists "so and so, or better" and I don't know how to tell whether or not what I have counts as better. Anyone know?

The key thing with Nvidia graphics cards is actually the second digit in the model number - this is the specification level. The first digit is the series (kind of like a model year). The more recent series have a three digit number.

Your Quadro 3100M is effectively a 210M/310M (M for Mobile = notebook variant) with different drivers designed to show pie charts, play videos and minimise battery usage. The minimum specs go all the way back to a 7800 (in the old four digit series that ran to 9xxx) so a standard (non-Quadro) G210M/310M might be able to handle it on minimum settings - but it would not be fun with the low performance.

Notebooks are generally not able to be upgraded as well, because the internals are specifically engineered rather than having the larger space needed for standardised slots.

That's not such a bad thing in terms of not getting SimCity though, the initial reviews of the latest SimCity reboot only stop just short of declaring it a crime against humanity. You can only play online (rules it out for me with our regular dropouts), it requires you use EA's horrific Origin spyware service to buy and run it, the servers aren't adequate for the demand and it seems to offer little over the last proper SimCity (the last one designed by Will Wright was SimCity 4) which came out ten years ago. At least that one could be played on your own!


If you want a copy of SimCity 4 (Windows version) and the Rush Hour expansion, send me a PM as I'd be happy to send mine your way just for the cost of the postage, but it would probably be cheaper for you to just buy it on Steam. I haven't played it in many years, but it was great fun when I did. It should work just fine on your machine, being a 2003 game that worked okay on my parents' desktop with the awful Nvidia 8400GS (a graphics card designed for first-generation Media Center usage).

The reason I don't play it these days is that I discovered Cities in Motion, an independent release where you have the slightly smaller scope of playing with just passenger transport. It's done incredibly well, and unlike SimCity 4 it has the advantage of being a single purchase on Steam for both Mac and PC platforms with all content working on both, and the second version about to be released as well. Unfortunately it's also one you can rule out on your laptop due to the graphics card requirements even though it's two years old.

[ 07. March 2013, 17:32: Message edited by: the giant cheeseburger ]
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Gwai:
quote:
Originally posted by lilBuddha:
Gwai,

Tablet or tablet computer? What OS?

Computer, it's an android.
Have you tried uninstalling it and then reinstalling?
 
Posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider (# 76) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Gwai:
quote:
Originally posted by lilBuddha:
Gwai,

Tablet or tablet computer? What OS?

Computer, it's an android.
There's your problem. .exe files are Microsoft (i.e. windows or MSDOS if you're old enough) executable files. They won't run on anything else (yes, all right, WINE)

You need to download the Android version, not the Windows version.
 
Posted by The5thMary (# 12953) on :
 
Okay, I haven't had the time to go through every post in this thread to see if anyone has asked this question before, but I kinda doubt it. It's a computer game related question. My partner has Sims 3 playing on a Windows 7 laptop. I guess EA has their own download manager called Origen. Anyway, my partner can't update anything on her Sims 3 game because she needs Origen to do it and the damn download manager will not open on our computer, even though she has about four copies of the program. I went to EA's website to see if this issue was addressed and yes, plenty of people seem to have the same problem. HOWEVER, no one has a solution!!! It's hella annoying. Now, when I last tried to make Origen work, I got this message:

Origin.exe-Entry Point Not Found
The procedure entry point?dropEvent@QLineEdit@@MAEXPAVDrop
Event@@@Z could not be located in the dynamic link library QtGui4.dll

Does anyone have any clue what this means?
Again, profound thanks if someone can help us with this.
 
Posted by the giant cheeseburger (# 10942) on :
 
Based on that message, I would hazard a guess at a corrupted DLL file. It's probably one which Origin would install, but with "Qt" at the start of the filename it could be a file related to QuickTime.

Best way to solve it is probably to try uninstalling and reinstalling Origin, most unexplainable program problems can be solved that way.
 
Posted by Gwai (# 11076) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider:
quote:
Originally posted by Gwai:
quote:
Originally posted by lilBuddha:
Gwai,

Tablet or tablet computer? What OS?

Computer, it's an android.
There's your problem. .exe files are Microsoft (i.e. windows or MSDOS if you're old enough) executable files. They won't run on anything else (yes, all right, WINE)

You need to download the Android version, not the Windows version.

Thanks. And knowing that's the problem, I can download another reader and ignore the other problem. Appreciated.
 
Posted by Snags (# 15351) on :
 
"Slideshow on a CD"

My FiL wants to dump a bunch of photos to CD/DVD and chuck it at a friend such that it will play as a slideshow in a predetermined order on either a PC or a DVD player hooked in to a TV. I can think of a few 'grubby' ways of doing it (e.g. rename all the files to get the desired order, and use whatever built-in facilities are on the unknown target device) but he'd like something a little slicker.

A quick Google finds me loads of tools to create VCDs that I could use if I wanted to do it, but which are liable to induce head-scratching if I suggest those.

He has some ancient free copy of Photobase that sometimes does it, but more often than not explodes messily when pressed into service.

So ... does anyone have any recommendations for a clean, simple piece of software he could use for this? It doesn't have to be free, but <25UKP would be desirable, as it's really a vanity thing rather than a necessity. It's totally outside my normal field of operation, and none of the stuff I've found online looks convincing enough to want to pony up sight unseen.

Oh, client PC is running XP.
 
Posted by Amanda B. Reckondwythe (# 5521) on :
 
I think I'd simply use Windows Movie Maker for that. Drag the photos to the storyboard in the order you'd like them to appear, add transitional effects plus opening and closing titles, choose Save to CD, and lo and behold, a slideshow!
 
Posted by Snags (# 15351) on :
 
I have a horrible feeling that Windows Movie Maker isn't on that machine for some reason ...

However, I shall brave the horror of conversing with the FiL and find out.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Well, there is always Powerpoint. I've had photo presentations sent to me this way.
 
Posted by Amanda B. Reckondwythe (# 5521) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Snags:
I have a horrible feeling that Windows Movie Maker isn't on that machine for some reason.

It was included with WinXP SP2 and Vista, and is available for free download here for other versions. Movie Maker isn't required for playback, only Windows Media Player, which I think is included with all versions of Windows.

PowerPoint would work beautifully also, as pointed out above.
 
Posted by Snags (# 15351) on :
 
Ah, if WMP is required for playback it's a fail [Frown]

Part of the requirement is playback through a standard DVD player into a TV. So Powerpoint is also a fail, not to mention an absolute POS to use for a 200+ image slideshow. That's why I think it has to be something that produces a VCD.
 
Posted by the giant cheeseburger (# 10942) on :
 
I would suggest trying the free non-commercial version of PhotoStage by NCH Software.

I haven't used that particular program, but I have used a number of other NCH products over time (before I switched to my Mac) and found that they are efficient, no-nonsense tools that get the job done every time.

It would also be worth checking to see if the TV to be used has a USB port where a flash drive or portable hard drive could be plugged in. The vast majority of modern flat screen TVs will have one included, and if you export as an MPEG-4 video you should get away without any "video cannot be played on this device" nightmares.
 
Posted by Snags (# 15351) on :
 
Thanks TCG, I'll check it out.

If that fails I'm half-minded to make him drop the "play on TV" request, which hugely simplifies things. Unfortunately he wants to knock one of these up and then send copies to various friends all over the place, so doing an end-user kit check is a little impractical. Most modern DVD players have slideshow stuff built in, but you can just guarantee one of his chums will have something ancient [Smile]
 
Posted by Snags (# 15351) on :
 
PhotoStage is looking good. I've just run a test which shows promise, and have compiled some instructions for the FiL, so we shall see.

Thank you!
 
Posted by North East Quine (# 13049) on :
 
I am having problems with page numbering a lengthy document in Word. I have been told the first 7 pages (contents etc) have to be numbered in roman numerals i-vii and then the body numbered 1-42. I initially printed them off as two documents so the hard copy was fine. I've been asked to combine them into one document but I can't figure out how to do the page numbers; I keep ending up with the whole thing numbered 1-49, or, even worse i-il.

What do I do?
 
Posted by Jengie Jon (# 273) on :
 
The trick if I remember is to put a section break between the two parts of the Word document. Then you are able to get the numbering of the second part to be independent of the first part.

Jengie
 
Posted by Snags (# 15351) on :
 
JJ is right. Use a next page section break between the areas, and undo the link between the footers for the sections.

Note that when printing a subset of the document you will then need to use s1p3 format and the p value refers to the page within the section, not necessarily the displayed number.
 
Posted by Earwig (# 12057) on :
 
Help! When I go to Twitter on my iPhone, it won't show anything - no tweets, nothing! There's a little padlock icon next to the word 'Twitter' at the top of my screen - have I locked myself out or something stupid like that?
 
Posted by lily pad (# 11456) on :
 
You may have been locked out. Some information is here.
 
Posted by Sarah G (# 11669) on :
 
My Yahoo email account was hacked yesterday. This has showed itself because every email that has ever had anything to do with the account has been sent a dodgy link email using my account name (not sent from the Yahoo account itself).

I've changed its password, and I'm going through finding the emails where various organisations have emailed me a password, to reset those.

What else would be a sensible but proportionate response?


Thanks for your help.
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
Go to any site on which you registered using that e-mail and change the passwords there as well.
 
Posted by Firenze (# 619) on :
 
Circumventing Windows 'block images' - can it be circumvented?

I have a setting for a particular site, not to load the images. It's this one - jigidi - because I like to do a puzzle sight unseen. It used to work, but does no longer.

Anyone know why?
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
Did not know Windows had a 'block images.' Are certain this is not a browser issue?
Which browser are you using, Internet Explorer?
 
Posted by Firenze (# 619) on :
 
Sorry, browser. Firefox. (The whole site doesn't work on the iPad, since it uses Flash).
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
It is a Firefox issue, I set Firefox to block images from that site and they still appeared. I set Chrome to block images from that site and it worked. Not sure why at the moment.
 
Posted by Earwig (# 12057) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by lily pad:
You may have been locked out. Some information is here.

Thanks lily pad, you're probably right. Can't see how to rectify it though...
 
Posted by luvanddaisies (# 5761) on :
 
This may end up being a little rambling.
The short summary is "What is too much for a low-end budget Tablet?"

I've just bought a Tablet. It's tiny (7') and was very cheap - £40 cheap, in fact (and that all covered by Amazon vouchers). I wanted it as an easy thing to take to the pub to get wifi while I'm away (got a job this season ) to check Teh Interweb, my emails and facebook, possibly to listen to stuff on iPlayer with headphones, but to be less annoying than typing on my little phone.

I can't find anything about it online though, except what's on amazon - the reviews on there are pretty good.Cloud 9 Neuropad Candy . I plan to get it a case, when it arrives, but is there anything I should know? Most of the techy details mean little to me - I think the screen res is pretty low, but I can live with that, I wasn't looking for high definition, just servicable.

quote:
Brand Cloud9
Manufacturer reference npc3
Color pink
Screen Size 7 inches
Processor Type 8032
Processor Speed 1.60 GHz
Processor Socket DIP
Processor Count 1
RAM Size 512 MB
Computer Memory Type DDR3 SDRAM
Hard Drive Size 4 GB
Hard Drive Interface ATA
Wireless Type 802.11bgn
Operating System Android

It says it's Jellybean, which is the latest Android OS, I think. It has a small brain, but it says it can be expanded if I need it to by stuffing a little 32GB card in some orofice or other...

What I want to know is what I can expect of it - mostly what won't it do?
I know it's cheap, so I don't expect it to be all-singing-all-dancing, but I'd like to know what's reasonable of me to expect.

Few examples, if I wanted to amend my CV, which exists as a MS Word document (and on Pages) on the elderly MacBook I don't want to risk taking away to sea with me, is that something I'd be able to do?
Would I be able to plug in a hard-drive? and would an Android tablet recognise my iTunes collection?
If I got a USB multi-way port, so I could plug a few USBs in at once, maybe a phone, a kindle, a hard-drive, an iPod, would that be too much for a bear of little brain?
 
Posted by Ricardus (# 8757) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Firenze:
Sorry, browser. Firefox. (The whole site doesn't work on the iPad, since it uses Flash).

You have to set it to block images from jigidi.com rather than www.jigidi.com. (The reason appears to be that the images themselves are hosted at static3.jigidi.com. You can find this by poking around in the source code.)
 
Posted by Alisdair (# 15837) on :
 
luvanddaisies,

Without diving into the technical details of the tablet your are looking at. I would suggest the simplest way of looking at it is that Android is NOT Windows. If you are happy to buy into the Googleverse: Googledocs, Gmail, etc. you will find there is a lot you can do, even with a basic tablet.

Just don't treat it as though it will let you use all the software you are familiar with in Windows, not to mention access ALL the same file formats. There is SOME overlap, but trying to use it like a portable version of your Windows PC will lead to lots of frustration---it's a completely different system.

The downside of using Google is getting 'borged' by them---you (or more accurately your data) WILL be assimilated and Google will tag and use as much data about you as it can. This isn't necessarily bad, you/we just need to be aware of what is going on---Google sells advertising and sucking up as much data as possible about 'users' that may be useful to potential customers of its commercial services is part of it's business model.

Just as Google exploit us, we can exploit Google, by thinking through what we want from them, what the risks are, and acting sensibly. Knowledge is power.

Have fun.

BTW, cheap tablets can do a lot, but often have fairly rubbish batteries, low res screens (you say this doesn't matter too much to you, and fair enough), and obviously will often be made of lower grade materials, so don't expect it to last too long before things start failing/falling apart. I've got a cheapy. It's okay, but I do grumble about it's slowness.
 
Posted by luvanddaisies (# 5761) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Alisdair:
luvanddaisies,

Without diving into the technical details of the tablet your are looking at. I would suggest the simplest way of looking at it is that Android is NOT Windows. If you are happy to buy into the Googleverse: Googledocs, Gmail, etc. you will find there is a lot you can do, even with a basic tablet.

Thanks [Smile]

I've been assimilated into the Googleverse already - my smartphone is an Android one, and my email is gmail.

Despite that, my ideal platform is Mac - it's just too expensive though.

I'm not really expecting to ickle budget tablet like a laptop - it's only me wondering whether it's even slightly viable to think about that sort of thing using an app if I need to - like if I'm needing to poke my CV around.

Most of what I'm going to want it to do is to sit in a pub/cafe/other wifi place with me to check gmail, to look at facebook, to look at The Ship and gCaptain, to browse the web, to listen to stuff on the radio on iplayer.

I'm more wondering about the exceptions to that, when I occasionally might want to do a bit more - while hoping its battery isn't too bad, and that its build quality is enough that it survives the season!
 
Posted by Alisdair (# 15837) on :
 
luvanddaisies,

If you do some Googling you will find there are various apps that allow you to read and edit Office documents on Android (up to a point). Some are better than others, but I don't think any of them are a complete replacement, but enough to cover the basics.

Visit: https://play.google.com/store/apps and have a browse, then look up some reviews for the various apps.

A little bluetooth/wireless keyboard can also be a very pleasant complement to a tablet, if you are likely to do a lot of typing. The on-screen keyboard can get to be a bit of a pain for longer sessions as it takes up so much screen space and doesn't have the feel of a physical k'bd, though some folk seem to get on fine.
 
Posted by luvanddaisies (# 5761) on :
 
Cheers.

Well, it has arrived - pretty fast service from the Amazon seller - and it looks to be just what I need.

Once I've bought it a little case, it'll be fine to live on a boat with me and be taken to random pubs or whatever for wifi, and if it gets damaged it'll be a pity, but it's not like it's an iPad or an expensive top-of-the-range thing.

If I was looking for a brilliant screen resolution or amazing speakers, or bells and whistles, it probably wouldn't have been the right thing, but for what I want it looks very good indeed - and it does look like I've got myself a very good little bargain indeed.

I'd already checked out some Office-reader/editor apps on Google Play, and it does look like they should be pretty usable even on this little thing, should I need them - which is handy.

Anyway, thanks Alisdair [Smile]
 
Posted by Wet Kipper (# 1654) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Wesley J:
The most stupid thing however is that when I connect a USB stick, RealPlayer seems to think I want to play/store/edit things with it - which I don't. It is trying to act as a library manager, for which it is utterly useless. Anyone know how I can tweak this off? (I think I've turned off everything I could in the options.)

RealPlayer seems to have it in its head that it should be the deafult media player for everything, and as soon as it is presented with new files thinks "pick me, pick me, I'll hep you look at these" Can you access a "default programs" control panel and see what it says - changing it from RealPlayer if possible ?
 
Posted by mousethief (# 953) on :
 
Do any windows victims know how I can switch settings in such a way that when I double-click on a DVD, it opens it in the program I want it to, rather than starting Windows Media Player?
 
Posted by Wesley J (# 6075) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Wet Kipper:
quote:
Originally posted by Wesley J:
The most stupid thing however is that when I connect a USB stick, RealPlayer seems to think I want to play/store/edit things with it - which I don't. It is trying to act as a library manager, for which it is utterly useless. Anyone know how I can tweak this off? (I think I've turned off everything I could in the options.)

RealPlayer seems to have it in its head that it should be the deafult media player for everything, and as soon as it is presented with new files thinks "pick me, pick me, I'll hep you look at these" Can you access a "default programs" control panel and see what it says - changing it from RealPlayer if possible ?
Everything in RealPainPlayer has been turned off long ago. It goes deeper than that: it still thinks it's God. That's why I've fumbled around in the software installaton folder and removed some of its most annoying features. Only way to make it behave, apparently.

Fanks.
 
Posted by mousethief (# 953) on :
 
I uninstalled RealPlayer back in about 1994 for that very reason and have never reinstalled it since. If some website will only show me their content on RealPlayer, well, sucks to be them.
 
Posted by Wesley J (# 6075) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Alisdair:
@ Wesley J, re VLC bookmarks.

You might like to have a look at this site: http://tinyurl.com/668smmf

The bit on bookmarks is nearly two thirds of the way down.

Excellent! Misunderestimated good ole VLC. Thank you. [Smile]

Still looking for a decent, free RealPlayer alternative for streaming. Hm...
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
I was taken aback to discover how many entries Realplayer had left in the Registry after I uninstalled it.

Removing those and some other references to obsolete software has meant that my pc now boots up in half the time it used to take.
 
Posted by ElaineC (# 12244) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by mousethief:
Do any windows victims know how I can switch settings in such a way that when I double-click on a DVD, it opens it in the program I want it to, rather than starting Windows Media Player?

Try a right click and hopefully you should get an 'Open with' option that will allow you to choose a program. Downside - it's Windows that chooses the options that are available.
 
Posted by mousethief (# 953) on :
 
ElaineC, thanks for responding. Yeah, I can do the "open with." I was just hoping that there was some way to make the double-click use my preferred program.

[ 29. March 2013, 08:56: Message edited by: mousethief ]
 
Posted by ElaineC (# 12244) on :
 
You can associate a file type with a particular program but I can't remember exactly how to do it. The Control Panel comes into it somewhere I'm sure.
 
Posted by Snags (# 15351) on :
 
mousethief, the easiest way to do it will depend on the preferred application and on your version of windows, but ...

- some media players have a built in "Make it all mine" option that you can choose to apply (WMP, WinAmp etc. certainly do). Have a look in any Tools or Preferences section, or occasionally hiding off the File menu somewhere

- alternatively you can edit the file associations individually in the File Types dialog.

In XP open any Windows Explorer window and go to Tools > Folder Options > File Types where you can edit existing associations or create new ones.

In Vista and I think 7 (but the 7 machine is downstairs and I'm too lazy t move) you use the Default Programs option from the Start menu official go to guide here
 
Posted by mousethief (# 953) on :
 
Thanks Snags! Frustratingly, the "program defaults" allowed me to change the auto-play program for DVDs, but not the double-click program. PowerDVD doesn't have a "take control" feature. This seems destined to elude me.

Obnoxiously, the program defaults appears to lock some things to WMP and makes them un-re-assignable. Microsoft for you.
 
Posted by Snags (# 15351) on :
 
I'll try to have a look on the laptop tomorrow and suss it out. It ought to be possible - I certainly have Win7 machines that don't use WMP as the default.
 
Posted by Snags (# 15351) on :
 
OK, this from Windows 7:

Start > Default Programs (if it doesn't show up, type "default" into the search box)

Choose "Associate a file type or protocol with a program" (you may want to look at the option above, which sounds like a blunter instrument - "Set your default programs")

Potentially wait a long time for all the file associations to load.

Find the file extension that you're looking for (.avi, .mpg etc.), double-click and associate it with PowerDVD.

I have a feeling that in Win7 you can only do the above for actual extensions, so it won't affect behaviour on 'proper' DVDs. I'm not sure you can directly edit those primitives any more (it's called progress), but if that's the case then back in "Default Programs" choose the top option "Set your default programs" then pick PowerDVD from the list, and you can either have it seize everything it can do, or you can pick from a list of options.

I believe that will do it; I haven't tested it, because this machine doesn't have an optical drive ...
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
I’ve been clearing out cookies, manually, in Opera, through the Preferences -> Manage Cookies option, as there are a few that I want to keep so that I don't have to keep logging in to certain sites each time.

Deleting most of them is straightforward, just click on each individually and delete, however there are some that are resistant to this procedure. How do you get rid of cookies that won't go?

I suppose I could just delete the entire cookie4.dat file and start again but I'd be interested to know if there’s a way of getting rid of the ones that appear to be fixed and persistent.
 
Posted by Alisdair (# 15837) on :
 
In Firefox there is an extension called BetterPrivacy which is designed specifically to deal with cookies that are hard to crumble---Flash cookies and others of that ilk. Hopefully it has an equivalent for Opera. Sorry, I can't be more helpful.
 
Posted by Sparrow (# 2458) on :
 
Help needed please - my elderly PC running windows XP won't start. I get a black screen with the message: "Windows could not start because the following file is missing or corrupt: <Windows root>\system 32\hal.dll." Any advice please?
 
Posted by Snags (# 15351) on :
 
Sparrow, I hope you're reasonably techie as this could get messy [Smile]

First, if you don't have recent backups, take the HDD out and put it as a slave in another box to get your data off.

Next, try this link here but do the non-destructive things first; it doesn't list them in the best order.

If the link is broken apologies, working on phone and having to remember the code.
 
Posted by the giant cheeseburger (# 10942) on :
 
I would second that advice, get your data copied using an external hard drive enclosure before doing anything else.

When it comes to the link given above, I would suggest ignoring steps 2-6 as they are generic advice given for all problems on many DIY troubleshooting websites like this. I would recommend going straight to step 7 - run a repair installation of Windows XP.

Running a clean installation of Windows XP and copying back your data could be an even better solution. Windows XP doesn't take care of itself and accumulates lots of crap over time, so a clean installation could give you back a good amount of the performance lost to the system being clogged up.

[ 04. May 2013, 10:01: Message edited by: the giant cheeseburger ]
 
Posted by Jengie Jon (# 273) on :
 
To re-echo the advice and to say that:

If you do not feel able to do that, get the techy to do it first, BEFORE he/she does anything else. Only let them try other bits of muddling around with the machine once you know your data is safe.

Jengie
 
Posted by Sparrow (# 2458) on :
 
Thanks everyone, one question first, is there any way I can get my documents off the hard drive WITHOUT taking the drive out and putting it in an external hard drive enclosure - e.g. by connecting it to my laptop by cable?

I have nearly everything backed up except for about the last two weeks, but I do have several recent important documents I had not got round to backing up.

Otherwise I realise it is probably new PC time, the old one is well past its sell by date.
 
Posted by the giant cheeseburger (# 10942) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sparrow:
Thanks everyone, one question first, is there any way I can get my documents off the hard drive WITHOUT taking the drive out and putting it in an external hard drive enclosure - e.g. by connecting it to my laptop by cable?

Unfortunately the answer is no, networking to another computer requires starting up in Windows as PCs generally don't have any built-in networking capability that can run without the operating system.

Getting the HDD out of the computer should require nothing more exotic than a no2 Phillips screwdriver unless it's had security screws installed.
quote:
Originally posted by Jengie Jon:
To re-echo the advice and to say that:

If you do not feel able to do that, get the techy to do it first, BEFORE he/she does anything else. Only let them try other bits of muddling around with the machine once you know your data is safe.

Jengie

Be very specific to ask for data to be copied directly and not copied to an image, and be prepared to call their bluff and walk away to another provider if they refuse. Copying to an image file will usually mean that it's not accessible unless you use whichever proprietary disk image format they are using.

[ 04. May 2013, 12:48: Message edited by: the giant cheeseburger ]
 
Posted by Amanda B. Reckondwythe (# 5521) on :
 
No one has mentioned other options that might be available:

1. Have you tried booting in safe mode?

2. Have you tried booting from a bootable CD or thumb drive?

3. If either of the above works, you might be able to copy the missing or damaged files from a known good source to your hard drive, and that might fix the problem.

4. If 1 or 2 works but 3 fails, you might be able to copy off your data anyway.
 
Posted by Ricardus (# 8757) on :
 
FWIW, I once managed to get files off a nearly-dead Windows system using a USB stick loaded with the Linux distro Knoppix, which will run from an external drive and therefore doesn't require any scary partitioning / virtualising.

You have to 1.) create a live USB of Knoppix using someone else's computer (I've forgotten how you do that but the Internet will probably tell you) - 2.) persuade your computer to boot from the USB drive instead of the hard drive - 3.) spend some time working out how Linux works.

[ 06. May 2013, 08:58: Message edited by: Ricardus ]
 
Posted by Adeodatus (# 4992) on :
 
I have a problem. I'm still running Windows Vista on my laptop. A recent automatic update tried to update my SiS Mirage 3 graphics card with a new driver, and failed. My repeated efforts to install the driver manually also fail: the driver downloads, but won't install. The result is that hardware acceleration is now switched off: videos are slow and jerky.

Any ideas, folks?
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Adeodatus:
I have a problem. I'm still running Windows Vista on my laptop.

This is as much of the problem as you need to describe and the solution is the same: upgrade to Windows 7.
 
Posted by Alisdair (# 15837) on :
 
@Sparrow -- I second Ricardus' idea re salvaging files off a hard drive using a Linux 'Live-disk'

Using a USB stick can be tricky though if your computer isn't already set up to boot off one. If you want to avoid fiddling with BIOS settings, and you're willing to give the Linux Live-disk method a go---and it should be pretty straightforward---then you need to download a copy of Knoppix and then make a CD or DVD of the image that you download. This isn't a 'copy' you actually have to choose the 'burn image' option in your CD burning software.

Once you've got that done put the CD/DVD in your computer's drive, boot the computer and all being well it will boot into the Knoppix system. Find the file browser, navigate to your files, and copy them over to a USB stick or USB hard drive.

If this seems all too technical then you may need to enlist the help of someone you know who feels able to do it, but it isn't major technical stuff and is very doable by anyone reasonably at home with a PC and its ways.

Good luck.
 
Posted by balaam (# 4543) on :
 
How can I print from Widows Mail which comes with Windows 8?
 
Posted by Wesley J (# 6075) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by balaam:
How can I print from Widows Mail which comes with Windows 8?

Would that be Windows Mail? Though you may have just found a market niche!
 
Posted by balaam (# 4543) on :
 
Yup. Well spotted.
 
Posted by Wesley J (# 6075) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by balaam:
How can I print from Windows Mail which comes with Windows 8?

Above balaam's as of yet unanswered query again, my punning having made his reply go to the top of the next page. Apologies.
 
Posted by balaam (# 4543) on :
 
It's OK, I've found it by pratting around.

Swipe up from bottom of touch screen - Right click if mouse or keyboard is connected.
 
Posted by Thyme (# 12360) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by lilBuddha:
quote:
Originally posted by Adeodatus:
I have a problem. I'm still running Windows Vista on my laptop.

This is as much of the problem as you need to describe and the solution is the same: upgrade to Windows 7.
I have Windows Vista Home Premium which came with my Toshiba Satellite laptop. I've never had any problems with it but have started thinking I ought to upgrade. I think maybe it would be better to upgrade to Windows 7 and not leap into Windows 8. My laptop is a few years old now (I can't remember when I bought it but the earliest programme dates are sept 2008.) Windows 8 seems to be more for computers with touch screens and all the latest stuff like that.

As I don't have any problems is there any benefit to upgrading and if so should I upgrade to 7 or 8?
 
Posted by ken (# 2460) on :
 
7
 
Posted by Alisdair (# 15837) on :
 
Wait for 8.1 and upgrade to that. MS have allegedly listened to user's howls of pain and are reinstating some much missed features from W7.

Putting the interface issues to one side, W8 itself is reputedly more power and memory efficient than 7, and with better security. 8.1 should allow you to more or less ignore the `touch screen' features, rather than having them shoved down your throat.
 
Posted by Thyme (# 12360) on :
 
Thank you ken and Alisdair, that is very helpful.
 
Posted by moonlitdoor (# 11707) on :
 
Does anyone know if you can block on Facebook things which are coming from Twitter ? Someone I know has started putting to Facebook all their Twitter activity which consists of repeating large numbers of posts of well known people. I don't want to remove this person as a friend if I can avoid it but I don't want all this clutter to scroll through to see if any friend has actually put something about themselves.
 
Posted by Gwai (# 11076) on :
 
Socialfixer (socialfixer.com) is very good at that. Though some recent fix has completely broken socialfixer for Chrome, unfortunately.
 
Posted by the giant cheeseburger (# 10942) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Alisdair:
Wait for 8.1 and upgrade to that.

I agree, you don't want to be an early adopter with a new version of Windows. The worst possible outcome did happen to Vista early adopters, M$ decided to make the service pack a paid update and called it Windows 7.
 
Posted by lily pad (# 11456) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by moonlitdoor:
Does anyone know if you can block on Facebook things which are coming from Twitter ? Someone I know has started putting to Facebook all their Twitter activity which consists of repeating large numbers of posts of well known people. I don't want to remove this person as a friend if I can avoid it but I don't want all this clutter to scroll through to see if any friend has actually put something about themselves.

I have several friends who used to do that and have now disconnected their Twitter feed from Facebook as they have realised that there are two different audiences so it may just be a matter of time.

Anyhow, to change it, go to your profile and then to your friends list, find the name of the friend that you wish to make changes for and hover over the icon marked "Friends" that is just beside their name - it has a check mark beside it. That will give you the choice of showing the posts they make in your Newsfeed or not, or go to settings and select from "all posts", "most", or "only important"

[ 21. May 2013, 11:16: Message edited by: lily pad ]
 
Posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider (# 76) on :
 
Indeed. The last thing I want from some people is the mental diarrhoea that makes up their Twatter output.
 
Posted by lily pad (# 11456) on :
 
Could someone help me figure out how to save/back up things from one computer and move them to another computer that is, as yet, not bought and may not be before I have to give up the first? PM would be even better so I could explain more.
 
Posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider (# 76) on :
 
Big external HDD.
 
Posted by Eutychus (# 3081) on :
 
My daughter has just got a laptop running Windows 8, basically because this is all you can get in a hurry off the shelf here.

Experience and a cursory look round the web suggests that due to an argument between Microsoft and Google, you can't get proper Gmail functionality, only the "html lite" version (using Firefox).

Has anyone found a workaround to this?
 
Posted by Ricardus (# 8757) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by lily pad:
Could someone help me figure out how to save/back up things from one computer and move them to another computer that is, as yet, not bought and may not be before I have to give up the first? PM would be even better so I could explain more.

Dropbox might be worth investigating depending on how much stuff you have to back up and how long it needs to be kept in limbo.

(You get a few gigabytes of storage for free and you can boost it with various bonus activities, but after a certain point if you want more gigabytes you have to pay a monthly or yearly fee, which by its nature can work out quite expensive over the long run.)
 
Posted by Thyme (# 12360) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by lily pad:
Could someone help me figure out how to save/back up things from one computer and move them to another computer that is, as yet, not bought and may not be before I have to give up the first? PM would be even better so I could explain more.

I've just done this! And I am not very skilled.

I used Dropbox for word/spreadsheet files. The free storage wouldn't accommodate my photos as well so I used a USB stick (flash drive??) but you could just upload all photos to flickr who now have unlimited free storage. Then they will all be there waiting for you. You can make them private. You can also use a stick for the Office Docs if you have too many for the free dropbox. But you could also pay for the extra dropbox storage while you need it then downgrade later.

My music and audio books were on itunes and I made sure my ipod was up to date. ebooks were on Kindle anyway. But again Dropbox and a flash drive are your friends.

You need to make sure you have the product licence keys and any other necessary reinstall information to reinstall any paid for software programmes.

I had those in my webmail IT folder, so they are always accessible from everywhere on any computer but you could store them in a document in your dropbox or flash drive.

I don't have any films or suchlike downloaded so I don't know about those but probably some form of external or cloud storage is best.

I did look at some free cloud storage facilities, just google free cloud storage for information but didn't need that so far. I am thinking about it for the next phase in my personal technology upgrade programme.

I think that's all. It has worked for me. PM me if you want to.

Good luck, I have found it all fairly painless.

[ 22. May 2013, 13:19: Message edited by: Thyme ]
 
Posted by ken (# 2460) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Eutychus:
Experience and a cursory look round the web suggests that due to an argument between Microsoft and Google, you can't get proper Gmail functionality, only the "html lite" version (using Firefox).

Try Chrome. Or Opera.

Or use the Thunderbird mail client (though that will mean you don'tt directly see the gmail web page)

[ 22. May 2013, 14:39: Message edited by: ken ]
 
Posted by ken (# 2460) on :
 
Unless what you are worried about is losing ActiveSync? Can still use Gmail without it from the Google web page, what you can't do is use Windows Mail client and have Google as its mail store (well youi can but you need to manually sync your contacts, which isn' hard, and to use IMAP to read your mail, which is OK too...)
 
Posted by Doc Tor (# 9748) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider:
Big external HDD.

This. I've got a 1TB Western Digital external HD. You power it up, plug it in via a USB cable, and copy whatever the hell you want. Keep it simple and copy 'my documents', 'my music' and 'my pictures' en masse. With 1TB, you shouldn't run out.

Get the new computer, plug it in and copy the files back. It's really simple, and there's no mucking around with slow upload speeds.
 
Posted by lily pad (# 11456) on :
 
Thanks everyone. I will try my best!
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
Okay, we may have been here before, but I can't find it ...

after the kids have played on my computer the US / UK keyboard layout swaps, so " becomes @ and £ becomes .... oh I don't know, a pounds symbol.

googling is unhelpful as all findings elate to Windows 7 and earlier and I have the horrible new one which I think is 8

Anyone know how to get my " where my @ should be?
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
(wait - that was a pound symbol ... £ needs to be a hash tag ... i.e. above the 3 [Ultra confused] [Ultra confused] [Ultra confused]
 
Posted by Wesley J (# 6075) on :
 
Could this help? Link.

For more, search keywords are 'change keyboard layout Windows 8'.
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
Yeah, I found that, but "Win + R" didn't bring up that window thing or the options described there .. that's about when I decided to flee to heaven for further help!

Thanks for trying
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
Thanks again ... "WINKEY + SPACEBAR - Switch input language and keyboard layout" worked even though the WINKEY + R brought up the wrong thing. Your combination in the search engine worked, though, further down the list if that makes sense.

Somehow now I've got to remember that, as the kids clearly hit that combo often when gaming. [brick wall]
 
Posted by Alex Cockell (# 7487) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider:
Big external HDD.

... on a NAS connected to your network.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by fletcher christian:
I think I'm right in saying that there was a tech support thread on here a while back. I did a search and couldn't find it, so I hope it's ok if I start a new one.

I have a problem with expired certificates for google with the result that I can't log into blogger, can't access my email and can't perform a google search (I'm on a MAC). Now I did manage to get some information that said I could change the date and time on my computer and it would all be ok. Tried that and it didn't work. Now when it comes to computers I am not the greatest person at sorting stuff like this out, but if anyone can proffer any help it would be hugely appreciated - just make it real easy to follow. Pretend I'm five or something and need step by step, simple instruction.
Ta.

(Copied over by Ariel, Heaven Host)
 
Posted by Avila (# 15541) on :
 
Ok

so my laptop has dodgy charger socket that may or may not connect, the fan makes too much noise as if preparing to die - and get overheated cut outs regularly, whilst some keys need a bit more encouragement to work...

I face the laptop shopping hell...

What do I need to know/ask etc?

I use it for work, it is my only computer, watch lots of web tv streaming, no gaming, and need to play dvds and output via projector.

Where is the starting line?
 
Posted by fletcher christian (# 13919) on :
 
[BUMP]
 
Posted by Jengie Jon (# 273) on :
 
Avila

The general buying advice by the University of Sheffield should give you a minimum spec.

Jengie
 
Posted by fletcher christian (# 13919) on :
 
Anyone any advice on 'expired certificates'?
 
Posted by the giant cheeseburger (# 10942) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by fletcher christian:
Anyone any advice on 'expired certificates'?

What version of OSX are you on (found under Apple menu > About This Mac) and what browser (Safari, Firefox, Internet Exploder etc) are you using?

I can give you a bit of a hand but only if you help me help you by giving me more detail on the problem.


ETA: Also, what version of said browser are you using? You'll find this under the program menu one to the right of the Apple menu, under About <your browser>.

[ 15. June 2013, 01:29: Message edited by: the giant cheeseburger ]
 
Posted by fletcher christian (# 13919) on :
 
Thanks.
I am on a MAC Os X 10.8.3, 2.8 Ghz Intel Core 2 Duo and the firefox version I am running is 21.0
It's now beginning to effect other things too - like I can't watch anything on youtube anymore. I also have Safari, but I rarely use it, but it also has the same issue anyway.
 
Posted by the giant cheeseburger (# 10942) on :
 
You've got an old 24" first-generation aluminium iMac right? Good computers, let down only by the average graphics card.

YouTube is operated by Google, so any time you have problems with Google you will have problems with YouTube. Certificates are handled by the operating system, so they should affect all browsers, except for Chrome which has had problems in the past over and above any OSX issues.


Can you try four things?

1. Open the Parental Controls panel in System Preferences, and check that it is turned off for the current user account. I don't want to question your intelligence, but this only takes a minute to check just in case you did this accidentally.

2. Download the Apple Root Certificates from http://www.apple.com/certificateauthority/ (first two items in list, hit the "Download certificate" link for both) and double-click them once they've downloaded to import them into the Keychain. Then restart and see if it works now.

3. If that doesn't work, open Keychain Access and select "Certificates" from the bottom-left panel. If any of them show an expiry date before the current date, right-click on them and select "Export <certificatename>" to save it as a .cer file somewhere like your Documents folder. Then once exported, select the certificate in the list and hit the delete button on your keyboard, then confirming when you get the "are you sure" box. Then restart your computer and give it another shot.

4. If that still doesn't work, check that the computer's time and date are correct, then shut down your computer overnight and turn it on again. If the time and date are now incorrect, you have a faulty internal CMOS battery which will need to be replaced - an expensive internal repair job for a computer well out of warranty. Having an impossible date does conflict with internet security certificates which do have a starting date as well as an expiry date.


If none of these work, you'll probably only be able to solve it by doing an OSX reinstall. I can't reliably instruct you on the process for this as I haven't had any experience using the newer OSX Recovery routines on a machine that was upgraded after shipping with an older version of OSX that used a DVD installer.
 
Posted by fletcher christian (# 13919) on :
 
Thanks.
I can get into keychain and see the expired certificates which I can export ok, but I can't delete them.
 
Posted by the giant cheeseburger (# 10942) on :
 
After a bit more hunting around - try going to http://pki.google.com/index.html and clicking the link to download GoogleInternetAuthority.crt on the left hand side. Open it (should open up Keychain Access), restart your computer and give a Google site a shot.
 
Posted by moron (# 206) on :
 
I'm considering starting a website with a bulletin board format similar to this place.

I've researched various software products (the short list is MyBB and PhpBB) but recognize some of you lot know much more than I do and would very much appreciate any thoughts on the topic. In case it's not obvious [Help] I in no way resemble a computer savvy individual.

Thanks in advance.


[Not similar in content... who could compete with the Ship?]

[ 18. June 2013, 13:03: Message edited by: moron ]
 
Posted by Drifting Star (# 12799) on :
 
I'm not familiar with MyBB, but wouldn't hesitate to recommend phpBB to anyone. I've been working with it for about 7 years and it's a very good system. Their forums offer great support too.
 
Posted by monkeylizard (# 952) on :
 
I'm active on another site that uses Invision. I like it, but have never been on the admin side of the house there.

http://www.invisionpower.com/apps/board/
 
Posted by Drifting Star (# 12799) on :
 
It's been a while since I was admin for an Invision site (about 5 years I think). It was OK, but I would rather have phpBB any day - in fact we changed that board to phpBB. I don't think Invision is free either.
 
Posted by Thyme (# 12360) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by moron:
I'm considering starting a website with a bulletin board format similar to this place.

I've researched various software products (the short list is MyBB and PhpBB) but recognize some of you lot know much more than I do and would very much appreciate any thoughts on the topic. In case it's not obvious [Help] I in no way resemble a computer savvy individual.

Thanks in advance.


[Not similar in content... who could compete with the Ship?]

I'm just a bit further on in a similar situation. I went for Proboards

The main reasons, free, and include web hosting so you don't have to faff around with that, I belong to another site which seems to work well,and they have just upgraded, which also seemed to go well. They have mobile apps for iphone and android.

The support seemed good and geared to the non-computer savvy - reasonably plain English.

So far so good. There was a bit of a learning curve, but the support forum is really helpful. I would recommend it.

You can set up a free board just to practice on - and I have done this. So this is like a free trial.

My second choice would be phpbb.
 
Posted by Hart (# 4991) on :
 
So, I'm currently nearing the end of my thumb-twiddling period in between finishing seminary and starting at my first parish. I picked up a few projects during that time, some work-related, some fun hobbies. One was to teach myself Python using Codeacademy. I found it a fun language to code in, and I've been enjoying working a few problems from Project Euler on the Codeacademy sandbox. However, I've soon discovered that that sandbox is *slow*. I know Python isn't famed for its speed, but a few times I've been wondering how to possibly speed up my code only to find out with some googling that my algorithm is fine, it's just taking forever because I'm running it through a browser.

So, what software can I get that will allow me to write and run Python code on my pc? I'm looking for a pretty user-friendly gui, like that sandbox. This site has a somewhat bewildering array of things that may or may not be that. Any suggestions?
 
Posted by Wesley J (# 6075) on :
 
I've got an issue with my desktop soundcard, Creative SB Audigy 2 ZS (WDM), ordered with my trusty DELL in summer 2005. It's WinXP Pro SP3.

A few weeks ago, crackling sounds like static noises started to appear. It is not a matter of the speakers or headphones, but highly likely of the soundcard. I've installed the latest drivers, but the crackling, which starts a few few minutes after I turn the machine on, just isn't going away. When I turn off the card in the device manager, all the sounds go, but so does the crackling.

I've cleaned the interior of the puter, and shall do so again with a new can of compressed air. I guess I may also try to physically remove and reinstall the card. (I've been wondering if it sits somewhat too close to new graphics card and if there could be interferences.)

Any suggestions? There are a few comments on similar problems online, but no clear solutions, from what I see. Or is it time to cough up for a new soundcard?

Thanks.
 
Posted by the giant cheeseburger (# 10942) on :
 
I would think that eight years is an acceptable run for a sound card installed in a Dell desktop. It could be that you've compromised the airflow inside the case by installing a new graphics card with a different profile to the old one, in which case re-cleaning won't solve the problem.

The bigger question you should be asking is whether purchasing a new sound card for an eight year old computer would be throwing good money after bad. Dell desktops don't last forever and Windows XP is already starting to become obsolete even ahead of Microsoft's official end of support next year, so perhaps you should consider putting up with it for a little while and putting the money you would spend on a sound card aside as the start of saving for a new machine.

[ 22. June 2013, 05:24: Message edited by: the giant cheeseburger ]
 
Posted by The Machine Elf (# 1622) on :
 
Hart, code academy is running python 2.7.2, so install the appropriate install for 2.7 your OS, probably the Python 2.7.5 Windows Installer.

If you run that in the command prompt, you can get a similar interactive experience to the one Codeacademy labs looks like giving.

You will eventually want a text editor so you can save longer programs in files and work on them in a more structured manner. I use SciTE, which is fairly light and fast, but if you ask a dozen programmers which editor to use you get a dozen different answers. I'd heartily recommend stackoverflow for asking further questions.

(I'm not primarily a python programmer)

TME
 
Posted by luvanddaisies (# 5761) on :
 
Peeking back into this thread with a possibly slightly odd question looking for recommendations for software. I'll try to keep it short, but a little description might tell you what I'm looking for...


I want to make a timeline . It's not really for anything other than for my own amusement and learning, although i might have one or two friends who might like to see it too, and I'd like it to be an ongoing project as I learn more. I'm interested in sailing vessels and their history (especially, but not exclusively, the " Age of Sail "). I'd like also to include more modern sailing vessels too (like modern sail-training ships). I'd like it to have a stream for ships, a stream for people (like Grace O'Malley, Cochrane, Admiral Duncan, Nelson, whoever), a stream for world events, so I can put things into context (we didn't do history at my secondary school - I know, I know, it's weird, but it's left me trying to mend an impoverished view of context, chronology and continuity through time), and a stream for fictional characters too (I'm rather fond of historical naval fiction, and it would be nice to see what is meant to tie in with what, or not...)
I want to include quotes, pictures, links (both to external sites and within the timeline), and to be able to browse it. Because I intend it to be an ongoing project for learning from me, I'd like it to be easy to use and fairly pretty as well as clear.
Not asking much, eh?

I'd like it to be held online, so I can edit it from either my laptop (an elderly MacBook, from whenever the original 13.5 inch ones came out) which is slowing to snail pace now, but still staggering bravely on. ( Currently running Mac OS X 10.5.8 (9L31a) ), or from my android phone or very-cheap-android-tablet.
I'd also quite like to be able to keep a version on my laptop (or, even on my tablet, for when I'm on a ship and don't have wifi although that's not essential).

I've googled timeline creators, and there are quite a few of them, and I just don't really know where to begin on choosing one. Money is a big issue for me, so free is preferable (or veryvery cheap!). I can live with adverts.

I'm also quite interested to see if anyone here has created a timeline for something, and what, why you made it, what it looks like, how you use it, how it develops - but that might be another thread..?

Anyway, any and all ideas, suggestions and recommendations would be helpful.
Thanks [Smile]
 
Posted by luvanddaisies (# 5761) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by luvanddaisies:
...learning from me...

Gah - preview post twice and still failed [Frown] .
"learning for me".
I am a muppet.
 
Posted by Hart (# 4991) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by The Machine Elf:
Hart, code academy is running python 2.7.2, so install the appropriate install for 2.7 your OS, probably the Python 2.7.5 Windows Installer.

If you run that in the command prompt, you can get a similar interactive experience to the one Codeacademy labs looks like giving.

You will eventually want a text editor so you can save longer programs in files and work on them in a more structured manner. I use SciTE, which is fairly light and fast, but if you ask a dozen programmers which editor to use you get a dozen different answers. I'd heartily recommend stackoverflow for asking further questions.

(I'm not primarily a python programmer)

TME

Thanks, I went with PyScripter and it's working well for me. I'd come across stackoverflow when googling a few other questions, at some point maybe I'll post!
 
Posted by Autenrieth Road (# 10509) on :
 
Text-to-speech -- I want something that can read ebooks, also PDF and Word documents.

It seems oh-so-simple: get a Kindle, read the book out loud. Or Install text-to-speech software on your PC (e.g. NVDA), read everything out loud.

But not so fast. Everything resides in the details: not all Kindles support text-to-Speech (and I'm sorting through the strangely not-quite consistent information about that). NVDA on a Word document seems to only read a bit at a time and then stop (what am I doing wrong)? Kindle App with Accessibility Plugin for PC works very nicely, but Kindle for PC can only see Kindle books, not documents that you can send to your other Kindle devices, because for some reason you can't send documents to Kindle for PC.

Not sure if Kindle For Cloud Reader can do text-to-speech. Or other devices e.g. smartphone or tablet computer (iPhone and iPad in my situation). Or if Mac can do it.

So then I reflect on the Nook and epub open format. Nook apparently doesn't do Text To Speech. But epub is an open format, so I ought to be able to find information on how to text-to-speech it. Alas, at that point my google-fu collapsed from sheer exhaustion, and I came to take refuge here at the Ship appealing to the good and well-informed nature of fellow Shippies.

Plus what to do about a book that doesn't even come in an electronic format? Is there anyway to read it? What do colleges and universities do for their students who need this sort of reading assistance?

This actually isn't for me, it's for others in my EfM group who need texts read for them.

Any help you can provide would be fantastic!

[ 24. June 2013, 19:15: Message edited by: Autenrieth Road ]
 
Posted by Wesley J (# 6075) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by the giant cheeseburger:
I would think that eight years is an acceptable run for a sound card installed in a Dell desktop. It could be that you've compromised the airflow inside the case by installing a new graphics card with a different profile to the old one, in which case re-cleaning won't solve the problem.

The bigger question you should be asking is whether purchasing a new sound card for an eight year old computer would be throwing good money after bad. Dell desktops don't last forever and Windows XP is already starting to become obsolete even ahead of Microsoft's official end of support next year, so perhaps you should consider putting up with it for a little while and putting the money you would spend on a sound card aside as the start of saving for a new machine.

Thank you, TGC.
 
Posted by Wesley J (# 6075) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Autenrieth Road:
[...] Plus what to do about a book that doesn't even come in an electronic format? Is there anyway to read it? What do colleges and universities do for their students who need this sort of reading assistance?

This actually isn't for me, it's for others in my EfM group who need texts read for them.

Any help you can provide would be fantastic!

For my Open University studies, when getting tired, I've often used Adobe Reader's built-in reading-aloud programme, together with a screenreader voice that comes with Windows XP/7. I've even recorded entire pdf books for myself with this and Audacity recording software (link), saved them as mp3 and put them on a laptop or mp3-player or even smartphone.

Luckily, the Open University (link) are very good at support. I know you can get screen-readable pdfs for material that normally isn't in electronic form. They also provide searchable (audio-)CDs, so-called DAISY Talking Books, with coursebook and other texts read aloud by people or synthetic voices. More details from the OU here.

This from own experience. - I think BTW that such extra support also benefits others, as some people may have a learning style very much based on listening, so it'll help those too.
 
Posted by SusanDoris (# 12618) on :
 
Autenrieth Road

I have replied in pm.
 
Posted by Bene Gesserit (# 14718) on :
 
Oh dear... We tried, a couple of days ago, to install some freeware called Freecorder to download YouTube video. We had previously (on our last computer) used it with no problems but this time it came with a train of unwanted software.

We've got rid of most of it but something called "Strongvault online backup" has installed. I'm not sure whether it is a real nasty or just scareware but it keeps trying to tell us it is backing our data up online. We have - always - up-to-date antivirus software and I've also scanned with Windows Defender but I can't find anything to uninstall or delete. We are using Windows 7.

Any suggestions, please?

BG
 
Posted by Morlader (# 16040) on :
 
You might try
http://www.wintips.org/remove-strongvault-online-backup/

No guarantees. And be careful not to install anything while uninstalling strongvault !
 
Posted by Doc Tor (# 9748) on :
 
I use Firefox and the DownloadHelper extension. It's really very good.
 
Posted by Avila (# 15541) on :
 
No particular question, just that with the arrival of the new laptop I am encountering severe Windows 8 trauma!!

I am hiding in the desk top setting but unable to do things I could before - like explorer opening a new window so can have iplayer running alongside ship reading etc.

I am a technological luddite - I always like the version before the current one!

Twitching in the corner....

Avila
 
Posted by the giant cheeseburger (# 10942) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Doc Tor:
I use Firefox and the DownloadHelper extension. It's really very good.

You can also use www.keepvid.com which works in all major browsers, only requires you have Java installed, and offers a number of different formats in a far easier interface - I used to prefer DownloadHelper until KeepVid made some major improvements.

quote:
Originally posted by Wesley J:
Thank you, TGC.

Just out of curiosity, what did you decide in the end?
 
Posted by Autenrieth Road (# 10509) on :
 
Wesley J and SusanDoris, thank you for your replies.
 
Posted by monkeylizard (# 952) on :
 
Wes, inspect the jack on the soundcard where you plug in your headphones/speaker. If it's cracked, it will create static as the connection between the card and the headphones will be unstable.

An old trick from when dinosaurs played Pac-Man was to clean the metal contacts on the bottom of the card with a pencil eraser before re-inserting it to the motherboard. It cleans off any oxidation.

An alternative to a new soundcard would be to pick up some USB headphones. Those have their own soundcard built in so they would easily transfer to a new computer when it's time to get one. The downside is that you can't use external speakers with them.

[ 26. June 2013, 18:12: Message edited by: monkeylizard ]
 
Posted by Bene Gesserit (# 14718) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Morlader:
You might try
http://www.wintips.org/remove-strongvault-online-backup/

No guarantees. And be careful not to install anything while uninstalling strongvault !

Thank you so much! That thing was a damned nuisance.

BG
 
Posted by Wesley J (# 6075) on :
 
Happy Wes!

On the old Ancient Geek thread of fame, one of my first posts was about the Logitech G15 (v1) keyboard I'd got then, actually in November 2006. I've even found the invoice again! - My desktop life had changed forever with this chunky, very comfy keyboard and its shedloads of features. Melurves it!

Now, nearly 7 years later, it's still very much useable, but may need an overhaul: the backlight LEDs have dimmed down considerably over time. I may want to take it apart at some point. (A known issue others have successfully dealt with.)

You'll imagine my surprise when I saw the very same, still highly acclaimed keyboard, brandnew (!), in its original box, and tested, on an online auction site! And now I'm the proud owner of that geeky toy, which at £33/$50 cost me just 1/3 of what I paid back then. It's in absolute mint condition: the previous owner works for Logitech and got it aeons ago for free (or very cheap) and never used it! - Just amazing!

For a new, similar gaming keyboard of the latest generation you'd cough up lots more. And with full Win7 and Win8 support from Logitech, it's bound to be quite handy for a while! [Yipee]
 
Posted by Wesley J (# 6075) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by monkeylizard:
Wes, inspect the jack on the soundcard where you plug in your headphones/speaker. If it's cracked, it will create static as the connection between the card and the headphones will be unstable.

An old trick from when dinosaurs played Pac-Man was to clean the metal contacts on the bottom of the card with a pencil eraser before re-inserting it to the motherboard. It cleans off any oxidation. [...]

Thank you, ML and TGC!

Here's what I did:

What can I say - all crackle and pop and static noise has gone! I've had the machine on, and with various loads, for several hours. All perfect. And I think my trusty DELL deskie sounds somewhat happier now, with graphics and sound card further apart, and more room for air and ventilation.

Thus: thank you muchly for your advice and thumbs up. The machine might even make it into Win7 or Win8 times, as in theory most stuff is compatible (M$ dixit). And why chuck it away if it works.

Happy Wes again!
 
Posted by Adeodatus (# 4992) on :
 
Well, my last problem, back in May, sorted itself out. It does look like my graphics driver problem was caused by a Windows update - because the next Windows update cured it!

Here's a new one. I want to burn an opera to audio CD - bought from Amazon MP3 downloads, so perfectly legitimate. Unfortunately the version of Windows Media Player I've got (yes, still Vista) puts a 2-second gap between tracks when it's burning CDs, and you can't change that.

Is there any good and preferably free CD burning software out there in Internetland?

Just to be clear - I want to make an audio CD, with no gaps between tracks, so that I can play it on a good old fashioned CD player.
 
Posted by the giant cheeseburger (# 10942) on :
 
Try ExpressBurn.

iTunes will also get the job done if you have that installed as well as WMP, but be sure to select "none" from the drop menu for gaps between tracks.

ETA: don't believe any of the commonly received myths that iTunes only handles audio files from the iTunes Store - it happily imports CDs and most audio file formats.

[ 01. July 2013, 18:02: Message edited by: the giant cheeseburger ]
 
Posted by Adeodatus (# 4992) on :
 
Thank you, cheeseburger, I'll have a go at that later.
 
Posted by Eutychus (# 3081) on :
 
I would like to print a specific set of e-mails to file - there are thousands of them.

I can access them either on my Rackspace webmail or on Thunderbird.

Does anyone have any ideas of how I could do this?
 
Posted by Moo (# 107) on :
 
I am computer-illiterate, and I have a problem.

My monitor frequently does not scroll properly. Is the problem in the monitor? It's about eight years old, while the computer itself is less than three years old. Is it time for a new one?

Moo
 
Posted by Pearl B4 Swine (# 11451) on :
 
I found a very helpful "place" called TechTerms.com

Most of you already know all this stuff, but I couldn't be the only one who winces when the puter terms & abbreviations start flying. I just pretend I know what they are talking about.

I found it when googling "metadata", looking for a definition. This is a great site IMO ! It even has a daily quiz question.

Pearlie
 
Posted by Eutychus (# 3081) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Moo:
I am computer-illiterate, and I have a problem.

My monitor frequently does not scroll properly. Is the problem in the monitor? It's about eight years old, while the computer itself is less than three years old. Is it time for a new one?

Moo

I can't see any way it's the monitor. It's much more likely to be your mouse or keyboard (does scrolling using the arrow keys work?). But to be absolutely sure, beg borrow or steal another monitor, plug it in and see what happens.
 
Posted by ElaineC (# 12244) on :
 
You might be hitting the 'Scroll Lock' key by accident.

It's probably above the number pad on your keyboard. It often has a light associated with to show when scrolling is locked.
 
Posted by Doc Tor (# 9748) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Eutychus:
I would like to print a specific set of e-mails to file - there are thousands of them.

I can access them either on my Rackspace webmail or on Thunderbird.

Does anyone have any ideas of how I could do this?

This Thunderbird add-on claims to be your answer...
 
Posted by Thyme (# 12360) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Moo:
My monitor frequently does not scroll properly. Moo

I had this problem on my old laptop. It turned out to be a driver problem. I used a thing called Hardware Helper which checks and updates all your drivers and that sorted it.

And thanks PearlB4Swine - I have bookmarked that site.

[ 03. July 2013, 15:25: Message edited by: Thyme ]
 
Posted by Pearl B4 Swine (# 11451) on :
 
MOO -- I recently wore out the scroll wheel on my mouse. It was probably corroded by mayonnaise or cheese, etc.

I got a new cordless mouse, and now I scroll great.
 
Posted by Eutychus (# 3081) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Doc Tor:
This Thunderbird add-on claims to be your answer...

Thanks, that looks promising. I wonder if I should try it out on the 2891 e-mails in question straight off or go for a smaller sample first? Decisions, decisions...
 
Posted by Moo (# 107) on :
 
I have the same problem whether I use my keyboard or my cordless mouse. I suspect it may be a driver problem.

Moo
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
I use Jetico's BestCrypt to encrypt sensitive files, I am now thinking of getting myself a 7" tablet, probably running on Android Ice Cream Sandwich [4.0.4?] does anyone know if my BestCrypt Traveller will work on Android?
 
Posted by the giant cheeseburger (# 10942) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Eutychus:
quote:
Originally posted by Doc Tor:
This Thunderbird add-on claims to be your answer...

Thanks, that looks promising. I wonder if I should try it out on the 2891 e-mails in question straight off or go for a smaller sample first? Decisions, decisions...
I would always try something like that on a smaller sample first, just to get a near-instant clue of whether it is up to the task at hand.

Are you on a Mac? You might be able to use Automator to get the job done in Thunderbird or OSX Mail with the OSX print dialog's built-in PDF exporter.

[ 04. July 2013, 07:21: Message edited by: the giant cheeseburger ]
 
Posted by Thyme (# 12360) on :
 
HELP! I am trying to create labels from an online database in Open Office.

I have managed to get the labels into a doc via a spreadsheet which I have registered as a database in OO. but there are three fields for the address and some people only use one or two of them, and the system is leaving spaces where the blank fields are when it prints out the label sheets.

I can't work out how to make it ignore the empty fields.

My process is, copy the db (which is in a csv format online), save it in OO writer. Open it as a spreadsheet and save. Register the spreadsheet as a database. Open a new doc and select labels then follow the instructions.

I found a helpful video which got me thus far but can't find anything that tells me how get rid of the empty fields.

Any thoughts anyone?

[ 07. July 2013, 20:04: Message edited by: Thyme ]
 
Posted by Doc Tor (# 9748) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Thyme:
HELP! I am trying to create labels from an online database in Open Office.

<snip>

Any thoughts anyone?

This might help.
 
Posted by Thyme (# 12360) on :
 
Thank you! I tried the OO support forums etc when I started but found it really difficult to navigate to the information I wanted.

Thank you so much.
 
Posted by Sparrow (# 2458) on :
 
I have had to reinstall my operating system following a computer meltdown, and of course I lost all my settings. I am now having a problem finding the right setting for my widescreen monitor, at present everything appears stretched across the screen so for example, circles look like ovals. Can anyone tell me what the correct resolution should be?
 
Posted by the giant cheeseburger (# 10942) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sparrow:
I have had to reinstall my operating system following a computer meltdown, and of course I lost all my settings. I am now having a problem finding the right setting for my widescreen monitor, at present everything appears stretched across the screen so for example, circles look like ovals. Can anyone tell me what the correct resolution should be?

The native resolution of your monitor might be the largest one in the list if the monitor's drivers are installed (a good thing to do, it gives you better colour calibration than a default driver), but if it isn't try doing a search on the internet for your monitor's manufacturer and model number to find the specifications.

Common widescreen monitor native resolutions include 1280x720, 1280x800, 1600x900, 1680x1050, 1920x1080, and 1920x1200.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
I'm on 1440 x 900.
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
Sparrow,
As TGC suggests, the manufacturer should be able to supply that information and the native drivers for your system. Should you not know the model, this site can tell you then info by scanning your computer.
 
Posted by Sparrow (# 2458) on :
 
Thanks everyone, I seem to have found a better screen resolution and it looks a whole lot better!
 
Posted by Wesley J (# 6075) on :
 
Anyone on board using a decent pdf merger/splitter, possibly freeware? What's your experience there?

Thanks. [Smile]
 
Posted by Sparrow (# 2458) on :
 
I have a problem occurring every time I try to instal Flash player which so many sites tell me is essential to view the site properly or play music. Even the BBC site seems to need it to listen on line. However every time I instal it I get an annoying little advertising program that inserts links at random in any website I am on. It's called Toparcadehits.

It does give instructions on how to uninstal it but they don't work! Any advice on how to get rid of it please - or on an alternative to Flash player?
 
Posted by Wesley J (# 6075) on :
 
I've found this: mozilla (Firefox) forums, and links thereon. People seem to be able to get rid of it.

It was probably downloaded as an add-on to a legit programme/extension. Adobe Flash download I think will automatically add Chrome (as browser/new default browser) and Java will add the Ask.com-toolbar/install it as default search option - if NOT unticked! [Mad]
 
Posted by Sparrow (# 2458) on :
 
It defnitely piggybacks along with Adobe Flash. I instal it, Topcarcadehits appears. I uninstal it, Toparcadehits disappears. There definitely is no option to decline it.

So, the solution seems to be, is there an alternative to Flash player?

[ 18. July 2013, 18:49: Message edited by: Sparrow ]
 
Posted by Wesley J (# 6075) on :
 
Try to download it from the Adobe Flashplayer site proper, not from any third-party website. I'd be very surprised if they'd bundle it on their own site. (What OS and browser are you using, BTW?)

Unfortunately, there is currently no easily available alternative option to Flash, which - I agree - is a nuisance.

[ 18. July 2013, 19:10: Message edited by: Wesley J ]
 
Posted by Sparrow (# 2458) on :
 
I've been using Win XP and Firefox. I thought I was downloading Flash from the Adobe site - whichever link I used, it always took me to the same website, even when clicking through from the BBC site.
 
Posted by Snags (# 15351) on :
 
Sparrow, it's likely that the TopArcadeHits is due to something already on your machine which is hi-jacking the link to the Flash download.

Run a full scan with something like Malwarebytes, and check to see if anything has snuck in to change your default search functionality or installed itself as a proxy.
 
Posted by the giant cheeseburger (# 10942) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Snags:
Sparrow, it's likely that the TopArcadeHits is due to something already on your machine which is hi-jacking the link to the Flash download.

Run a full scan with something like Malwarebytes, and check to see if anything has snuck in to change your default search functionality or installed itself as a proxy.

I agree, sounds like a new spin on the nasty "Google Redirect" malware. That's a very hard one to get rid of as it has a rootkit component.
 
Posted by Ricardus (# 8757) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Wesley J:
Anyone on board using a decent pdf merger/splitter, possibly freeware? What's your experience there?

Thanks. [Smile]

I have a rather hacky way of splitting pdf's, which is to open the pdf in a viewer (i.e. Adobe Acrobat Reader or Preview), select 'print', select a page range, and then 'print as pdf' ...

(This of course depends on 'print as pdf' being an option on your print dialog. I'm using a Mac where it comes by default, and I know there are various free plugins you can get for a PC.)
 
Posted by Amorya (# 2652) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ricardus:
I have a rather hacky way of splitting pdf's, which is to open the pdf in a viewer (i.e. Adobe Acrobat Reader or Preview), select 'print', select a page range, and then 'print as pdf' ...

Preview can handle merging and splitting directly. You can select and delete pages in the sidebar, or drag pages from one PDF to another. You can also select pages in the sidebar, hit Copy, then go to File -> New From Clipboard.
 
Posted by Dafyd (# 5549) on :
 
I'm about to throw out the old computer. There isn't anything important that I can think of on the hard drive - I don't store passwords. But it does store login names and there are old personal documents on there. Do people have advice on disposing of it please?
 
Posted by Snags (# 15351) on :
 
Your basic options are:

- do nothing, it's fairly low risk
- physically remove the HDD, take it apart, and destroy it
- get a copy of DBAN (Darik's Boot And Nuke) and run it through a few cycles to secure erase it

I would post a link, but I'm on the phone; Google will find it easily enough
 
Posted by Sparrow (# 2458) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sparrow:
It defnitely piggybacks along with Adobe Flash. I instal it, Topcarcadehits appears. I uninstal it, Toparcadehits disappears. There definitely is no option to decline it.

So, the solution seems to be, is there an alternative to Flash player?

There is something else that's worrying me, I dont know if it is related. Every time I try to shut down the computer I get the message saying, do not turn off the computer because updates need to be intstalled. (This is on a PC running XP). It's been happening every day for about a week. Do you think something else has installed itself that is preventing the updates from installing?
 
Posted by Tukai (# 12960) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Amorya:
quote:
Originally posted by Ricardus:
I have a rather hacky way of splitting pdf's, which is to open the pdf in a viewer (i.e. Adobe Acrobat Reader or Preview), select 'print', select a page range, and then 'print as pdf' ...

Preview can handle merging and splitting directly. You can select and delete pages in the sidebar, or drag pages from one PDF to another. You can also select pages in the sidebar, hit Copy, then go to File -> New From Clipboard.
When I tried Ricardus' method in my system (Acrobat Reader X on Windows 7 with the option"print to file", it didn't work. It made a file that purported to be an Acrobat document, but my reader could not open it (said "type not recognised" even though it saved by default as .PDF

[ 24. July 2013, 04:51: Message edited by: Tukai ]
 
Posted by Snags (# 15351) on :
 
Sparrow get thee hence to Malwarebytes, download a copy (don't accept the full version preview when installing, it will only lead to nagging in a month or so) and run a Full System Scan.

TopArcadeHits probably uses Flash to do the pop-ups, so if Flash isn't there you don't see it, but it doesn't mean the malware has gone, it's just invisible.

On the shutdown/updates issue it may be that the updates aren't installing cleanly. When the PC is running, go to Automatic Updates and see if there are any waiting to install. If there are, choose to install them but pick the "Custom" option - this will allow you to see the installation progress, and also any error messages.

If there aren't any updates waiting to install, then it's possible that your shutdown message is from malware rather than Windows itself, so again, grab Malwarebytes and have a spring clean.
 
Posted by Doc Tor (# 9748) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Snags:
Your basic options are:

- do nothing, it's fairly low risk
- physically remove the HDD, take it apart, and destroy it
- get a copy of DBAN (Darik's Boot And Nuke) and run it through a few cycles to secure erase it

It's easy enough to remove the HDD from the housing, and set to with a lump hammer. If you're still worried after that, pop it in the microwave for some inductive welding goodness*

*is actually welding, do at your own risk.
 
Posted by Ricardus (# 8757) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Amorya:
Preview can handle merging and splitting directly.

[Hot and Hormonal]

Never realised that ...
 
Posted by North East Quine (# 13049) on :
 
For the past week, I've been getting a couple of dozen e-mails a day advertising penis enhancement pills. I can't understand how they're getting through my spam filter. In addition to my normal spam settings I have blocked several specific words but it makes no difference; e-mails with those words are still getting through.

It's the only spam I'm getting, it's not a general spam problem, just penis enhancement adverts.

Suggestions?
 
Posted by Chorister (# 473) on :
 
All these stopped for me (I don't even have that part of the anatomy, so enhancement isn't much use!) when I switched to gmail.com - their spam filter seemed much more efficient.
 
Posted by Wesley J (# 6075) on :
 
Try this, NEQ: Spamihilator. I've used it for years myself; very happy.
 
Posted by Firenze (# 619) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by blackbeard:
Computer I am currently using has McAfee - 18 months of it came packaged with the computer.

My ISP (Virgin) also provides its own antivirus (which is currently on an occasionally used laptop).

No problems, and (AFAIK) no viruses, so far.

McAfee is coming up for renewal, which of course costs. Is this worth doing? is there a better alternative? will the Virgin package (at no extra cost) do an equally good job?

All opinions welcome!


 
Posted by Firenze (# 619) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Penny S:
I went off McAfee when it overfilled the very small drive on my EeePC, and they kept me on the phone for ages before telling me it simply couldn't be installed on any other drive. I now have AVG on that machine, and it seems OK. As does McAfee on my other machines - but I'll be using AVG on those when it comes to renewal. I didn't like the way I got slid on to automatic renewal. Picky I am. But both my nephew, in computing, and John Lewis staff recommended AVG. Which you can try out free.


 
Posted by Firenze (# 619) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by lilBuddha:
I loathe McAfee and Norton.
I currently use Avast. It is a tad more bloated than it used to be,* but appears to work.

ETA: I also use NoScript as an add-on to Firefox. Righteous PITA, but more secure.

*Though much less so than either McAfee or Norton.


 
Posted by Sir Kevin (# 3492) on :
 
I'm glad we have an iMAC. They have always been virus-free for us. My schools use McAfee for PC - seems to work almost transparently except for when the machines are first started up in the morning.
 
Posted by Jengie Jon (# 273) on :
 
Well may you just been fortunate. If a OS is on computers where there are things other people will want to steel then you can be sure that somewhere in the world there is someone trying to write a piece of malware to do exactly that.

Jengie
 
Posted by The Rogue (# 2275) on :
 
I use Avast on all our computers at home and at work. It is getting a bit more bloaty but as far as I am aware none of the machines have been infected by anything. Another frustration with it is that every time a new version comes out they try to get you to install some toolbar. But it is free so I am not really complaining.
 
Posted by the giant cheeseburger (# 10942) on :
 
Back when I used Windows, I first had AVG which consumed lots of system resources but did nothing to stop a nasty rootkit attack. When I suspected something wasn't right I installed Avast, which picked it up on the first scan. Formatting and reinstalling was the eventual solution (faster than faffing around trying to kill the rootkit) with Avast then installed first thing afterwards.

That was a fair few years ago, so AVG might have improved to the point it is somewhat competent now but I would still be hesitant to recommend it based on previous negative experiences.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
AVG slowed my pc to a crawl on booting up and at intervals during use through updating its virus definitions. I switched to Avast, but it didn't take long before that started doing the same thing so I uninstalled that too.

I haven't found any decent anti-virus software yet that doesn't consume huge amounts of system resources. It really shouldn't be necessary to have such bloated software these days - all part of the racket to make you cave in and buy a bigger, faster computer IMO.
 
Posted by the giant cheeseburger (# 10942) on :
 
If you want a "security" program that doesn't use system resources, go for Microsoft Security Essentials. It's marginally less useful than tits on a bull, and the impact on the system performance is correspondingly small.

They aren't bloated, they are appropriate for dealing with today's security threats on today's computers.
 
Posted by que sais-je (# 17185) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Jengie Jon:
If a OS is on computers where there are things other people will want to steel then you can be sure that somewhere in the world there is someone trying to write a piece of malware to do exactly that.

quote:
According to the ever reliable wikipedia: ... operating systems [other than windows] are also susceptible to viruses, but in practice these are extremely rare or non-existent, due to much more robust security architectures in Unix-like systems (including Linux and Mac OS X) and to the diversity of the applications running on them.
To be fair nearly 30 viruses have been found on Linux - though none of them worked. On Windows, one figure I saw was 500,000.
 
Posted by Eutychus (# 3081) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Doc Tor:
quote:
Originally posted by Eutychus:
I would like to print a specific set of e-mails to file - there are thousands of them.

I can access them either on my Rackspace webmail or on Thunderbird.

Does anyone have any ideas of how I could do this?

This Thunderbird add-on claims to be your answer...
Belated thanks. I've just done this. It took me ages messing with filters to get all 3370 e-mails into one folder on Thunderbird, but once that was done it exported perfectly, in text format (so searchable) and with a nice HTML index folder too. Really useful add-on [Smile]
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by que sais-je:
quote:
Originally posted by Jengie Jon:
If a OS is on computers where there are things other people will want to steel then you can be sure that somewhere in the world there is someone trying to write a piece of malware to do exactly that.

quote:
According to the ever reliable wikipedia: ... operating systems [other than windows] are also susceptible to viruses, but in practice these are extremely rare or non-existent, due to much more robust security architectures in Unix-like systems (including Linux and Mac OS X) and to the diversity of the applications running on them.
To be fair nearly 30 viruses have been found on Linux - though none of them worked. On Windows, one figure I saw was 500,000.

At least part of this is due to obscurity, especially for Linux as there is not one flavour. This article shows that even Apple's Gatekeeper, specifically developed because of vulnerabilities, can be circumvented.
Due to the rising popularity of iPhones and iPads which run on a unix base, expect more viruses to emerge. It is when, not if.
 
Posted by mousethief (# 953) on :
 
Help, O geeky shipmates.

My wireless connection is on the fritz.


Who can rescue me from this body of death?
 
Posted by Doc Tor (# 9748) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by mousethief:
Help, O geeky shipmates.

My wireless connection is on the fritz.


Who can rescue me from this body of death?

It sounds like your on-board wireless is fritzed. How about a USB wireless dongle? It looks like you can pick one up for about 10 bucks.
 
Posted by mousethief (# 953) on :
 
I think I may have one. I'll try it.
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
Drivers can be a frustrating thing. The OS thinks it is fine and terminates the reinstall. You might try finding a newer version of the driver, this would be an update and the OS should not react the same. If your driver is the latest, you can uninstall, reboot then reinstall.
Caveat: None of this should be harmful to your computer. Though I once had two NIC cards die when I changed the adapter settings. This is akin to your front door falling off if you changed the address on your home.
 
Posted by mousethief (# 953) on :
 
Well I found the AirLink USB wireless thingee in the computer cabinet in the garridge, and it appears to be working fine. I think my onboard wireless adapter must be fritzed.
 
Posted by mousethief (# 953) on :
 
I'm going to pronounce it a hardware problem. I turned the onboard adapter off (Fn+F12), and now it won't turn back on. Thanks, lilBuddha and Doc Tor. With the AirLink working, I am happy enough. Whew.
 
Posted by Earwig (# 12057) on :
 
Ok, this is probably a really stupid question, but I'm a bit confused...

I've got a phone with an 'all you can eat data' package for accessing the internet. Does that mean I can just access the internet on 3G without occuring extra charges, or does that cost extra? Or does it just mean I can access the internet on wi-fi?

I am a luddite. A confused luddite.
 
Posted by Eutychus (# 3081) on :
 
I would read the small print in the T&Cs really really carefully. It may be different in the UK to where I am, but most of these offers come with a cap.

(That said, I still haven't worked out the terms of use of my smartphone's wifi connection...)
 
Posted by Jengie Jon (# 273) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Earwig:
Ok, this is probably a really stupid question, but I'm a bit confused...

I've got a phone with an 'all you can eat data' package for accessing the internet. Does that mean I can just access the internet on 3G without occuring extra charges, or does that cost extra? Or does it just mean I can access the internet on wi-fi?

I am a luddite. A confused luddite.

It means data over 3G data, the connection of wifi to the internet is the responsibility of the owner of the wifi connection. They can charge you even if you have all the data you can eat package.

However 3G is in my experience slower than wifi, so the choice between connecting your phone to your home network or just using 3g, wifi wins.

Jengie
 
Posted by Thyme (# 12360) on :
 
I got a smartphone recently and am also very confused about this data allowance. I have unlimited text and six hours of free calls with 500MB of data per month.

They are telling me I have exceeded my data allowance this month but I am not sure how. I had 'roaming' switched off and haven't been out of the UK. They say they will try to limit the excess cost to £30(!) but I don't know how to stop it anyway. So I am just keeping it switched off as much as possible.

It's a bit difficult to unravel it right now as I am away and have limited time available to focus on these things.

I'm glad I'm not the only one confused about the difference between 3G, Wifi, Bluetooth, the GPS thingy and what I am connected to when and what the charge is.

I'm starting to feel more sympathy for these unfortunate people who incur thousands of pounds of excess charges by mistake.

Last night I thought I would reset the phone to the factory defaults in case I set it up wrongly in the first place. But just ended up losing all my contacts!

[ 12. August 2013, 08:53: Message edited by: Thyme ]
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
500MB of free downloads is not a lot. I've got 3GB a month on my deal*. I haven't exceeded it yet but I have GPS, blue tooth and data roaming switched off most of the time. I do use the Wi-fi at home when I remember and I can use that contract for Wi-fi on the move picking up on hotspots.

* PAYG: 3GB internet access + free texts, calls are charged, including to voice mail, have to top up at least £10 a month to keep the package, and that per month is within certain dates. I do realise a contract may well be cheaper, but until I have a permanent work contract, I'm a bit over a barrel on that one.
 
Posted by Thyme (# 12360) on :
 
I use he home wifi mostly and this also gives me free access to various 'hot spots'

Unfortunately I now realise I have no idea what it is connecting to. I also didn't realise just how much I would be using it for things other than phone calls and texts!

I have been using it a lot as a car satnav, at which it is brilliant. My son in law says this shouldn't be incurring all the charges as it is the GPS.

The phone settings display shows most of the data usage as being the Android OS. Maybe it is just having it switched on that eats up the data.
 
Posted by Eutychus (# 3081) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Thyme:
I have been using it a lot as a car satnav, at which it is brilliant. My son in law says this shouldn't be incurring all the charges as it is the GPS.

That doesn't make sense at all to me. GPS locates where your phone is, but it doesn't as far as I know render the data into a map! My guess is that is probably where most of your data use is coming from.
 
Posted by Thyme (# 12360) on :
 
Eutychus - you are probably right, although that's not what the phone says. But I don't really understand any of it.

But apart from having it switched on a lot more recently the satnav is the main extra use.

Back to paper maps and paper notes until I get it sorted out.
 
Posted by Wet Kipper (# 1654) on :
 
Although the use of the GPS signal to "know" where you are is not using up the data, the application providing you with satnav capabilities will be updating the display to "show" you where you are every so often with a new map retrieved from the 'net, via your mobile data connection

[ 12. August 2013, 09:34: Message edited by: Wet Kipper ]
 
Posted by Thyme (# 12360) on :
 
Thanks Wet Kipper. That fits.
 
Posted by Jengie Jon (# 273) on :
 
No with using it as a satnav you are downloading data. The GPS is solely the position, the maps are data! If you use something like Google maps this downloads maps as you need. I suspect if you use something such as Garmin or TomTom then you are paying for their maps and they may well be downloaded before you start.

Jengie
 
Posted by Dinghy Sailor (# 8507) on :
 
Free mapping exists, which you can load onto the phone itself and never have to download data to use your phone as a satnav. Open StreetMap is free and is very good for the UK, although how complete it is will vary by country. There are various apps you can get for Android that use your phone to navigate using OSM. What sort of smartphone are you using?

OSM for Android
 
Posted by Earwig (# 12057) on :
 
Thanks all! So if I'm reading the Ship on my phone (using 3G) am I downloading data?

Or does that cost extra, like a phone call would?

I've checked the small print and the data limit is 1000GB a month.

Sounds like I need to make sure gizmos like GPS are turned off unless I need them.
 
Posted by Jengie Jon (# 273) on :
 
If you are reading the ship on your phone then that is data.

Jengie
 
Posted by Earwig (# 12057) on :
 
Thanks Jengie! This bear of very little brain is starting to understand.
 
Posted by the giant cheeseburger (# 10942) on :
 
With the mapping and GPS, it would be helpful to understand the maps as always using data downloads to draw them each time. You may be able to get a mapping package that you can use as a one-time download then stored permanently, but with 1000 MB of 3G data per month you should be fine without that so long as you're not downloading music or videos over the 3G connection - connect to a Wifi access point for that stuff.

The GPS on the other hand, is probably best understood as being an electronic version of a friend pointing to a spot on the map and saying "you're here" - and doing it for free. You can safely leave the GPS option switched on all the time, as it uses no data.
 
Posted by Thyme (# 12360) on :
 
This 'bear of little brain' is also starting to understand. Thanks so much everyone.
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
My GPS is mostly switched off because it tends to link in with other apps and I don't really want Twitter knowing exactly where I am, for example. Also turning the GPS on usually turns on background data which ups the battery drain and data usage.
 
Posted by the giant cheeseburger (# 10942) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Curiosity killed ...:
My GPS is mostly switched off because it tends to link in with other apps and I don't really want Twitter knowing exactly where I am, for example. Also turning the GPS on usually turns on background data which ups the battery drain and data usage.

On an Android phone, apps which have permission to track your location can track it at any time, whether GPS and/or Wifi are turned on or not. The only thing it changes is the accuracy of the tracking.

Unless things have changed since the last Android phone I ran, the GPS and data sync options were completely separate as well.
 
Posted by Thyme (# 12360) on :
 
Dinghy Sailor, I've got an HTC One - Android.

I upgraded all my technology recently but I am beginning to regret the phone. I think I would be better with something much cheaper and simpler.

Annoyingly the thing it is worst at is making phone calls! It keeps cutting out, so I can hear the person I am talking to but they can't hear me.

Another thing to sort out when I get home.
 
Posted by monkeylizard (# 952) on :
 
I'll try to summarize this up for the cranially challenged ursines.

Your smartphone communicates with the outside world through 5 methods: Phone, Messaging (aka text), GPS, WiFi Data, and Cellular Data.

Your cellular carrier is only interested on how much you use THEIR cellular network. Anything else you do with your smartphone, they don't care about.

Phone is simple enough to understand. Your plan has X minutes allowed. Talk more, charged more.

Text is usually as simple. Y messages allowed per month. Read the fine print. Some count incoming messages towards your limit, some only count outgoing. Many carriers now offer reasonably priced unlimited texting or include it in all but their lowest-tier plans.

GPS is one-way only. It's one way of how the phone knows where it is. There is no charge for this as there is no activity on the carrier's network when your phone is using its GPS antenna.

That leaves data. Everything else your phone does that's not in one of the 3 above is data. As was said in earlier posts, this would include any maps that a navigation app needs which it doesn't already have, but not the GPS locating itself.

The remaining piece of the puzzle is which "network" the phone is using to send/receive that data.

WiFi data is when the phone sends/receives data while it's on a WiFi enabled network. WiFi usage does NOT count towards your cellular plan's data limits because the phone isn't using their network. WiFi Data is when your phone is connected to a WiFi-enabled network like your home, or Starbuck's. While connected, it is not using the cellular network. It basically becomes like any other computer on that network. Any data usage by your phone while on your WiFi network will count towards the total Internet use that month for that network. Be mindful of that if you have monthly usage limits on your home Internet. Those are all but gone in the US, but I don't know anything about home Internet plans in the UK.

Cellular data is all that remains and that's when the phone sends/receives data and it's not on a WiFi network. This is what counts towards your monthly "data" limit with your cellular carrier.

It varies slightly by phone, but if you see one of these WiFi symbols lit up on your phone, you're on a WiFi network. If not, you're on cellular.


Something mentioned in a post above is Bluetooth. Bluetooth isn't a way for your phone to connect to the Internet*. It's a way for it to connect to other devices wirelessly. Bluetooth devices are building an as-needed on-the-fly network of thier own. Any data sent between Bluetooth devices is on that private mini-network so your cellular carrier doesn't care about it. An earpiece for example, or perhaps a set of speakers to play the music stored on your phone. It's never billable from your carrier. It's more like GPS in that regard, simply something that your phone does all on its own away from their cellular network.


*It can be involved but for 99.9% of people reading this, it's not. If you're the 0.1% you already know how Bluetooth works.

[ 12. August 2013, 17:53: Message edited by: monkeylizard ]
 
Posted by monkeylizard (# 952) on :
 
+1 to what TGC said. In my above post I said that GPS is one way that the phone knows where it is. The other way is by triangulating itself using cellular towers. GPS being off won't stop the phone from knowing where it is.

The nice thing is that this self-locating doesn't count towards data limits as it's not actually sending/receiving data. As part of its regular "connectedness" to the cellular network, it self-computes its location. It's usually less accurate than GPS, but close enough for most purposes.

So why have a GPS antenna at all you ask? Because it works even when there is no cellular service. If you have a map app that pre-downloads its maps (either in whole, or the pieces you tell it to get) while on a network, then it can use those maps with the GPS antenna when you have no signal. I use GaiaGPS with my iPhone. I can pre-download the maps of an area when I go hiking, then use the app if needed even when I have no cellular signal.

[ 12. August 2013, 18:03: Message edited by: monkeylizard ]
 
Posted by Thyme (# 12360) on :
 
Thank you monkey lizard, that is so helpful. I am saving it and other posts in this sequence for future reference.

[Overused]
 
Posted by Earwig (# 12057) on :
 
[Overused] monkeylizard, you are a star.

I take it you've seen this video? I am that monk. [Hot and Hormonal] [Roll Eyes]
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
Sorry - my Bluetooth is permanently off as there are some security concerns from using it, and I use public transport (tube & buses) a lot, not because of battery drain.
 
Posted by jedijudy (# 333) on :
 
One of the things I really liked about my laptop was the back lighting of the keyboard. It was easy to turn off and on with the function key. Now it doesn't come on anymore.

Could the keyboard light be disconnected somehow? (The power light and little lights over the top left of the keyboard still work.

Any ideas?
 
Posted by Drifting Star (# 12799) on :
 
The latest version of Firefox includes a search box on the page that opens when you open a new tab. Unfortunately the cursor defaults to the search box on that page rather than staying in the browser address box, as used to be the case. This is driving me mad. I have a search box on a toolbar, and when I open a new tab it is usually because I want to enter a url, not do a search.

I can't find a way of either changing the default cursor position or removing the search box from the page.

When I try to change the new tab page to something else in about:config I can't save the result. I right-click on the appropriate line, select modify, and change the value to either about:blank or a completely different url, then click on OK, but the value on the page never changes.

Can anyone help me? I quite like the thumbnails on the new tab page, but will happily do without them I can just keep the cursor in the url box.
 
Posted by Wesley J (# 6075) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by jedijudy:
One of the things I really liked about my laptop was the back lighting of the keyboard. It was easy to turn off and on with the function key. Now it doesn't come on anymore.

Could the keyboard light be disconnected somehow? (The power light and little lights over the top left of the keyboard still work.

Any ideas?

What make and model is it? What operating system? When did you buy it?

[ 17. August 2013, 18:17: Message edited by: Wesley J ]
 
Posted by Wesley J (# 6075) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Drifting Star:
The latest version of Firefox includes a search box on the page that opens when you open a new tab. Unfortunately the cursor defaults to the search box on that page rather than staying in the browser address box, as used to be the case. This is driving me mad. I have a search box on a toolbar, and when I open a new tab it is usually because I want to enter a url, not do a search.

I can't find a way of either changing the default cursor position or removing the search box from the page.

When I try to change the new tab page to something else in about:config I can't save the result. I right-click on the appropriate line, select modify, and change the value to either about:blank or a completely different url, then click on OK, but the value on the page never changes.

Can anyone help me? I quite like the thumbnails on the new tab page, but will happily do without them I can just keep the cursor in the url box.

Could that be the Norton toolbar that's showing up again? Apparently, it's now got a search box. I've just downloaded and restarted my now FF v23 too - in the menu bar (top of browser) go to view --> Toolbars --> Norton Toolbar --> untick. If you don't see the Menu Bar, go to Firefox (top left) --> Options --> Norton Toolbar --> untick.

I wonder if this'll work with you?
 
Posted by Drifting Star (# 12799) on :
 
No, there's no Norton toolbar to tick or untick.

This search box is actually on the web page, not part of the surrounding browser gubbins.
 
Posted by Jengie Jon (# 273) on :
 
What if you change the homepage to something different? Or am I missing something?

At home I have it open on the pages it was open with when I shut it down.

Jengie

[ 17. August 2013, 19:37: Message edited by: Jengie Jon ]
 
Posted by Drifting Star (# 12799) on :
 
It's not the home page, it's the page you get when you open a new tab. That should be changeable through about:config, but for some reason it won't accept any changes.
 
Posted by jedijudy (# 333) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Wesley J:
What make and model is it? What operating system? When did you buy it?

It's an Asus Notebook G73Sw. I'm using Windows 7. It is almost two years old.

Is there hope?
 
Posted by Drifting Star (# 12799) on :
 
Now that is odd. I've just uninstalled and re-installed Firefox (same version - 23.0.1) and although the search box is still there, my cursor is no longer jumping to it when I open a new tab.

As that is the only issue I had with it, I'm quite happy now.

If anyone has an idea as to why it was happening before, though, I'd be delighted to hear it! Also, about:config still won't let me make any changes to browser.newtab.url - I don't need to now, but that doesn't mean I don't want to be able to!
 
Posted by LeRoc (# 3216) on :
 
I have a Dell laptup running Windows 8. How do I turn the frigging gestures in the touchpad off? The only thing I want is that a finger tap equals a mouse click, those other things always come up when I didn't intend them.
 
Posted by Wesley J (# 6075) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by jedijudy:
quote:
Originally posted by Wesley J:
What make and model is it? What operating system? When did you buy it?

It's an Asus Notebook G73Sw. I'm using Windows 7. It is almost two years old.

Is there hope?

Possibly. Can't offer anything right now, but noticed that it seems a common problem in search engines!

One trick seems:
quote:
Can you try this, hold the Fn key (right next to the left ctrl key) and press F4 to get the keyboard turned on.

 
Posted by basso (# 4228) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Drifting Star:

If anyone has an idea as to why it was happening before, though, I'd be delighted to hear it! Also, about:config still won't let me make any changes to browser.newtab.url - I don't need to now, but that doesn't mean I don't want to be able to!

What's the value of browser.newtabpage.enabled? It's false in my FF, and I'm using about:blank with no problems.

I always disable the search bar - Toolbars -> Customize and drag the search box away.
 
Posted by mousethief (# 953) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Wesley J:
One trick seems:
quote:
Can you try this, hold the Fn key (right next to the left ctrl key) and press F4 to get the keyboard turned on.

Okay it's a warm day and I just had lunch so my brain may be sleepy, but how can you hit Fn+F4 if your keyboard isn't turned on?
 
Posted by Wesley J (# 6075) on :
 
Apparently lazy geek speak: It's about keyboard backlighting on a lappie. See further up.
 
Posted by Drifting Star (# 12799) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by basso:
quote:
Originally posted by Drifting Star:

If anyone has an idea as to why it was happening before, though, I'd be delighted to hear it! Also, about:config still won't let me make any changes to browser.newtab.url - I don't need to now, but that doesn't mean I don't want to be able to!

What's the value of browser.newtabpage.enabled? It's false in my FF, and I'm using about:blank with no problems.

I always disable the search bar - Toolbars -> Customize and drag the search box away.

The value is true, but when I change it to false I get the same newtab page - without the thumbnails, but still with the search box - and I still can't change the browser.newtab.url value. I can go through the process to modify it, but when I try the value doesn't change. No error message, nothing.

It isn't a toolbar. It's a search box on the webpage itself, together with the thumbnails of the most visited pages.

Thankfully the cursor is still behaving this morning, so this is academic - but I don't like the fact that I am unable to change things that I should be able to change.
 
Posted by Wesley J (# 6075) on :
 
Hm... I never use that preview feature. Have tried now, and the search bar has to be activated by clicking on the magnyfing glass top right. Clicking on it again makes it go away, which is obviously different to what you're experiencing.

Could it be an add-on that's causing this?
 
Posted by Drifting Star (# 12799) on :
 
I'm beginning to suspect that Firefox has a conspiracy against me...

I only have a spanner and a grid at the top right of the web page. The spanner lets me set a theme, and the grid makes the thumbnails go away, but keeps the search box. [Paranoid]
 
Posted by Wesley J (# 6075) on :
 
I have a grid and a magnifying glass, but no spanner. [Paranoid]

[ 18. August 2013, 18:24: Message edited by: Wesley J ]
 
Posted by Drifting Star (# 12799) on :
 
Curiouser and curiouser. [Paranoid] Are you on 23.0.1?
 
Posted by Wesley J (# 6075) on :
 
Yessir.
 
Posted by Drifting Star (# 12799) on :
 
OK. So they think you need practical stuff and I need pretty stuff. Hmmm. [Paranoid]
 
Posted by jedijudy (# 333) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Wesley J:
One trick seems:
quote:
Can you try this, hold the Fn key (right next to the left ctrl key) and press F4 to get the keyboard turned on.

That's my normal way to get the keyboard back light on. It's no longer working.
[Frown]
 
Posted by mousethief (# 953) on :
 
Ahhh. On my puter, Fn+F4 brings up a menu for selecting configurations for multiple screen setups.
 
Posted by the giant cheeseburger (# 10942) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by mousethief:
Ahhh. On my puter, Fn+F4 brings up a menu for selecting configurations for multiple screen setups.

That's because there is no standard for the various operations that happen when you hold the Function key, each manufacturer makes them up as they please.
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by jedijudy:
quote:
Originally posted by Wesley J:
One trick seems:
quote:
Can you try this, hold the Fn key (right next to the left ctrl key) and press F4 to get the keyboard turned on.

That's my normal way to get the keyboard back light on. It's no longer working.
[Frown]

On mine, a G75V, F3 dims and F4 brightens. Perhaps playing with another Function Key?
 
Posted by jedijudy (# 333) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by lilBuddha:
quote:
Originally posted by jedijudy:
quote:
Originally posted by Wesley J:
One trick seems:
quote:
Can you try this, hold the Fn key (right next to the left ctrl key) and press F4 to get the keyboard turned on.

That's my normal way to get the keyboard back light on. It's no longer working.
[Frown]

On mine, a G75V, F3 dims and F4 brightens. Perhaps playing with another Function Key?
I had tried that, just because it seemed worth doing. I'm afraid I'm just about ready to take it back to the store to let them poke the thing a bit. Maybe they have a sekrit incantation?
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
This is becoming my favourite computer repair method.
 
Posted by jedijudy (# 333) on :
 
[Big Grin]
 
Posted by Niteowl (# 15841) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by lilBuddha:
This is becoming my favourite computer repair method.

I used to keep one of those in my office as I had a printer that refused to work much of the time. Never had to hit it, just held it up and verbalized a scary threat and the printer would magically work. [Smile]
 
Posted by malik3000 (# 11437) on :
 
Does anybody here have experience with LibreOffice?

I have a Toshiba laptop and a Macbook Air. The Toshiba has the Microsoft Office suite and my Mac Book has no office suite.
Most of my computer experience has been with Windows, but now I pretty much use my Macbook. It is delightfully light.

I very rarely need one of the Microsoft Office programs -- except I have use for MS Access (database mgmt system) and sometimes Excel. That's the main reason for me having the Toshiba. But the Toshiba has been cranky lately (not due to software issues). Filemaker Pro is the main database program for Macs I gather but it's expensive.

Libre Office sounds interesting. It has all the usual office suite programs, and their database software is called Base. Libre Office is open source and is free.

My questions:

Is anybody experienced with it. In particular is anyone experienced with Base?

Does one have to be a computer programmer to use it?
(One does not need to for MS Access, but I've heard some of these open source programs require more computer skills, like SQL. I know a wee bit of SQL but I don't want to have to rely on using that in doing my database stuff.)

A word of warning -- Libre Office is an offshoot of Open Office which is no longer supported. AVOID the no longer maintained Open Office site -- one will pick up a virus, as I did, but fortunately which was gotten rid of by a very able associate.

LibreOffice doesn't have this defect -- it is being actively maintained -- it's the main office suite used by Linux users (but has versions for Windows and Mac OSX)
 
Posted by the giant cheeseburger (# 10942) on :
 
I don't have any experience with LibreOffice (I use iWork for documents, spreadsheets and presentations, and I don't do databases) but...

There are plenty of other database programs out there for OSX other than FileMaker Pro or FileMaker's consumer product Bento - I wouldn't recommend either as they are both stuck in the past. If I remember correctly there was one I saw in the Mac App Store which was essentially a MS Access interpreter.

I would recommend going for something that acts as a front end for SQL/SQLite so you've got an open format that isn't tied to a particular program. It could be Base (LibreOffice) or a commercial product that does the same deal, maybe even the confusingly named Base which is on the Mac App Store and has good reviews - https://itunes.apple.com/au/app/base/id402383384?mt=12
 
Posted by mousethief (# 953) on :
 
If you need documents in true Excel or Word format, LibreOffice is incapable of delivering it, whatever they bleat.
 
Posted by the giant cheeseburger (# 10942) on :
 
Oh yeah, I forgot to add that iWork (Pages, Numbers, Keynote) has been more than competent when it's come to opening or exporting the equivalent Word, Excel and PowerPoint files.

The best feature is the iCloud integration, I can download an iWork document from any web browser, in my choice of iWork, MS Office or PDF formats.
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by malik3000:

A word of warning -- Libre Office is an offshoot of Open Office which is no longer supported. AVOID the no longer maintained Open Office site -- one will pick up a virus, as I did, but fortunately which was gotten rid of by a very able associate.

Openoffice.org is being maintained by Apache. Not guaranteeing safety, but they are a going concern.
 
Posted by Wesley J (# 6075) on :
 
At least they've finally upgraded to a new version, 4.0.0. After months of waiting, a stable version that doesn't crash every few seconds! Yay! (Which was a well-known issue. Interestingly, it only did that on one of my three machines... [Paranoid] )

I'll stick with OpenOffice for the time being.
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
I'm using LibreOffice on Linux. I would agree about the documents. I can produce documents that work, but for the formatting to work on a Micro$oft machine I have to convert to pdf. You can't use sophisticated formatting on the PowerPoint equivalents and use them reliably on a Micro$oft machine either. The Excel OpenSource versions are limited and work differently. My daughter needed the full Excel and went back to Micro$oft and now Mac because Linux didn't give her access to the stuff she needed.
 
Posted by Palimpsest (# 16772) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by jedijudy:
quote:
Originally posted by Wesley J:
What make and model is it? What operating system? When did you buy it?

It's an Asus Notebook G73Sw. I'm using Windows 7. It is almost two years old.

Is there hope?

Googling it get this thread;
http://rog.asus.com/forum/showthread.php?2414-Help-on-G73SW-Keyboard-Light-Problem

which has the following comment


Do the kb lights at least turn on for a sec when booting up? I'd uninstall the ATK package, and download the driver from here, http://dlcdnet.asus.com/pub/ASUS/nb/...64_z100007.zip

Hopefully that will fix, if you do not see the kb lights at least flicker on/off on boot up, then you might have to send it in again. Most likely the un-installing/re-installing will fix your problems though, even if you have to do it twice as some have reported doing before it worked.
 
Posted by Palimpsest (# 16772) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by lilBuddha:
This is becoming my favorite computer repair method.

I had a friend who went to the big Computer show Comdex one year in Las Vegas. Someone had set up a shooting gallery with a fully functioning automatic machine gun. For an extra fee, instead of the paper targets you could bring a piece of computer hardware and shoot it up.

He said there was a long line of exhibitors with hardware waiting for their turn.
 
Posted by BroJames (# 9636) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by malik3000:
Does anybody here have experience with LibreOffice?

I have used NeoOffice (also based on OpenOffice - currently version 3.1.1) for years and have found it very solid. A pre-built binary (i.e. ready to use) costs £7 from the NeoOffice website, or an App Store compliant version is available from the App Store for £6.99. If you are happy with building your own from source code that's free. The engineers who support it work hard to ensure that it stays up to date with Apple OS developments.

AFAICT it does successfully handle Word and Excel formats - though things like font metrics differ between Windows and Mac systems, so even documents using the same fonts at the 'same' sizes may differ a little between the two operating systems. Sometimes, working with a Windows based colleague where an editable version is needed, I have sent both a Word and a PDF version of the same document to enable comparison.

I have used Base, but it's not for the faint hearted, though I think the same is true of MS Access as well. It is a full-featured database with both the power and the complexity that entails. I've gone elsewhere for my more basic abilities and needs.
 
Posted by Alisdair (# 15837) on :
 
Regarding LibreOffice : I would ignore the naysaying. Like most software (including Word) LibreOffice has it's quirks and faults, but you get a heck of a lot of bang for, well, no bucks at all! The best thing to do is suck it and see. If it works for you you've gained, if it doesn't you've only lost a bit of time.

Comments about LO documents not opening cleanly in Word are not without substance, but again your mileage will vary. If your typical documents are relatively simple, you may find you have no issues. Generally the more complex the formatting the more liklihood there is of problems. This isn't really LO's fault, but arises because Microsoft's documant formats are largely not open to scrutiny, so there is no easy way to build compatibility into non-MS software (even MS software struggles to translate some MS formats!).

For any document that does not require editing by anyone you send it to the simplest workaround is to convert your document into a PDF (which LO does extremely well), and send the PDF. LO also imports PDFs and allows them to be added to (not edited), which is very useful if you are filling out a PDF form. My version of Word (2010) on my work computer doesn't seem able to import PDFs, but it does now have the 'export to PDF' feature.

I've been using LO since it forked from OpenOffice (and used OpenOffice for several years before that. As far as I am concerned LO is a solid and productive bit of software, not perfect, but well worth trying.
 
Posted by jedijudy (# 333) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Palimpsest:

Do the kb lights at least turn on for a sec when booting up?

Yes, they do.

Thanks, Palimpsest. I'm going to see what I can do when I go home.

(Bad me! Looking at the Ship at w*rk!)
 
Posted by LeRoc (# 3216) on :
 
I use LibreOffice and I like it, but conversion isn't perfect. Whenever I make a big document with images, table of content, complex tables... I check how it looks in Word before I send it.

Also after the last time I updated LibreOffice, it doesn't copy and paste formats anymore, which is a big pain.
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
Alistair, I am very happy using LibreOffice for my personal use, but I had 3 months of completing Word produced forms for work with horrendous formatting using my own Linux laptop, and I wouldn't recommend it to anyone. I had to send everything back as pdfs, and every time I had to rebuild the forms to be able to complete them.

If you want to apply for jobs using LibreOffice there are a lot of job application forms out there that are not compatible.
 
Posted by jedijudy (# 333) on :
 
I have keyboard lights!!! [Yipee]

Y'all are awesome!!!!

Thank you, Palimpsest. I deleted and re-installed the ATK package. What a relief!

Thanks to everyone who was participating in the brain storming! [Big Grin]
 
Posted by BroJames (# 9636) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Curiosity killed ...:
Alistair, I am very happy using LibreOffice for my personal use, but I had 3 months of completing Word produced forms for work with horrendous formatting using my own Linux laptop, and I wouldn't recommend it to anyone. I had to send everything back as pdfs, and every time I had to rebuild the forms to be able to complete them.

If you want to apply for jobs using LibreOffice there are a lot of job application forms out there that are not compatible.

I agree that forms can be a particular weakness often because they use frames which seem to be a particular problem.
 
Posted by Alisdair (# 15837) on :
 
The LibreOffice issue seems to be exposing a misconception that often seems to cause problems:
LibreOffice 'is not' Microsoft Word, just as OSX 'is not' Windows 'is not' Linux.

I use LibreOffice because for my purposes it is a very good word processor and offic productivity suite, in certain respects considerably better than MS Office (which, in other respects, is way ahead of LO).

Problems arise when we think we're getting one thing under another name, so to use LO and expect it to be 'Word' just isn't going to happen, especially when MS deliberately make it difficult for competitors to access key aspects of their software (which is natural, Word is a commercial product).

As I said before: given that LO is 'free' as in beer, as well as in 'speech', no one has much to lose by trying it and seeing if it does the business. If it does great, if not move on. That's the great thing about software: there's often a choice as different people have set out to scratch slightly different itches in the same area of need.
 
Posted by LeRoc (# 3216) on :
 
quote:
Alisdair: LibreOffice 'is not' Microsoft Word
That's very true, and like I said, I like LO a lot. The thing is however that often I write documents in LO that other people need to open in Word. I hope they get the conversion right some day, but until then I'll have to check the document in Word.

I save to odt whenever I make a document that's only for personal use, so in that case there is no problem. LO is also perfect for creating PDFs.
 
Posted by Ricardus (# 8757) on :
 
That's my experience too.

There are a handful of highly technical things that LO does better than MS Office. For example, you can specify the character encoding when you save a CSV file in Calc. This is probably totally irrelevant to almost everyone, but I once had a job where this was vital.
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by LeRoc:
LO is also perfect for creating PDFs.

There is Nothing perfect about that vile format. From kicking puppies to mass murder, you will find the moment of snap was caused by creating or printing a PDF.
 
Posted by LeRoc (# 3216) on :
 
quote:
lilBuddha: There is Nothing perfect about that vile format. From kicking puppies to mass murder, you will find the moment of snap was caused by creating or printing a PDF.
You say that as if those are bad things [Biased]
 
Posted by Sparrow (# 2458) on :
 
Are there any Kindle experts out there who can help me? I have an old Kindle Keyboard with 3G, I've been trying to send documents to my Kindle via email but it doesn't seem to work. It looks like I need a free Kindle accound - i.e. Sparrow@free.kindle.com - but I can't see anything on the help pages that tells you how to do that!
 
Posted by Coffee Cup (# 13506) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sparrow:
Are there any Kindle experts out there who can help me? I have an old Kindle Keyboard with 3G, I've been trying to send documents to my Kindle via email but it doesn't seem to work. It looks like I need a free Kindle accound - i.e. Sparrow@free.kindle.com - but I can't see anything on the help pages that tells you how to do that!

Hello Sparrow!

I'm not sure this will completely work, but try the following:
*Log onto your amazon account.
*Just right of the search bar, the amazon home page will now say: "Hello, Sparrow
Your Account v"
*Click on the v to get a drop down menu
*Click on "Manage your kindle"
*On the left hand menu, click on "personal document settings"
*The website says that a unique address is assigned to your kindle upon registration. Mine is listed here, under personal document settings, and there is an option to edit the one you have been assigned too.
*Be aware that if you have 3G, you may be charged for recieving 3G documents. To avoid this, you actually have two kindle addresses - e.g. sparrow@kindle.com and sparrow@free.kindle.com. Use the 3G one to ensure your documents are delivered free-of-charge using wifi, or the one without free to get documents to show up now using 3G.
*The other thing you must do is add *your* email address to the approved senders list for your kindle. Click on "Add a new approved e-mail address" towards the bottom of the "personal document settings" page, and add your normal, day-to-day email address(es) here.
*I only send pdfs ( e.g. crochet patterns), but I think other formats should work. Someone else may have more experience.

(apologies for the long-windedness of the instructions)
 
Posted by mousethief (# 953) on :
 
Laptop, Compaq nc6400, running Win 7 Pro. All of a sudden the screen has gotten considerably darker. I have all the settings set to as bright as they go, and the Fn key combinations change the setting but little (and only downward).

Time to get a new screen? New inverter? New fluorescent tube? How can I tell which needs to be replaced? Do I need to give up and take it to a $hop, or can I do it myself?

ta.
 
Posted by the giant cheeseburger (# 10942) on :
 
My first guess would be that one of the fluoro backlights failing (there were usually four on a 14.1" laptop), but it would be worth rolling back any updates you installed recently in the unlikely case it's a software thing. If you can boot to some kind of live Linux disc with a graphic interface and it looks fine, then it's probably a hardware issue.

If it is a backlight failure, even if it is serviceable it's quite possible that it will be hard to get the right replacement part now that everything uses LED backlighting instead of fluro tubes. I don't have any experience with pulling apart HP laptops so I don't know how much work (or specialist tools for that matter) would be required, though if it's one of their Compaq branded ones it will hopefully be fairly simple and not too finely engineered.

[ 08. September 2013, 04:44: Message edited by: the giant cheeseburger ]
 
Posted by Doc Tor (# 9748) on :
 
Now here's a bizarre thing. There is a website I regularly visit, that since yesterday afternoon I have been unable to visit because my browser tells me it can't connect to the server.

Try a different browser. Nope.
Try clearing the cache and the cookies. Nope.
Reset the router. Nope.
Reset the modem. Nope.
Try a different machine on the network. Nope.
Try with the firewall off. Nope.

Try my wife's 3g phone. Bingo.

So I have to conclude that it's something to do with either my local network, or my provider. But what?
 
Posted by The Machine Elf (# 1622) on :
 
Google 'is it up or down' and you will find a selection of sites which will test whether another site is up or down.

TME
 
Posted by Doc Tor (# 9748) on :
 
The site is definitely up, as attested to by my wife's phone - which doesn't go through my cable provider.
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
Here is a list of suggestions to try, Doc Tor

[ 08. September 2013, 14:42: Message edited by: lilBuddha ]
 
Posted by Doc Tor (# 9748) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by lilBuddha:
Here is a list of suggestions to try, Doc Tor

Thanks for those - I'd already tried the low-level interventions, but some of the more gnarly ones were new to me.

I haven't tried swapping the DNS yet, but nothing's worked so far.
 
Posted by Sparrow (# 2458) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Coffee Cup:
quote:
Originally posted by Sparrow:
Are there any Kindle experts out there who can help me? I have an old Kindle Keyboard with 3G, I've been trying to send documents to my Kindle via email but it doesn't seem to work. It looks like I need a free Kindle accound - i.e. Sparrow@free.kindle.com - but I can't see anything on the help pages that tells you how to do that!

Hello Sparrow!

I'm not sure this will completely work, but try the following:
*Log onto your amazon account.
*Just right of the search bar, the amazon home page will now say: "Hello, Sparrow
Your Account v"
*Click on the v to get a drop down menu
*Click on "Manage your kindle"
*On the left hand menu, click on "personal document settings"
*The website says that a unique address is assigned to your kindle upon registration. Mine is listed here, under personal document settings, and there is an option to edit the one you have been assigned too.
*Be aware that if you have 3G, you may be charged for recieving 3G documents. To avoid this, you actually have two kindle addresses - e.g. sparrow@kindle.com and sparrow@free.kindle.com. Use the 3G one to ensure your documents are delivered free-of-charge using wifi, or the one without free to get documents to show up now using 3G.
*The other thing you must do is add *your* email address to the approved senders list for your kindle. Click on "Add a new approved e-mail address" towards the bottom of the "personal document settings" page, and add your normal, day-to-day email address(es) here.
*I only send pdfs ( e.g. crochet patterns), but I think other formats should work. Someone else may have more experience.

(apologies for the long-windedness of the instructions)

Thanks, I'll give that a try when time permits!

[Smile]
 
Posted by malik3000 (# 11437) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by lilBuddha:
quote:
Originally posted by LeRoc:
LO is also perfect for creating PDFs.

There is Nothing perfect about that vile format. From kicking puppies to mass murder, you will find the moment of snap was caused by creating or printing a PDF.

[Killing me]

Thanks for all the info on LibreOffice. For me the main reason I want it is for the database, not the other things, except as how they might help me to generate certain kinds of reports from the database.

Even though I am not the most knowledgeable about many software programs, I have a moderately good working knowledge of MS Access, having used it for a number of years.

I don't particular want to have to take an equivalent number of years to learn a new one. If Microsoft had Excel and Access for Mac that could be good except for the money aspect but there is no longer Access for Mac at all.

(The reason Excel has helped me is that there is an online database I use (LibraryThing), and I can download it in Excel, and, once downloaded, can convert it to an MS Access format database.)

[ 14. September 2013, 01:07: Message edited by: malik3000 ]
 
Posted by pererin (# 16956) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by lilBuddha:
quote:
Originally posted by LeRoc:
LO is also perfect for creating PDFs.

There is Nothing perfect about that vile format. From kicking puppies to mass murder, you will find the moment of snap was caused by creating or printing a PDF.
It was okay until they broke LO to make it open a 94-page PDF in Draw rather than Writer. Just idiotic. If the Draw types want PDF import capability, they should fork it off LO.
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
No, my dear pererin. I did not mean only the PDF-LO connection, but PDFs no matter the origin.
Formatting changes, print driver mismatches, even with preview pane showing correct!, extra empty pages printed, etc.
Oh, it will work correctly, at times, luring you in, lulling you to a false sense of productivity. And then, right when it is important, the damn format will betray you. Makes me want to convert to Christianity just to condemn it to Hell.
 
Posted by Sparrow (# 2458) on :
 
I seem to have a problem with my Norton firewall, a couple of times in the last couple of weeks it has reported that it has been turned off though I haven't changed the settings. I have scanned with Malwarebytes and Norton itself but they don't turn up any viruses. Any advice please?
 
Posted by Thyme (# 12360) on :
 
Norton firewall and antivirus was the cause of horrendous problems for me many years ago. I was advised to uninstall it and all the problems disappeared like magic. I would never use it again.

I have used AVG without too many problems.

[ 24. September 2013, 07:57: Message edited by: Thyme ]
 
Posted by Sparrow (# 2458) on :
 
A very stupid question this one .... can anyone clarify for me the difference between Microsoft Outlook and Outlook.com? They are different aren't they, but how?
 
Posted by LeRoc (# 3216) on :
 
Darn! We just had wireless installed last week, through an Arris TG862 modem/router combination.

Yesterday, the energy in our building was switched off for about 7 hours for maintenance. After this, I can't get internet working again (I'm on my 3G now). All the lights on the router seem to be as they should, but my computer says "Limited connection", and I can't access the internet.
 
Posted by Wesley J (# 6075) on :
 
Do a router reset? Check in the manual how it's done. Often helps.
 
Posted by LeRoc (# 3216) on :
 
quote:
Wesley J: Do a router reset? Check in the manual how it's done. Often helps.
Thank you, I've tried this already a couple of times. I also unplugged and plugged it again several times, restarted my computer... The modem/router doesn't work if I connect it with an Ethernet cable to my computer either. Yet, the lights that indicate that the modem/router is receiving internet signal are on.
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
For using the router wireless, in your network settings right click in your wireless network name and disconnect. Then reconnect entering the password anew.
 
Posted by LeRoc (# 3216) on :
 
quote:
lilBuddha: For using the router wireless, in your network settings right click in your wireless network name and disconnect. Then reconnect entering the password anew.
Hmm, I'm in Windows 8. I've tried diconnecting and reconnecting in my network settings a number of times, but it didn't work. It never asks me for my password because it already has that stored, I don't know how I can force it to ask again.
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
If you disconnect and it is not asking for a password on reconnecting, this is a problem. It should ask. Is there an option to "forget" the network?
 
Posted by LeRoc (# 3216) on :
 
quote:
lilBuddha: Is there an option to "forget" the network?
Yes, I found that now. I can remove this network from my list. The next time I connect to it, it asks for my password again. Didn't resolve my problems though. It still says "Limited connection" and doesn't connect to the internet.
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
It may well be that the power surge killed your router.
Hopefully your router and not your internal network card.
Can you take it back?
 
Posted by LeRoc (# 3216) on :
 
quote:
lilBuddha: It may well be that the power surge killed your router.
Possibly, I hope not. My router was plugged in when the power got disconnected but I unplugged it before the power came back. That's when the big surge is, isn't it?
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
It truly depends.
The easiest way to test is to bring another device into range of your wireless network and attempt to connect. If that does not work, then take your computer to another wireless access point and attempt to connect.
 
Posted by LeRoc (# 3216) on :
 
quote:
lilBuddha: The easiest way to test is to bring another device into range of your wireless network and attempt to connect.
I agree, I already tried it with another netbook and with a tablet. None of them connected, so it isn't my computer. I'll go to the company where I have the internet subscription tomorrow, but here in Brazil I don't know how long it will take for them to come and repair [Frown]
 
Posted by Doc Tor (# 9748) on :
 
Might the lengthy power outage have depleted an onboard battery/corrupted your volatile RAM in your router?

That is, can you hard reset/restore factory settings on the router, then use the default login to access the wifi?
 
Posted by LeRoc (# 3216) on :
 
quote:
Doc Tor: That is, can you hard reset/restore factory settings on the router, then use the default login to access the wifi?
Probably. It says that it will restore factory settings if I press the reset button for 15 seconds (the one in the little hole that you have to push with a pen). I've been a bit hesitant to do so, because I'm not sure if I can get the settings back the way they are now.

I managed to call the provider's helpline, and after being more than half an hour on the phone, making my choices on the menu, being put through, listening to muzak... they told me that they are doing maintenance in my region, and that internet will be restored tomorrow at noon [Roll Eyes]

It's a bit strange that all the lights on my modem are how they should be when there's no internet coming in. Let's see how it goes tomorrow.
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
All your modem displays is that signal is coming in. It does not differentiate between noise and information.
 
Posted by The Kat in the Hat (# 2557) on :
 
I've been asked to look over a website that is built using wordpress.
I think they need some forms so that feedback etc can be generated
Does anyone have any recommendations for plug-ins?
thanks
 
Posted by LeRoc (# 3216) on :
 
quote:
lilBuddha: All your modem displays is that signal is coming in. It does not differentiate between noise and information.
Ah I see, thank you. The connection has been restored now, not on Monday like they promised but on Tuesday. It still goes down quite often though, it is worse here than I thought.
 
Posted by the giant cheeseburger (# 10942) on :
 
Your ISP may have different connection profiles available for you to choose from in your account settings. My previous ISP had five settings ranging from Conservative (lowest speed, highest redundancy and stability) to Thrill Seeker (highest speed, no redundancy, lowest stability) with the Normal setting in the middle. Living a fair distance from the exchange meant we never ventured beyond Normal without major issues.

If your ISP has different connection profiles, maybe during the maintenance work it was reset to a higher-grade profile which is less stable than what you had before.

If your ISP did not tell you before the maintenance work began, you should be able to claim a discount off your next monthly bill according to the number of days with service denied and compensation for any resultant loss of income.
 
Posted by balaam (# 4543) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by The Kat in the Hat:
I've been asked to look over a website that is built using wordpress.
I think they need some forms so that feedback etc can be generated
Does anyone have any recommendations for plug-ins?
thanks

http://en.support.wordpress.com/?s=forms
 
Posted by The Kat in the Hat (# 2557) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by balaam:
quote:
Originally posted by The Kat in the Hat:
I've been asked to look over a website that is built using wordpress.
I think they need some forms so that feedback etc can be generated
Does anyone have any recommendations for plug-ins?
thanks

http://en.support.wordpress.com/?s=forms
The version of Wordpress that is being used does not seem to have an "Add form" button. Is it because it is wordpress.org?
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
Kat,

Plugins are available for Wordpress websites. But I am not sure the mechanism as I do not use wordpress.

As for .org v. .com, Here is a comparison.
 
Posted by Doc Tor (# 9748) on :
 
Comrades! It's probably time I retired my very ancient Acer laptop - it's on its second battery and down to less than an hour of life on a full charge, the (tiny) hard drive has bad sectors, and it just runs stuff at random, locking the computer for five minutes at a time.

From perusing the market, it seems to be a choice between Windows 8 and Android - with Android devices having a much better battery life than Windows. Of course, all my networking software is Windows-based, and OpenOffice has no official port to Android. I've no particular reason to go Android except for the longer battery life.

I don't need it singing and dancing. All I'll be doing with it is accessing t'internet and typing, so it can be reasonably cheap and cheerful, but a full-sized keyboard is a must.

Recommendations? (I'm in the UK, btw)
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
You mention Android, so tablets are in the mix?
As for real computers, I love my Asus ROG laptop.
For tablets, I do like my Nexus 7 (made by Asus), though would likely have gone with windows RT had that been a viable option.
If you are talking one device, stay away from tablets if you do real work. They are too limited in my experience.
FYI
Android and windows RT - tablet
Windows 8 - computer
There are "tablet computers", these are different from what are commonly called tablets.

Yes fellow geeks, I am aware tablets are computers, but they are limited.
And I am aware android also runs on full computers, also limited.
 
Posted by comet (# 10353) on :
 
dear beloved geeks-who-speak-a-language-I-cannot-comprehend:

years ago, my ex-husband gave the boys a PS3 (for my sins). We have used a variety of ship-anchor-style televisions for them to plug into. the current one is thankfully small, but still takes up a ton of space in our home - which is a 12'x12' 4-season wall tent. space is a premium.

Now, I have decommissioned the family's last actual desktop computer because we now ALL have laptops. the screen for the old desktop is a nice - and FLAT - LCD screen that I can even mount on a wall, thus saving more space. However, I need an adaptor to make the PS3 plugs talk to the screen plug. (right?)

Now is where I show off my great command of technical language. stand back.

the PS3 has a cord that ends in three separate pluggy thingies, each a separate color. the televisions have holes for those plugs. the computer screen does not. the computer has a hole for a wide thingie with two rows of tiny little sticky-outtie thingies plus two screws on each side. I think this is called a serial port but I wanted to describe it anyway incase I'm dead wrong.

(see what I mean about my mad technical language skills? my engineer in my radio days used to HATE ME)

Now, when I go look on amazon and enter search terms that I hope are close, they show me a couple of different little jobbies that LOOK right, but before I order something I want to make sure I AM right.

so first off, is there more information I need from what I said above (i.e. are there many varieties of these things?) and secondly, anyone just happen to know the answer?
 
Posted by Doc Tor (# 9748) on :
 
The PS3 has what I believe is called an RCA. The computer screen will have a socket that's a VGA, S-VGA or DVI or HDMI, depending on its age. You can google each one and compare it to the socket.

RCA

Video connectors
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
Unless the monitor also has speakers, you will need to sort that out as well.
 
Posted by the giant cheeseburger (# 10942) on :
 
That is slightly inaccurate Doc Tor.

The PS3 has two forms of AV connection, one is HDMI (which a new computer monitor will probably have) and the other is a proprietary multi-connector. You can see both on this picture but the exact position and arrangement may be different depending on which specific model of the PS3 you have - all should be labelled though.

The multi-connector has different adapter cables available which link to a number of different TV connection systems, some of which do use RCA plugs on the end. The one included in the box as standard is the composite video version which is the lowest common denominator of TV connections, using only one yellow RCA plug for the video signal. Component video also uses a number of coloured RCA plugs but is a very different system that is of much higher quality.


What you'll have on the computer screen is up to three different connection types - VGA (which looks a bit like a pre-USB serial port), DVI and HDMI.

If you have HDMI, you just need a HDMI cable long enough to reach from the PS3 to the screen. Buy the cheapest one you can get, they are all the same and if you buy a more expensive brand all you're getting is the name on the box! The majority of HDMI-equipped computer monitors will either have built-in speakers or a jack to plug in a cord leading to external speakers.

If you don't have HDMI but do have DVI, you should be able to purchase a HDMI-DVI converter (because HDMI uses very similar technology as the DVI standard) which will allow you to connect the HDMI cable from the PS3 to the converter, a DVI cable from the converter to the screen and an audio connection from the converter to a set of speakers.

If you only have a VGA connection on the screen then you have an older first-generation LCD computer screen that will not work with a PS3. There are HDMI to VGA converters out there, but they will not work with a PS3 because they do not have the content encryption system required.

[ 03. October 2013, 21:05: Message edited by: the giant cheeseburger ]
 
Posted by Doc Tor (# 9748) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by the giant cheeseburger:
That is slightly inaccurate Doc Tor.

Fair enough - I don't own a PS3, so was going by what comet said.

Further to what TGC said, this discussion is quite useful.
 
Posted by The Kat in the Hat (# 2557) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by lilBuddha:
Kat,

Plugins are available for Wordpress websites. But I am not sure the mechanism as I do not use wordpress.

As for .org v. .com, Here is a comparison.

Thanks for the link - it makes more sense now.
The company had paid someone to set up a better site for them, but then discovered that his talk was better than the outcome - but I can now see why we are linked to the .org site (more control).
However, I do need to create forms, which will need a plug-in, and there are quite a few to choose from, hence my question to see if anyone here has any experience.
 
Posted by comet (# 10353) on :
 
thank you guys. (I think!) I'll go look at the various holes on the boxes and see what I recognize. the H-something or other is what I'm hoping for in both places, right?
 
Posted by Doc Tor (# 9748) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by comet:
thank you guys. (I think!) I'll go look at the various holes on the boxes and see what I recognize. the H-something or other is what I'm hoping for in both places, right?

Assuming the PS3 has an HDMI, then you want the screen to have *at least* a DVI socket.
 
Posted by the giant cheeseburger (# 10942) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Doc Tor:
quote:
Originally posted by comet:
thank you guys. (I think!) I'll go look at the various holes on the boxes and see what I recognize. the H-something or other is what I'm hoping for in both places, right?

Assuming the PS3 has an HDMI, then you want the screen to have *at least* a DVI socket.
All models of the PS3 were built with HDMI sockets.
 
Posted by comet (# 10353) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by the giant cheeseburger:
If you don't have HDMI but do have DVI, you should be able to purchase a HDMI-DVI converter (because HDMI uses very similar technology as the DVI standard) which will allow you to connect the HDMI cable from the PS3 to the converter, a DVI cable from the converter to the screen and an audio connection from the converter to a set of speakers.

okay, it looks like the above is my option. whew! thanks, TGC.you get a gold star. now to see if I can find it!

so far I'm seeing a wide price range. any reason why cheap isn't okay?
 
Posted by comet (# 10353) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by the giant cheeseburger:
quote:
Originally posted by Doc Tor:
quote:
Originally posted by comet:
thank you guys. (I think!) I'll go look at the various holes on the boxes and see what I recognize. the H-something or other is what I'm hoping for in both places, right?

Assuming the PS3 has an HDMI, then you want the screen to have *at least* a DVI socket.
All models of the PS3 were built with HDMI sockets.
yes, the PS3 has the HDMI, and the monitor has the DVI, but not the HDMI. however, the cheap cables don't transmit sound, and I see no place on either to just plug in my speakers. (can't it just be easy?!?) do I have to buy one of the $60+ fancy converters to get the sound? and say... (says the annoyed mama) say I don't get the sound part, and they get silent games. will the thing still work even without sound?

and mega thanks for all this. this is far from my skill set, as you can see.
 
Posted by Wesley J (# 6075) on :
 
A question about printing pdfs from Adobe Reader XI to a number of Canon Pixma inkjet printers.

I've found that occasionally printed text in pdf documents can become garbled, i.e. showing a wild assortment of letters instead of the correct words. This can happen once, or several times, when doing several copies of the same document, and with all or only part of the page garbled, or everything on it ok. It can also occur with all of the connected printers, not just one.

It might be that certain types of pdf are especially prone to this, like pdf forms filled in by me, or forms auomatically created online by some website, and then printed by me. So it is perhaps a matter of that transformation process which confuses my printers.

Scanned document pdfs pose no problem.

Any thoughts? Thank you. [Confused]
 
Posted by the giant cheeseburger (# 10942) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by comet:
quote:
Originally posted by the giant cheeseburger:
quote:
Originally posted by Doc Tor:
quote:
Originally posted by comet:
thank you guys. (I think!) I'll go look at the various holes on the boxes and see what I recognize. the H-something or other is what I'm hoping for in both places, right?

Assuming the PS3 has an HDMI, then you want the screen to have *at least* a DVI socket.
All models of the PS3 were built with HDMI sockets.
yes, the PS3 has the HDMI, and the monitor has the DVI, but not the HDMI. however, the cheap cables don't transmit sound, and I see no place on either to just plug in my speakers. (can't it just be easy?!?) do I have to buy one of the $60+ fancy converters to get the sound? and say... (says the annoyed mama) say I don't get the sound part, and they get silent games. will the thing still work even without sound?

and mega thanks for all this. this is far from my skill set, as you can see.

Yes, to get sound you will need to use a converter box to split the video and audio - this is because the DVI carries video only. This is nothing to do with the price of the cable.

Just checking, have you tried it with a simple HDMI-DVI plug converter yet and managed to get the images on the screen?


The solution to this doubt about whether the converter box will work is something that actually is your specialty - good old fashioned customer service! Buy a converter box from a proper store staffed by real human beings who will notice when you refuse to treat them like they are convicts doing community service - and before buying make sure you check that you can return it with all the packaging carefully kept intact should it not work as intended. You'll probably pay a bit more than if you bought the identical product over the internet, but it would be worth it if it doesn't work.

If a converter fails to get your sound working, then it looks like silent games will be the best you can hope for. Just embellish the truth and tell the kids that even the movies were like that back when you were young, and to be thankful they at least have colour [Biased]
 
Posted by Honest Ron Bacardi (# 38) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Wesley J:
A question about printing pdfs from Adobe Reader XI to a number of Canon Pixma inkjet printers.

I've found that occasionally printed text in pdf documents can become garbled, i.e. showing a wild assortment of letters instead of the correct words. This can happen once, or several times, when doing several copies of the same document, and with all or only part of the page garbled, or everything on it ok. It can also occur with all of the connected printers, not just one.

It might be that certain types of pdf are especially prone to this, like pdf forms filled in by me, or forms auomatically created online by some website, and then printed by me. So it is perhaps a matter of that transformation process which confuses my printers.

Scanned document pdfs pose no problem.

Any thoughts? Thank you. [Confused]

According to Adobe, that sort of thing is most commonly caused by either internal damage to the pdf file (which doesn't affect its ability to be rendered on screen), or using old printer drivers. TAlso, there have been documented problems of Adobe reader updates causing problems with Pixma printers, so force a check to see if you have the most recent release of Adobe Reader XI.

Certainly you should check you are using the most up-to-date printer driver, and install that. Even if your driver is the current version I would still advise you to uninstall it and re-install it anyway for reasons too tedious to go into here.

I don't know about how you might regenerate a new pdf if the old one was damaged as it will depend on what software was in use. pdf's have become so variable that problems seem to crop up a lot more these days than they used to. They can now contain all sorts of things like sound effects, scripts and movie clips. If you have the option to re-generate the pdf, try doing so in a PDF/X format which should chop out a lot of that sort of thing.

We generate various documents here that need to go for commercial printing, and I spoke to our printer about this a while back. His comment was that they have to handle pdf's a lot at the imposition stage (how the pages are laid out on the big digital printers they use) and these sort of problems often crop up there, if you'll excuse the pun. They are often not caused by the DTP packages themselves, but by the pdf's people send in (e.g. advertisers), and these problems get carried forward. We sorted this out by generating PDF/X-1 format files which works in our case.

If you have access to a non-Canon printer you could also try printing to that of course. These problems seem to affect both Mac and Windoze machines. Scanned image pdf's are really just glorified bitmaps and rarely give problems.

[ 04. October 2013, 12:52: Message edited by: Honest Ron Bacardi ]
 
Posted by Wesley J (# 6075) on :
 
Lovely! Thanks! I'll report back. [Overused]
 
Posted by the giant cheeseburger (# 10942) on :
 
Fonts can cause issues with PDF and other document formats as well. This is common where you have a Windows <--> Mac exchange where the PDF file has been created with low-quality software and it references fonts instead of embedding them. A font with the same name on a different system might not actually be the same font.
 
Posted by comet (# 10353) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by the giant cheeseburger:

The solution to this doubt about whether the converter box will work is something that actually is your specialty - good old fashioned customer service! Buy a converter box from a proper store staffed by real human beings who will notice when you refuse to treat them like they are convicts doing community service - and before buying make sure you check that you can return it with all the packaging carefully kept intact should it not work as intended. You'll probably pay a bit more than if you bought the identical product over the internet, but it would be worth it if it doesn't work.

alas, I live in a rural community and don't have that option available to me. We have a radio shack but they specialize in marine radio and sonar and have almost nothing in the computery realm, I went by yesterday and checked. So I'm stuck with amazon. the simple cable is cheap, though, so I'll order that and hope it works and go forward from there. thanks for your help!
 
Posted by Honest Ron Bacardi (# 38) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by the giant cheeseburger:
Fonts can cause issues with PDF and other document formats as well. This is common where you have a Windows <--> Mac exchange where the PDF file has been created with low-quality software and it references fonts instead of embedding them. A font with the same name on a different system might not actually be the same font.

Very true, GC. (And also by high-quality software in the hands of people who forget the step about embedding fonts & graphics).

A related problem is that quite a few software packages are able to generate bold, italic etc. font styles automatically, even if those styles are not installed. What happens when people try to handle any resulting pdfs (which won't have those font styles embedded) can vary a lot depending on what they try to do with them.

[ 05. October 2013, 11:24: Message edited by: Honest Ron Bacardi ]
 
Posted by Sparrow (# 2458) on :
 
I'm thinking of changing my ISP, but have always been put off because I assumed I would lose my current email address which I have had for years. I am with John Lewis/Waitrose so my email is something like myrealname@waitrose.com.

But it seems to me now that I could find a much cheaper deal somewhere else. Would I need to give up my @waitrose email address or is there any way I could keep it with my new ISP?
 
Posted by the giant cheeseburger (# 10942) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sparrow:
I'm thinking of changing my ISP, but have always been put off because I assumed I would lose my current email address which I have had for years. I am with John Lewis/Waitrose so my email is something like myrealname@waitrose.com.

But it seems to me now that I could find a much cheaper deal somewhere else. Would I need to give up my @waitrose email address or is there any way I could keep it with my new ISP?

The whole point of an ISP including email service is so they have something that keeps you beholden to them, especially now that we use our email address as a login for website accounts. To allow you to keep your email address while not purchasing the internet service from them would make this model fail.

It used to be common in the days of dial-up internet when ISPs were independent businesses that only served a limited local area, if a customer moved to an area not served by that company they could set up a forwarding arrangement because they couldn't possibly retain you as a customer in an area they don't serve. But the reason it won't work that way is that Waitrose is not actually an ISP, they just act as a middle man charging you retail prices and paying a wholesale price to the actual ISP which provides the service - and that now the technology has moved on from dial-up internet the ISPs don't need to be small locally based companies these days.

My advice would be to get a new email address from a provider that is not an ISP (or a reseller of an ISP's wholesale service) so that you can have an address that doesn't tie you down to that ISP again. If you're concerned about the privacy implications of using a Google service, I could also recommend the independent provider Fastmail which offers plenty of different options for the domain name of your address.

I would suggest you do this immediately and switch over any online accounts, plus send a "hi everyone, this is my new address" message to people you know. Then wait a month or two so you can get any messages still trickling in on your old address before making the ISP switch.
 
Posted by Sparrow (# 2458) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by the giant cheeseburger:
quote:
Originally posted by Sparrow:
I'm thinking of changing my ISP, but have always been put off because I assumed I would lose my current email address which I have had for years. I am with John Lewis/Waitrose so my email is something like myrealname@waitrose.com.

But it seems to me now that I could find a much cheaper deal somewhere else. Would I need to give up my @waitrose email address or is there any way I could keep it with my new ISP?

........

My advice would be to get a new email address from a provider that is not an ISP (or a reseller of an ISP's wholesale service) so that you can have an address that doesn't tie you down to that ISP again. ...........

I would suggest you do this immediately and switch over any online accounts, plus send a "hi everyone, this is my new address" message to people you know. Then wait a month or two so you can get any messages still trickling in on your old address before making the ISP switch.

Yes I feared as much, but I have so many contacts etc with the current address, it will be a nightmare to switch them all over.

[Frown]
 
Posted by the giant cheeseburger (# 10942) on :
 
Why should having many contacts need to be an issue? You should be able to use the same email client on your computer as you were using before to keep your contacts in place, and a change of address message is one of the times it's more than acceptable to send a big group email (with all addresses in the BCC field of course).
 
Posted by BroJames (# 9636) on :
 
The more complicated thing, I've found, is not the contacts I have who can be dealt with by a simple email, but the number of web sites where my current email address is part of my user ID or profile. AFAICT there is no short cut with these, you have to go to each website, log in, change your email address (and sometimes verify the change via email). I've got over 30 of these (one of which is the Ship). So you will need to invest some time in making the change.

[Edited to remove appearance of shouting (caps)]

[ 17. October 2013, 21:59: Message edited by: BroJames ]
 
Posted by Sparrow (# 2458) on :
 
Yes, that is what I was thinking of.
 
Posted by Drifting Star (# 12799) on :
 
Do check with Waitrose though. I know that BT will allow people to keep their BT email addresses (for a small fee, of course - something like £2 a month). If Waitrose have a similar scheme you could take your time in identifying all those places that need a change while getting on with changing your ISP.
 
Posted by Sparrow (# 2458) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Drifting Star:
Do check with Waitrose though. I know that BT will allow people to keep their BT email addresses (for a small fee, of course - something like £2 a month). If Waitrose have a similar scheme you could take your time in identifying all those places that need a change while getting on with changing your ISP.

Thanks, that sounds like a plan, I'll try that!
 
Posted by Clint Boggis (# 633) on :
 
A friend had the ISP email problem and wanted to change to another ISP. He asked them and they said he could keep the email account, no problem. He still uses it some years later.

I had the same ISP and wanted to move. I didn't ask but still use the account at least five years later.

It must only cost them a negligible amount but everyone my friend contacts sees the ISP name (onetel) so it's like an advert for them.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
I've had ordinary broadband for years now. Is there any advantage in changing to wifi? I only have the one pc in use so am not looking to connect any others in the house.
 
Posted by the giant cheeseburger (# 10942) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ariel:
I've had ordinary broadband for years now. Is there any advantage in changing to wifi? I only have the one pc in use so am not looking to connect any others in the house.

Yes.

You can connect a smartphone or tablet to the network (instead of using slower cellular data) and you will have the freedom of being able to reposition your computer at will instead of it being fixed in one spot according to the location of the phone line plug.

If you don't have any smartphones or tablets and the location of your phone line is actually the best spot for your computer, then the only possible benefit would be a possible performance increase from replacing an older worn-out modem/router with a new one that should give you fewer dropped connections and maybe a slight speed boost.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Thanks. It sounds as if there isn't any point in changing as you have correctly identified the situation.

I do have a smartphone, but am not proposing to use it much for internet. If I understood the technician in the phone shop correctly, I wouldn't be able to log into my wireless network outside home anyway.
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
It depends on your wireless network ~ one of the bonuses of BT and I guess the other big providers is being able to log into WiFi hot spots ~ which has enabled me to work in more situations than my other peripatetic colleagues.

Are you sure about not using your smart phone for internet access? The ability to read the Ship and pick up emails on the move makes my commute much more tolerable. (The church twitter account gets updated on these journeys.
 
Posted by Earwig (# 12057) on :
 
I've started doing an MA, and that involves a lot of reading ebooks online. I'm finding my eyes hurt after doing a lot of reading on my laptop, and am thinking about getiing an ereader.

I'd like a big screen, the ability to take notes on my reading, and obviously a provider that would allow me to download the academic texts from the library.

Does anyone have any recommendations for such an ereader, available in the UK? Any students out there found good ereaders for academic work? Thanks!
 
Posted by Firenze (# 619) on :
 
Are you ever minded to get a Kindle? I'm not sure how that would work without wifi.

There is a definite step change between fixed spot computing and portable. It becomes flexible, integrated, casual, disposable (and much, much easier physically - no more Mouse Arm).

(Replying to Ariel)

[ 23. October 2013, 08:33: Message edited by: Firenze ]
 
Posted by Huia (# 3473) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Firenze:
Are you ever minded to get a Kindle? I'm not sure how that would work without wifi.

(Replying to Ariel)

I have a 3G kindle. It can be used with wifi, but also uses the telephone network. I've never tried to go on the internet with it though.

Huia - the technopeasant*

*with thanks to Pete for that word - which I hope he hasn't copyrighted
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
I’ve had my pay-as-you-go smartphone since the weekend. I like it a lot but internet is a real hassle. I lost £30 in credit within less than 24h because I didn’t realize that it was constantly downloading data in the background. I now have internet turned off (or packet data, anyway) to save costs.

I discovered yesterday that some wi-fi is free but I'm a complete novice at how this works. What seems to happen is that I can log into a free network spot here and there but what I can actually get seems to be very limited – the provider’s own home page and links. If I shift to another wi-fi network it seems to be almost impossible to get rid of the previous home page which simply says “not found”. The only way I can use the internet fully is to turn packet data back on and for the sake of cost keep access to an absolute minimum as I did with my last phone.

It’s a lovely little phone and I don’t want to get rid of it but it’s pretty clear that these are meant really for people on monthly contracts rather than PAYG.

quote:
Originally posted by Curiosity killed ...:
Are you sure about not using your smart phone for internet access? The ability to read the Ship and pick up emails on the move makes my commute much more tolerable. (The church twitter account gets updated on these journeys.

Commutes are my "quiet time" for reading, thinking and Sudoku. Internet, phone and radio access all seem to lapse about 5 minutes out of the station anyway and stay that way for the rest of the journey. I’m fine with that, though there are occasions when it would be useful to have them.

[ 23. October 2013, 11:51: Message edited by: Ariel ]
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
Check what your PAYG supplier offers. I have a PAYG deal that means I top up at least £10 per month, I get unlimited texts and 4GB internet download for the next month. The trade off is more expensive phone calls which I tend to be able to charge to work, so the better deal for me.

There were other options I could have signed up to.
 
Posted by Honest Ron Bacardi (# 38) on :
 
Some of the deals vary a lot. I have a PAYG phone (I live in the sticks - no mobile signal at all on many days). So it's mostly for the odd call or internet use when away from home. I'm with BT so have free access to tens of thousands of free WiFi hotspots around the country, and data charges are capped at £1/day. Though I try to locate a free WiFi signal before switching 3G on.
 
Posted by Wesley J (# 6075) on :
 
Silly question - possibly there's quite a straightforward answer:

I'm playing around with a 2nd monitor, an HP 2710m, which is currently connected to my nice little Alienware M11x R2 lappie.

When creating an enlarged desktop (which extends over both screens), I notice the desktop part on the external monitor always seems to be positioned to the right of the native one (here, the laptop screen).

Is there a way to change this, so that the main screen could be extended towards the left? (For practical reasons, the big screen needs to physically be on that side.)

Thanks. [Smile]
 
Posted by the giant cheeseburger (# 10942) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Wesley J:
Silly question - possibly there's quite a straightforward answer:

I'm playing around with a 2nd monitor, an HP 2710m, which is currently connected to my nice little Alienware M11x R2 lappie.

When creating an enlarged desktop (which extends over both screens), I notice the desktop part on the external monitor always seems to be positioned to the right of the native one (here, the laptop screen).

Is there a way to change this, so that the main screen could be extended towards the left? (For practical reasons, the big screen needs to physically be on that side.)

Thanks. [Smile]

If you're using a sensible version of Windows, right-click on the desktop and choose "Screen Resolution." You'll be presented with a graphical representation of the extended desktop arrangement in the top third of the resulting control panel, simply drag monitor two over the left from its current position on the right.

If you're using Windows 8, you're on your own as far as help from me goes as I have no clue about the various ways they buggered it up for users who want a computer OS on a computer instead of a mobile OS - and no interest in finding out either.
 
Posted by Wesley J (# 6075) on :
 
Ha! Saw that, but think I omitted to then actually click 'apply' - and as you say, indeed it works on this Win 7 machine now.

Many thanks indeed, TGC! [Overused] [Yipee]
 
Posted by Sparrow (# 2458) on :
 
Another very basic "idiot's" question - I have some BBC programmes on my desktop PC that I have downloaded with iPlayer; I understand it is possible to view them on my TV rather than on the desktop screen. Is this possible, and if so, how do I do it?
 
Posted by Wesley J (# 6075) on :
 
I'd say it's basically a question of using the telly as a monitor. Most recent TVs have a number of video-in connections of one kind or another.

What's put me off so far, is that my telly is in the other corner of the room and long video cables are really expensive, and are apparently losing transmission strength the longer they are. This applies, AFAIK, at least to scart, HDMI and VGA connections.

I think it mostly depends on a) the video-out connections on your puter, b) the video-in connections on your telly, and c) how far from the puter the telly is.

Perhaps could say what the aforementioned outs and ins are, if you like.

Curious to see what others can add to this.
 
Posted by Jengie Jon (# 273) on :
 
Well actually my parents new TV is more than just a monitor with a TV receiver. It connects to the local network, and it certainly has a USB port on which you can load a USB stick and look at pictures. I suspect a fair few now have small computers on board. However note whose TV it is. I do not have TV and therefore my expertise in this area is minimal.

Jengie
 
Posted by the giant cheeseburger (# 10942) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Wesley J:
What's put me off so far, is that my telly is in the other corner of the room and long video cables are really expensive, and are apparently losing transmission strength the longer they are. This applies, AFAIK, at least to scart, HDMI and VGA connections.

It sounds like you've been taken in by the FUD that the big corporate stores use to get you to buy overpriced HDMI cables which can easily be well over 80% profit margin.

Signal degradation isn't an issue up to (officially) 30 metres or (unofficially) 50 metres) so long as you aren't joining more than three cables together, even with cheaper cables. This is because HDMI sends digital signals,1's an 0's are a lot more resilient than analogue signals with colour levels. The same applies to DVI cables, which are the same as the video part of HDMI).

SCART, VGA, composite (uses a single yellow RCA plug) and component (uses three coloured RCA plugs) are all analogue signals which do degrade with distance or due to interference affecting poorly shielded cables.

A general tip for anybody with HDMI cables - don't buy the expensive branded cables that the big consumer electronics stores try to sell you when you buy a new TV or DVR. Instead buy a cheap cable from a budget PC component store or over eBay with PayPal payment from a vendor in your country (to get the protection of your country's consumer laws), the quality will be exactly the same but without paying for the flashy packaging or the 80-90% profit margin for the store. I've had a 10 metre HDMI cable that cost $14 for nearly four years now without a single problem, but you can easily pay up to $80 at a big box electronics store for a 2-3 metre cable.
 
Posted by Wesley J (# 6075) on :
 
That's good to know! I've just got a 3-metre HDMI cable for about $25, grrr... - but as I didn't have time to shop around... ach well. The 1.5m one was $20, which really made me wonder! I mean, if 1.5m more is only plus $5, there's something fishy going on. [Paranoid]

I'll look into cheaper outlets from now on. Thank you, again. [Smile]
 
Posted by the giant cheeseburger (# 10942) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Wesley J:

That's good to know! I've just got a 3-metre HDMI cable for about $25, grrr... - but as I didn't have time to shop around... ach well. The 1.5m one was $20, which really made me wonder! I mean, if 1.5m more is only plus $5, there's something fishy going on. [Paranoid]

I'll look into cheaper outlets from now on. Thank you, again. [Smile]

That just means that the fixed costs per unit are a high proportion of the cost for cables shorter than about 10 metres. In terms of materials and production costs, the connections at each end are the most expensive parts while the length of wire between is cheap. You can also add in the almost fixed costs of the supply chain (freight companies would charge for goods like by volume rather than weight) and the fixed portion of the retailer's markup which coverts overheads.

There is a royalty included in the price of HDMI cable or device which is fixed rather than being dependent on length. For a manufacturer producing less than 10,000 units per year it is a US$5,000 fee plus US$1 per unit, for over 10,000 units per year it is US$10,000 plus US$0.15 per unit or US$0.05 per unit if the HDMI logo is used.

Just for fun, there is also a royalty paid every time you purchase a 802.11 (aka WiFi) device. Thanks to WiFi being an invention of the public-owned Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation, that all flows back to the people of Australia and the world in the form of a healthy funding source for our scientific researchers. The CSIRO also invented the photocopier, aircraft landing guidance system, polymer banknotes and the radio telescope.

[ 04. November 2013, 12:14: Message edited by: the giant cheeseburger ]
 
Posted by Sparrow (# 2458) on :
 
Another dummy's question .... when I look at signing up for Twitter, it seems to want me to provide both a username and an email address. So is the email address private, or does it show on tweets and messages? I kind of want to remain anonymous and not have to show my email address.
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
The e-mail address remains private on Twitter. Your user name is what is used for tweets and that shows as an @username.
 
Posted by Sparrow (# 2458) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Curiosity killed ...:
The e-mail address remains private on Twitter. Your user name is what is used for tweets and that shows as an @username.

Great, thanks!
 
Posted by Pearl B4 Swine (# 11451) on :
 
I can't view U-tube things any more. Links work OK, but all I have is a black rectangle. Have I done something to cause this? Can I fix it (with your help) ?
 
Posted by the giant cheeseburger (# 10942) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Pearl B4 Swine:
I can't view U-tube things any more. Links work OK, but all I have is a black rectangle. Have I done something to cause this? Can I fix it (with your help) ?

The most probable cause is that your installed copy of Flash is out of date and therefore disabled to protect your security. To get the current version, go to http://get.adobe.com/flashplayer and follow the prompts to install it again.

If that doesn't work, what OS and what web browser are you running?
 
Posted by Moo (# 107) on :
 
[Help]

I just bought a Kindle Paperwhite. I have never owned an e-reader before.

The instructions say to begin by charging the battery from my computer; they provide a cable for the purpose.

When I plugged it in this morning, I got a message on my computer that the thing I plugged in was not interacting with the computer. They suggested I make sure I had all necessary updates. My computer downloads updates automatically, but I found a few updates that hadn't been installed, and installed them. It didn't do any good so I turned off the computer and tried again a few hours later.

This time, the computer didn't even tell me that the thing I plugged in wasn't interacting. What do I do now?

In case you haven't noticed, I'm computer-illiterate.

Moo
 
Posted by the giant cheeseburger (# 10942) on :
 
If all you're using the computer for with the Kindle is to charge it, it doesn't matter that the computer doesn't recognise the device. That's actually quite standard for USB-powered devices which only use the port as a power source, such as desk fans or drink can coolers.

If the Kindle is not getting the power supply (it should have some sort of charging indicator) then you have a low-power USB 1.1 port when charging a device like a Kindle, iPad or smartphone requires a high-power USB 2.0 or USB 3.0 port. The solution to that is simple - get a USB charger which plugs into the wall directly, the branding doesn't matter as it is all standard.
 
Posted by Firenze (# 619) on :
 
I have a plug which takes a USB cable. I switch in either the iPad or the Kindle cable to charge either device.

It is a lot less bother than firing up a PC, and, of course, goes in the suitcase (with appropriate adapter if going abroad) when I travel.

What I want is for that - or something similar - to serve as a universal charger. At the moment, the camera and phone need their own individual ones.
 
Posted by Moo (# 107) on :
 
My USB port is labeled 2.0, and the Kindle gives no sign of charging.

I ordered an AC adapter yesterday evening. I have given up on the computer.

Moo
 
Posted by mousethief (# 953) on :
 
Hey Windows 7 gurus: my stupid taskbar keeps getting stuck in the "on" position, obscuring the bottom cm or so of my screen. I can make it go away by shutting off explorer and turning it back on, but it's become a multiple-times-daily occurrence now. Thoughts?

[ 18. November 2013, 16:07: Message edited by: mousethief ]
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
Moo,

Did the Kindle ever charge from your computer?
 
Posted by Eutychus (# 3081) on :
 
Can one have too many Skype contacts?

By which I mean, is having too many Skype contacts a possible source of sluggishness in general computer performance?
 
Posted by the giant cheeseburger (# 10942) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Eutychus:
By which I mean, is having too many Skype contacts a possible source of sluggishness in general computer performance?

I wouldn't think so, Skype is an important enough program for Microsoft that they would patch it pretty quickly if it was having memory leak issues.

The usual suspects for generally lethargic performance would be a low amount of hard drive space, bloated anti-virus programs (I've seen computers infected with viruses running better than computers infected with Norton products) and too many background processes.
 
Posted by Firenze (# 619) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by The5thMary:
Or more insane than I already am!

Just this week a white box keeps popping up over every webpage and actually, ANY time my wife and I do anything on our laptop. I did a Yahoo search on this specific message and it seems like a pretty common problem but yet no one had any tips on how to get rid of it--well, there IS a very complicated YouTube video about it but I couldn't follow it and gave up, curling into a fetal position in a corner of my office. Please help!

Text inside little white box sez: Updater by SweetPacks thisValue: SyntaxError:Unexpected token s


 
Posted by Alban (# 9047) on :
 
Greetings Mary
Looks like an extension you don't want.
It could be called Web Assistant or Updater by SweetPacks.It needs to be turned off or uninstalled.
To get at the extensions and eradicate them: Guessing you're using Google Chrome, for me it is open the edit menu, click preferences and down the left choose extensions. YMMV however.
 
Posted by The5thMary (# 12953) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Alban:
Greetings Mary
Looks like an extension you don't want.
It could be called Web Assistant or Updater by SweetPacks.It needs to be turned off or uninstalled.
To get at the extensions and eradicate them: Guessing you're using Google Chrome, for me it is open the edit menu, click preferences and down the left choose extensions. YMMV however.

Thank you, thank you, thank you, Alban! Your instructions weren't quite correct for Google Chrome but I was able to figure out what to do and when I looked at what extensions had been enabled, there it was: SweetPacks! I disabled it and felt like crying--that's how damned annoying that little message box was! Again, many thanks! [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Wesley J (# 6075) on :
 
I seem to have momentarily lost my Advanced Geekiness, but gained beepiness - here's a question to warning beeps on Alienware laptops.

When waking up my M11x R2 from hibernation (bought spring 2011, Win7 64bit Ultimate) the other day, there were some dreaded beeps, a threesome of them, and the wake-up screen seemed to be stuck. According to various DELL and Alienware support websites, 3 beeps seem to indicate chipset failure. However, upon pressing the power button, force-shut down, and restart, all appears to be fine now.

To be on the safe side, I did a backup of the machine, and let it run several hours of diagnostic tests, i.e. the extended test programme in pre-boot mode - no problems found.

Any suggestions on how to proceed? Treat it especially carefully? Do further tests?

I'm using the wee liddle machine daily, also en route - perfect size for travelling. And should it really give up the alien, errm, ghost after less than 3 years? No more warranty of course. [Paranoid]

Thanks. [Smile]
 
Posted by Thyme (# 12360) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by the giant cheeseburger:
quote:
Originally posted by Eutychus:
By which I mean, is having too many Skype contacts a possible source of sluggishness in general computer performance?

I wouldn't think so, Skype is an important enough program for Microsoft that they would patch it pretty quickly if it was having memory leak issues.

The usual suspects for generally lethargic performance would be a low amount of hard drive space, bloated anti-virus programs (I've seen computers infected with viruses running better than computers infected with Norton products) and too many background processes.

My laptop got very sluggish and at first I assumed I needed a new machine. But I had a look at all the installed programs and found loads of stuff like toolbars and things that just seemed to have installed themselves without me realising.

Uninstalling everything that wasn't necessary or I didn't recognise helped. I reckoned that if I really needed it I would get a warning, and that things could easily be reinstalled. This helped.

A bit later I got a new netbook with windows 8 and this was so fast plus I like it and wanted to be able to sync everything so I decided to install it onto the old machine. WOW! That made a huge difference.

I've also discovered that with windows 8 you can do something called a 'refresh' which reformats everything without clearing your personal settings. So it's like totally clearing the hard drive but not quite.

Part of this process involved getting rid of AVG security and firewall as windows 8 comes with its own security programme. I'm sure AVG slowed things down, although to be fair, I never had any virus problems all the years I had it.

So, failing other solutions I would now use the refresh feature or uninstall everything and start from scratch again.
 
Posted by Eutychus (# 3081) on :
 
I've poked around a bit and looked in msconfig. There I discovered that my computer (Windows 7) is set to "selective startup" but with one of the boxes - load startup items - neither checked nor empty (I'm not sure what the correct term for this is), which is hampering my search for a solution: see here.

If I check it, the radio button returns to "normal startup". Any guesses as to why this should have come about or whether it's better to have it checked or unchecked?
 
Posted by Sparrow (# 2458) on :
 
I want to put some of my own documents on my Kindle. Some of them are in sections and I would like to put a table of contents at the front of the document, with links that I can click on to take me directly to that section of the document. Is there any way of doing this?
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Eutychus:
I've poked around a bit and looked in msconfig. There I discovered that my computer (Windows 7) is set to "selective startup" but with one of the boxes - load startup items - neither checked nor empty (I'm not sure what the correct term for this is), which is hampering my search for a solution: see here.

If I check it, the radio button returns to "normal startup". Any guesses as to why this should have come about or whether it's better to have it checked or unchecked?

Sorry, just saw this. Are you having problems? If you are, here is a page which can help you work through what might be causing the issue.
 
Posted by Alban (# 9047) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sparrow:
I want to put some of my own documents on my Kindle. Some of them are in sections and I would like to put a table of contents at the front of the document, with links that I can click on to take me directly to that section of the document. Is there any way of doing this?

I've had a little bit of a play with Sigil which edits epub documents. It might be what you're after, or fiddling with it might be too much like work for something simple.
 
Posted by Sparrow (# 2458) on :
 
It's ok thanks, I found an answer on the Amazon kindle forum.
 
Posted by Huia (# 3473) on :
 
My two MP3 players died some months ago [Waterworks] and I have been looking for a device to replace them. After talking to a bloke in a techie shop I think the ipod nano 7 may be the best thing to replace them. (I don't want the shuffle because it doesn't have the FM radio capacity). I'm just checking in here to see if anyone has any other possible ideas. All I really want is to play my music and listen to the radio.

Also does anyone know if it would fit headphones? I know it comes with the ipod standard earbuds but these necessitate removing my hearing aids which increases the possibility of losing them, besides which the audiologist has said earbuds are not a good idea for me.

Oh, and it comes in purple, so it's got to be good [Biased]

Huia
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
Huia,

The Apple's are lovely products, but if you are not in the Apple ecosystem, you might consider SanDisk. They've been in the MP3 business longer than Apple and do a good product.
 
Posted by Jengie Jon (# 273) on :
 
I can vouch for the Sandisk coming in purple as well, I bought one for my niece for her birthday! I have used Sandisks, and they have 3.5mm plug for microphones so you can buy headphones with that as a connector.


The Ipod Nano seems to have three options to connect. A lightening connector that connects its own earpods, a 3.5 mm jack that will connect it to many headphones and bluetooth which means you can connect bluetooth headphones as well. Apple in the UK also do Headphones but these seem to often use 3.5mm jack so I can see no reason why a much cheaper pair should not do.

Me I "upgraded" to Sony when my Sandisk failed, three to four years of really quite tough treatment. Not heavy use but random connections to various speakers, being left in cars and played sometimes for twelve hours in one session. Sony is almost as bad as apple for propriety stuff, but they have 3.5 mm jack which means I can easily find both earphones and speakers that I can attach to it although no Bluetooth.

Jengie

[ 27. December 2013, 21:04: Message edited by: Jengie Jon ]
 
Posted by Wesley J (# 6075) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Wesley J:
I seem to have momentarily lost my Advanced Geekiness, but gained beepiness - here's a question to warning beeps on Alienware laptops.

When waking up my M11x R2 from hibernation (bought spring 2011, Win7 64bit Ultimate) the other day, there were some dreaded beeps, a threesome of them, and the wake-up screen seemed to be stuck. According to various DELL and Alienware support websites, 3 beeps seem to indicate chipset failure. However, upon pressing the power button, force-shut down, and restart, all appears to be fine now.

To be on the safe side, I did a backup of the machine, and let it run several hours of diagnostic tests, i.e. the extended test programme in pre-boot mode - no problems found.

Any suggestions on how to proceed? Treat it especially carefully? Do further tests?

I'm using the wee liddle machine daily, also en route - perfect size for travelling. And should it really give up the alien, errm, ghost after less than 3 years? No more warranty of course. [Paranoid]

Thanks. [Smile]

The problem seems to have sorted out itself - never had the slightest problem or beep since. Am keeping the backup routine though.

Happy Wes. [Smile]
 
Posted by Drifting Star (# 12799) on :
 
Huia, I replaced my iPod with a Sony Walkman ( this one ) because it has a stupendous battery life. It takes standard headphones, including the ones from my old iPod, from my mobile and my big earmuff ones.
 
Posted by Huia (# 3473) on :
 
Thanks, that looks interesting DS. I like the idea of being able to recharge via a plug into the wall too. Both my MP3 players were Sony as is my laptop. I think a visit to the sony shop is in order.
 
Posted by Frank Mitchell (# 17946) on :
 
No mention of Linux on this page. If you have a previous PC which you're not using for anything else, transfer any data from it which you might want in future, then install Linux. Linux is a form of Unix, so you may want to read up on it and find out about Disk Partitions and File Systems, because it's safer just to devote your entire old computer to it. Choose Debian Linux, the i386 version if doubtful. The first DVD in the series does the install with alot of free software still available. Then you may want the second DVD for various reasons. The third DVD is probably redundant, because anything else you need can be downloaded in Debian Package form.
 
Posted by Firenze (# 619) on :
 
Frank Mitchell, we do have Linux users on The Ship - but the purpose of this thread is more of an A&E for urgent computer problems, rather than discussion of the merits of a particular OS per se.

I am sure that as and when a Linux-based issue does arise, your contribution will be invaluable.

Firenze
Heaven Host

 
Posted by no prophet (# 15560) on :
 
Which Android phone mobile browser to use? Web searching is useless and most info is from pundits and fan clubs. My needs are webpage viewing, not viewing videos or needing a cloud, not needing to resemble a computer, not needing to synchronise between phone and confuser.

Thus far have tried the Android browser, Firefox, Chrome, Maxthon, Dolphin and Opera. So far thinking Opera is the most intuitive. I'd like to hear what others think.

((And I'll mention that Android is a distribution of Linux for Frank's benefit: I've used only Linux for about 8 years.))
 
Posted by Sparrow (# 2458) on :
 
I've been going through my music collection on my PC, culled from a variety of sources, a lot from ripped CDs, some recorded from radio. Nearly all converted to MP3 format. However a lot of them have come out very faint compared to others. Is there any way I can make them louder - I have to turn my speaker volume right up to maximum, and then the OK tracks blast my eardrums!
 
Posted by LeRoc (# 3216) on :
 
quote:
Sparrow: I've been going through my music collection on my PC, culled from a variety of sources, a lot from ripped CDs, some recorded from radio. Nearly all converted to MP3 format. However a lot of them have come out very faint compared to others. Is there any way I can make them louder - I have to turn my speaker volume right up to maximum, and then the OK tracks blast my eardrums!
I know that the program iTunes has a function that allows you to play tracks on equal volume, I guess that other players have this as well.
 
Posted by BroJames (# 9636) on :
 
Audacity which is free and has Windows, Mac and Linux versions has a very good utility for increasing the overall volume of audio files.
 
Posted by Alban (# 9047) on :
 
It's been a while since I've used it, but to the best of my recall, MP3Gain did this quite well, feed it a collection and it'll set them all to the same volume.
 
Posted by Eutychus (# 3081) on :
 
I occasionally use Dragon Naturally Speaking, v11. OS: Windows 7.

Annoyingly, there are what seem to be software conflicts that cause Dragon to crash and require me to reboot the computer to start using it again. I've identified Adobe (PDF and Flash) as one culprit, so I've learned to steer clear of those while using Dragon. But something else here is causing it to crash too. I think it might be browser-related. When I look in Task Manager to try and identify offending processes, I can't see anything obvious (e.g. no Flash running). Does anyone have any ideas?

[ 16. January 2014, 14:19: Message edited by: Eutychus ]
 
Posted by Late Paul (# 37) on :
 
Linux users: what's your preferred music app and why?

Thanks
 
Posted by Antisocial Alto (# 13810) on :
 
I have a networking question which may be a bit lengthy- hosts please advise if this is not the appropriate thread and I'll move it elsewhere.

I'm in the middle of trying to set up a wired network in our house (we have an older home and wi-fi has trouble getting through our walls) and I am puzzling over how to get a decent number of ports that can all connect to the internet at once. According to some online sources I am seeing, if I use a network switch, only one device attached to the switch can connect to the internet at a time. If, say, I wanted to stream a movie on the computer at the same time my husband was playing an online PS3 game, the switch couldn't do that and both devices would both have to be connected to a router instead. Is this right?

I'm working from an Instructable that suggests using a switch to create lots of ports and it doesn't mention only one being usable at a time.

We have about 9 devices that I would like to be able to connect simultaneously (VoIP phones, tv, computer and a couple gaming systems). Is my only option to get, like, three routers?
 
Posted by Alban (# 9047) on :
 
LatePaul. I run Ubuntu.
Music App? Define Music App.
For playing music, VLC - simple, plays everything, and I'm used to it from before I defenestrated.
Recording and mixing music, Audacity. Simple, stable and usable.
More in depth recording type fiddling around, currently LMMS, though I'm looking at some others as well.
DJ type musiccy stuff, Mixxx looks pretty decent indeed.
Ripping it from CDs, Asunder.
Hopefully that list's of some use. There's so many apps out there, and so many of them not as useful as you'd hope, I understand your quest.
 
Posted by balaam (# 4543) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Antisocial Alto:

I'm in the middle of trying to set up a wired network in our house (we have an older home and wi-fi has trouble getting through our walls) and I am puzzling over how to get a decent number of ports that can all connect to the internet at once. According to some online sources I am seeing, if I use a network switch, only one device attached to the switch can connect to the internet at a time.

I know it exists, because a hotel I recently stayed at had one of those plug-into-the-mains type of wi-fi extension thingies in the room. Sorry that I'm not techie enough to give any more help, but the solution is out there.
 
Posted by Jay-Emm (# 11411) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Late Paul:
Linux users: what's your preferred music app and why?

Thanks

Tend to use VLC at the moment as it was already installed (when on Ubuntu used whatever was on also), and is adequate.

I used 'abcde' to copy CD's so I don't have to swap them over all the time (and that did feel a lot less obtrusive than doing it via rhythmbox where I gave up).
 
Posted by Honest Ron Bacardi (# 38) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Antisocial Alto:
I have a networking question which may be a bit lengthy- hosts please advise if this is not the appropriate thread and I'll move it elsewhere.

I'm in the middle of trying to set up a wired network in our house (we have an older home and wi-fi has trouble getting through our walls) and I am puzzling over how to get a decent number of ports that can all connect to the internet at once. According to some online sources I am seeing, if I use a network switch, only one device attached to the switch can connect to the internet at a time. If, say, I wanted to stream a movie on the computer at the same time my husband was playing an online PS3 game, the switch couldn't do that and both devices would both have to be connected to a router instead. Is this right?

I'm working from an Instructable that suggests using a switch to create lots of ports and it doesn't mention only one being usable at a time.

We have about 9 devices that I would like to be able to connect simultaneously (VoIP phones, tv, computer and a couple gaming systems). Is my only option to get, like, three routers?

AA - I suspect you have been reading a document talking about commercial networks. Technically, it's true that the commonest configuration would be to have one machine connected to the internet (called the gateway server), and that would be in turn connected to the Local Area Network (LAN).

Domestic networks are a lot simpler. The broadband router that you normally get when you sign up contains a small gateway server built in. It also has a DHCP (Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol) server which hands out unique addresses to all the machines (computers, phones, etc.) connected. Because they are all given unique addresses, the router can channel all communications between the internet and each device, so that the internet connection can be shared simultaneously.

So you only need a single router. In fact, nearly all routers come with a switch built in - usually 4 ports. If you need more you can simply buy an extra switch (hub) and connect to to one of the ports on the router.

But if you are using wired networking over the mains then you'll just connect the hub via an ethernet port to an adapter. Here's a short article on the powerline networking side of things.

I hope I've understood your problem, but let me know if not.

[ 19. January 2014, 16:05: Message edited by: Honest Ron Bacardi ]
 
Posted by balaam (# 4543) on :
 
Antisocial Alto.

A wi-fi extender like this one works in the same way. You'll still have to connect the rourte to the mains system as in Honest Ron Bacardi's wired extension above.
 
Posted by mousethief (# 953) on :
 
I want to reply to an email in gmail but not send the file back to them that they sent to me. There appears to be no way to do this; I HAVE to send back the file they sent me.

What am I missing here? How can I uncouple this attachment? All the hacks I found online involved installing a mail reader on my computer and synching it to my gmail account, and I refuse to do that, it's inane. It might as well be Microsoft to need a kluge that stupid.
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by mousethief:
I want to reply to an email in gmail but not send the file back to them that they sent to me. There appears to be no way to do this; I HAVE to send back the file they sent me.

What am I missing here? How can I uncouple this attachment? All the hacks I found online involved installing a mail reader on my computer and synching it to my gmail account, and I refuse to do that, it's inane. It might as well be Microsoft to need a kluge that stupid.

I sent an attached file, a pdf, to my gmail account from a different mail provider and replied back. The file did not show. Could you have hot forward instead?
 
Posted by mousethief (# 953) on :
 
I think what happened was, I thought it was forwarding it because it still appeared on the original. When I actually did it to myself*, I saw that it didn't send it back.

When I tried forwarding, there was an X I could click to delete the attachment.

All is well. Thanks!

_____
*get your mind out of the gutter.
 
Posted by Doc Tor (# 9748) on :
 
A somewhat technical question follows:

I'm running Win7 on two new computers, and have the same problem on both. Trying to log into webmail, I get the response
quote:
Secure Connection Failed

An error occurred during a connection to identity.xxxxxxxxxx.com. Cannot communicate securely with peer: no common encryption algorithm(s). (Error code: ssl_error_no_cypher_overlap)

Now, I've tried pretty much everything. I've turned Java on and off, the firewall on and off, the whole virus protection thing on and off, and nothing works, running it on Firefox, IE or Chrome. Nothing works.

It's a bit of an arse, and I'd like to be able to fix it. Any ideas?
 
Posted by Doc Tor (# 9748) on :
 
As a further datapoint, Firefox seems unable to detect updates, and Thunderbird reports that something is trying to spoof it when it tries to update itself.
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
Sounds very virusy to me, Doc Tor.

Try running a utility such as Malwarebytes to detect problem software. Run the free version first, you don't wish to transmit payment information from an infected computer. Running this, or your anti-virus, in Safe Mode is sometimes more effective.
 
Posted by Jengie Jon (# 273) on :
 
Does this help?

Jengie
 
Posted by Doc Tor (# 9748) on :
 
It's not a virus - my newest computer has this problem, and it's factory fresh. And JJ, I've followed the instructions on your link before and it's a no-go.

This problem is browser-independent, which makes me think it's the way I connect to the internets. I'm working off a relatively old cable modem and separate wireless router, and I'm wondering if the router's the problem - that it's not exactly compatible with Win7 or the latest 64bit machines.

I might try and connect directly to the internet tomorrow and see if that helps - I've another, much newer, modem/router that's just sitting in a box behind me that I've never needed to plug in.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
The SSL error messages ring a bell. I had a persistent problem with a router for a long time which wouldn't let me connect to certain sites. Including the local library and other completely harmless ones. I didn't know at first whether it was the router or my pc, a virus or anything else, and spent literally hours trying to figure this out.

As the interface and instruction leaflet for the router were in Chinglish with no explanation of any of the acronyms on the various menus, I was at my wits' end and so was the technician I called in. I took the plunge, bought another router, plugged it in, and it worked immediately without any problems. You might want to try your newer router and see if that cures your connection problem.
 
Posted by Late Paul (# 37) on :
 
Thanks to Alban and Jay-Emm. I meant music app as in playback.

I recently switched to using Xubuntu and it comes with gmusicbrowser by default. It seems the current fad is for minimalist music players.

I tried out various ones (as I have in the past) and am flicking between Clementine and Banshee. The later I've used for a while, and have accumulated a lot of metadata in, but is tbh not the most stable thing in the world. Clementine is quite nice but well see re: metadata. That's how they get you...

Anyway thought I'd report back. Thanks again.
 
Posted by Jengie Jon (# 273) on :
 
Doc_Tor

If you have not done it before, then do what I have learnt to do, google the error code precisely in quotes. Then think through the "solutions" given for the nearest matches. You often can find some clue to what is actually wrong.

Jengie
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
Originally posted in Hell, but I thought others might benefit from the discussion.
quote:
Originally posted by Francophile:
quote:
Originally posted by Jengie Jon:
I will second that, mine decided not to charge last night. So this morning I was faced with a dead phone. Unplugged it from the powersocket and replugged into another showed it was just sulking.

Jengie

Mine's been doing that. Sometimes it resolutely won't charge, other times it obliges. Can anyone explain the problem?
Could be a poor connection caused a damaged wire in the charging cable, damage to the charging port in the mobile or the transformer.
Could be a software problem in the mobile. This might be solved by updating the software or resetting the mobile. A caution, though. Doing either could cause loss of information. Read the steps to do so and backup all important info.
Could also be the battery. Many mobile phone batteries have circuits. Or it could be nearing the end of its life.
 
Posted by Doc Tor (# 9748) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ariel:
You might want to try your newer router and see if that cures your connection problem.

I did, and it didn't.

Ho hum.
 
Posted by Eutychus (# 3081) on :
 
Applying JJ's method took me here for Firefox. The suggested fixes in about:config look harmless and reversible enough. Worth a try?
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
A word of advice: if you are tweaking a browser, it is not a bad idea to have another installed. Just in case.
 
Posted by Doc Tor (# 9748) on :
 
I have three browsers - FF, Chrome and IE. None of them seem to be able to handle the security certificates right, which makes me believe it's further down the pipe than the browser.

I'm looking at Java, currently, but it's actually pretty bloody complicated and I have no idea which buttons to tweak.
 
Posted by Eutychus (# 3081) on :
 
I Am Not An Expert but the Firefox error suggests it is to do with how you access https sites - your mailbox is probably https too. I have no idea if this helps.
 
Posted by Sparrow (# 2458) on :
 
I'm currently confined to my laptop as my desktop Pc is out of action. The email programme is Windows Live Mail. There are just a couple of things I just cannot work out how to do - to resend a message I have already sent once, from the Outbox, and how to edit a message either for replying or forwarding on. Any experts out there who knows?
 
Posted by Pigwidgeon (# 10192) on :
 
My 15-month-old PC has been acting up (appointment at repair shop next week). Sometimes it just shuts down (totally off) in the middle of whatever I'm doing. Other times the screen goes black with the message "Unsupported signal. Please check the device output." When I Googled this notice, all of the posts seemed to be about using a computer hooked up to a television. Mine is not. Any suggestions would be appreciated.
 
Posted by Alban (# 9047) on :
 
I'd tend towards trying to update the graphics card drivers as a starting point. Good ol' helpful error messages.
 
Posted by Sandemaniac (# 12829) on :
 
Hi everyone, I come to the altar of technology seeking help from the high priests thereof. My dear mother, so Luddite that she makes me look like a NASA programmer, has just bought a laptop with Windows 8 installed.

As she's struggling with the thing, Celtic Knotweed and I are going over next weekend to try to sort her out (God help us).

As far as I can ascertain, Windows 8 is installed but it's wanting to download the update to 8.1. Can anyone confirm that this is what it's doing? Neither of us can help as our machines run 7, the Knotweed's workplace has only just adopted XP, and my workplace is refusing to let 8 in on pain of death! The plan is to take a Dummies guide over (hence why it would help to know if it's trying to upgrade itself, so we can get the right version).

Can anyone think of anything else we ought to cover?

Thanks!

AG and CK
 
Posted by Pigwidgeon (# 10192) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Alban:
I'd tend towards trying to update the graphics card drivers as a starting point.

Thanks, but you've already lost me. How do I do that?
 
Posted by TonyK (# 35) on :
 
Sandemanic

I'm certainly not any sort of an expert, but my newish laptop, delivered with Windows 8, updated itself to W8.1 when Microsoft released it. So that's probably not a problem.

As for Windows 8, of whichever version, we hates it!! Takes quite a bit of getting used to - fortunately the sort of work I do on the laptop is stuff from the desktop display, not those 'orrible icon-like panels!

A Dummies guide will, I'm sure, be invaluable - perhaps I'd better get one...
 
Posted by Celtic Knotweed (# 13008) on :
 
Thanks TonyK, Dummies 8.1 guide on the shopping list. Just need to sort out the download. Knowing Sandemaniac's mother, there will be a severe lack of anti-virus software on there (unless it came with some). [Roll Eyes]

Does anyone have suggestions for anti-virus? She's unlikely to use her machine for more than email, Amazon and possibly e-bay. The parental Knotweeds have Norton and Sophos on Windows and Mac machines respectively (think that those may have been work-supplied), which works well for them, and I've been running AVG on the old (XP) laptop, and a free month of McAfee on the new (Windows 7) - so I need to consider what to put on my machine before the free month runs out as well!
 
Posted by TonyK (# 35) on :
 
Celtic Knotweed - Windows 8 has Microsoft's own anti-virus built in - called Windows Defender ( see here )

All the reviews I've seen rate it pretty highly - even though it's free!
 
Posted by Thyme (# 12360) on :
 
Yes, I have windows 8 and just use the windows defender. It had good reviews and so far I haven't had any problems. (Trying to type with my fingers crossed [Big Grin] )
 
Posted by balaam (# 4543) on :
 
I have been using Windows 8 for a year. In that time only 2 viruses (virii/viri??) wave got through Defender and been picked up by my anti virus. It's worth having one of the free on-line virus checkers as a back up.
 
Posted by Celtic Knotweed (# 13008) on :
 
Free is not a problem. Free is a Good Thing. If Windows Defender is that good, it will be fine for Mother Maniac. [Smile]

Am going to be playing about with Libre Office on my machine, might not pass that on to her though - depends on how like M$Office the interfaces are, as she prefers to have things that look the same as she uses at work to reduce confusion.
 
Posted by Doc Tor (# 9748) on :
 
A point of information: Miss Tor turned on the new computer this morning, and after booting up normally, was greeted by a black screen with a white mouse cursor, and that was all.

CTL_ALT_DEL worked, but poking at various processes didn't work. Rebooted in safe mode, poked the settings some more. Didn't work.

Safe mode again, then reverted to the last save point (new Win7 downloads on Friday). Rebooted. Fine.

Somewhat relucatant to reload the upgrades, and the internet has conflicting information as to how to fix the problem.
 
Posted by Thyme (# 12360) on :
 
quote:
Am going to be playing about with Libre Office on my machine, might not pass that on to her though - depends on how like M$Office the interfaces are, as she prefers to have things that look the same as she uses at work to reduce confusion. [/QB]
I tried Open Office when I couldn't reinstall my XP Office (had lost the discs). It was fine for basic word processing but I needed to produce labels for a mailshot from an external database and it was hell. It turned out that this is a huge problem with Open Office according to the forums etc.

Finally I used my husbands version of Office (next up after XP I think) and it worked like a charm.

So now I have got Office 365 and I lead a peaceful serene life with it.

Free is good if it works, or you have the computing knowledge to make it work.

Also, Open Office is similar to MS Office, but this is just irritating as it is different enough so things don't work as you expect and you can't work out how they do work. I believe Libre Office is quite similar to Open Office and this Mum prefers MS Office.
 
Posted by Sparrow (# 2458) on :
 
I don't understand this subscription thing with Office 365. Does it mean you HAVE to pay a sub every year to keep updated, and you can't just buy a copy as previously?
 
Posted by Pigwidgeon (# 10192) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sparrow:
I don't understand this subscription thing with Office 365. Does it mean you HAVE to pay a sub every year to keep updated, and you can't just buy a copy as previously?

I asked about this at the Microsoft Store last week. The salesman told me you can do it either way.
 
Posted by The5thMary (# 12953) on :
 
HELP! I accidentally eliminated my wife's Gmail account and she is absolutely on the rampage. Please help or I might have to sleep in a cardboard box on the back stoop for a week...

I was having some buggy issues with Youtube and Gmail so like a dope I just hit reset on Gmail and it apparently got rid of my wife's account.

Is there any way to get it back or is she going to have to set up another account?

Oh, God... I sure hope I can redeem myself... or someone here can redeem me!
 
Posted by The5thMary (# 12953) on :
 
Ah! No cardboard box for me! I actually figured it out for myself! I had to... she was breathing fire and giving me murderous looks... whew! [Ultra confused]
 
Posted by Thyme (# 12360) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Pigwidgeon:
quote:
Originally posted by Sparrow:
I don't understand this subscription thing with Office 365. Does it mean you HAVE to pay a sub every year to keep updated, and you can't just buy a copy as previously?

I asked about this at the Microsoft Store last week. The salesman told me you can do it either way.
I am trying to remember why I went down the subscription route. I think it is because I can install it onto up to five devices, and share it not just one and share it with someone else. I do have to pay annually to keep it, but I think I could revert to a one off payment.

If you don't want this facility you can make a one off payment as previously. I think you still get updates this way.
 
Posted by Thyme (# 12360) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by The5thMary:
Ah! No cardboard box for me! I actually figured it out for myself! I had to... she was breathing fire and giving me murderous looks... whew! [Ultra confused]

Congratulations, how did you do it? I might need to know that.
 
Posted by Alex Cockell (# 7487) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Honest Ron Bacardi:
quote:
Originally posted by Antisocial Alto:
I have a networking question which may be a bit lengthy- hosts please advise if this is not the appropriate thread and I'll move it elsewhere.

I'm in the middle of trying to set up a wired network in our house (we have an older home and wi-fi has trouble getting through our walls) and I am puzzling over how to get a decent number of ports that can all connect to the internet at once. According to some online sources I am seeing, if I use a network switch, only one device attached to the switch can connect to the internet at a time. If, say, I wanted to stream a movie on the computer at the same time my husband was playing an online PS3 game, the switch couldn't do that and both devices would both have to be connected to a router instead. Is this right?

I'm working from an Instructable that suggests using a switch to create lots of ports and it doesn't mention only one being usable at a time.

We have about 9 devices that I would like to be able to connect simultaneously (VoIP phones, tv, computer and a couple gaming systems). Is my only option to get, like, three routers?

AA - I suspect you have been reading a document talking about commercial networks. Technically, it's true that the commonest configuration would be to have one machine connected to the internet (called the gateway server), and that would be in turn connected to the Local Area Network (LAN).

Domestic networks are a lot simpler. The broadband router that you normally get when you sign up contains a small gateway server built in. It also has a DHCP (Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol) server which hands out unique addresses to all the machines (computers, phones, etc.) connected. Because they are all given unique addresses, the router can channel all communications between the internet and each device, so that the internet connection can be shared simultaneously.

So you only need a single router. In fact, nearly all routers come with a switch built in - usually 4 ports. If you need more you can simply buy an extra switch (hub) and connect to to one of the ports on the router.

But if you are using wired networking over the mains then you'll just connect the hub via an ethernet port to an adapter. Here's a short article on the powerline networking side of things.

I hope I've understood your problem, but let me know if not.

Twisted pair cabling can cascade into a hub-and-spoke design. By using
Ethernet hubs connected together via Cat5 twisted pair cabling, terminated in RJ45 plugs, you can extend your eired network to where it needs to be, and other devices plug into these hubs. Your router is then plugged into this network.. you can also segment it out to better balance across the hub that forms part of your router.
 
Posted by The5thMary (# 12953) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Thyme:
quote:
Originally posted by The5thMary:
Ah! No cardboard box for me! I actually figured it out for myself! I had to... she was breathing fire and giving me murderous looks... whew! [Ultra confused]

Congratulations, how did you do it? I might need to know that.
Hmmm. Let me find the exact website where I found the walk-through and I'll post it. [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Wesley J (# 6075) on :
 
I'm happy to report that I've successfully upgraded my trusty 10 y o (!) DELL Inspiron 8600 laptop, on which I first accessed this 'ere Ship, from Win XP Home to Win 7 Professional, via a clean install. Still going strong (the Ship and the lappie, the latter serving now as the kitchen machine). [Smile]

I've used the much cheaper OEM version instead of the costly retail pack. Disadvantage, if any: OEM can only be installed on one specific machine, and not transferred to another computer, should the original one give up the ghost.

General hints as to whether Win 7 will work on an XP machine for the many XP users still out there: Download the 'Windows 7 Upgrade Advisor' from the M$ website (Search Engines are Your Friend: try the tracking-free Startpage.com).

Now - any thoughts on why I should not cough up the extra few $$/££ for Win 7 Ultimate instead of Professional for my last (and powerful) remaining XP machine? Any practical hints? - Ta muchly. [Cool]
 
Posted by Amanda B. Reckondwythe (# 5521) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Wesley J:
Any practical hints?

Under Control Panel, Appearance and Personalization, you can choose "Windows Classic Theme" to make the desktop look as "XP-like" as possible. Gets rids of those annoying super-sized icons cluttering up what used to be called the system tray.
 
Posted by Wesley J (# 6075) on :
 
Yep. Got that, Miss Amanda. I rather meant, why should you buy the Ultimate version instead of Professional?

I've had Windows 7 on the Alienware M11x since 2011.
 
Posted by Adeodatus (# 4992) on :
 
This is my computing face for today - [Frown]

On Thursday my trusty(ish) 5 year old laptop started not booting properly. Eventually I decided to do a full system restoration from disc. The restoration went well but hit problems when Windows (Vista) started downloading updates.

Three attempts at a system restoration later, this afternoon it gave me a message saying "Windows has detected a hard disk error" - and as if on cue, there was a crunching noise and smoke started coming out the back!

Question 1: for a machine of that vintage, repair or get a new one?

Question 2: what's the current wisdom regarding desktop vs. laptop? (I also have a good but basic tablet running Android 4.0, on which I'm typing this.)

[Frown] again, at the thought of forking out 300-odd quid...
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
I would get a new machine. Other bits are likely to start failing.
Though the disparity is much smaller, desktops are still a better value than laptops. And more easily fixed and upgradeable. The only advantage of the laptop is portability.

NOTE TO ANYONE RUNNING WINDOWS VISTA: upgrade to Win 7. Win 7 will run on anything Vista will, run more efficiently and with fewer problems.

NOTE TO ANYONE DOING A REINSTALL OR A MASSIVE SERIES OF UPDATES: Do the updates in small groups. Allowing all updates to attempt to install at the same time can cause more problems than the updates solve.
 
Posted by Palimpsest (# 16772) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Doc Tor:
A point of information: Miss Tor turned on the new computer this morning, and after booting up normally, was greeted by a black screen with a white mouse cursor, and that was all.

CTL_ALT_DEL worked, but poking at various processes didn't work. Rebooted in safe mode, poked the settings some more. Didn't work.

Safe mode again, then reverted to the last save point (new Win7 downloads on Friday). Rebooted. Fine.

Somewhat relucatant to reload the upgrades, and the internet has conflicting information as to how to fix the problem.

It sounds like you accidentally turned on High Contrast Mode. In Windows 8 that's ALT-LEFTSHIFT-PRINTSCREEN. You can fix this in the Windows Control Panel in the Ease of Access Center- Make Computer Easier to See. Other settings are in the Appearance and Personalization section. Ease of Access is also where you go when you accidentally turn on sticky keys or the computer starts reading everything aloud to you. In their defense, the shortcuts for turning these things on are fairly close to the surface so that those who have trouble with seeing or keyboard can turn them on easily. It is a problem for those of us who are fumble fingered (aka dexterity challenged)
 
Posted by Palimpsest (# 16772) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Adeodatus:
This is my computing face for today - [Frown]


Question 1: for a machine of that vintage, repair or get a new one?

Question 2: what's the current wisdom regarding desktop vs. laptop? (I also have a good but basic tablet running Android 4.0, on which I'm typing this.)

Sorry to hear about the disk problem. If I were in your shoes I'd open it up (details on line and see if the scorch marks are all on the hard drive. If so, you can replace the drive fairly inexpensively. It should just slide out of a connector after it's unscrewed and hopefully there's a nice little door for it. If on the other hand you trash it, there's nothing lost.

Two things to consider; if you go the disk replacement route and you have a smallish disk, consider a solid state drive. It will make things much faster and quieter. Do check the price for a replacement.. basic laptops have gotten much cheaper over the years so you may want to buy a shiny new toy.

[ 16. February 2014, 03:32: Message edited by: Palimpsest ]
 
Posted by Adeodatus (# 4992) on :
 
Thanks for the help, lilbuddha and Palimspsest...

... so then along comes a friend (may his name be written in the Book of Life) who says, why not have my old desktop that I don't use much, at least till you've decided what you want?

So here I am, on a clunky old desktop machine that's still quicker than my laptop ever was, running Windows 7 Ultimate. And this is my computing face for this evening: [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Wesley J (# 6075) on :
 
Brilliant! [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Sparrow (# 2458) on :
 
I have just had to say goodbye to my beloved Windows XP and done the upgrade to Windows 7. I installed it from a Win7 3 PC disk that I bought a couple of years ago to upgrade a laptop. Everything seems to have gone fine, it seems to have installed itself ok and has got all the updates from the Microsoft automatic updates, except that it doesn't seem to have installed Service Pack 1.

Is Service Pack 1 vital, or can I manage without it? If I need it, how can I get it?
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
Windows 7 Service Pack 1 No guarantees on the link.

What it does.
Not listed there are other bug fixes and security fixes.
Also, from what I have read, Microsoft will not support your OS if you have not installed SP1.
 
Posted by Sparrow (# 2458) on :
 
Thanks, I managed to locate it on the Microsoft website and downloaded it. Everything now seems to be workign fine.
 
Posted by Sandemaniac (# 12829) on :
 
Having downloaded what I thought was the free version of Malware Bytes, I know find that it's the trial. Uninstalling and downloading again gives me the identically named file, and it still says "Trial"... Any ideas?

AG
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
Go through the process again, looking carefully at the choices? I've run into this myself on various sites. Not on my computer to check.
 
Posted by Sandemaniac (# 12829) on :
 
That's exactly what I did, and still...

AG
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
Is this page the one you accessed?
 
Posted by Sandemaniac (# 12829) on :
 
No, but I think you may have found the root of my woe.

Thanks!

AG
 
Posted by Eutychus (# 3081) on :
 
Is there anyone out there with expert knowledge of fiddling Google rankings? This is not because I want to do so myself [Two face] but because I'm looking at a link which does not appear as a sponsored link and for which normal search algorithms should be a highly unlikely candidate to come out top, or anywhere near (feel free to PM me).

[ 02. April 2014, 17:11: Message edited by: Eutychus ]
 
Posted by Wesley J (# 6075) on :
 
Sorry, afraid can't help you there, Euty. Anyone? [Frown]

Question of my own: I've been playing around with my now upgraded to Win 7 Pro DELL Inspiron 8600 lappie of old. (My first SoF access with that! [Yipee] )

It doesn't seem to recognise now an external voice/fax modem on COM1, the serial port, which worked well in Win XP, both on the same and a different machine. The 'modem query' says:
quote:
The modem failed to respond. Make sure it is properly connected and turned on. If [sic!] it is an internal modem or is connected, verify that the interrupt for the port is properly set.
When I try to update the drivers, it says 'Windows has determined the driver software for your device is already installed.' - The modem is my fax and answerphone which I depend on.

What now, Blue Cow? Any suggestions?

Thank you! [Smile]
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
Wesley J,

Delete the old driver, then install the new.
 
Posted by Wesley J (# 6075) on :
 
Ah yes - sounds eminently reasonable, ta. [Smile]

Haven't got round to it yet. To be on the safe side, and with some of the connectors somewhat wobbly after more than 10 years' use, I've ordered a USB to Serial Port adapter cable, just in case.

In other news, I've just managed to get WLAN reception going again on the old lappie, on Win 7. Which is nice.

Will keep youse posted. Thanks again!
 
Posted by Drifting Star (# 12799) on :
 
I suddenly have a problem with Thunderbird picking up messages from yahoo.co.uk.

Everything was fine, and then in the middle of the afternoon, while the program was running, it just stopped downloading any messages. I had made no changes to anything connected with either Yahoo or Thunderbird, and there have been no updates to Thunderbird.

It is still accessing Yahoo and correctly identifying the number of new messages, then it says it is downloading them but doesn't, then it says there are no new messages to download. If I check again it identifies them again, so it clearly doesn't think they have been downloaded.

I wondered whether this might be caused by something Yahoo have put in place to deal with the heartbleed bug, but if it was there would surely be hordes of people shouting about it, and I can't find anything.

I have checked all the settings on Thunderbird and Yahoo, and everything seems to be as it should. I un-installed and re-installed Thunderbird, with no change.

Experience tells me to blame Yahoo, but I have no idea what to do.
 
Posted by Drifting Star (# 12799) on :
 
Hmph. The culprit is Avast - the antivirus, not the firewall.

Miraculously, within minutes of submitting a ticket to Avast it started working again. I can't really believe they worked that quickly, but it seems very odd - I found nothing at all to change in the Avast control panel, so it wasn't down to me.
 
Posted by Wesley J (# 6075) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Wesley J:
[...] To be on the safe side, and with some of the connectors somewhat wobbly after more than 10 years' use, I've ordered a USB to Serial Port adapter cable, just in case. [...]

Good news here: both Win 7 lappies now recognise the external modem, via USB to serial converter. Phew...!

Now onwards and upwards - occasionally... - and transform the 1TB Win XP deskie into a Win 7 one. Process which IS going to take a while... [Roll Eyes]

Thanks for your encouragement. [Big Grin]

[ 14. April 2014, 12:41: Message edited by: Wesley J ]
 
Posted by Autenrieth Road (# 10509) on :
 
Why is it that itunes pops up when I plug my iphone into my laptop via USB cable in order to recharge the iphone (*)? Am I really supposed to use itunes to also arrange backup (**) for my iphone? Why can't something pop up called something like "iDevice manager" and leave the frigging sound-playing and other audio management capabilities of itunes out of it?


(*) usually I use the wall, but when my laptop is docked it's often convenient to use the USB port, and then my phone is right there instead of across the room. But where is the laptop dock plugged in, you might ask? Well, right next to me, but underneath the desk and a bit too far away for the USB cable to conveniently reach.

(**) the Help Desk person who I went to to get my ipad to start again very kindly did not fall on the floor laughing and pointing when I asked him "should I be backing up my iphone and ipad?"

[ETA: to, too, two, what's an extra or missing letter among frieds...]

[ 14. April 2014, 14:56: Message edited by: Autenrieth Road ]
 
Posted by Autenrieth Road (# 10509) on :
 
*friends

I hate when I make typos on the Edit, and especially really stupid ironic typos.

Go ahead, fall on the floor pointing and laughing [Biased] .
 
Posted by Pearl B4 Swine (# 11451) on :
 
I just bought a new computer, Windows 7. My two MAIN problems are:
A. Skype, which I depended on daily to chat w/friends, won't do diddly-squat. Ir didn't come along with my other programs from XP. It recognizes my name & picture, but won't let me go anywhere. Plenty of ads from Microsoft, tho, to buy this & that. My gut feeling is that the Microsoft/Skype marriage is the trouble. Any thoughts?

B I hate Windows live mail. It's cumbersome and very unfriendly to me. Trying to send email gives me a box that says Unknown errors have occured, blah blah blah.....and then a list of error numbers & puter language junk. What the heck??
 
Posted by ken (# 2460) on :
 
PBS, have you tried deleting and reinstalling Skype?

AR, yes, Apple do expect you to do that all through itunes. Yes its a pain. Because they are Apple and expect everything done their way.

Use a USB wallplug to recharge if its a pain.
 
Posted by Autenrieth Road (# 10509) on :
 
Thanks ken. It's not too much of a pain having itunes pop up when I'm charging. It's less of a pain than having my phone out of reach on the other side of the room, or crawling under my desk on this side of the room to reach the plug. Why I'm really asking is because I'm figuring out how to backup my iDevices, and I wanted some reassurance that this idiotic itunes arrangement that mixes device management with audio playback is really the way it's meant to work (by Apple at least, not by the Platonic ideal of software).

I guess it might make sense for someone for whom music is a major iDevice use, but that's not me. In fact I don't even know how to get music on my iThings yet.

I'll go ahead and trawl through itunes looking for how to backup. Then I'll be safe enough to upgrade to the next patch of iOs. I did the recent "goto fail" upgrade to iOs 7 naked, without a net of a backup, but that was a white knuckles operation that I don't want to repeat.

[ 14. April 2014, 17:34: Message edited by: Autenrieth Road ]
 
Posted by Autenrieth Road (# 10509) on :
 
Another itunes question (I just thought of this now, and didn't want it to get lost in my other reply):

Is there any advantage to switching my music player to itunes, as it prompts me when it pops up?

I know I can turn the prompt off, but so far I've been afraid that answering No will be the wrong permanent choice... although I guess I could google how to change my permanent choice later. Grrrrrr, I don't know why I'm so befuddled by these iDevices. Perhaps it's because they're hyped as being really user-friendly and intuitive, and I don't find them to be so, not in the least.

[ETA: I'm on Windows 7. Is there a good simple player anyone would recommend in the PC world?

I just want to be able to put in a CD player or point to a soundfile, see all the tracks if it's a CD, start wherever I want and have it play to the end, see how long each track is and how far the playback has gotten, and allow me to pause it and restart it. No need for fancypants stuff like Shuffle or Random or Who Knows What Else they add. Or is what I describe already fancypants?]

[ 14. April 2014, 17:38: Message edited by: Autenrieth Road ]
 
Posted by Wesley J (# 6075) on :
 
I've been using VLC player (www.videolan.org/vlc/) for several years and quite like it.
 
Posted by Pearl B4 Swine (# 11451) on :
 
Thank you Ken. I'm Skyping again. [Smile]
And thank you, Wesley !
Will tackle the email tomorrow.
 
Posted by Autenrieth Road (# 10509) on :
 
Thank you, Wesley J, I'll check out VLC player.
 
Posted by Mrs Shrew (# 8635) on :
 
I've taken in board the advice that windows defender is pretty good. If, however, I'm looking for a backup like Balaam described, what would you recommend? I don't mind paying for it, I just want it to work, not slow my laptop down and not pester me all the time. I'm running windows 8.1.
 
Posted by Doc Tor (# 9748) on :
 
I use an external 1TB hard drive to back up. It does mean you have to remember to do it every week (or so), but it's fuss-free.
 
Posted by Mrs Shrew (# 8635) on :
 
Thank you Doc Tor - I do that too(although not yet for this laptop as it arrived yesterday...) . I meant using antivirus as a second wall of defence (a "back up" ) behind windows defender, in case it misses any viruses.
 
Posted by Doc Tor (# 9748) on :
 
Oh okay.

I'm not sure of the efficacy of using two anti-virus programs, as what might evade one will probably evade the other, and what will be caught by one will also be caught by the other.

There are specific programs that'll go after deeply embedded rootkit things, but they're generally run only when you think you need them.
 
Posted by Jengie Jon (# 273) on :
 
The advice I was given was:


Jengie
 
Posted by Thyme (# 12360) on :
 
If you have windows 8.1 then you will have both firewall and anti-virus through windows defender and don't need to duplicate these. As Jengie Jon says, it will just cause problems.

When I got windows 8 I didn't reinstall my AVG antivirus and firewall for these reasons. I had read that windows defender is considered pretty good and so far I haven't had any problems.

I haven't used any anti-spyware since installing windows 8, but might give this some thought now I have been reminded.
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
There can be specific instances with two specific anti-virus that work together without causing more harm than good. But at best they will slow down your computer. And it rarely survives very long.
Even some spyware/anti-virus combos cause problems.
Research and continuously: the best solution today will not be so tomorrow.
 
Posted by Cartmel Veteran (# 7049) on :
 
I have Microsoft's firewall running and Avast doing my antivirus.

But every so often I also scan with MalwareBytes. This is perfectly fine as this program isn't normally running all the time, it does not compete with the other program.
 
Posted by Golden Key (# 1468) on :
 
Hi. I need help with some long-term dial-up connection problems.

I have difficulty getting connected. When I do, the connection is very unstable. My home pages hang, and rarely really connect.

I get many error messages. I'm told the codes are the same for all ISPs, at least in the US. If you're not familiar with them, there's probably a list online.

The error codes I've gotten are: 618, 628, 631, 638, 651, 678, 718, 734, 777

The problems have gotten much worse over the past few months, to the point where I'm online very little. That's a problem, because health problems keep me home most of the time. And most days, the Net is the only contact I have with people.

An additional puzzle piece: the internal modem's signal that it's successfully connected is often stuttering and garbled, as if it's got to work really hard. OTOH, when I run a modem query test, everything seems to be fine. I was thinking it might be the sound card, but I haven't noticed any other problems with sounds.

Computer details:

--Desktop PC, running Windows Vista.

--ISP is Earthlink, with "Total Access" dial-up.

--Browser: mainly IE8, and occasionally various Mozilla-based browsers.


Oh, and when I run Earthlink's diagnostic utility, it almost always fails at the step where it tests the DNS service, and suggest that there may be a DNS problem.

I spent some time talking to Earthlink tech support last night. Difficult communication, due to outsourcing. But the gist was that the problems are all on my end. despite the way the text of some error messages is worded. A previous ISP thought the problem was in my phone line.

Anyway, I'm keeping my fingers crossed that this connection will hold long enough for me to post this!

Thanks in advance for any help you can give. Due to the connection problems, it may take me a few days to respond to posts, so please be patient!
[Smile]
 
Posted by Snags (# 15351) on :
 
Modem issues are a bit tricky to do a remote diagnosis on, but from back when I was dealing with them a lot, the usual advice includes:

- if possible, use a good external modem, not an internal one. If nothing else the lights help with diagnostics!

- where there are multiple extensions on the line, unplug everything except the modem; it could be interference from other devices

- make a call from your handset to the modem number and see if it's picking up and sending the initial negotiating tones correctly

- turn the volume up on your modem so you can hear the negotiation process and listen for "odd" parts (you kind of have to know what a normal negotiation sounds like for this to be of value)

- get the line checked for quality/noise as a crappy line will really stuff things up
 
Posted by Doc Tor (# 9748) on :
 
One of the obvious tests would be to get a friend to call round with their own laptop and modem, and see if they either replicate the problem or log on fine.

At least that way, you can have a more specific conversation with tech support.

(Also dial-up. I've been on a fibre optic cable for a decade, and have mostly forgotten how crunchy dial-up is...)
 
Posted by mousethief (# 953) on :
 
My guess would be spotty phone service. Speakers keep vibrating momentarily when the sound is cut off, so a microsecond gap in connection might not be audible in a voice call, but could be enough to wreak havoc on electronic communications.
 
Posted by mousethief (# 953) on :
 
Okay, I need help. I have a Win 7 laptop, and I can't get anything onboard to listen to the "external" mic.

When I switch it to make the external mic the main input mode, I get various error messages, depending on the software. For instance, Zelscope, an oscilloscope emulator, says "The specified device is already in use. Wait until it is free, and then try again."

Audacity says, "Error while opening sound device. Please check the input device settings and the project sample rate."

Sound recorder says "An audio recording device could not be found."

On the plus side, when I plug the microphone into the jack, it makes a crackling noise through the speakers, and it makes a "pop" sound when I turn the mic switch on and off. So some kind of signal is worming its way through the plug.
 
Posted by Palimpsest (# 16772) on :
 
Does the external microphone show up in the Device Manager?
 
Posted by Lamb Chopped (# 5528) on :
 
Okay, very basic question for Minecraft geeks who can actually speak English. (Or Danish, not picky here)

My son blandished me into downloading the zip files for the city of Copenhagen. You know that Denmark Minecrafticized itself in the name of geography? Yeah.

Anyway, we've downloaded the files, we've extracted them, but I don't know where we need to park them or what we need to do to tell the game program itself access them. Right now they are sitting in the downloads directory of the computer.

He has Minecraft 1.7.9. Thanks!
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
This should* work.
quote:


Download the map.
Go to your %appdata%/.minecraft folder.
Open the “saves” folder.
Unzip the map you downloaded, and put the unzipped folder into the saves folder.

First create a backup of his minecraft folder!!!!!

*Minecraft can be a minefield.
 
Posted by Lamb Chopped (# 5528) on :
 
oy vey, can't even find the directories you speak of! wonder if windows is helpfully hiding them from me.
 
Posted by Doc Tor (# 9748) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Lamb Chopped:
oy vey, can't even find the directories you speak of! wonder if windows is helpfully hiding them from me.

They are. You need to click the "show hidden/system folders" box.

#hasboywhoplaysminecraft
 
Posted by The Machine Elf (# 1622) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Doc Tor:
quote:
Originally posted by Lamb Chopped:
oy vey, can't even find the directories you speak of! wonder if windows is helpfully hiding them from me.

They are. You need to click the "show hidden/system folders" box.

#hasboywhoplaysminecraft

Or press [Windows] + R and type / paste %appdata%/.minecraft into the box
 
Posted by Autenrieth Road (# 10509) on :
 
If anyone can advise me on combining .Rmd files with images to create PDF documents, I would be undyingly greatful. Any solution would be appreciated, whether it involves Rstudio and knitr, or additional software, or other software entirely.

If the resulting PDF documents could also have live links and be text-searchable, that would be fantastic. But I can live without those features, as long as I can get the pictures in.
 
Posted by Jengie Jon (# 273) on :
 
If Knitr works as it says, then the dirty way, if the images exist separately to the rmd files, is to compile the knitr file so it produces a standalone html file and then edit that to include the images. Remember html is just text.


From having html file you have two options for getting the images in: the geek way and the mucky way.

For the geek way you would do this in your favourite web editor (yes a standard text editor will do) and as long as you have a print to pdf installed (e.g. cutepdf) then you just print it from your webbrowser when ready.

However if you fancy going the mucky way then you can open the html file in Word, add the pictures and mess around with the format and then get Word to export it as a pdf. This gives you more control of the pdf than just printing, but you have to deal with Microsoft.

Your choice.

Jengie

p.s. if instead you want to add images to plots then print them as pdfs the command add image is in the fields package for R.
 
Posted by Autenrieth Road (# 10509) on :
 
Thanks, Jengie Jon. On closer inspection, the images are all the result of R plotting commands embedded in the R markdown. So they should just automatically include themselves, it seems to me. I'll see if that happens, while following your instructions in outline.
 
Posted by Sparrow (# 2458) on :
 
I have to proofread and edit a very long document created in Word 2007, and one of the things I need to do is to change all the quote marks from straight quotes to curly quotes. Is there a quick way of doing this? I have found that I can change Autocorrect to do it as I type, but not if the document already exists. Can anyone suggest a solution?
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
Try this

Press "CTRL" + "F" to bring up the "Find and Replace" menu, and select the "Replace" tab.


Type one double quotation mark (") in the "Find what" field, and type another double quotation mark in the "Replace with" field.


Click the button labeled "Replace all," and all the straight quotes will transform into curly quotes.
 
Posted by Sparrow (# 2458) on :
 
Thanks,I thought I had already tried that and it didn't work, but I just tried it again and it did!

[Yipee]
 
Posted by Sparrow (# 2458) on :
 
Another question ... can anyone recommend a FREE picture editing software package that will enable me to put captions on my pictures - on the picture itself rather than underneath it. Thanks.
 
Posted by Amanda B. Reckondwythe (# 5521) on :
 
You can use MSPaint for that.
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
GIMP is freeware picture editing. Captions are just adding a text box .
 
Posted by monkeylizard (# 952) on :
 
Google's Picasa is also free. Does the same stuff as the rest.

[ 21. May 2014, 16:09: Message edited by: monkeylizard ]
 
Posted by Pearl B4 Swine (# 11451) on :
 
Here I am again, asking my wise shipmates for help. By the way, I have neglected to say "Thank You" in the past, so...thank You.

Problem with my cordless mouse- Microsoft, low end price. It takes spells of skittering away from where I am pointing. Sometimes it is OK, but the wandering happens enough to be very maddening.

I took it apart & cleaned it out the best I could. No improvement. The battery is fresh. So, what's up?
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
The surface on which it is used might be a problem. Mouse with a ball underneath? Or optical mouse?
 
Posted by monkeylizard (# 952) on :
 
My thoughts too. Try not using your mouse pad for a few days (or try one if you don't have one) and see if that fixes the problem.
 
Posted by Pearl B4 Swine (# 11451) on :
 
It's optical- a blue light inside.
And, I thought of the surface, too. It doesn't matter if I use a (cleaned) mouse pad, or the table top. Also, sometimes a left click doesn't "take" & I have to click again. I thought, maybe Ive just worn out the contacts.

If I have to get a new one, what do you think best? I do a lot of low-level gaming, and other normal stuff. Thanks guys [Smile]
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
Probably just failing, then. The Microsoft Arc And Arc Touch are my two favourite mice at the moment.
 
Posted by Sparrow (# 2458) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Amanda B. Reckondwythe:
You can use MSPaint for that.

I couldn't get either Picasa or Paint to do what I wanted. I want the caption on the picture itself, not on the bottom, and preferably in white so the lettering stands out against the picture background.
 
Posted by Firenze (# 619) on :
 
It might be worth looking for free (and older) versions of Photoshop. A text layer in any colour, font, size and position you want is very easy in that.
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
GIMP really will do that. You open your picture in GIMP, add a text box which should be as a new layer, set the lettering to what you want it to be - might have to open the toolbox to do that - choose colour, font, size - and then move the layer to where you want the text to sit. Merge layers, export to .jpg. Done.

Better to work on the text all in one movement as moving the text boxes isn't always brilliantly easy.
 
Posted by Wesley J (# 6075) on :
 
Any suggestions on connecting multiple (well, two...) monitors to a deskie?

I've got the main monitor on HDMI both sides, and am finding the VGA connection (both sides) of monitor #2 not really satisfactory. - Do I better get a DVI to DVI cable (puter-monitor), or a DVI (puter) to HDMI (monitor) connector?

Windows 7, BTW.

Ta muchly. [Smile]

[ 07. June 2014, 14:24: Message edited by: Wesley J ]
 
Posted by Huia (# 3473) on :
 
Is there a free programme I can use that will highlight spelling mistakes and typos that I make when I post on the Ship? I know I can post in Word then transfer it over, but that seems a bit clumsy.

Please use simple language when replying - I don't speak computerese as a second language.

Huia - technologically challenged

AAARGH - I made a typo spelling typo .

QED - (as demonstrated)

[ 08. June 2014, 01:47: Message edited by: Huia ]
 
Posted by Kelly Alves (# 2522) on :
 
Google Chrome does in-post spellcheck. I think you have to opt in, though.
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
Firefox as well. It should be noted that this does not include the title of a new post. You are free to muck that up without a peep from Firefox.
 
Posted by Lamb Chopped (# 5528) on :
 
Many thanks to you Minecraft people for advice! Sorry for delay, every time I mean to thank you my not-so-wee monster is on the computer, playing... Minecraft.
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
Just checking - Opera has a built in spell check too. (You get the red wiggly lines under misspelled words - you don't get the green lines for grammar, doesn't stop homophones or other problems.)
 
Posted by Jengie Jon (# 273) on :
 
I do not know what browser you are using but Grammarly Lite will do it for a number of browsers, but it has American spelling.

Jengie
 
Posted by Firenze (# 619) on :
 
Anyone know how to switch off spell/grammarcheck within Safari on an iPad? It will keep introducing 'a' before any noun, irrespective of the sentence structure.

[ 08. June 2014, 20:55: Message edited by: Firenze ]
 
Posted by Sandemaniac (# 12829) on :
 
Has anyone any idea why I cannot persuade my phone (Samsung B2100) to see my laptop, and vice-versa, using Bluetooth? A couple of years ago (that's how often I fill up the 15 pics worth of memory...), used Bluetooth to download it as cheapskate Samsung didn't provide it with software... but it's having nothing of it today!

Cheers,

AG
 
Posted by Jay-Emm (# 11411) on :
 
Hazy memory from trying to get two computers to talk (it didn't work as both £1 bluetooth adapters had the same ID, but did get in touch with phone)

At least some devices you need to actively tell them to look for each other the first time. If things have reset since then you may need to redo this?
(otherwise anyone could get the photos off the phone)

On my phone when bluetooth is enabled (showing the lightning B) the settings menu has an option with a bluetooth menu with an option to make the device discoverable and a list of old connections.

Clicking on the old connection seems to reawaken something.

You may also have to do the opposite steps on the computer, not sure how that works on different devices.
 
Posted by Doc Tor (# 9748) on :
 
Use a USB cable instead?
 
Posted by Ann (# 94) on :
 
I have a Samsung and found their program a right pain. I now use My Phone Explorer - install it on the pc/lappie, get the app for the phone and it'll give you a choice of WiFi, USB or Bluetooth - I use Bluetooth. You have to launch both the program and the app. You can then sync contacts, messages, tasks and look through the files and download them.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
I also have a Samsung but I guess it depends what sort you have/how old it is, because I plug mine into the pc, the pc always offers to "install new software" and fails, but a message comes up on the phone saying touch to activate USB connection. So I do and it works fine after that, just drag and drop via Explorer in the usual way. However, I do have to go through this every time and it will only recognize the memory card, not access the phone itself.

Tangentially, I've also discovered to my annoyance that many apps won't or can't be transferred to the memory card, so the phone is filling up nicely while the memory card still has a huge amount of space.
 
Posted by GCabot (# 18074) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Mrs Shrew:
I've taken in board the advice that windows defender is pretty good. If, however, I'm looking for a backup like Balaam described, what would you recommend? I don't mind paying for it, I just want it to work, not slow my laptop down and not pester me all the time. I'm running windows 8.1.

It depends on what you are looking for. I use AVG, which is a full-fledged anti-virus program. If you are looking for something purely as a backup, you could use something like BullGuard Virus Scan, which works off a browser extension.
 
Posted by Pearl B4 Swine (# 11451) on :
 
"Silo" seems to be the new everybody-has-to-use-it word. I'm still not happy about Cloud. Who thinks up these things? [Old Person Rant]
 
Posted by Snags (# 15351) on :
 
Wesley J HDMI and DVI are both digital connections so either should give better results. As you're already using HDMI-HDMI on one monitor, I assume the other output from the PC is DVI, not HDMI? If so I would stick with DVI-DVI (assuming a DVI in on the monitor) as you're not going to improve on the source signal.

At the end of the day, keeping both ends the same normally gives the best result. Only use converters/adapters when you have to.
 
Posted by Wesley J (# 6075) on :
 
Thank you! I'm glad there are some Snags to it!
 
Posted by monkeylizard (# 952) on :
 
HDMI and DVI carry the same quality of visual signal. The main difference is that HDMI can also carry an audio signal. That's why an HDMI-DVI converter is just a plug. It's simply rewiring the wire layout from one plug to another. What Snags said is true though. Only convert if you have to because every connection risks some signal loss.
 
Posted by Sparrow (# 2458) on :
 
I've suddenly started getting annoying "sponsored" adverts coming in at the top of my inbox (and every other mail folder) in Yahoo every time I open it up. They go away when I click on a cross at the side of the title, but shortly afterwards another pops up. How can I get rid of them?
 
Posted by ElaineC (# 12244) on :
 
It's happening to me too. You have to pay to make them go away.
As yahoo is not my main account I'm not going to pay.
I don't often read my mail in a browser as my iMac and iPad use a mail client to access all my mail accounts.
 
Posted by lily pad (# 11456) on :
 
Me too. And if I can succeed as marking them as spam, another pops up to take its place. Sigh. Not fun Yahoo.ca. Not fun.
 
Posted by Sparrow (# 2458) on :
 
If I can't get rid of them, that will be the end of a more than ten year very happy association with Yahoo. I won' stand for being messed around like this.
 
Posted by no prophet (# 15560) on :
 
Just got a raspberrypi - http://www.raspberrypi.org/ (their site is slow). Here is a link to a site that sells them in Canada. Though I got mine for $68.

The little computer is the size of 1½ packs of playing cards, runs Linux (like an Android phone does, though Linux for the little thing is different). I expect to leave a monitor, mouse and keyboard where I need to use a computer and stop hauling a laptop around. Need it only for some web stuff and documents (Libre Office).

Anyone else using one? I think the future of computing is cheap. My other computers are a used and free to me 10" Dell mini N-series, and a $189 off lease HP laptop. I have Linux on both of these.
 
Posted by Wesley J (# 6075) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sparrow:
I've suddenly started getting annoying "sponsored" adverts coming in at the top of my inbox (and every other mail folder) in Yahoo every time I open it up. They go away when I click on a cross at the side of the title, but shortly afterwards another pops up. How can I get rid of them?

I haven't got any of those (yet...?). However, I've been a heavy user of 'AdblockPlus', 'Element Hiding Helper for AdblockPlus' and 'AdblockPlus Pop-up Add-on' for many years. These are add-ons in Firefox. They do the trick, though you'll occasionally have you tweak them, when the ad companies find new ways of forcing ads upon us.

I wonder if this might work for you?
 
Posted by Late Paul (# 37) on :
 
A similar question to Wesley J - I recently got a shiny new monitor (was using an old TV before). It's got VGA, HDMI and DisplayPort inputs. My PC has VGA and DVI outputs. I've been using VGA so far and it looks very nice.

Is it worth buying a DVI->HDMI cable? Will it suffer the same potential problems as the adapters mentioned above? I also have spare HDMI cables so an adaptor would be cheaper but not that much.
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
Late Paul
quote:
Originally posted by monkeylizard:
Only convert if you have to because every connection risks some signal loss.

Missed this before.
This is technically possible, but misleading. DVI and HDMI are digital signals. When they lose signal, the information is missing. It does not result in noise (fuzzy image/sound) like an analogue signal, but in missing bits or a complete loss image/sound. And it is not a gradual decline as analogue will do. It is a full signal, missing bits or nothing.*
Side Note: don't buy expensive cables. Here is an article explaining signal loss in digital cable.

*What are more often seen are compression artifacts which your cables/adapters have no effect in causing or fixing.
 
Posted by Thyme (# 12360) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sparrow:
I've suddenly started getting annoying "sponsored" adverts coming in at the top of my inbox (and every other mail folder) in Yahoo every time I open it up. They go away when I click on a cross at the side of the title, but shortly afterwards another pops up. How can I get rid of them?

Me too. I thought it was because I clicked on a message saying firefox had blocked a pop up and I let it through. The message said that I could reverse this, but then I couldn't find a way. I tried resetting all my firefox settings.

Very, very annoyed as I have just changed my main email to yahoo and wouldn't have done if I had known. I don't know why it irritates me more than the sidebar ads.

I use Windows Mail as much as possible now, although I don't find it as good for some things.

Relieved to pop in here and find it might not have been my own stupid fault.
 
Posted by Joan Rasch (# 49) on :
 
I'm a long-time yahoo mail subscriber (it's my main email account). If you think of the ads that that appear at the top of the email list as a banner ad that's *pretending* to look like an email message, it's actually pretty easy to ignore. Just let your eyes immediately move to the SECOND line on the list of emails, and proceed from there. (On my system, the first line is even shaded differently, making it even easier to filter out.)

I would agree with anyone who says that this approach to ads is excessively deceitful, but it's still reasonably easy to avoid.

cheers from Boston - /Joan
 
Posted by Wesley J (# 6075) on :
 
I can only repeat what I said earlier: I'm not getting a single advert on Yahoo mail, not have for years, namely thanks to AdblockPlus. (Other adblockers are available.) Oh, and the Flashblock add-on, too. [Smile]

Linkie and Linkie.
 
Posted by BroJames (# 9636) on :
 
We're having significant issues with internet access at the moment, and I am wondering whether it is just too many WiFi users at the same time. It seems that connecting to the router via Ethernet almost always solves the problem. We have a TalkTalk (ISP) provided Huawei HG533 N router with one of its Ethernet ports used via a power line adapter to provide a TV service.

So, two questions:
1 Is it likely that 5 simultaneous wifi users (some of whom are likely to be streaming music or video, or gaming) will be putting a strain on the router's wifi capabilities? If so…
2 Could I use a second router to alleviate the problem? My provisional thought would be to have it connected by Ethernet (via the power line adapter) to the first router (which will handle all WAN transactions). The TV service would be routed straight through the second router to the first. The second router would also be used to increase the overall WiFi capacity. If this is possible, I'm not sure whether the second router should run a second WiFi network or extend the one operated by the first router.

If this is sensible, can anyone point me towards some help, ideally step by step instructions for a relative ignoramus?

Thanks

James
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
BroJames,

You have a limited amount of bandwith coming in. It is then divided amoungst concurrent users. This is the most likely culprit, and nothing you can change unless your ISP allows for a better package.
 
Posted by GCabot (# 18074) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by BroJames:
We're having significant issues with internet access at the moment, and I am wondering whether it is just too many WiFi users at the same time. It seems that connecting to the router via Ethernet almost always solves the problem. We have a TalkTalk (ISP) provided Huawei HG533 N router with one of its Ethernet ports used via a power line adapter to provide a TV service.

So, two questions:
1 Is it likely that 5 simultaneous wifi users (some of whom are likely to be streaming music or video, or gaming) will be putting a strain on the router's wifi capabilities? If so…
2 Could I use a second router to alleviate the problem? My provisional thought would be to have it connected by Ethernet (via the power line adapter) to the first router (which will handle all WAN transactions). The TV service would be routed straight through the second router to the first. The second router would also be used to increase the overall WiFi capacity. If this is possible, I'm not sure whether the second router should run a second WiFi network or extend the one operated by the first router.

If this is sensible, can anyone point me towards some help, ideally step by step instructions for a relative ignoramus?

Thanks

James

While it is possible that the source of your issues is a poorly made/designed router, I suspect that the culprit is likely bandwith, as lilbuddha said.
 
Posted by Alisdair (# 15837) on :
 
Remember that BroJames says the problem tends to be resolved when connected via Ethernet, which rather suggests that the poor old router isn't really up to the job when it comes to handling multiple Wifi data streams.

BroJames, if you are using the router supplied by your ISP there is a good chance it's fairly basic. It might be worth finding some reviews of it online

If it looks as though your ISP has opted for cheap, and not particularly cheerful, in its choice of router, then buying a more serious bit of routing kit could well solve at least the worst of your bandwidth problems.

[ 24. June 2014, 18:13: Message edited by: Alisdair ]
 
Posted by Jengie Jon (# 273) on :
 
Oh another question given this is talktalk. Is the router plugged into the primary telephone socket in the house?

At least some of the TalkTalk routers require this. I have one going free to anyone that wants it as my primary socket is in a position where it is impossible to get power to.

Jengie
 
Posted by GCabot (# 18074) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Alisdair:
Remember that BroJames says the problem tends to be resolved when connected via Ethernet, which rather suggests that the poor old router isn't really up to the job when it comes to handling multiple Wifi data streams.

BroJames, if you are using the router supplied by your ISP there is a good chance it's fairly basic. It might be worth finding some reviews of it online

If it looks as though your ISP has opted for cheap, and not particularly cheerful, in its choice of router, then buying a more serious bit of routing kit could well solve at least the worst of your bandwidth problems.

Ah, you are correct. I somehow missed that. Mea culpa.
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
[brick wall] Oy! I missed that as well.
 
Posted by BroJames (# 9636) on :
 
Thanks all for your contributions. Budget won't run to buying another router ATM, but I've got several previous ones lying around. Hence my question about running two of them.
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
Instruction on connecting two routers.
 
Posted by Thyme (# 12360) on :
 
Bro James:

I don't know if this will be any help at all but we moved house recently and the new house has three telephone sockets. So we put the router and the ADSL filter gizmo in the bedroom, out of the way of grandchildren.

Since we moved we have had a lot of problems with the connection dropping.

So we recently got a BT TV package for the football and channels and films for the grandchildren. The engineer who came to install the kit said the reason for the connection dropping was because we had the router and the phone sharing a socket. (I think, I wasn't there) So he put another ADSL filter in the phone handset downstairs and that seems to have solved the problem. Whatever arrangement we had was splitting the signal.

The short version is you need an ADSL filter with every phone handset. And don't have things sharing sockets.

Sorry if this is totally irrelevant.

[ 25. June 2014, 14:38: Message edited by: Thyme ]
 
Posted by Autenrieth Road (# 10509) on :
 
Password keeper: any recommendations? Features I should look for, or misfeatures I should watch out for?

I'm interested in something for both my Windows 7 PC and my iPhone. I don't know if that means I need two different ones, or if it's possible to have a secure cloud solution that can be accessed from both. (Although storing all my passwords together in one place in the cloud makes me queasy... am I right to be suspicious, or could this be trusted?)
 
Posted by *Leon* (# 3377) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Autenrieth Road:
Password keeper: any recommendations? Features I should look for, or misfeatures I should watch out for?

I use LastPass. Their cloud implementation is very good (everything is encrypted locally and delivered to the cloud in a way that means they never have access to the password). You probably do want a cloud one, because you probably use some sites on both your PC and phone. But you're right to be suspicious. I reckon LastPass do it right, but others may not.

I can't comment on their iPhone app as I use Android.
 
Posted by Amanda B. Reckondwythe (# 5521) on :
 
KeePass is also good and is Freeware.
 
Posted by Snags (# 15351) on :
 
For clarity on sockets/filters etc.:

- there is no problem with things sharing sockets
- there is a problem with having unfiltered devices on the same line if the sockets are wired in parallel not series

So it's normally just a question of checking that all devices are filter, either because the filter is built into the faceplate, or with an external filter.

Also, no router whatsoever will care whether it's plugged into the master socket or not as long as any extension wiring is good. If you have to plug your router into the master socket then you either have unfiltered devices, or dodgy extension wiring.

BroJames I haven't checked, but we (work) almost certainly have a bunch of spare wireless access points lying around the office. They'll be pre-loved and maybe a little "random", but if you want I will gladly dig around to see if there's anything servicable, configure it for you ready to just plug in to your existing router, and send it to you (assuming the "UK" is accurate in your location!). PM me if you'd like me to go ferreting ...
 
Posted by Thyme (# 12360) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Wesley J:
I can only repeat what I said earlier: I'm not getting a single advert on Yahoo mail, not have for years, namely thanks to AdblockPlus. (Other adblockers are available.) Oh, and the Flashblock add-on, too. [Smile]

Linkie and Linkie.

Done! Thank you.
 
Posted by Jengie Jon (# 273) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Snags:


Also, no router whatsoever will care whether it's plugged into the master socket or not as long as any extension wiring is good. If you have to plug your router into the master socket then you either have unfiltered devices, or dodgy extension wiring.
...

Sorry about this Snags but that is not the case in my experience

The installation instructions say from the main socket only. It also regularly failed when I did it on another socket and diagnosed as not plugged into the main socket! The socket I was using is one I had used for the previous router.

Jengie
 
Posted by Drifting Star (# 12799) on :
 
I agree. When we moved house we spent a fortnight without broadband because our router was plugged into a socket that was not the master socket - we had been wrongly told that it was the master socket, and had to wait for an engineer to come out before we discovered that it wasn't.

There was no connection at all at any time via the non-master socket, even with nothing else at all plugged in anywhere, and there is nothing wrong with the wiring.

[ 28. June 2014, 16:19: Message edited by: Drifting Star ]
 
Posted by Snags (# 15351) on :
 
I won't argue with personal experience, and TalkTalk are shite, so all bets are off. However, I will say that the router has no way of knowing what socket it is plugged into, and dealing with this stuff is my job. I therefore suspect Something Else, and convenient simplification on TT's part.

Not least because the master socket (aka test socket) can only be accessed by removing the faceplate.

Obviously if your "master socket" is of the type the incorporates a filter, that changes the game ...
 
Posted by Drifting Star (# 12799) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Snags:
...Obviously if your "master socket" is of the type the incorporates a filter, that changes the game ...

It is now, although it wasn't when we had the problems with broadband.

Can't blame TalkTalk here though - this was purely BT. It was one of their call centre people who told me that he could tell (from several continents away) that the phone I was using was plugged into the master socket. I thought that was very strange, but as I thought it was anyway and we were waiting for an engineer's visit it didn't make much difference.

When the engineer came he replaced the master socket, not because there was anything wrong with the old one, but because BT wanted their latest logo on all sockets. He did also tell me that having an extension lead connected to the master socket made no difference to its performance, but it seems that this doesn't apply to the wired in extensions around the rest of the house.
 
Posted by Snags (# 15351) on :
 
The BT 'phone support person was bullshitting you.

There are lots of things that can cause issues for ADSL on extension wiring, but if everything is the way it needs to be (wiring quality, signal strength, correct filtering throughout the chain which depends on what's filtered where already, whether the extensions are parallel or series etc.) then the router won't care where it's plugged in to. Really, truly [Smile]

The reason they get you to plug in to the test socket is so that they can exclude issues with extension wiring, and also any possible issues with the faceplate itself. They can't tell whether you actually have plugged in to the test/master socket, but some of the support droids try it on, because they know most people don't really have a clue how it works.
 
Posted by Drifting Star (# 12799) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Snags:
The BT 'phone support person was bullshitting you.

Yes indeed - and when I complained to the CEO they gave me a special complaints handler, who I am still using almost a year later. Apparently every time I complain the CEO's office is informed. (This sounds like flannel to me, but it does seem to get me better treatment.)

quote:
Originally posted by Snags:
There are lots of things that can cause issues for ADSL on extension wiring, but if everything is the way it needs to be (wiring quality, signal strength, correct filtering throughout the chain which depends on what's filtered where already, whether the extensions are parallel or series etc.) then the router won't care where it's plugged in to. Really, truly [Smile]

I have to admit that it wouldn't surprise me if the person who built the house didn't put the wiring in properly. In fact, to be honest, I'd probably be more surprised if he had done it properly. [Frown]
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
I was thinking of downloading a news app to my phone. The pre-installation notice said that this app would have access to:

"Device ID & call information:
Allows the app to determine the phone number and device IDs, whether a call is active, and the remote number connected by a call."

Why would it need to know what number is being phoned?
 
Posted by Alex Cockell (# 7487) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by lilBuddha:
Instruction on connecting two routers.

Better idea would be to get hold of a decent couple of baby Etheernet hubs and run a tree structure. That way some of the local datagram routing is handled further away fromt he router.
 
Posted by mousethief (# 953) on :
 
Microsoft Word. My index doesn't show; instead where it should be it says

quote:
{INDEX \e" "\c"2"\z"1033"}
If I copy this and paste it into Wordpad, the index shows up! But I kinda need to be able to see it in situ.

My table of contents and page numbers (in the footers) are doing analagous things -- where the page number should be, it says

quote:
{ PAGE \* MERGEFORMAT }
I would sure as hell hate to lose all the formatting I did in this document, as I've probably put over 30 hours into it.

Thots?
 
Posted by Snags (# 15351) on :
 
You're displaying field codes instead of content. There's a toggle which is based on F9 but I can never remember if it's plain or Ctrl+ , I think plain and the latter lets you write codes directly.

or, on older versions, there's a fairly obvious menu item to switch it. Not looked on the ribbon, but probably on the Developer tab knowing MS
 
Posted by mousethief (# 953) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Snags:
You're displaying field codes instead of content. There's a toggle which is based on F9 but I can never remember if it's plain or Ctrl+ , I think plain and the latter lets you write codes directly.

or, on older versions, there's a fairly obvious menu item to switch it. Not looked on the ribbon, but probably on the Developer tab knowing MS

Found the answer -- you right click on the field code and there's a toggle. I had to do it on the footer in every section, in the TOC, and in the Index.

Now my problem is that I can't change the headers or footers without Word turning all my "Odd Page" section breaks into "Continuous" section breaks. I turn off the link to the previous header, and BAM, the section break is changed. Jaysoos, who programs this shit?
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Smartphones - is there a huge and important difference between Ice Cream Sandwich [Android 4.0.4] and JellyBean[Android 4.1]?

There are two phones I am considering - one of each. The cheaper of the two is the JellyBean but from an unknown [to me] manufacturer [Swipe Sonic] - the Ice Cream Sandwich is from Lenovo.

Opinions? Sniggers behind the hand? Outright condemnation of my choices?

[Help]
 
Posted by Latchkey Kid (# 12444) on :
 
Androids are now being released with Kit-Kat. Unlike i-phones, which can always upgrade their OS (though iPhone users seem flush enough to just buy the latest models) android phones seem to only be able to upgrade once or twice. That may just mean that there are some newer apps you can't install. My phone and tablet (ICS) can't access USB drives, which is about the only later function I would like to use.
 
Posted by Snags (# 15351) on :
 
The other thing to check with cheaper/entry level Android devices is whether they are "full" or a slightly messed about version.

Some of the cheaper implementations don't include access to the Play store, and instead you have to go through whatever the provider has set up.
 
Posted by Thyme (# 12360) on :
 
Last year after considerable research I got a top of the range android smart phone.

I have never got on with it and wish I had got an iphone.

More recently I got an ipad and in contrast with the $$%%**!! phone I love it.

Stuck with the phone now for at least another year.

So my advice is get an iphone [Razz]
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
It may make life easier to get an entry-level Android until you get used to the way they work. It can come as a bit of a learning curve otherwise if you haven't had one before.
 
Posted by Alisdair (# 15837) on :
 
Android v. iPhone, it's horses for courses. If you prefer consistency and predictability you're probably better off with an iPhone. If you prefer freedom to do things the way you want and to have lots of options then you'll probably get on better with an Android.

If you want a higher end but vanilla Android experience which will get it's updates straight from Google buy a Nexus. If you want to spend less, but get very good value for money buy a Motorola Moto G (the 16G version if you plan on putting lots of music, or other stuff on board). The camera's not the best, but everything else is pretty good. Again, this is pretty much Android as Google make it (Motorola were owned by Google until very recently and the Moto G is basically, like the Nexus, a Google product---effectively a reference design for an Android phone done right.

The reason Androids generally only get one or two operating system upgrades is because manufacturers/network operators have a bad habit of varnishing over the basic Android OS with their own ideas of how it should be (they are trying to differentiate themselves in the market, and the quality is highly variable). This makes having to customise upgrades an expensive pain for the supplier so they tend to do it as little as possible. They would rather you bought a new phone; which isn't totally silly or venal as most people only have the phone for the length of the contract, i.e. two/three years.

I would avoid buying a 'cheap' landfill Android phone. They are usually cheap for a reason---they're pretty rubbish and disappointing to use.

The ones I have mentioned are generally rated to be worth their purchase price.

[ 08. July 2014, 17:52: Message edited by: Alisdair ]
 
Posted by Doublethink (# 1984) on :
 
Silly people, you don't choose, you get your tablet in one and your phone in the other .... [Two face]

(And windows on the desktop/equivalent - God forbid there is an app in the cosmos you can not access.)

[ 08. July 2014, 18:05: Message edited by: Doublethink ]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Thanks folks, much food for thought there.
 
Posted by Snags (# 15351) on :
 
As an aside, having used all three major phone OS and multiple examples of Android implementations from cheap to high end* I can honestly say that for general purpose use, ease of operation, and all round 'niceness' the current Windows Phone release strikes me as the best.

Obviously if you must have x,000,000 apps then it doesn't cut it, as the supporting infrastructure isn't there to the same degree. And if you're guided strongly by fashion then you won't have the strength of character to overcome the hoots of derision. Or if you're already heavily invested in iOS or Android elsewhere. But starting from a neutral position it's surprisingly good, and has won over a number of people I would never have thought would bring themselves to touch one, let alone use and own!


*Not all my phones, I end up setting them up and helping a great many people with them as an adjunct wot w**k
 
Posted by Tukai (# 12960) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Joan Rasch:
I'm a long-time yahoo mail subscriber (it's my main email account). If you think of the ads that that appear at the top of the email list as a banner ad that's *pretending* to look like an email message, it's actually pretty easy to ignore. Just let your eyes immediately move to the SECOND line on the list of emails, and proceed from there. (On my system, the first line is even shaded differently, making it even easier to filter out.)

I would agree with anyone who says that this approach to ads is excessively deceitful, but it's still reasonably easy to avoid.

cheers from Boston - /Joan

Me too. Yahoo is my main account also, and even used for my business. The different shading makes these ads very easy to ignore. They distract me far less than the sidebar ones.
 
Posted by que sais-je (# 17185) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Snags:
And if you're guided strongly by fashion then you won't have the strength of character to overcome the hoots of derision.

I've installed Android on an old ASUS EEEPC netbook which now thinks it's a very very heavy tablet. Not flashy, fast or anything but I've overcome the hoots of derision. Like having a dinosaur coming back from the dead, it's rather sweet in a lumbering sort of way.
 
Posted by LeRoc (# 3216) on :
 
My w*rk gave me a different laptop, a DELL Inspiron with Windows 8, but it doesn't recognize the webcam. Anyone know how to fix this?
 
Posted by Alisdair (# 15837) on :
 
Try a reputable search engine with: 'Dell', '<the model of the laptop>' and 'webcam' maybe add 'problem' and see what comes up.
 
Posted by Wesley J (# 6075) on :
 
Would that be an external or internal webcam?
 
Posted by LeRoc (# 3216) on :
 
Internal. It's a Dell Inspiron, I can't find the number that quickly. One of the things suggested by a Google search was to reset the BIOS (is that what you do by pressing F2-F9-F10 at startup?) I tried that, but it didn't help. Another thing could be to reinstall the webcam driver?
 
Posted by Adeodatus (# 4992) on :
 
A question - I'm pootling along quite nicely on my glacier-slow computer running Windows 7. But one thing I don't like is the version of Windows Movie Maker that comes with Windows 7. It seems actually to have removed whole chunks of functionality from the version whatever-it-was Movie Maker I had with Vista. (Even for simple slideshows, I'd like to have the "zoom in and focus" function; and it seems to have lost virtually all of the fine-tuning you used to have over the soundtrack.)

Is there any reputable source from which I can download a version of the old Movie Maker? The reason I'm asking is partly because there are so many disreputable sources out there.
 
Posted by Wesley J (# 6075) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Adeodatus:
A question - I'm pootling along quite nicely on my glacier-slow computer running Windows 7. [...]

Can't help with the MovieMaker question right now, I'm afraid.

Regarding the glacier-slowity, however - I'm writing this on a 2003 DELL Inspiron 8600 with Win 7 [Biased] - : using a dedicated USB stick for ReadyBoost acceleration's really helped. With the 2GB extra (you can try and use a bigger one, if you like), this machine works now quite a bit faster. While it's never going to be a racehorse, it certainly does a fairly decent job.

Just as an idea for further investigation. [Smile]
 
Posted by Wesley J (# 6075) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Adeodatus:
[...] But one thing I don't like is the version of Windows Movie Maker that comes with Windows 7. It seems actually to have removed whole chunks of functionality from the version whatever-it-was Movie Maker I had with Vista. (Even for simple slideshows, I'd like to have the "zoom in and focus" function; and it seems to have lost virtually all of the fine-tuning you used to have over the soundtrack.)

Is there any reputable source from which I can download a version of the old Movie Maker? The reason I'm asking is partly because there are so many disreputable sources out there.

Apparently, the Vista version is no longer available from M$. But the 2009 version for XP is still there - might this help? Linkie to M$ "Windows Live Essentials 2009".
 
Posted by Wesley J (# 6075) on :
 
Oooh! Oooh! Hidden away, the Vista version for Win 7 still seems to be there:

https://www.microsoft.com/en-gb/download/details.aspx?id=29219

(ETA: This is Windows Live Essentials 2011, which includes Movie Maker.)

[ 27. July 2014, 08:14: Message edited by: Wesley J ]
 
Posted by Adeodatus (# 4992) on :
 
Thanks, Wesley J, those links were very helpful. But ... I hit the download button, and the site told me that I would first have to uninstall my current version of Windows Live Essentials. I hesitated. I procrastinated. What will happen if I do? What might I lose?...

So I still haven't done it.

The tip about using a dedicated USB is a good one, and I'm already doing it - you should have seen the speed of this computer before I did that! Basically it's a very old machine (originally ran Windows XP at best) that I got from a friend for next to nothing earlier this year when my laptop had ... let's call it a terminal incident. (There were grinding noises. There were sparks. There was smoke and a nasty smell.) I'm making do till I can decide what I can afford by way of a new one.
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
The route I've gone down to keep using old machines is Linux - this one is currently running Mageia 4.

Currently my issue is how to download Dropbox to this version - and I've googled and the answers are that it's a pain for this version of Linux.
 
Posted by The5thMary (# 12953) on :
 
This isn't a computer question per se, but rather a query about Facebook apps. I play Scrabble and Angry Birds on Facebook and in the last week haven't been able to play them at all. I click on the picture of the game and... nothing. I tried to use Facebook's "HELP" function but it doesn't have any information. One can send them an email describing the problem but they don't answer individual emails, so what the hell good does that do me? Anybody know anything about such things? I emptied Google Chrome's History and Cache, thinking that might help. It didn't. This isn't a mission critical problem but it's annoying--I had some kick-ass games I was winning in Scrabble! [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Alisdair (# 15837) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Curiosity killed ...:
Currently my issue is how to download Dropbox to this version - and I've googled and the answers are that it's a pain for this version of Linux.

Dropbox is ubiquitous, but you might as well shout, 'Hey world, come and get my stuff!', i.e woeful security.

Look at 'SpiderOak'; but my personal favourite is 'Wuala' (as in 'voila') by LaCie, which works very happily with Linux and includes client-side encryption, and across device synchronization.
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
I only use Dropbox to share things with others, currently for a cloud based teaching resource system for peripatetic tutors.

The only reason I want something now is to transfer 100 odd photos to another party rather than put them on CD and post them.

The problem with any Linux solution is that the other party can't access whatever I'm trying to share

[ 30. July 2014, 07:48: Message edited by: Curiosity killed ... ]
 
Posted by Alisdair (# 15837) on :
 
As far as I remember (it's not a feature I use), you can set up 'public' folders in Wuala.

http://tinyurl.com/ketmay2
 
Posted by Alisdair (# 15837) on :
 
Slight downer: I've just noticed that since June new users of Wuala have to pay, although it's fairly nominal for the basic package.
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
Yes - I checked and realised it was going to cost me. What I'm probably going to do is use the web-based route to upload to BT Cloud, through gritted teeth, and hope that's accessible, because there's no good reason for me to access Dropbox otherwise.

(The other account is on work Windows laptop and work e-mail account)
 
Posted by lily pad (# 11456) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by The5thMary:
This isn't a computer question per se, but rather a query about Facebook apps. I play Scrabble and Angry Birds on Facebook and in the last week haven't been able to play them at all. I click on the picture of the game and... nothing. I tried to use Facebook's "HELP" function but it doesn't have any information. One can send them an email describing the problem but they don't answer individual emails, so what the hell good does that do me? Anybody know anything about such things? I emptied Google Chrome's History and Cache, thinking that might help. It didn't. This isn't a mission critical problem but it's annoying--I had some kick-ass games I was winning in Scrabble! [Big Grin]

Try signing in to Facebook from a different browser or a different computer. That way you will know whether or not it is a setting on Facebook or on the browser/computer.
 
Posted by The5thMary (# 12953) on :
 
Thanks, lily pad. The answer was so embarrassingly simple that I can't even mention it ever again. I must have been having a serious brain fart the other day... [Hot and Hormonal]
 
Posted by Thyme (# 12360) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Curiosity killed ...:
What I'm probably going to do is use the web-based route to upload to BT Cloud, through gritted teeth, and hope that's accessible, because there's no good reason for me to access Dropbox otherwise.

Unless they have drastically redesigned it recently BT Cloud is horrendous to use. At least, I found it so. I haven't used it for some time, but never have enough life to spare to look at it again. I was trying to delete my stuff there at one point and gave up.

If it's photos you want to share why not use flickr or Picaso web albums or somesuch?
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Curiosity killed ...:
The only reason I want something now is to transfer 100 odd photos to another party rather than put them on CD and post them.

Zip file(s) and Dropbox. I'm surprised you have to download Dropbox; I've always just logged on to it and uploaded files to it. Or email some batches. Or if you have your own webspace (this usually comes with an ISP) upload the zip file to that, send them the url and they can download it from there. Or maybe the other party has access to an ftp site of their own.

[ 31. July 2014, 06:52: Message edited by: Ariel ]
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
Because Flickr (and Picasa) isn't a photo sharing site in quite the way I want to do this - I want to hand 100 or more photos from an event to several other people. If it was one or two I'd just e-mail them. Last year I put them on a CD and posted them.

Flickr doesn't necessarily allow someone to use pictures posted there freely, there are fairly good copyright controls in place. I've tried using my own photos to allow students to use pictures they wanted for a project and really had to dig for those sharing buttons, even signed in, and that was two or three versions back. I've also had to request a CD of photographs from someone else who took a number of pictures of the church and posted them to Flickr to be able to use them.

And anyway I don't want to flood my Flickr account with hundreds of photos from one event, I already use my Flickr account in a different way.
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
Yes - zip file and Dropbox would be the answer, if I could install the file sharing software. But I can't easily put Dropbox on this version of Linux. The download of the daemon crashes, the tarball instructions come back with error messages. And Googling installation of Dropbox on Mageia 4, it needs fiddling in terminal on KDE (when I'm using Gnome) and installing additional programmes on top of installing KDE, for something I don't really want or need normally.

And I do have access to ftp space, but loading photos there is not going to be straightforward. I do it all the time.

[ 31. July 2014, 07:07: Message edited by: Curiosity killed ... ]
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
I'm not sure why you have to install software for Dropbox and run it on your own pc. I never have, when I used it it was purely web-based. I wouldn't have used it if I'd had to download any software.

In any case, there are a variety of other web-based file transfer sites - YouSendIt being one, I can't remember any others, but if you google there'll be quite a few out there which don't require you to download any software.
 
Posted by Alisdair (# 15837) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Curiosity killed ...:
Yes - zip file and Dropbox would be the answer, if I could install the file sharing software. But I can't easily put Dropbox on this version of Linux. The download of the daemon crashes, the tarball instructions come back with error messages. And Googling installation of Dropbox on Mageia 4, it needs fiddling in terminal on KDE (when I'm using Gnome) and installing additional programmes on top of installing KDE, for something I don't really want or need normally.

And I do have access to ftp space, but loading photos there is not going to be straightforward. I do it all the time.

If you are using Thunderbird email client why not use the Filelink service for large attachments and upload the photos to 'Box' or 'Hightail', etc. where the people you are sending to can download them. they receive a notification email with a link for downloading the photos.

http://tinyurl.com/k5x7tnm

I've used it several times without any issues (it pops up automatically if the attachment upload is over a certain size). If you don't use Thunderbird, you can probably set up the link manually without much bother, or other email clients no doubt have their own versions of the same thing.

[ 31. July 2014, 07:27: Message edited by: Alisdair ]
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
Thank you Ariel and Alistair, I've found web based ways of uploading to both BTCloud and Dropbox so can send links to both of those. Boring, but not as painful as they could be.
 
Posted by moron (# 206) on :
 
I asked for and received some advice here earlier which was helpful (I made a phpbb website more or less functional) so

now I'm wanting to start a website which I currently think needs to incorporate at least the following capabilities:

*Blog (I can sense your excited anticipation)
*Calendar allowing customers to schedule appointments
*Possibly process credit card payments (not sure I want to go there)

I use Godaddy to host.

Any suggestions on which software/program/whatever you call it? TIA.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
After much shillyshallying I am thinking of getting a tablet, probably Android based. Does anyone know if Jetico BestCrypt works with Android? I keep a lot of stuff encrypted and would like to continue to do so and I want to look at possible pitfalls before I throw money at the situation.
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
According to their website, WW, no.
 
Posted by mousethief (# 953) on :
 
It must be possible in Chrome to add a single icon to the navigation bar that opens the list of bookmarks. All I can find is how to add a whole bookmarks bar, which I don't want. Just a single little piccy I can clicky to bring up my bookmarks. IE can do it. Firefox can do it. Chrome MUST be able to do it, and I'm just not seeing it somehow.
 
Posted by LeRoc (# 3216) on :
 
When I want to find my list of bookmarks in Chrome, I open an empty tab. It will have the first 8 bookmarks listed horizontally on the top of the page, with next to it a » symbol. Clicking on that gives the full list.

[ 12. August 2014, 16:56: Message edited by: LeRoc ]
 
Posted by Pearl B4 Swine (# 11451) on :
 
And I thought it was just me, being tech-deficient. I don't want a whole strip of wasted space, further cutting down the room on the screen for what I want to look at. I use bookmarks more than anything else, for getting what I want. Chrome is nutz for not providing it as a thingy to click on.
 
Posted by mousethief (# 953) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Pearl B4 Swine:
And I thought it was just me, being tech-deficient. I don't want a whole strip of wasted space, further cutting down the room on the screen for what I want to look at. I use bookmarks more than anything else, for getting what I want. Chrome is nutz for not providing it as a thingy to click on.

I'm suspecting their attitude is "We are Google. We'll give you whatever functionality we damn well please."
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
Their is a way, it is a bit of an annoyance. Chrome only shows the bookmarks or folders that are at the top level of organization. One can use this to "hide" or reveal bookmarks from the bar.
If you open your bookmarks manager, you will see something like this

Bookmarks bar


And all these will appear on your bookmark bar should you enable it. However, if you create a folder for these, only that folder will appear. And it can have many subfolders, none of which will appear on the bookmark bar.
And one can click drag a particular bookmark to the bar.

A pain, but it can be done. The positive side is it forces one to organise.

ETFix because I am not certain what bread grooming is.

[ 12. August 2014, 18:15: Message edited by: lilBuddha ]
 
Posted by mousethief (# 953) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by lilBuddha:
Their is a way, it is a bit of an annoyance. Chrome only shows the bookmarks or folders that are at the top level of organization. One can use this to "hide" or reveal bookmarks from the bar.
If you open your bookmarks manager, you will see something like this

Bookmarks bar


And all these will appear on your bookmark bar should you enable it. However, if you create a folder for these, only that folder will appear. And it can have many subfolders, none of which will appear on the bookmark bar.
And one can click drag a particular bookmark to the bar.

A pain, but it can be done. The positive side is it forces one to organise.

ETFix because I am not certain what bread grooming is.

But I don't WANT the bookmark bar. The bookmark bar chops 3/8 of an inch off the top of my screen. That's too much real estate. I want a single button on the navigation bar. Like IE has. Like Firefox has. Like every web browser in the goddam world except Chrome has.
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
Go here install the extension.

[ 13. August 2014, 01:01: Message edited by: lilBuddha ]
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
If you're adding apps you could add Xmarks which stores your bookmarks as a cloud store and lets you access them from any device - and gives you a little button on your Chrome bar.
 
Posted by Alex Cockell (# 7487) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Curiosity killed ...:
I only use Dropbox to share things with others, currently for a cloud based teaching resource system for peripatetic tutors.

The only reason I want something now is to transfer 100 odd photos to another party rather than put them on CD and post them.

The problem with any Linux solution is that the other party can't access whatever I'm trying to share

How about going for a hosted FTP solution?

Review page of FTP hosts

That way - you shove the files up using a client like QinFTP - they download them or you send them an ftp:/ url

Yes, it's old-school - but it works.
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
That job is done. It had to be done quickly, and I have no real need for cloud solutions on Linux for anything else. If I want to share - as in give people - pictures I now have an on-line Dropbox solution
 
Posted by ChastMastr (# 716) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Alex Cockell:


Yes, it's old-school - but it works.

Awesome!! Thank you!! [Axe murder]
 
Posted by moonlitdoor (# 11707) on :
 
If booting a computer from a CD, as a regular thing not a one off, how long should I expect the CD to last ? Should I make lots of copies or would 2 or 3 be enough ?
 
Posted by Snags (# 15351) on :
 
Depends on where the CD is stored, exposure to UV, heat/cold, physical damage etc. etc.

Also it depends on whether the CD is easily recreated (e.g. if it's a Linux Live CD you just go to another machine, download the latest ISO and burn a new one).

I would have thought one or two backup copies, stored somewhere cool, dark and free of damp would be OK, with periodic confirmation that they work.
 
Posted by moonlitdoor (# 11707) on :
 
It is a linux CD, puppy linux, so it can be recreated but I'd have to get a friend to do it , as he did for this original one, since our work computers are not allowed to make CDs.

I could ask him to do it again but feel I should be prepared, and while this one is working I can use it to make some more. I will want to start up the computer most days, and have never used a music CD so often, so not sure how long they last with repeated use. But it will just be in my cupboard in between so it shouldn't get wet or UV radiation.

So far I am very impressed with the puppy linux, I had never used a linux before and am not that good with technology, but in terms of internet access it just worked straight away without me having to do anything. Without it this pc would have been useless.
 
Posted by Alisdair (# 15837) on :
 
moonlitdoor, you can install puppy to the pc's harddrive. Instructions are on the Puppy website IIRC. OTOH you may have reasons for not doing that. Either way, all the best with your adventures in Linuxland. :-)
 
Posted by Sparrow (# 2458) on :
 
I've just bought an Android tablet (Samsung Galaxy Tab 4). I am new to Android and wondering, do I need any antivirus software?
 
Posted by Snags (# 15351) on :
 
It won't hurt, there are things that target Android.

Sophos do a free scanner for Android (just type Sophos into the search in Play Store and pick the obvious one, as there are a few related items that pop up). Various other providers offer stuff too, if Sophos isn't to your taste.
 
Posted by Pearl B4 Swine (# 11451) on :
 
Esteemed people, I humbly come before you with yet another stumbling block. Windows Live Mail. I often find out that mail I send frequently 'says' sent, but never gets to its destination. This is the error message I get:
The connection to the server has failed.

Subject 'Nothing much'
Server: 'smtp.comcast.net'
Windows Live Mail Error ID: 0x800CCC0E
Protocol: SMTP
Port: 25
Secure(SSL): No
Socket Error: 10060
Is this something I can fix, or not. My skills are minimal. I'm tired of people saying No, I didn't get any email from you....
 
Posted by Amanda B. Reckondwythe (# 5521) on :
 
That's one of those errors that can be caused by a thousand different reasons. I would start with the SMTP port number.

Windows uses "ports" to connect with the outside world. However, some parts of the outside world do not allow traffic on certain ports, usually because the ports in question are notorious spam channels.

Try changing your SMTP port from Port 25 to Port 465, with SSL (secure socket layer) enabled. How you do this depends on the e-mail client you use. In Microsoft Outlook 2003, its Tools > E-mail accounts > View or Change > Change > More settings > Advanced. I have no idea what it would be for other versions of Outlook or other e-mail clients.
 
Posted by Pearl B4 Swine (# 11451) on :
 
Thanks Amanda. I finally found a page that gave info about the email details, but there was no way to change anything. I'm just going to stop using it & go with the gmail which seems to work reliably for me. It's all too much for an old gal like me. Thanks again. PB4S
 
Posted by Snags (# 15351) on :
 
I'm having to do this from memory, as I don't have a machine with Live Mail on it to hand, but you need to go into the account properties (either Tools > Accounts, or right-click on the top node of the navigation tree on the left, I believe).

From there you need to get into the Advanced or More Settings area, and there's an Advanced tab, which is where you can set ports, and whether or not to use SSL/STARTLS etc.
 
Posted by Pearl B4 Swine (# 11451) on :
 
I did reach that page, but was not allowed to put a different number in. It overrode back to what was there before. But thanks for trying. I'm just not going to use Windows Live Mail.
 
Posted by Thyme (# 12360) on :
 
I could [Mad] Apple. They have changed the connectors on their ipod. So now my nearly new sound system carefully chosen to fit my old ipod touch does not work with my new one!

Does anyone have any workarounds/fixes for this? I have posted here before enquiring with the Apple site or support by the way.

I was going to do a TITCH post in Hell but thought the energy would be better expended here.
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
Apple, and many aftermarket companies, make lightning to 30pin adaptors. They will likely not be elegant solutions.
 
Posted by monkeylizard (# 952) on :
 
What LB said. Just get an adapter.

To be fair, Apple hasn't changed their 30-pin connector since the iPod Gen3 debuted in 2003. 11 years is an eternity in technology. Plus the lightning connector has been standard for 2 years now.

I like the lightning connector on my iPad much better than the 30-pin on my older Apple iPods and iPhone stuff.

http://lmgtfy.com/?q=apple+30-pin+to+lightning+adapter

[ 15. September 2014, 20:42: Message edited by: monkeylizard ]
 
Posted by Thyme (# 12360) on :
 
Thank you! I will get an adaptor!

I have spent hours and hours this last week trying to get to grips with some new software 'No technical knowledge required' they said [Killing me] [Roll Eyes]

Trying to find out how to make my new ipod work was the last straw.

PS I didn't even know the names for the different adaptors/connectors so would not have known what to google for!

[ 15. September 2014, 21:26: Message edited by: Thyme ]
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by monkeylizard:

I like the lightning connector on my iPad much better than the 30-pin on my older Apple iPods and iPhone stuff.

My thoughts on the lightning connector do not belong in heaven. Suffice to say, durability is not as good as the old connectors, IME.
 
Posted by Alex Cockell (# 7487) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Amanda B. Reckondwythe:
That's one of those errors that can be caused by a thousand different reasons. I would start with the SMTP port number.

Windows uses "ports" to connect with the outside world. However, some parts of the outside world do not allow traffic on certain ports, usually because the ports in question are notorious spam channels.

Try changing your SMTP port from Port 25 to Port 465, with SSL (secure socket layer) enabled. How you do this depends on the e-mail client you use. In Microsoft Outlook 2003, its Tools > E-mail accounts > View or Change > Change > More settings > Advanced. I have no idea what it would be for other versions of Outlook or other e-mail clients.

Actually part of TCP/IP..
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Boring thread. Closed on the grounds of not being sufficiently amusing.

Ariel
Heaven Host
 
Posted by Lucia (# 15201) on :
 
OK, if you want amusing...

I managed to spill my gin and tonic over my laptop last night just after I switched it off. [Hot and Hormonal]

Only over the number pad at one end and I instantly picked it up and drained the liquid off the keyboard. Used kitchen roll to mop and dry it and held it upside down to try and drain anything off from around the keys. Left it open last night stood up on one end. It's hot here at the moment so I'm hoping any liquid which got in round the keys has evapourated. I haven't dared try turning it on yet.

Some questions:

How long do you think I should leave it before attempting to turn it on?
Is there anything else I should do?

Does praying for computers work??
Am I an idiot?
 
Posted by Ambivalence (# 16165) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Lucia:

How long do you think I should leave it before attempting to turn it on?
Is there anything else I should do?

Does praying for computers work??
Am I an idiot?

You've done what I would've done by draining, wiping and leaving it to stand in the warm.

Did the machine short out or switch itself off when the spill happened, or did you switch it off yourself?

If it shorted I would leave it to dry for longer (and TBH wouldn't be too optimistic for it) but if you were able to shut it down yourself after the accident then you should be ok to start it again now.

I make good use of crossed fingers when repairing laptops, if that counts as prayer. [Biased]
 
Posted by Lucia (# 15201) on :
 
I had actually already switched it off shortly before I knocked my drink over it. Reading around on the internet it seems that this may give some grounds for hope as there was no power running at the time to short circut things and fry them. We live in hope.

I'm just so annoyed with myself. Can't afford a new laptop at the moment and I'd have to get one brought over by someone from the UK as the different keyboard layouts available here would drive me nuts.

Ah well, here's hoping it doesn't come to that...
Crossed fingers welcome indeed!

[ 23. September 2014, 14:08: Message edited by: Lucia ]
 
Posted by Jengie Jon (# 273) on :
 
Lucia

Even if it does not work when you start please take it to a technician before you consider buying a new one. With your action it is quite likely that it might be limited damage that is replaceable e.g. it might just be the keyboard, in which case it can be replaced.

Jengie
 
Posted by Moo (# 107) on :
 
I am computer-illiterate, and I am trying to sign up for something on a website. I filled out several pages, clicking on 'next' after each. I have reached a page where clicking on 'next' produces nothing except a note on the bottom left of my screen which says, javascript void'.

What now?

Moo
 
Posted by Amanda B. Reckondwythe (# 5521) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Moo:
I have reached a page where clicking on 'next' produces nothing except a note on the bottom left of my screen which says, javascript void'.

Try a different browser -- i.e., if you were using Internet Explorer, try Google Chrome. If you still get the error, then there's something wrong with the page's coding.
 
Posted by Moo (# 107) on :
 
Thanks.

Moo
 
Posted by PeteC (# 10422) on :
 
So Geeks, here's a question from a technopeasant:

I recently bought a new laptop, and once I figured out some tricks, I am reasonably happy with Wingdos 8.1

Except there are longish periods when, if I click on a video, the screen turns green and all I get is audio. Doesn't matter where from: Utoob, Mother, Mother Canada, Uncle's Joes cute animal pictures. Green.

I thought it had corrected itself at the beginning of September. But, alas, it is back again. And I can't even blame the former regime in Libya ( where colouring the flag was a toddler's dream)

So any answers?
 
Posted by Wesley J (# 6075) on :
 
Seems to be a common problem, Uncle Pete. I've searchengined "green screen video win 8.1", and there's a lot. Haven't been able to trawl through this yet, but may do so later.

In the meantime, if anyone's found a befitting reply, please go for it. Luckily, ehem ehem, I'm still on Win 7 myself.
 
Posted by Golden Key (# 1468) on :
 
Re the spilled-on laptop:

I've heard several times of people burying them in dry, raw rice. It's supposed to soak up the moisture. Look for instructions online. FWIW.
 
Posted by Golden Key (# 1468) on :
 
Uncle Pete--

This is just a wild guess, but I wonder if it's somehow hitting DOS mode, or another machine-level mode? Sounds like the screens of some of the early, pre-windows PCs and terminals.

Or maybe some sort of video card problen???

FWIW.
 
Posted by moonlitdoor (# 11707) on :
 
Are we allowed to ask about other technology here apart from computers ?

I decided to try a mobile phone for the first time but am regretting it as I can't even get it to turn on. It is called the Alcatel C1, from Argos.

The battery was separate in the box. I have inserted it. I have put it on to charge from the mains for a few hours. There is a small white light showing at the top of the phone but that is all. The actual screen of the phone is completely dark.

It was a sim free but you could choose a free one with it and I put one in from Three. But even I did that wrongly, according to the instructions it should turn on without a sim card.
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
My Alcatel I have to hold buttons down for a while for it to turn on ~ it is 18months old and what I am using posting to the Ship
 
Posted by Jengie jon (# 273) on :
 
Spent some time googling and wonder if pg 139 of the User Manual might help.

Intriguingly it does say that it suggests charging for at least 5 hours for the first time in the setup part of that manual.

This is the Users Manual and not the "Quick Users Manual". These days you quite often have to go on the web for the full manual.

Jengie
 
Posted by moonlitdoor (# 11707) on :
 
Thank you for that link to the instructions, I think that they could be very useful.
 
Posted by Sparrow (# 2458) on :
 
Can anyone recommend a free music converter program, in particular one that can convert WMA files to MP3? Thanks
 
Posted by LeRoc (# 3216) on :
 
I think iTunes can do this, although it's a bit cumbersome. If it's a small number of files, I sometimes convert online using Zamzar.
 
Posted by Jengie jon (# 273) on :
 
After battles with converting files from my voice recorder using the manufacturers software I settled on NCH Switch. I think the free version will do mp3 to wma and you only need the paid for one if you have a propriety sound file (mine was) but even that is cheap.

Jengie
 
Posted by Arethosemyfeet (# 17047) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sparrow:
Can anyone recommend a free music converter program, in particular one that can convert WMA files to MP3? Thanks

Audacity should be able to do the job, I think.
 
Posted by Sparrow (# 2458) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Arethosemyfeet:
quote:
Originally posted by Sparrow:
Can anyone recommend a free music converter program, in particular one that can convert WMA files to MP3? Thanks

Audacity should be able to do the job, I think.
I've GOT Audacity and that was the first thing I tried. It told me it couldn't open WMA files due to patent restrictions!
 
Posted by Amanda B. Reckondwythe (# 5521) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sparrow:
Can anyone recommend a free music converter program, in particular one that can convert WMA files to MP3? Thanks

I use Jodix with very good results.
 
Posted by Sparrow (# 2458) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Amanda B. Reckondwythe:
quote:
Originally posted by Sparrow:
Can anyone recommend a free music converter program, in particular one that can convert WMA files to MP3? Thanks

I use Jodix with very good results.
Thanks, I might try that.
 
Posted by BroJames (# 9636) on :
 
To open WMA files (a M$ proprietary format) in Audacity you need to download the add-on FFmpeg import export library.
 
Posted by Sparrow (# 2458) on :
 
I've tried several different programs but none of them will convert WMA files, they all say the files are protected and can't be converted.
 
Posted by BroJames (# 9636) on :
 
Are the files DRM protected? If so you will need to take other steps to disable the DRM protection before you can convert them from WMA to MP3. I know there are ways of doing this, but it is not something I have experience of. You need to look at DRM removal tools/methods if that is the case.

[ 25. October 2014, 13:35: Message edited by: BroJames ]
 
Posted by Sparrow (# 2458) on :
 
Yes but most of them are from my own CDs that I have ripped to the computer. I thought the law had changed recently in the UK so we could copy music we had purchased, to anywhere for our own use.
 
Posted by BroJames (# 9636) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sparrow:
Yes but most of them are from my own CDs that I have ripped to the computer. I thought the law had changed recently in the UK so we could copy music we had purchased, to anywhere for our own use.

IANAL (at least not currently practising, and never in that field), but I believe you may be right. However, changing the law hasn't removed the DRM protection that is built in. It only means (assuming you are right) that you are not breaking the law if you find software or other means (Google may be your friend) to remove the protection and make copies yourself.

Also, changing the law does not mean that music producers are required to stop making it difficult for you to do the copying. They may still seek to prevent or limit copying on the commercial grounds that it will lead to more sales.
 
Posted by Pyx_e (# 57) on :
 
So I have a Samsung Note 2 (a big phablet), which I love. I very rarely use it to make calls (on silent all the time). I use it more as a mini tablet which also allows me to txt and make the odd call (using a headset mostly). In it I have a SIM - unlimited mins, txt and data package.


My question is will the Note 8 work in the UK as a phone with my SIM ? It seems to me I should but before I splash out .......... any input would be gratefully received.

Pyx_e
 
Posted by Schroedinger's cat (# 64) on :
 
OK, people who are even more geeky than me, I have a challenge. I have a wifi router at home, that works perfectly OK across most of the house.

However, the signal at the furthest end of the house is not very good - it makes it difficult to work there, or stream music, or suchlike. This is not a huge problem as such, at least at the moment.

However, we are looking at extending, and this will be more of an issue. So what I need is a booster device - ideally that I can plug in anywhere, and it can hook into the existing signal and improve it. I don't want something I need to wire into my existing router, because i want to put the booster upstairs.

I know that these devices exist, but I would appreciate insight from the very knowledgeable community as to what I need to look for, and what I need to avoid. I don't want to pay loads of money for something that will provide a wifi signal across the whole of the South East - I just need to improve the signal across my house. I think the real problem is that there are steel girders in the way, so boosting from upstairs should help this.

Thank you.
 
Posted by Snags (# 15351) on :
 
Here be violent opinions and flamewars, SC!

We (work) generally avoid range extenders (aka wireless repeaters) if at all possible. The way that they operate means you essentially lose half of your WiFi bandwidth for anything on the extended network, and a chunk out of the primary that goes to servicing the extension.

So for a domestic setup I would normally look at getting a good quality (Devolo or similar, not cheapo) powerline/homeplug solution and then either attaching an access point to the far end, or getting one with an integrated access point. That way you extend your LAN from the current router via the mains to the new location, and have discrete wireless access there.

The other thing you could look at would be an Open Mesh network. I haven't played with it yet, but a couple of associates who generally know their stuff on networking are favourably impressed.
 
Posted by Schroedinger's cat (# 64) on :
 
Snaggs - I love throwing petrol onto smouldering coals. I know that there are a whole lot of differing opinions on this stuff, which is why I was specifying my particular situation! I was thinking of a powerline solution, but was interested if others had experience of this, or other solutions.

The open-mesh stuff does look like it would be good for a much larger place. Maybe when I move to my palace, I will take a look at that.....
 
Posted by Pearl B4 Swine (# 11451) on :
 
[Confused] My Mozilla Firefox keeps crashing. I get a message box that wants me to fill out a "crash report". Does this do any good?

Will I have to disconnect everything & take the box to the puter fixit shop? Any suggestions?
 
Posted by jedijudy (# 333) on :
 
Pearlie, my geekiness is pretty lightweight, but this is what I did when Mozilla was being a PITA: changed to Google Chrome! (I hear folks giggling out there. Stop it!)

You might want to try that before boxing everything up and carting it to the shop. [Smile]
 
Posted by Schroedinger's cat (# 64) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Pearl B4 Swine:
[Confused] My Mozilla Firefox keeps crashing. I get a message box that wants me to fill out a "crash report". Does this do any good?

Will I have to disconnect everything & take the box to the puter fixit shop? Any suggestions?

You shouldn't. Lets go through a checklist:

1. Have you installed anything in firefox recently? Any popups indicating that something need to change? Any oddities in behaviour?

2. Have you installed anything else recently on your computer? However innocuous, it can sometimes push the machine over the edge.

3. Do you regularly do routine maintenance on the computer (defrag and error check)?

4. Do you switch the computer off completely when you are not using it? If not try this.

Firefox does sometimes crash unexpectedly. It is often to do with wither an add-on that has snuck in, is unwanted, and just breaks stuff; or a memory issue, which can be caused by other things running at the same time.
 
Posted by Pearl B4 Swine (# 11451) on :
 
Thank you jedijudy and Sch'cat.
JJ: yes, I also have Google Chrome, and do the same thing. I'm not so good at manipulating the GC though, but I'm getting better.
SC: thank you! I avoid adding anything, LOL. But I will give it serious thought. I should look at recently bookmarked I think. No, I haven't defragged in probably too long. OK, I will do that. Question-- where can I find out what version of Firefox I am running? A friend told me maybe I should upgrade it.
 
Posted by Snags (# 15351) on :
 
Most browsers have a Help > About box for version info, although it hides in different places depending on version. Firefox is a beggar for moving the main menu in particular with version changes. Most recent versions should also update themselves.

Failing that, Add/Remove Programs (Uninstall a Program in Win7) will tell you, in Control Panel. Assuming Windows, of course.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Windows 7 and I need to clear my cookies, or so a Government website tells me, so I can log in again. Anyone know how?

I am using Firefox.
 
Posted by Jengie jon (# 273) on :
 
In Firefox go to options dialog (either tools option or from the right hand drop down menu select the option icon), choose the privacy tab and there should be a link to clear cookies.

Jengie
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Thanks!
 
Posted by Huia (# 3473) on :
 
My new computer gives 'hibernate' as an option as well as 'sleep' - what is the difference? and when would you use each option?

Is it best to log off overnight?

Answers in plain English for the technologically challenged please.

Huia
 
Posted by Snags (# 15351) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Huia:
My new computer gives 'hibernate' as an option as well as 'sleep' - what is the difference? and when would you use each option?

Is it best to log off overnight?

Answers in plain English for the technologically challenged please.

Huia

OK, keeping it as simple as possible (for me!):

Sleep doesn't quite ever actually turn off. It uses a tiny, tiny bit of power in order to keep what's held in RAM (working memory that loses content when it loses power) fresh and stop it being lost. But almost everything else powers down (screen, disk, etc.).

When you wake the computer up, it quickly* springs to life from exactly where you left off.

Hibernate takes a kind of snapshot of everything that's currently happening and what state it's in, and writes that information to a file on the hard disk. It then completely shuts the power off.

When you turn the computer back on it doesn't do a full startup, instead it does a quick one, and puts you back where you were when you hibernated.

Which should I use?
If you use Sleep for long time it will eventually run out of juice (if on battery) and screw up (unless it's configured to automatically shutdown or hibernate after a period of time asleep). It also runs the risk of knackering the battery by giving it a complete discharge, if left long enough.

However, the computer will wake up quicker from a Sleep than a Hibernate.

So, if you're just shutting the lid to move to another room, use Sleep. If you're packing up to drive home, or until the next day, Hibernate.


*Note that "quickly" may be a relative term.
 
Posted by Pearl B4 Swine (# 11451) on :
 
Snags, I forgot to say "Thank You". Sorry.

I did manage to find that I am on Mozilla Firefox 32.0.3. When I found "Update Firefox", it said that it updates automatically. So, I presume I'm ok.

Now: I've only found the defrag spot accidentally before. Where is it, actually? (yes, I am Windows 7)
Thanks in advance.
 
Posted by Snags (# 15351) on :
 
You can get to defrag in various ways.

Probably the laziest is:

- click Start button
- type "defrag" in the search box and wait (no quotes)
- click "Disk Defragmenter" when it appears in the list
 
Posted by Drifting Star (# 12799) on :
 
Start button > All Programs > Accessories (this is a folder, not a file, so scroll down and click once to open it) > System Tools (also a folder) > Disk Defragmenter.

[Smile]

(cross-posted - Snags' version will be quicker!)

[ 31. October 2014, 15:54: Message edited by: Drifting Star ]
 
Posted by Huia (# 3473) on :
 
Snags, thank-you, that is understandable, clear and helpful.

I'm listening to a person being interviewed on the radio at the moment who is talking about the curse of knowledge where a writer uses jargon or technical words assuming, often wrongly that the reader understands them.

Your post avoids this nicely.

Huia
 
Posted by moonlitdoor (# 11707) on :
 
I recently got a mobile phone for the first time. After some trouble I got it working and yesterday took my first digital photo. I want to load it onto a pc to have a better look at it.

I connected the phone to the pc using a usb cable which came with it. The phone recognises hat it is connected to a pc, but the pc does not recognise the phone.

The pc is very old and can be started up in 2 ways, windows 2000 from the hard disk and puppy linux slacko from a cd. When I start from windows 2000, it shows removable drive E in windows explorer, but clicking on it gets the message 'please insert a disk into drive E'.

When starting from puppy linux and clicking mount, it does not show the usb drive at all, just 2 hard disk partitions and a cd rom drive.

Is there something else I could try or am I out of luck trying to connect a phone to an old pc ?
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
moonlitdoor - you will probably have to download the right software from the repository

one article

and another discussion

and another discussion

(mind you these are all 3G and I bet you're looking at 4G). That's from guessing what to search for but you'll probably have to go dig in the forums.

Software for processing pictures but you need to find it in the repository unless you're confident to tarball.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by moonlitdoor:
I recently got a mobile phone for the first time. After some trouble I got it working and yesterday took my first digital photo. I want to load it onto a pc to have a better look at it.

Are you able to email the photo to yourself, and open the email with attachment on your pc?
 
Posted by LeRoc (# 3216) on :
 
quote:
moonlitdoor: The pc is very old and can be started up in 2 ways, windows 2000 from the hard disk and puppy linux slacko from a cd. When I start from windows 2000, it shows removable drive E in windows explorer, but clicking on it gets the message 'please insert a disk into drive E'.
I can imagine that Windows 2000 is too old for this.
 
Posted by Alisdair (# 15837) on :
 
Dear Moonlitdoor,

This link: http://tinyurl.com/lfpxtbl

contains the following, but make sure to read to the end of my post before giving up, or trying this:

quote:
I did some more reading about libmtp, and I see that it's generally regarded as unreliable with Android devices.
There's an alternative application based on libmtp: go-mtpfs
which I have just packaged now for you to test. Get it here -
www.smokey01.com/tempestuous/go-mtpfs-20130628.pet
Instructions:
Download and install the dotpet.
Connect your phone to the USB port of your Puppy computer. Wait a few seconds.
Open a console and run these 2 commands -
Code:
cd /mnt
go-mtpfs MTPdevice

You will see the go-mtpfs application attempt to connect to your phone ...
if this is successful, you should be able to see the contents of your phone at /mnt/MTPdevice with a standard file browser (such as ROX). Go ahead and copy some files from/to Puppy.
When you're finished, it's important to unmount the phone before disconnecting it, with this command -
Code:
fusermount -u MTPdevice

UPDATE: 64bit version now available (for Fatdog64, Slacko64 etc) -
www.smokey01.com/tempestuous/go-mtpfs-20130628-64bit.pet

As you can see tinkering may be required, HOWEVER, the answer may lie within your phone and involve simply changing the protocol used by the phone to communicate with a PC via USB. When you first connect your phone you may well be offered a choice. Your phone is currently set to use 'MTP', but if you are able to choose 'Mass Storage Device' try that, and your phone will appear to the PC as a simple memory stick.

ALTERNATIVELY, if none of the above is possible or appeals, and for some reason emailing the picture isn't a preferred solution, then you could install the 'WiFi File Explorer' app from Google's 'Play Store', assuming you have a wifi connection, and by following some straightforward instructions your phone's file structure will appear in a web browser window on your PC.

All the best.


BTW, Slacko Puppy is a rather niche Linux, although a very good one. You may well find however that something more mainstream, like a Live Ubuntu or Knoppix, etc. will handle the 'MTP' protocol 'out of the box'.

[ 02. November 2014, 18:47: Message edited by: Alisdair ]
 
Posted by Sparrow (# 2458) on :
 
I use Windows Live Mail for my main email and calendar, and I'm trying to remember how to save the whole calendar to my hard drive. I used to be able to do it, just can't remember how! I think it was as an HTML file. Help please?
 
Posted by mousethief (# 953) on :
 
In Windows 7 my taskbar is hiding behind whatever window is maximized, even though it's not set to autohide. Pressing the windows key makes it come back into view, as does minimizing all windows.

Setting I can set, or is this the new black?

ETA: Dragging my pointer to the bottom of the screen does not make it pop back up, nor does it change the shape of the pointer.

[ 12. November 2014, 14:57: Message edited by: mousethief ]
 
Posted by moonlitdoor (# 11707) on :
 
Many thanks to Alisdair for that comprehensive advice. I was unsuccessful with the USB cable whether I connected as USB mass storage or MTP.

However I have successfully installed the wifi File Explorer. It took me a while to find the photos as I had no idea where in the file system they would be, but I found them in the end and easily downloaded them, so I am happy.
 
Posted by cattyish (# 7829) on :
 
I have internet again! Mr C has fixed it and it works significantly better than it did prior to needing fixed.

Cattyish, dancing a wee jig.
 
Posted by LeRoc (# 3216) on :
 
Congratulations! Lend me Mr. C sometimes.
 
Posted by Wesley J (# 6075) on :
 
I've just had this message pop up when I restarted my deskie after a day off:

quote:
_OEC ! ! DWD+-SW!NE-3540A ATA Device installed
I will have to check what brand my DVD player and DVD burner are (I have one of each in the machine). According to a websearch, it could be about a '_NEC DVD+-RW ND-3450A ATA Device' - but then, why am I getting this barely disguised 'SW!NE' thingy? Annoying! I certainly haven't installed any new hardware.

I have immediately taken the machine off the internet and am running a full Norton scan, plus a Spybot S&D scan later on.

Any ideas? Thanks.
 
Posted by Wesley J (# 6075) on :
 
Update - device manager tells me that the DVD burner is indeed called '_OEC ! ! DWD+-SW!NE-3540A ATA' - which is rather strange!

Why DWD instead of DVD? Why OEC instead of (apparently) NEC? Why the many exclamation marks? Plus the SW!NE? DWD and OEC are both one letter further than DVD and NEC - so an alphabet puter software hiccup?

Both DVD players are working fine, at least with an audio CD. Why that glitch? [Confused]
 
Posted by Snags (# 15351) on :
 
I quite often notice that the hardware ID strings in bits of kit can be, erm, esoteric. It doesn't normally tumble through to the forefront in the UI, but a lot of the buried stuff often looks like an explosion in a character set mapping factory.
 
Posted by The Machine Elf (# 1622) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Wesley J:
Update - device manager tells me that the DVD burner is indeed called '_OEC ! ! DWD+-SW!NE-3540A ATA' - which is rather strange!

Why DWD instead of DVD? Why OEC instead of (apparently) NEC? Why the many exclamation marks? Plus the SW!NE? DWD and OEC are both one letter further than DVD and NEC - so an alphabet puter software hiccup?

Both DVD players are working fine, at least with an audio CD. Why that glitch? [Confused]

Possibly a cosmic ray or something has been setting the least significant bit to 1 rather than 0, as all the transpositions appear to be a 0 to 1. (N->0, space -> !, V -> W) so it would have been '_NEC DVD+ SW ND-3540A ATA'. ND-3540A is a real NEC model number whereas NE-3540A isn't.

TME
 
Posted by Wesley J (# 6075) on :
 
Aaaah! - Yes indeed, cosmic rays it must've been. After the virus and spyware check, which both came out clean, and after a restart, the DVD burner is now again correctly listed as

quote:
_NEC DVD+-RW ND-3530A ATA Device
Thank you both. This 0/1-business is now utterly making sense! [Overused]
 
Posted by Bene Gesserit (# 14718) on :
 
Our computer came with Windows installed but we have recently started getting really annoying and repetitive messages to the effect that our copy of Windows is not genuine. [Mad] The error message has the number 0x8004fe21.

Do we (collectively!) know a way, please, of sorting this without going back to factory settings?

Thanks in advance

BG
 
Posted by Eutychus (# 3081) on :
 
Is it a Dell? If so, my comiserations. My laptop has been like this for a couple of years now and Dell's only suggestion was a complete reinstall.

On the upside, the only drawback I've encountered (apart from embarassment when other people notice the message and draw the wrong conclusions) in all that time is having no wallpaper, just a dark black screen. But it looks sort of cool.
 
Posted by Snags (# 15351) on :
 
There are a few things you can try. One is to start an administrative command prompt (Start > cmd, right click, run as admin) then type "slmgr -rearm", then reboot and re-activate.

If you don't have your product key, get Produkey from Nirsoft and run it first to retrieve the Windows key.

This is an occasional problem, and seems to be doing the rounds again [Frown]
 
Posted by Snags (# 15351) on :
 
Further to previous, that last fix didn't work for all of the machines I've seen that have been hit with this.

What appears to be working on one of the stubborn ones is downloading and running this patch which fixes a fubar MS introduced in a recent round of regular updates.

Procedure appears to be:

- download patch
- run it (requires elevation); note that there is no UI for it, and no indication when it's done. It's only tiny and should go through very quickly though
- reboot
- reboot again just for giggles
- check that your Windows is still activated (right-click on Computer > Properties), if not activate it
- reboot one last time
- hope the stupid WGA goes away

Still got fingers crossed, but appear to have stopped my FiL ringing me up twice a day with this one!
 
Posted by Bene Gesserit (# 14718) on :
 
Thanks everso.

I think I'll make sure we've got everything backed up - we usually have!- and try the first of those first. It might have to wait until I'm off for Christmas...

If all else fails we'll take the computer back to factory settings - it won't be the first time we've done that and it probably won't be the last.

BG
 
Posted by Wet Kipper (# 1654) on :
 
same thing happened to us with a laptop about 2 years ago. We didn't worry about it too much because
A (as mentioned) it just meant an extra button to click, and no desktop picture
B - the battery held no charge (had to be plugged in all the time) and the fan was getting slower and noisier
so we were already contemplating getting a replacement anyway.
 
Posted by Sparrow (# 2458) on :
 
Can anyone tell me where on the PC the emails in Windows Live Mail are saved?
 
Posted by Huia (# 3473) on :
 
Advice for the technopeasant please - this is driving me batty.

I had Google as my home page - it suited me, and I could find most of the things I wanted. I have free AvG as my virus protection. I got a message asking if further AVG protection to which I agreed. What I didn't understand, being a bear of very little brain was that it would change the search engine I use to Yahoo (it's an AVGpage similar to Google's but claiming to be more secure). Since I have done this I have come up with "blank page" in searches for sites I know exist.

If I change my search engine and home page back to Google will this be less secure?

Please don't dazzle me with science.


Huia
 
Posted by Lamb Chopped (# 5528) on :
 
It won't do any harm.

They tend to slip that change in there ("do you want to make x your new home page?") I think for advertising and revenue purposes.

If I notice it, I always uncheck the little box so they don't mess with my home page.

It should have no effect on security.
 
Posted by Huia (# 3473) on :
 
Thanks Lamb Chopped, I thought that might be so but lately technology seems to be ganging up on me [Paranoid] and I didn't want to make things worse.

Huia
 
Posted by mousethief (# 953) on :
 
I have an old PC. There is no operating system on this PC; the HDD is completely blank. It has a CD-ROM but not a DVD-ROM. I would like to install Linux Mint Cinnamon 17 Rebecca. Becky does not fit on a CD.

Do I have to install some other operating system, then download the iso (even though I already have the damn thing but it doesn't fit on a CD), then install Mint over the existing operating system? Am I missing something, or are they really that bone-headed?

[ 29. December 2014, 03:34: Message edited by: mousethief ]
 
Posted by Leorning Cniht (# 17564) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by mousethief:
I have an old PC. There is no operating system on this PC; the HDD is completely blank. It has a CD-ROM but not a DVD-ROM. I would like to install Linux Mint Cinnamon 17 Rebecca. Becky does not fit on a CD.

Do I have to install some other operating system, then download the iso (even though I already have the damn thing but it doesn't fit on a CD), then install Mint over the existing operating system? Am I missing something, or are they really that bone-headed?

You should be able to write the ISO to a USB stick and install from that. There are instructions here that at a glance look sensible.

ETA: Many other linuces offer a "small" bootable image that would easily fit on a CD, and installs over the network. Mint appears not to.

[ 29. December 2014, 04:01: Message edited by: Leorning Cniht ]
 
Posted by mousethief (# 953) on :
 
Thanks, I managed to do the USB stick thing. After a few glitches it seems to be running. Unfortunately apparently Cinnamon doesn't like old video drivers and that might give me some headaches. But I'm not doing anything particularly fast so I'm hoping it won't be a game-stopper.
 
Posted by mousethief (# 953) on :
 
Why is it so fripping hard to install software in linux? My God, they go out of their way to make it as difficult as possible.

Okay so I've downloaded fuckme.tar.gz. The online instructions say to do this:

tar xvzf fuckme.tar.gz

Okay that works, it extracts the folder inside the tar file. Then the instructions say to look for a "readme" file. None. Fine. Now it says do this:

./configure

result:

bash: ./configure: No such file or directory.

WHAM. Stymied. I'm fucked. Can you google for "./config no such file or directory"? Hell if you can.

Cloud help? Puhleeze. And of course I can't find a man entry for configure if configure doesn't exist.

Linux may be wonderful, but Windows has it all over Linux in installing software. Hands down, no contest, for installing software, Windows rules, Linux drools.

So all of you Linux kool-aid drinkers, please help me. How do I install this software?
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
I did a Google search for "./config no such file or directory" with the parentheses included and got back multiple results. I do not use Linux, so cannot vouch for the results.

[ 29. December 2014, 17:14: Message edited by: lilBuddha ]
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by lilBuddha:
I did a Google search for "./config no such file or directory" with the parentheses included and got back multiple results. I do not use Linux, so cannot vouch for the results.

Bloody hell. Quotes not parentheses.

[ 29. December 2014, 17:18: Message edited by: lilBuddha ]
 
Posted by Jengie jon (# 273) on :
 
IANALE

My poor Unix says that it looks as if you might be in the wrong directory! However I have no idea which directory you should be in.

You should be in a directory with a readme file for the software, you are then changing directory to the configure one for the software.

Jengie
 
Posted by Paul. (# 37) on :
 
Mousethief,

First - is this something that's definitely not in the software repository? If you type:

code:
apt-cache search fuckme

do you see it? If so then

code:
sudo apt-get install fuckme

will be far less painful.

I'll assume that it's not in the repository or you have a good reason not to want to install it from there - later version, no connection to internet.

What you're doing is the classic "configure;make;make install" incantation to build and install software from source. There's no "man configure" because configure is not a command it's a script that should be part of the source you just unpacked (that was the tar command). So check whether the file "configure" exists and if it does that it has execute permissions:

code:
ls -l configure [check output for x's] e.g.
$ ls -l configure
-rwxr-xr-x 1 paul paul 419 Jul 4 2009 configure

If you don't have execute permission then grant it:

code:
chmod u+x configure

Then try to re-run "./configure"

If there's no configure but there is a file called configure.in then you can create one with:

code:
autoconf

If autoconf is not installed you'll get a message telling you how to install it (apt-get).

Anyway that should create the configure script which you can then run. However don't be surprised if that then tells you you're missing a dependency or library or some such. This is why installing from the repo is better - it handles all that for you.

If you don't get any messages indicating it's missing something then you should be able to go ahead and build it with make (OK, I'm guessing but it's a near-certainty, but if your instructions say something other than make after the configure step defer to them)

If none of that works/moves you forward then let us know and also let us know what "fuckme" actually is.

HTH
Paul
 
Posted by Paul. (# 37) on :
 
Jengie's post is good advice. Normally a tar soruce archive would be create a sub-directory so try typing "cd fuckme<tab>" and the autocomplete should find it.

(I'm guessing assuming the directory name would be the same as the tar file, again pretty standard)
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Paul.:


If none of that works/moves you forward then let us know and also let us know what "fuckme" actually is.

HTH
Paul

An entirely appropriate name for a Linux install?
 
Posted by Paul. (# 37) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by lilBuddha:
quote:
Originally posted by Paul.:


If none of that works/moves you forward then let us know and also let us know what "fuckme" actually is.

HTH
Paul

An entirely appropriate name for a Linux install?
[Razz]

I like Linux and find it suits me. Not so everyone and I try to avoid getting into religious wars about it.
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
I am OS agnostic. However, I do enjoy persecuting fanatics.
 
Posted by no prophet's flag is set so... (# 15560) on :
 
Mousethief: if you haven't been successful, plse tell us what distribution you are using. Most popular versions use a package manager like Synaptic. If you are unfamiliar with Linux, which you post suggests, then you generally should avoid tar.gz and compiling yourself and use a package manager. What package are you trying to install, or better yet, what are you wanting to do? There are usually many different packages for the same task, some are better than others.

Linux is like Anglicanism if iOS is RC, Microsoft is protestant and Orthodox is BSD.
 
Posted by Palimpsest (# 16772) on :
 
Perhaps a new coffee mug is needed "I Thought This was a Unix Website"?

It sounds like you need to go into the directory that tar unpacked, using a "cd fuckme" and then look for the .configure command with a "ls -a"
 
Posted by mousethief (# 953) on :
 
What's BSD?

Anyway I just added the repository for fuckme (which is FreeFileSync) and then did an apt-get. All is well again in the mousehold (after J heard me cursing Linus Torvalds in all the languages I know how to curse in).

I still maintain that it should be easier to download and install a program from the interwebs, where most of us go to look for software. Every freaking TAR file is different. There was no "configure" or "configure.in" file anywhere in the directories created when I un-tarred the tar.gz file.

And the online help forums (fora?) are so worthless. You either find someone who had your exact problem in 2009, but their thread was never answered, or peters out with a lot of gas but no solution; or you you get a lot of instructions that tell you to click on something that isn't there, or run a command you don't have, or which assume you know how to do things you don't ("simply add the FFK to the XMU file in dkrggz, and comment out the zingzingwabbu section").

Oh, and Linux Mint Cinnamon 17.1 Rebecca 32 bit.

[ 30. December 2014, 02:38: Message edited by: mousethief ]
 
Posted by mousethief (# 953) on :
 
I love the idea of Linux. The reality keeps drawing me up short.
 
Posted by Leorning Cniht (# 17564) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by mousethief:

I still maintain that it should be easier to download and install a program from the interwebs, where most of us go to look for software. Every freaking TAR file is different.

Well, yes - a tar archive is exactly an archive of whatever its creator wanted to shove in there.

One of the greatest strengths, and weaknesses, of linux is that it has so many standards to choose from. If what you are installing is a package built for your distribution of linux, then installing it is just as easy (and I dare say rather more robust) than installing a Windows program with the standard Windows InstallShield thing.

But because there are so many different distributions, a random software author is unlikely to want to maintain install packages for each one. Still, Mint being popular, you should be able to find something suitable (as you did).

Of course, if you're not going to use a package manager, but install binaries by hand, or build from source, then you need to know something of what you're doing, but that's no different from installing Windows software given a zip archive full of binaries and dlls (and of course, most windows users don't have a compiler at all).

[ 30. December 2014, 04:10: Message edited by: Leorning Cniht ]
 
Posted by Alisdair (# 15837) on :
 
A suitable alternative file synchroniser, and one much more simply installed from most mainstream distro repositories, is Unison (generally 'unison-gtk' is an effective GUI version).

Have a look at it at: http://tinyurl.com/9uvjl but, as already said, probably best installed from the distro repo if you want to minimise the possibility of incompatibility.

Personally, with the odd exception over the years, I find Linux's way of managing software and dependencies superior to Windows', and generally extremely simple, but there are certainly exceptions, esp. once you leave the safe havens of the authorised repositories.
 
Posted by Paul. (# 37) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by mousethief:
What's BSD?

Berkley Software Distribution. It's another (family of) Unix OS. Unlike Linux which is a clone of Unix, BSD actually is Unix insofar as it can trace its lineage back to the original version.

quote:

Anyway I just added the repository for fuckme (which is FreeFileSync) and then did an apt-get. All is well again in the mousehold (after J heard me cursing Linus Torvalds in all the languages I know how to curse in).

By all means curse but Linus isn't really to blame. He's responsible for the kernel but he's not really responsible for the OS that's wrapped around it, much less FreeFileSync. It may even surprise you to know that Linus is on your side on this issue

(For those that don't know "The Year of the Linux Desktop" has become a sort of jokey meme in the Linux world. It relates to the fact that people have been predicting Linux will make a big splash on the desktop "this/next year" for the last 15 years at least.)
 
Posted by Wesley J (# 6075) on :
 
Happy Geeky New Year to all! [Cool]

Anyone got any experience with Windows ReadyBoost? (Linkie)

I'm just playing around with a couple of USB sticks of different sizes, reformatted in exFAT (FAT format won't allow for the full capacity to be used: max. size with FAT is 4GB on Win 7). I'm currently using 4, 8 and the maximum 32GBs for this.

If you've tried this yourself, did you notice any significant improvement in performance? I'm also wondering if something like an SD card would grant faster access, USB 2.0 being somewhat limited. (I haven't got any USB 3.0 ports yet.)

Any observations? Many thanks! [Smile]
 
Posted by Snags (# 15351) on :
 
I'm fairly sure that the general consensus on ReadyBoost is that unless you have a cripplingly small amount of RAM, it doesn't bring anything to the party. So Win 7 with 512MB RAM it confers some advantage. Get above 2GB-4GB of RAM (fairly standard these days) and it doesn't really do much, if anything, for you.

Note the above is received wisdom, I haven't run any actual tests personally.
 
Posted by Wesley J (# 6075) on :
 
Thank you, Snags.

I reckon the relative lack of information on big ReadyBoost improvements speaks for itself then. Seems that there are now simply too few users actually trying this out.

I guess I'll continue to fiddle a bit - putting some of the otherwise unemployed memory sticks or cards to use, and be it experimental.

Reports from readily boosted Shippies still very welcome. [Smile]

[ 06. January 2015, 07:18: Message edited by: Wesley J ]
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
OK. After some screen failure and computer crashes which reset my pc to January 2002 (I've since amended the date and time), I can't connect to any secure sites any more. I'm getting an error message saying

"Secure connection: fatal error (1066)

The response from the online certificate validation (OCSP) server was too old."

Any ideas how I can get around this? It's Windows XP Service Pack 3 and I'm not a computer expert so simpler explanations would be helpful if possible. Should I do a system restore?

TIA.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Now sorted (I hope) [Ultra confused]
 
Posted by mousethief (# 953) on :
 
I've got a box booting Linux Mint Cinnamon, and a box booting Windows 7, with Linux Mint Cinnamon in a Virtualbox.

I would like to remote desktop, controlling the linux boot machine from the windows boot machine, either from windows or from within the Virtualbox. I've installed Remmina on both, and can't see either machine from the other one. They're both talking to the internet, so I know they're connected to the router.

Help.
 
Posted by mousethief (# 953) on :
 
Look at me. Look at me. I did it. The product anybody should want to remote desktop with Linux beasties is nomachine. Fabulous product, easy to use, good online tutorial for setting everything up. And I even managed to install from a .deb file, which is maybe a first.
 
Posted by Wesley J (# 6075) on :
 
This is regarding Skype, and their innumerable, never communicated and never detailed (for the user) updates.

I still have version 6.14.xx. I let it upgrade once, but only to revert ASAP via system restore - whenever I turned it off, it came up with a nagging screen, like 'Do you really want to turn off Skype? You won't be able to receive any calls, messages or files'; well, yes, and that's why I like to turn it off (not the invisible mode, but off as in 'shut down the programme'), if I don't need it.

Anyways: in another of the so-wise (not!) updates, and when talking with a someone who has version 7.0.59.xx, I noticed that if he sends me a file, this is no longer sent witin Skype, but now provides me a link to a Skype website, similar to this:
code:
https://api.asm.skype.com/s/i?0-cus-xxx

He, on the other hand, can still download my files within Skype. Question: Is there any way that users with upgraded, more recent versions can send you direct links, or has this now all been abolished in favour of webbased, i.e. cloud storage of said files?

I used to like Skype as a separate entity from a web browser, and I still think this is preferrable. Cloud may be fine for some items, but I don't want to always be logged into Skype on their website as well!

Any ideas?

(NB. There are frequent complaints within the Skype community about new features, which you find doing a websearch. However, I haven't found any outside look at Skype and helpful comments on a non-M$ website. Is there independent Skype watching?)

Thanks. [Smile]
 
Posted by Scots lass (# 2699) on :
 
I've downloaded all the metadata from my (well, work's) Flickr site, and it's currently in a plain text format. Ideally I want it in Excel/CSV - is there a straightforward way of doing that? Preferably described in relatively non-technical language, getting it out of Flickr was pretty much the limit of my technological skills...

It's for a work project, so theoretically I could probably get our IT people to do it, but I'd prefer to do it myself as that way I keep control of the content!
 
Posted by Jengie jon (# 273) on :
 
First of all it may be in CSV already as CSV is a popular pure text format.

If it isn't then there is a good chance Excel can read it anyway.

If not then the final thing is to get hold of a decent text editor with decent find and replace and put it manually into csv format.

One of the skills of my job when I started out and things did not talk to each other too well was the ability to get data out of any package and into another. If you have a friendly older statistician they might well be able to use a stats package to do it, if the first two fail.

Jengie

[ 28. January 2015, 21:02: Message edited by: Jengie jon ]
 
Posted by Scots lass (# 2699) on :
 
Thanks for that. I think it may end up as the manual edit (*looks at the amount of data, weeps*) but will try the other ideas first!
 
Posted by Jay-Emm (# 11411) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Scots lass:
Thanks for that. I think it may end up as the manual edit (*looks at the amount of data, weeps*) but will try the other ideas first!

How do you intend to do the manual edit? Is there some pattern to the text?

Is there some simple marker ending a row/cell in a row (in which case then excel definitely can cope_using the method above).
Does it rely on a fixed number of characters (in which case it can cope again).
If it's HTML style you might be able to open in IE and then copy/paste? Or use find/replace.

And if none of that is suitable, then it should be possible to bodge something up.

[posting as think the methods Jengie gave ought to work and be fairly quick, and if they don't it's for a reason that someone might know how to resolve if they know the right details]

[ 28. January 2015, 22:24: Message edited by: Jay-Emm ]
 
Posted by Jay-Emm (# 11411) on :
 
ought wasn't the right word to use above.
 
Posted by luvanddaisies (# 5761) on :
 
This isn't so much about translating something as about seeing if anyone here is aware whether something exists...

I'd like a page where I can store links in folders - like an online filing cabinet of links to articles and things. Not a bookmarks bar - I don't want to clutter that up with links to one article here, one here, but something like a blog that's just for storing and organising links. Something I could go to, find a link and share it on Facebook or here or whatever - or better, share it so it redirects people straight to the whatever-it-is. There're more and more interesting articles appearing on my FB timeline (for example), and I'd like to be able to keep them on a website somewhere so I could go "oh, an article about Canadian water-buffallo, yes I read something about that, look in the "animals" section, see a preview (like those you get on Facebook, you know the type) and think, yes, that's the one. I can message that to a friend who's just bought one as a pet.

Does that exist (for free?) I'm sure it must, but I'm not sure how best to google for it, and I think I must be missing something obvious.
 
Posted by Paul. (# 37) on :
 
Well there's save-and-read-it-later sites like Pocket and Instapaper. These actual save a version of the article (webpage) which you can retrieve and read later. They have apps and browser extensions so one way to use them is save the article using the browser extension and then read in the app later, on your phone or tablet.

For organisation Instapaper has folders, Pocket has tags.

If you just want something to store links then I use Delicious which again uses tags.

There are probably many other such sites these are the ones I've used.
 
Posted by Eutychus (# 3081) on :
 
My PC (Windows 7) has suddenly started refusing to zip files, whether with the usual tool or with WinRar. I get a message along the lines of:

"Impossible to complete: access refused"

Multiple files on from webmail are still automatically zipped on downloading and I can unzip everything.

Does anyone have any idea what's going on?
 
Posted by Amanda B. Reckondwythe (# 5521) on :
 
Google may be your friend, although if it's worked all along and suddenly stopped, I'd be suspicious of what may have happened (virus?).
 
Posted by Eutychus (# 3081) on :
 
Thanks, that helped resolve it.
 
Posted by luvanddaisies (# 5761) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Paul.:
Well there's save-and-read-it-later sites like Pocket and Instapaper. These actual save a version of the article (webpage) which you can retrieve and read later. They have apps and browser extensions so one way to use them is save the article using the browser extension and then read in the app later, on your phone or tablet.

For organisation Instapaper has folders, Pocket has tags.

If you just want something to store links then I use Delicious which again uses tags.

There are probably many other such sites these are the ones I've used.

Thank you. Delicious seems good. I can't put them in folders, but apart from that it's ideal. Sorry it's taken me so long to get back to you to say thanks.
 
Posted by Adeodatus (# 4992) on :
 
A fairly basic question here. Is there such a thing as good free anti-virus software for a machine running an MS operating system? Or, as with so much in life, is it a case of you get what you pay for?

(I currently run the free versions of Malwarebytes and avast!, and all I can say is I don't think I have any virus problems. But I have the same quality of evidence for this tin of tiger repellant I have on my desk...)
 
Posted by Siegfried (# 29) on :
 
For general, always running in the background, I favor Norton. It's not free, but it's reliable and they don't shove other crap down your throat all the time (I'm looking at you, McAfee).
For spot cleaning or special issues, MalwareBytes is my go-to.
 
Posted by Snags (# 15351) on :
 
The free (personal) version of Avast! has always done OK by the various friends and relations I get blagged into helping. Not too resource hungry, seems reasonably effective.

Notes:
- make sure you get it from the legit site, as it's one of those tools that gets re-packaged in wrapper installers and offered with malware from download sites, oh the comedy

- you need to register annually (give it an email address) but IME it doesn't result in any unwanted communications

- at renewal time it will try to sucker you into the paid for version (fair enough) so keep your wits about you (or pay, if you like it and can afford it)

- turn off the voice notifications, they're weird and disconcerting [Smile]
 
Posted by Alisdair (# 15837) on :
 
For the sake of offering a genuine alternative to anti-virus software, consider this:

Unless user's of the machine are in the habit of visiting the less salubrious parts of the net, or are naive enough to click on any link or unexpected PDF that happens to land in their mailbox, the chances of being infected by a virus are actually quite low. Not vanishingly small, but not likely to be a weekly or even a monthly occurance. I have run internet connected machnies 'naked' for years had no infections; but YMMV. ;-)

Anti-virus software has a terrible habit of taking over your machine, ruining it's performance, and too often behaving effectively like malware, i.e. the kind of software you really don't want to have and shouldn't have to put up with, let alone pay for.

What to do?

Run a regular and effective backup regime. Something we should all do, but all to few of us actually do, and then of course, sooner or later, there are tears.

By 'imaging' your system now and again, and keeping regular backups of your personal files you can run your computer without the overhead and intrusiveness of anti-virus software, and should disaster strike it is a simple matter to reinstall a 'clean' system and recover all your data. This is effective against crypto-locker attacks as well as any other virus type attacks. AND, you don't have some unaccountable corporate entity roaming freely on your computer and demanding 'protection money' every year.

This is not offered as a panacea, but as a viable alternative approach to securing your computer and data. It won't suit everyone, but it is effective.

[ 11. February 2015, 16:32: Message edited by: Alisdair ]
 
Posted by Thyme (# 12360) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by luvanddaisies:
This isn't so much about translating something as about seeing if anyone here is aware whether something exists...

I'd like a page where I can store links in folders - like an online filing cabinet of links to articles and things. Not a bookmarks bar - I don't want to clutter that up with links to one article here, one here, but something like a blog that's just for storing and organising links. Something I could go to, find a link and share it on Facebook or here or whatever - or better, share it so it redirects people straight to the whatever-it-is. There're more and more interesting articles appearing on my FB timeline (for example), and I'd like to be able to keep them on a website somewhere so I could go "oh, an article about Canadian water-buffallo, yes I read something about that, look in the "animals" section, see a preview (like those you get on Facebook, you know the type) and think, yes, that's the one. I can message that to a friend who's just bought one as a pet.

Does that exist (for free?) I'm sure it must, but I'm not sure how best to google for it, and I think I must be missing something obvious.

I'm a bit late replying to this so you may be fixed up but I use Evernote for this sort of thing. Evernote
 
Posted by jrw (# 18045) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Adeodatus:


I currently run the free versions of Malwarebytes and avast!, and all I can say is I don't think I have any virus problems.

Are you running two anti-virus programs on the same computer? Not a good idea, apparently. I read that they 'fight against' each other.
 
Posted by Jay-Emm (# 11411) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Adeodatus:

(I currently run the free versions of Malwarebytes and avast!, and all I can say is I don't think I have any virus problems. But I have the same quality of evidence for this tin of tiger repellant I have on my desk...)

At least with the tiger repellent you&I know there aren't any tigers nearby* (regardless of the cause).

*in our respective environments. (and assuming tigers haven't learnt to pick locks silently).
 
Posted by Wesley J (# 6075) on :
 
Have any of you ever used TeamSpeak 3 (linkie) for IRC, i.e. chatting, for file transfer and audio conversations? What's your experience?

Thank you! [Smile]
 
Posted by Snags (# 15351) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by jrw:
quote:
Originally posted by Adeodatus:


I currently run the free versions of Malwarebytes and avast!, and all I can say is I don't think I have any virus problems.

Are you running two anti-virus programs on the same computer? Not a good idea, apparently. I read that they 'fight against' each other.
Avast! is av and memory resident. Malwarebytes, in free trim, runs on demand. No significant conflicts in that scenario. They also cover slightly different but overlapping issues, so again, minimal internal fisticuffs.
 
Posted by Golden Key (# 1468) on :
 
Re free anti-virus and such:

AVG is good, IME. Also Spybot. They do different things.

PCPitstop has some good paid-for programs; but also has freebie tests you can run, and then fix the problems yourself. And it has forums where you can get help with problems.

I had a bad time with paid-for anti-virus programs--especially Norton and Kaspersky.

IME, you can use multiple AV programs if you don't run them at the same time. It's good to have more than one, though, because they pick up on different things.
 
Posted by Sparrow (# 2458) on :
 
I'm going to be on holiday later this year, mainly in Northern Europe. If I take my tablet pc with me, will I be able to log in to BBC iPlayer and watch live programmes?
 
Posted by LeRoc (# 3216) on :
 
quote:
Sparrow: I'm going to be on holiday later this year, mainly in Northern Europe. If I take my tablet pc with me, will I be able to log in to BBC iPlayer and watch live programmes?
I don't think you can watch BBC streaming outside of the UK.
 
Posted by Amanda B. Reckondwythe (# 5521) on :
 
When I try to watch BBC iPlayer in the USA, I get a notice saying it's available only in the UK.

There was a time when people went on vacation to foreign lands to enjoy the culture. Now they go to keep up with their iPlayer feeds from home . . . ?

[Stop the world. Miss Amanda wants to get off.]
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
Secure VPN
 
Posted by Wesley J (# 6075) on :
 
In addition to what lilBuddha is saying:

I've used the FoxyProxy add-on (standard version) for Firefox plus their paid-up UK access for many years. Only very few lapses, good customer service; both are quite reliable!

The free add-on is for FF, Chrome and IE, possibly others, see their site. The minimum, non-recurrent (or recurrent, if you like) subscription for their proxy/VPN services for 1 month is about $10. There's a 3-day free trial. Absolutely no problem to cancel within that period (I did this when trying it out, and later before upgrading to longer period subscriptions. These are then somewhat cheaper). Access to other countries is offered too.

Other proxy services are available, of course. It's just that I've found this one to be excellent. [Cool]
 
Posted by Sparrow (# 2458) on :
 
It's ok, on further investigation it won;t be needed. I wanted to see whether, if necessary, we could get BBC football on the tablet for BF when we are away on holiday, but on looking at the schedules for his team (Liverpool FC) [Overused] [Overused] [Overused] it won't be necessary.
 
Posted by mousethief (# 953) on :
 
Anyone here have any experience with CodeWeavers? Does it work?
 
Posted by Firenze (# 619) on :
 
Anyone with experience of sharing calendar (in particular) info between an iPad and an Android phone?

I have just got a whizzy new Sony Xperia, and an iPad Air (plus I have my old iPad 2, which I will continue to use). It would be really useful to have to enter upcoming events on any one of these and have it sync to all of them.
 
Posted by Sparrow (# 2458) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Firenze:
Anyone with experience of sharing calendar (in particular) info between an iPad and an Android phone?

I have just got a whizzy new Sony Xperia, and an iPad Air (plus I have my old iPad 2, which I will continue to use). It would be really useful to have to enter upcoming events on any one of these and have it sync to all of them.

That reminds me, has anybody experience of sharing a calendar between Windows Live Mail on a PC, and an Android tablet?
 
Posted by Snags (# 15351) on :
 
Calendar sharing: the least-hassle route is to use a server-based system so each client device is just a view on the same data.

So if you're hooked into something like Exchange it all Just Works.

If not, your best bet, particularly with Android, is to try to integrate your disparate applications into something like a Google Calendar. Otherwise it's a world of shims and kludges, generally, in my experience.
 
Posted by Sparrow (# 2458) on :
 
The story so far: I have run into a problem in trying to set up two devices to synchronise calendars. I have a Windows phone (Nokia Lumia) and an Android tablet (Samsung Galaxy) with a Microsoft account (@live.com) running on both. I have had some success in that when I enter an appointment in the calendar on the phone, it shows up also on the Android tablet. But I can’t make it happen in reverse. Anything I put in the calendar on the tablet, doesn’t show up on the phone. I am sure there is just one small thing I need to do to make it work, can anyone advise please?
 
Posted by Jengie jon (# 273) on :
 
From having dealt with Android devices for a while are you sure that the calendar that you are making the appointment on the Samsung device is actually the one attached to the live.com account? I find that most devices have the default calendar to be the one that is run by the manufacturer in this case "Samsung".

I use Calengoo app on all devices after falling out with the Sony calendar on the phone before last. This allows me to easily change calendar and have similar experiences on all devices.

Jengie

[ 06. March 2015, 20:02: Message edited by: Jengie jon ]
 
Posted by Sparrow (# 2458) on :
 
That's it! I just needed to change the setting so the Samsung calendar synchronised with the right email address. It works now! Thanks a lot.
 
Posted by Alex Cockell (# 7487) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by mousethief:
Why is it so fripping hard to install software in linux? My God, they go out of their way to make it as difficult as possible.

Okay so I've downloaded fuckme.tar.gz. The online instructions say to do this:

tar xvzf fuckme.tar.gz

Okay that works, it extracts the folder inside the tar file. Then the instructions say to look for a "readme" file. None. Fine. Now it says do this:

./configure

result:

bash: ./configure: No such file or directory.

WHAM. Stymied. I'm fucked. Can you google for "./config no such file or directory"? Hell if you can.

Cloud help? Puhleeze. And of course I can't find a man entry for configure if configure doesn't exist.

Linux may be wonderful, but Windows has it all over Linux in installing software. Hands down, no contest, for installing software, Windows rules, Linux drools.

So all of you Linux kool-aid drinkers, please help me. How do I install this software?

Tarballs are not really the best way to install for Linux. The Software Repository (popularised and referred to as App Stores under Android or Apple) are your best bet here.

The intended way for most distributions is for software to be installed and tested by QA people - who then repackage it and release it onto repositories. You then use a Package Manager to yank it.

In Debian-based distros - this would be the apt-get or aptitude package; in Red Hat, this would be the RPM tools, typically YUM.

Packages are built with the current-for-distro-version baseline packages.. upstream source tarballs are compiled and tested by release management personnel (we called them AppAdders at work), then QA is done and the package released to production servers.

The user (you) would then issue a command like sudo apt-get install (packagename).

NEVER install tarballs unless you know what you;re doing, and you don't mind risking breaking another dependency.
 
Posted by mousethief (# 953) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Alex Cockell:
NEVER install tarballs unless you know what you;re doing, and you don't mind risking breaking another dependency.

Well that would be just peachy if the software I wanted was available through apt-get, with which I am thoroughly familiar, thank you very much. When the software I want is not available through apt-get, when it's tarballs or nothing, it has to be tarballs. Which is what prompted my original complaint.
 
Posted by Alex Cockell (# 7487) on :
 
One solution would be to raise a package request with your distro provider in their bug tracking system.

Supply the location of teh software - a release bod could then work on it for future releases...

Oh - did you look around for a PPA (personal repo)?

http://forums.linuxmint.com/viewtopic.php?f=47&t=31954

[ 07. March 2015, 14:43: Message edited by: Alex Cockell ]
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Alex, that question was raised in December last year. It's now March. It's not really ongoing any more.
 
Posted by Alex Cockell (# 7487) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ariel:
Alex, that question was raised in December last year. It's now March. It's not really ongoing any more.

Sorry - was catching up;
 
Posted by Pearl B4 Swine (# 11451) on :
 
I get daily pop ups titled Adobe Flash Player Settings: blah blah blah dot com is asking permission to store information on your computer.... I keep clicking 'deny' but it's hard to make the dang message go away. What's up with this?
 
Posted by Palimpsest (# 16772) on :
 
Mousethief

Is there a configure.ac file in the folder produced by tar?

If so running autoconfigure will cause it to produce the configure file. And then you can run the configure file by typing ./configure

Using autoconf to Create configure

The reason it's so complicated is that it has to build the software to run on your version of Linux with the compiler you use (like gcc) and for your hardware. It's a lot messier than windows because you're actually doing the builds yourself.
 
Posted by no prophet's flag is set so... (# 15560) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by mousethief:
Anyone here have any experience with CodeWeavers? Does it work?

Yes. I used it extensively for a number of years, though have gone to free versions of wine more recently because what I needed to do either ran in VirtualBox or VMware installs of winxp.

My normal question if someone asks about running windows software on Linux is what task they are trying to accomplish or thing they find is missing within Linux. Many times the task can be done another way, or there is some expert who can tell you what to do.

I see your subsequent posts are about compiling or building from source (tarballs). Are your questions connected? I'd be happy to help if I can, but would want to know what distro you're using and what the problem is.
 
Posted by jrw (# 18045) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Pearl B4 Swine:
I get daily pop ups titled Adobe Flash Player Settings: blah blah blah dot com is asking permission to store information on your computer.... I keep clicking 'deny' but it's hard to make the dang message go away. What's up with this?

I don't know what operating system you are using, but in Windows XP you can go into the control panel on the start menu, click on Flash Player and you'll be able to change the settings from 'ask me...' to either 'block...' or 'allow...'.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
(bump)
 
Posted by Sarah G (# 11669) on :
 
Can anyone recommend a bit of free software to copy DVDs that doesn't come with nasties attached?

I used to use Nero, but you have to install OpenCandy.

Thanks for any replies.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
My browser [firefox] has suddenly gone weird and decided to route through a proxy or something. I switched it back soon enough through Options > Advanced > Network > Settings but does anyone have any idea why it might have done this? This morning I clicked on a link I have used before with no ill effects and got an unwelcome pop-up which I closed but this has happened before without all this proxy nonsense.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Have you just had an (automatic) update?
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Not that I recall, unless it happened, and it may well have done I suppose, whilst I was elsewhere but the machine was still on.

That could be the solution, thanks.
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
WW,

I would immediately run an anti-spyware program as well as a deep antivirus scan.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
What an excellent and fairly obvious suggestion! Why didn't this occur to me?

I am running it as I type - and am just heading out shopping so it can run on whilst I am out.

Thank you.
 
Posted by Sparrow (# 2458) on :
 
I am about to buy a new PC which will mean switching from Windows 7 to 8. Last time I upgraded, I used Transfer My PC to move my stuff from one to the other. Will this still work with Windows 8?
 
Posted by Snags (# 15351) on :
 
Sparrow in theory you can use Windows Easy Transfer. This page tells you how it should work.

You may also want to read this page too though, as it appears that some of the options no longer actually work.

When moving to 8.1 be aware that MS will very, very much want you to create a "Microsoft Account" but you don't have to. It's a matter of personal choice - there are benefits to having one (automatic integration with the Store, OneDrive, assorted other Cloud services, sync'ing of data/apps between machines and so on), and there are downsides (see all of the above if you don't trust MS, or want to keep everything under wraps).

Getting the best out of 8.1 requires a bit of learning and effort, but it is possible, and overall it's not as bad as some folks would have you believe (although they really have made some duff decisions in places).

Getting back to the original point, personally whenever I transfer a personal machine I tend to set the new one up fresh and shuffle the data around manually anyway. But in theory you don't have to.
 
Posted by Wesley J (# 6075) on :
 
Is the Yahoo! e-mail/account login currently being hacked from Iran?

I've got Firefox, latest updates, with the Flagfox add-on, which displays a little flag in the address bar, identifying the country where the server you're trying to access is located. Today, and with quite some shock, I've discovered that there's no longer the US or UK flag, but the Iranian one.

Geotool, one of the Flagfox built-in IP lookups, shows the IP as 188.125.80.13, located in Iran. Apparently, I'm not the only one who noticed this - see TinyURL link. In this link, there is a further link to a screenshot which shows this, including the Iranian IP address. This is exactly the same IP addy I am being diverted to.

According to cnet from 2011 (link), sites like Yahoo, Google or Skype may indeed have been attacked or their login credentials faked by Iranian hackers.

Questions:

1. Can anyone else replicate this? (I've tried on different computers, from home and work: the same.)
2. How can I contact Yahoo mail to tell them my (and the first link's, above) observations?
3. What do I do? Shall I still log into the Iranian hacked site and change my password(s)?

This is pretty annoying. Please advise!

Thanks!

[ 20. May 2015, 12:07: Message edited by: Wesley J ]
 
Posted by Drifting Star (# 12799) on :
 
I just installed Flagfox and went to Yahoo! - I was already logged in.

The Yahoo front page (yahoo.co.uk)showed a UK flag. My inbox showed a US flag. I logged out, and an Iranian flag flashed past and then as I arrived on the BT homepage it changed to an Italian flag.

Going back to yahoo.co.uk (UK flag) and clicking on the login link did indeed take me to a login page with an Iranian flag.
 
Posted by Wesley J (# 6075) on :
 
Many thanks, DS! Is appreciated!

I've found the official Yahoo abuse e-mail addies and have told them now, using non-Yahoo e-mail. Have also sent an e-mail to a cyber security institution, and am going to talk to some local puter wizards later. Still not quite sure if I should attempt to log into both my accounts and change the passwords... Aaargh!

Very unusual, all this, never had that before. (I did have the US or UK flags, and I wonder if the Italian one you saw might actually be the Irish flag. You can find out by hovering your cursor on the flag. - All these are IPs Yahoo normally use, in my experience.)
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
It is quite possible that the problem is on your end.

My Yahoo login pages display the proper IP country flag, whether I am logged in or not.
But I use another firefox add-on called noscript. It requires your permission to allow each and every script a website tries to load. Which can be a real annoyance, you have no idea how many third-party scripts are running on your favourite websites.
 
Posted by Drifting Star (# 12799) on :
 
Please let me know what response you have Wesley.

The bt.com page definitely has the Italian flag. I'm sure BT has some sort of interest there though, so I'm not particularly concerned about that.
 
Posted by Wesley J (# 6075) on :
 
lilBuddha, sorry - can you please specify what exactly you mean by 'your end'? Ta!

I've done a few more enquiries, nothing conclusive yet; found some further discussion boards where the Iran flag and Iranian IP location within Yahoo sites were observed. Most date back to 2011, which as it seems is when a big hacking attack on Yahoo and others occurred, and which could be traced back to Iran.

Having talked to my puter wizards, I'm none the wiser. They were as surprised as me, and suggest waiting for a Yahoo abuse reply e-mail.

On the other hand, they told me (silly me, I sort of knew this, really...! [Hot and Hormonal] ) that you can install Yahoo mail on an e-mail client, such as Outlook or Thunderbird - this means you can get a copy of everything you receive onto your harddrive. [Yipee]

Just done that, and now've got the entire, large Yahoo inbox on my desktop machine as well. This pleases me, and I'll do some serious cleanup of the web-based mail in the near future! - A how-to here, even works without having to log into the webmail, at least with the latest Thunderbird version 31.7.0. [Smile]

More later.
 
Posted by Drifting Star (# 12799) on :
 
Yes - big Thunderbird fan here, not least because we have a not-too-reliable broadband signal here. That and not entirely trusting anyone else to look after my data. [Paranoid]
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Wesley J:
lilBuddha, sorry - can you please specify what exactly you mean by 'your end'? Ta!

Meaning your computer might have been hijacked rather than Yahoo's.
 
Posted by Wesley J (# 6075) on :
 
Hm... I believe that's rather unlikely, seeing that I was able to replicate this behaviour on all 4 of my machines (Win 7 Pro/Ultimate), and from different access points, as well as on 2 work Macs.

Some good news from my visit to the local puter wizards though, on a different subject: we were looking at low-cost upgrades for my 10 y o (!) deskie, a DELL Dimension 5000. We found I had 2 sets of not quite co-operating RAM; the machine wasn't able to use the entire 3GB I had installed, 2x512MB and 2x1GB. So I replaced the 512MB ones with another fully co-operative 2x1GB and hey presto, the deskie is honestly considerably faster with now 4GB! Brilliant! [Big Grin]

I sometimes think my own geekiness's only partially activated these days...! [Paranoid]
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Firefox keeps on logging me out of FB and the Ship, no matter what I do, and I can't see any obvious reason for it. I've got it set to accept all cookies, even third party ones. I've asked it to make exceptions for FB. I've cleared the entire cache and started again. But I can still be typing a post and then find I've been logged out and can't post it. Every few minutes. Any ideas? It's Firefox for Windows, 38.0.1.
 
Posted by lily pad (# 11456) on :
 
Did you shut down and then reboot it again? Sometimes freaky things like that seem to get worked out when you do.

LilyPad
Eternal Optimist (that all computer glitches may be solved by rebooting.)
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Yes... this has been ongoing for weeks now. I'm thinking this may be something to do with a dynamic IP address, but I don't think there's anything I can do about that.

[ 23. May 2015, 12:18: Message edited by: Ariel ]
 
Posted by Snags (# 15351) on :
 
Ariel, your public IP shouldn't be changing every few minutes, even if it is dynamic. Usually (but not incontrovertibly) a dynamic public IP will only change the the router drops the connection and re-connects*. Even then in most cases a lot of ISPs will just re-assign the previously issued IP unless there is a long period of no connection.

*Some ISPs used to just change them on the fly, e.g. AOL and occasionally NTL (now Virgin, who I don't think do this), but even so the lease would have been days not minutes.

You can easily check whether your public IP has changed by using a site like What Is My IP to keep track of your public IP (or just monitor your router logs).

If your ISP is messing about with your connection to that extent, I'd be looking to change ...
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
I think I've finally sorted the Firefox problem. Apparently it's something to do with the history settings - you have to tell it to remember your history otherwise it starts all over again from scratch.

I have a similar problem with the new Opera 29 which sometimes won't let me click on links "because the network connection has changed", but now that Firefox seems stable and can load FB easily (which Opera can't) I'm making Firefox the default browser.

It really is ridiculous that in this day and age it can still sometimes be necessary to have two or even three browsers just to access different sites.
 
Posted by Celtic Knotweed (# 13008) on :
 
Advice required please! I'm considering getting a tablet (already have and use a laptop running Windows 7). The idea is to use the tablet for reading books and quick email checking. I'm not looking at a Kindle right now as I already have several non-Kindle e-books, and my favourite local bookshop does nook only.

What I need to work out (not quite in priority order!) is
Suggestions on where to look for info much appreciated - I'm not going to be doing this in a hurry.
 
Posted by Brenda Clough (# 18061) on :
 
What do you currently use? If you are already an Apple or Mac user then the move to an Ipad is easy.
 
Posted by Snags (# 15351) on :
 
CK, it probably doesn't actually make a lot of difference. Getting a good example of whichever OS you go for is more important.

With iPad, you're basically on safe ground if that's what you want to buy into, because it's such a tightly controlled system.

With Android the cheapo ones will not be anything as nice to use as a better quality (and therefore more expensive) device. And because Android is what it is, there are a huge range of cheapo options to tempt you.

With Windows it'll be Windows 8.1 again I would avoid the very entry level units as they will suffer in performance terms. Also, look carefully at storage, as the OS takes a good chunk, so if you do want to store much on a Windows tablet you really want to start at 64GB and work up - the 32GB ones won't have much slack after the basic system load.

Having used lots of different tablets because of work, I personally prefer the flexibility of an appropriately spec'd Windows tablet, but that's because of what I do and what I use day in day out, and therefore what I want to integrate with.

Next would be an iPad just because it is what it is, and that's a known quantity with a lot of supporting infrastructure.

For me, Android is last mostly for the reasons that actually make it good - I find it requires too much tinkering, and too much faffing to get it the way I want it. It doesn't suit my personal desire to just get on with it, rather than have a nerdgasm at the potential. But if you're more of a Linux kind of person and you like tinkering and getting everything 'just so', or if you're heavily into Google Apps etc. then a good one is a gem.

Which probably isn't much help, other than to indicate that going with something that satisfies you emotionally as much as practically is probably wisest. In my experience no matter what we tell ourselves most tech purchases aren't rational, at the end of the day [Smile]
 
Posted by Brenda Clough (# 18061) on :
 
Because I have vision problems, I got an Ipad. I will never need (because I can't see it well enough) a small screen. I need to be able to biggify -- the gesture of spreading your fingertips to make a screen image bigger. The Ipad also has dynamite graphics and color, for reading comic books.
 
Posted by mousethief (# 953) on :
 
I have been using AllwaySync to keep mirrors of my important data, but am frustrated at its inability to detect file and folder renaming and moving. So I'm ready to get a new package, but the choices are bewildering (see link), even among the packages that do what I want and are in my price range (under $50). Goodsync seems to be a good choice but I don't want to get something and then regret it. Anybody have a favorite they could recommend?

(PS: I'm running Windows 7 and am not at all interested in getting into conversations about how Linux or MacOS are better, please and thank you.)
 
Posted by Wesley J (# 6075) on :
 
I've used the SyncBack Free software for many years and am very happy with it.

There are paid-up versions with more features, but the free one is sufficient for my current needs.

Link to the different versions: http://www.2brightsparks.com/syncback/
 
Posted by Paul. (# 37) on :
 
I used to use Unison - but I seem to recall having problems with large numbers of files.

These days I use SyncToy and haven't had any issues with it.
 
Posted by Chamois (# 16204) on :
 
This is probably a silly question but I'm not at all technical and would appreciate it if somebody more knowledgeable can advise me.

My yahoo email account has recently taken to bringing up a dialog box telling me that a website it is trying to connect to has an "expired certificate". This website seems to be something to do with selecting and loading the adverts on the sidebar to the right of the screen. I only get this message when I'm logged on using Safari on my mac. When I log on using Firefox on my work pc everything is fine.

Should I be worried about this "expired certificate"? If not, how do I get it un-expired (renewed??) again and stop the dialog box coming up?

I don't ever look at adverts on my email page, but continually clicking "cancel" on the dialog box is an irritating waste of time. If this isn't dangerous I'd like to be able to stop it happening.

Thanks!
 
Posted by Bene Gesserit (# 14718) on :
 
Anyone else's Windows 10 failing to install, with the error code 80240020?
 
Posted by TonyK (# 35) on :
 
Bene Gesserit - this might help.
 
Posted by TonyK (# 35) on :
 
And now my Windows 10 download is failing with same error code ... I'll call you back!!
 
Posted by TonyK (# 35) on :
 
Having had 4 successive error 80240020 despite following suggestions from various sources, I gave up and manually downloaded Windows 10.

Instructions here.

The whole process took about 2 hours on my Samsung Ultrabook with an Intel i3 processor. It ran all by itself until the very last stages when it wanted to use its own settings. I chose Custom Settings (from a very small print option!) and switched off most of the Microsoft-inspired settings - most of which seemed to send virtually all my links, contacts and other personal data directly to Microsoft! The only ones I left switched on related to Microsoft Edge - the replacement for Internet Explorer.

So far so good - it seems better than Windows 8.1 (admittedly not difficult!!!) but there's a long way to go yet.
 
Posted by Bene Gesserit (# 14718) on :
 
Thanks very much - instructions saved! If we don't get it pushed to us the next day or so I'll use that.
 
Posted by TonyK (# 35) on :
 
That's good, Bene Gesserit.

Please note though my points about the Express settings.

See here for a better explanation and recommendations.

Hope it works OK for you
 
Posted by Bene Gesserit (# 14718) on :
 
Thank you - that is really useful.
 
Posted by Drifting Star (# 12799) on :
 
A word of warning re Windows 10.

I upgraded on Friday with no problems. Today I discovered that there is no Windows 10 driver for my printer, which is two and a half to three years old.

Canon say "... the production of drivers and software support comes at a direct financial cost. So, while Canon certainly respects our customer’s choice to decide to upgrade technologies, Canon cannot guarantee that older Canon products will continue to be supported by the new operating system."
 
Posted by balaam (# 4543) on :
 
Whilst the world and his dog are downloaing Windows 10, a question about Android.

Is there any way of copying text (out of copyright of course) from Google Chrome internet files?
 
Posted by Latchkey Kid (# 12444) on :
 
Are you meaning something different from the ordinary Chrome select and copy functions?
 
Posted by Latchkey Kid (# 12444) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by mousethief:
I have been using AllwaySync to keep mirrors of my important data, but am frustrated at its inability to detect file and folder renaming and moving. So I'm ready to get a new package, but the choices are bewildering (see link), even among the packages that do what I want and are in my price range (under $50). Goodsync seems to be a good choice but I don't want to get something and then regret it. Anybody have a favorite they could recommend?

(PS: I'm running Windows 7 and am not at all interested in getting into conversations about how Linux or MacOS are better, please and thank you.)

I used to use Syncback (free version) for photos and that worked well, but I am not sure about how well it deals with your problem. There is a discussion about it here.

There are two paid versions, the most expensive being $54.95.

I am now using my built in Synology NAS software to do my sychronisation so am not up to speed with the latest SyncBack.
 
Posted by balaam (# 4543) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Latchkey Kid:
Are you meaning something different from the ordinary Chrome select and copy functions?

I can't find then on the Android tablet. Everything works on the Windows laptop. The tablet is new.
 
Posted by Offeiriad (# 14031) on :
 
A Windows 10 question - I don't know if this belongs in Heaven or Hell! - but answers in simple language appreciated please.

I downloaded W10 on my computer. It took 14 hours - our broadband is even slower when they milk the cows next door...

My installation was uneventful, but installation on my wife's laptop has hit disaster - it will no longer let her sign in! Trawling various forums has revealed that this is a problem experienced by a fair number of people. Can anybody help me fix it please? - preferably before she comes home from shopping!

Thank you!

[ 05. August 2015, 09:05: Message edited by: Offeiriad ]
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
Her sign in will be tied into her Windows account, because all Windows machines use your personal Windows account and password. This didn't impress me much when I started using Windows again recently because I like giving different things different passwords.

The instructions on how to reset that password are here.
 
Posted by Offeiriad (# 14031) on :
 
Thank you - but she doesn't think she HAS a Windows account....
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
That is almost certainly the problem. I had to set one up to use a Windows 8.1 tablet, because I really didn't have one. What version of Windows were you updating?

Try using her usual e-mail account and seeing if that is recognised by Microsoft. You will probably need to allocate a phone number for a PIN too.

I checked whether my printer had the right drivers for Windows 10 before I installed, which it did and it's working fine.
 
Posted by Offeiriad (# 14031) on :
 
Thank you CK (hi! long time no see!) - presumably she can set this up from my computer, can she? ('Coz she can't get into hers....)
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
I guess - I haven't had to try this
 
Posted by Offeiriad (# 14031) on :
 
Thank you for this help - the computer suddenly accepted her password!
 
Posted by Snags (# 15351) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Curiosity killed ...:
Her sign in will be tied into her Windows account, because all Windows machines use your personal Windows account and password. This didn't impress me much when I started using Windows again recently because I like giving different things different passwords.

The instructions on how to reset that password are here.

Just for the record, it's possible to setup and use Win 8/8.1 machines without creating a Microsoft Account if you want to, although it does take a little bit of persistence, and as soon as you need to use the Windows Store you're screwed and have to give in.

Not sure about W10 as I haven't had time to get involved with that joy yet [Smile]
 
Posted by no prophet's flag is set so... (# 15560) on :
 
Windows 10 might warrant slow adoption. I intervened on the weekend with my company's network so that no-one would upgrade to Windows 10 until security issues are clarified. We may have to return to an old policy of only allowing computers, smart phones and tablets we've approved to connect to the wifi.

Win 10 is designed to share by default the passwords of wifi networks using a feature called "Wi-Fi Sense". While it encrypts the wifi passwords, it also makes the wifi networks your machine remembers available to everyone in your Facebook, Outlook, Skype and other lists. Thus, you might be at your home network, and someone you have in your contact lists across the street will have access to your wifi network to do whatever.

Link.
quote:
If you're taking up Microsoft on its offer of a free upgrade to Windows 10, you should know that the new operating system has a feature, called Wi-Fi Sense, that automatically shares your Wi-Fi passwords with others....the issue is nonetheless dangerous for those users, and there are many of them, who agree to everything their computers ask of them.
Win10 also does some other things that might give pause. Windows 10 defaults to keylogging, harvesting browser history, purchases, and covert listening
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
You can turn off WiFi sense and all the other goodies you might not want to use by choosing to customise the set up. It's what Tony K meant about not using express set up.
 
Posted by Alex Cockell (# 7487) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Celtic Knotweed:
Advice required please! I'm considering getting a tablet (already have and use a laptop running Windows 7). The idea is to use the tablet for reading books and quick email checking. I'm not looking at a Kindle right now as I already have several non-Kindle e-books, and my favourite local bookshop does nook only.

What I need to work out (not quite in priority order!) is
Suggestions on where to look for info much appreciated - I'm not going to be doing this in a hurry.
Nook clients are avaiilable on Android and iOS - http://nook.barnesandnoble.com/u/nook-mobile-app/379003593

Kindle app is available on both platforms... what other format are those other ebooks? PDF readers are available as well.
 
Posted by Doublethink. (# 1984) on :
 
Personally - much as apple can irritate me - my experience has been that ios is easier to use and the build quality on ipads is good. I've lost track of how many times I've dropped this one and its survived. The one thing that does bug me is the lack of usb compatability on my model though.
 
Posted by no prophet's flag is set so... (# 15560) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Curiosity killed ...:
You can turn off WiFi sense and all the other goodies you might not want to use by choosing to customise the set up. It's what Tony K meant about not using express set up.

Yes, indeed, the individual user can happily enable or opt-put, but unless I check every computer which comes into the office with workers, I don't know if they did that or not. The wifi passwords may not be secure and this creates network vulnerability which the Privacy Commissioner has not allowed us. We can do the appending of "_optout" to the SSID (name of the wireless network), but really? I have to do something because of some silly Microsoft idea? M$ has created an insecurity by design which I must now address because of their doing? [Mad] Having spent about 1/2 day checking computers so far. How soon will someone figure out how to get around that?

I may have to change policies about any device and operating system, generally disallowing anything Microsoft. (rant)
 
Posted by Alisdair (# 15837) on :
 
Windows 10 -- you are definitely the product, not the customer. The vast mass of uninterested/unaware users will blithely accept what they are fed, but if you do value taking any kind of responsibility over your private data, etc. then you need to tread warily with Windows 10, and you should with any (proprietary) computing service where control is largely retained by the supplier.

Have fun, it really is a jungle out there.
 
Posted by Alisdair (# 15837) on :
 
PS - there's plenty of info online re set-up and privacy settings for Windows 10, but here's a link to a fairly straightforward run through on dealing with privacy side: http://tinyurl.com/poy27nv
 
Posted by Wesley J (# 6075) on :
 
Users of Win 7, Win 8 and 8.1 are, AFAIK, entitled to a free upgrade to Win 10 within one year after its launch, which would be sometime in July 2016. And after that, you'll still be able to purchase it.

Therefore, IMO, there's plenty of time to wait and see how Win 10 really works in everyday computing - or not, as the case may be - by learning from others users. Quite a few of the bugs and inconsistencies built into it by M$, either consciously (greedy bastids!) or by sheer sloppidity (has all happened before!), will have been discovered by then. M$ may even have been forced to do a Win 10.1, who knows.

Mainly, support for Win 7 only runs out in 2020, and for Win 8/8.1 even later.

Thus, in my view, upgrading to Win 10 can really wait! At least until the summer of 2016, if you must. Or even until the end of support for Win 7/8/8.1.

I really, honestly don't see why we, the users, should play unpaid and spied-upon guinea pigs for M$. Personally, me, I have the time and can wait. Perhaps even for Windows 11? Or Linux. [Devil]
 
Posted by Alisdair (# 15837) on :
 
For anyone contemplating experimenting with Linux you might like to consider this:

Linux is NOT Windows, you really do need to take the time to explore what it offers and how it works. If you go in with the attitude that you can force Linux to be Windows you will be very disappointed and frustrated.

A modern, user friendly distribution of Linux, like Mint or Ubuntu are generally simple to install, easy to maintain (in as much as any operating system is 'easy'), and highly functional, but there are philosophical and structural differences that need to be understood and accepted if you are to really 'get on' with Linux (as with any OS).

You need to be willing to explore and learn. Alternatively you need someone else to act as your 'system administrator', while you just get on with using it. Plenty of domestic Linux (and Windows/OSX) users are in that boat, they know nothing and care nothing about how it all works, but someone else does and that's all that matters.
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
I loved Linux while I used it (on dead Windows machines to keep them going), but ... I work on Windows, and the incompatibilities continued to be a pain.

It's fine if everything you do is standalone different, but I had major major problems completing electronic job applications or other online forms, because the formatting didn't convert, so I had to allow much much longer to reformat all the forms to work and resend as a pdf. Or go to the library to complete forms there. Some of the integration of files, such as calendars across devices, ain't so great (and I have an Android phone too).

Lots of things were fine: internet browsing (although the buttons on here were useless), Skype, e-mails, photography and processing pictures, producing simple word documents and spreadsheets and saving as .doc and .xls, so long as you're not expecting full Windows compatibility because flashy formatting falls over.
 
Posted by Snags (# 15351) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by no prophet's flag is set so...:
quote:
Originally posted by Curiosity killed ...:
You can turn off WiFi sense and all the other goodies you might not want to use by choosing to customise the set up. It's what Tony K meant about not using express set up.

Yes, indeed, the individual user can happily enable or opt-put, but unless I check every computer which comes into the office with workers, I don't know if they did that or not. The wifi passwords may not be secure and this creates network vulnerability which the Privacy Commissioner has not allowed us. We can do the appending of "_optout" to the SSID (name of the wireless network), but really? I have to do something because of some silly Microsoft idea? M$ has created an insecurity by design which I must now address because of their doing? [Mad] Having spent about 1/2 day checking computers so far. How soon will someone figure out how to get around that?

I may have to change policies about any device and operating system, generally disallowing anything Microsoft. (rant)

Well, strictly speaking if they're guests to the office then they should be on a guest LAN, not the office LAN, which has full separation from the main LAN.

If it's workers and BYOD then you need some server software or an appliance doing NAC (Network Access Control) - nothing can join the network or send traffic until it has been automatically scanned and found compliant with your policies.

(Also, on a Windows Domain rather than Workgroup, no-one will get the W10 upgrade prompt anyway, which is handy).

All of which will just make you rant more, but really NAC style approaches are the only viable thing to do if you really want to maintain security and don't want to frisk everyone as they enter the building [Smile]
 
Posted by no prophet's flag is set so... (# 15560) on :
 
We have workers and associates. Complicated as it is with professionals. They are signing yet more forms undertaking not to do Windows 10. I have viewed computers as disposable appliances. Just have to connect to the server via whatever client operating system and remote desktop software. I would make them all use $200 refurbished HP laptops with Linux on them if I could. Those who really want windows or apple can get a recreational device. But I can't get independently thinking professionals in this anarchistic collective to agree on anything, and frankly, philosophically, I want independent people, who feel powerful and not bossed around. But this sort of thing is rather annoying. One told me that they are 'confusers' not computers.
 
Posted by Snags (# 15351) on :
 
Doomed! You are doomed!

Unfortunately it's always the way: either lock everything up tighter than a gnat's chuff, which causes aggro, inefficiency and frustrates the competent; or leave it open and flexible, trusting people not to be numpties, and discovering that numpty-dom is an equal opportunity affliction.
 
Posted by Alex Cockell (# 7487) on :
 
In that office - go for a Citrix virtual desktop solution? Lock everything to cock-all hits the local gear... Balkanise everything.
 
Posted by mousethief (# 953) on :
 
What else do I need to be safe? A paranoiac's guide to Windows safety

I have Windows Firewall and Microsoft Security Essentials running constantly, and MSE does a scheduled weekly full scan. In addition, monthly I back up my personal files and run Spybot Search & Destroy as well as Malwarebytes.

Is that about as safe as I need to be? Or is there something else I should be doing?
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by mousethief:

Is that about as safe as I need to be? Or is there something else I should be doing?

A script blocker, such as NoScript. One where any script (JavaScript, Java, Flash, plugins) must be allowed before it can run.
It can be a major pain, but it really does help.
 
Posted by Wesley J (# 6075) on :
 
Weekly instead of monthly backups might be a thought, too, especially if you regularly accumulate a lot of new files . This could be things like subscribed podcasts you possibly want to keep, or any other kind of document, pic, video or music.
 
Posted by Drifting Star (# 12799) on :
 
Since 'up'grading to Windows 10 I've discovered that a number of settings are being changed whenever I turn off my laptop.

One is the setting that turns off the trackpad when there is a pointing device plugged in. That's really annoying.

The other is that neither Windows Defender nor Bitdefender (which should override Windows Defender) is running when I start my laptop up, and after a few minutes I get a message telling me to turn one of them on. That's worrying. I'm sure there are others.

I can't find any help through Google, not least because it's hard to know precisely what to search for.

I've got to the point where I'm considering dumping Windows 10 and going back to 8.1.

Has anyone got any advice?
 
Posted by Drifting Star (# 12799) on :
 
I've added the shortcut for Bitdefender to the start-up folder for me as a user - there are no other users on this computer - but even though it shows as a process in Task Manager as soon as I've booted up, I'm still getting the message that both Windows Defender and Bitdefender are turned off about five minutes later (and a security question about unknown publishers as soon as I turn Bitdefender on).

And even disabling the touchpad in the start-up menu (via Task Manager) has made no difference - I still have to go through Settings to manually disable it every time I boot up.
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
Windows 10 forums aren't recommending Bitdefender with Windows 10

Windows 10 is being very glitchy today - and the Windows 10 forums are all echoing the problems I'm having.
 
Posted by Drifting Star (# 12799) on :
 
Thanks for that CK. Sheesh. I did my homework before choosing it too (I've always used Avast or AVG before, and the latest update of Avast is playing stupid games on my XP machine).

I guess I'll try AVG or Avira then, although it's a close run thing as to whether Bitdefender or WIndows 10 gets the boot.
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
I'm using Avira on my daughter's recommendation (who is a much better geek than me). That isn't clashing with Windows 10.

You might find the Store isn't working. It isn't for me, neither is Mail. I am not the only one, but at least that code got me into the TenForums. I'm wondering whether Windows 10 gets the boot, too, particularly when it was easier to e-mail from the tablet on 8.1 this morning.
 
Posted by Drifting Star (# 12799) on :
 
Avira is installing as I type. [Smile]

The Store seems to be OK for me - I haven't really explored it before so I might have a browse and see if it keeps going. I don't use Windows Mail - I tried it briefly when I first had Windows 8, but I couldn't be bothered to get used to a new system and went back to Thunderbird. Starman uses it though, so I'll warn him that any problems are not soluble by him.
 
Posted by Doc Tor (# 9748) on :
 
Serious question: is it possible to run a modern OS without ever connecting to the internet?

It seems to me the more I learn about W10, the more unlikely this seems. It appears to want to seek permission from the mothership to function at even a basic level.
 
Posted by mousethief (# 953) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Doc Tor:
Serious question: is it possible to run a modern OS without ever connecting to the internet?

It seems to me the more I learn about W10, the more unlikely this seems. It appears to want to seek permission from the mothership to function at even a basic level.

Define "modern OS." I believe when I set up my #2 computer with Linux Mint Cinnamon, I didn't need to connect to the Internet to get it done. Although it may have downloaded drivers as it went along; I'm not sure. It's difficult to imagine an installation disk that has every possible driver for every possible hardware configuration. Hence using the internet during installation.
 
Posted by Doc Tor (# 9748) on :
 
I can understand the driver issue - I remember when hardware used to come with a CD with the drivers on it, the same CDs I now use as drinks mats.

But - for the most part - if I wanted to run a stand-alone machine, for whatever reason, it seems to me to be increasingly impossible. I have a little laptop which I use for writing, and not much else, yet every time I log on to the home wifi to transfer files across, I have to leave it up and running for an hour or two while it downloads a torrent of files from MS and elsewhere.

Yes, I know I could turn all that shabazz off, but I do need to remote-internet occasionally. But it seems to me that even an isolated, stand-alone machine running say OSX, Win7 or higher, may actually refuse to work if it can't phone home once in a while.

Is this where we are now?
 
Posted by Snags (# 15351) on :
 
TTBOMK there is no reason why you couldn't run Win 7 totally standalone, as long as you had sourced all of your drivers elsewhere and stuffed them on a USB stick etc. first.

The only caveat being you would need a connection once in order to activate it (or you need a volume licence or to go through the phone process, I suppose, but that's a PITA).

The same is true of Win 8.x

I don't know MacOS as intimately, but I would imagine the same applies.

W10 ... who knows.

What tends to get you is that more and more people are using a subscription basis for their software, and that means you need a connection to get updates, hit the licensing server and so on.
 
Posted by Penny S (# 14768) on :
 
I've just bought a new computer, a Toshiba convertible, about the same size as my old Asus EeePc, but able to read my 64 Gb camera microSD, and to display photos MUCH more quickly. I had to shift fast, in order to have Win 8.1 with the choice of 10 later. I've seen complaints about Win 10 phoning home all the time and telling MS everything about me, but I had to disable a lot of stuff and poke around in the install to make sure I could finish without being tied to MS apron strings.

What I would like to know is - is there an app for windows which will do a similar job to Graffiti in Android? I was so pleased to find that that had been updated to work on my phone after being used to using it on my Palm Pilot. I've seen a number of handwriting entry apps for sale, but I don't want to get one and find it's no good if I have paid for it, so I need advice. I know there's a screen keyboard, but I like to use the greater fluidity of a version of handwriting. The early Research Machine tablets would do it.
 
Posted by Penny S (# 14768) on :
 
Ignore the above. I have found it. Not very obvious.
 
Posted by Penny S (# 14768) on :
 
Just done this with it; A bit scribbly, and it isn't happy with commas, but it's quite impressive. I couldn't read some of my finger work! This is the native thing that came pre-installed.

[ 19. August 2015, 20:46: Message edited by: Penny S ]
 
Posted by mousethief (# 953) on :
 
Hey Linux Kool-Aid drinkers:

I want a video editor. I just want to take an mp4 and chunk it into smaller mp4 chunks. That's all. Here are the video editors I have tried. All failed in some way. Most just crashed when they were exporting video. Some crashed before. Some couldn't save as an mp4. It's been discouraging.

Open Shot
Avidemux
Cinelerra
LiVES
KDEnlive
jahshaka
ffmpeg
kino

What's left?

ETA: Yes, I did apt-get update before installing any of them.

I am using Mint 17.1 Cinnamon

[ 23. August 2015, 21:33: Message edited by: mousethief ]
 
Posted by Jay-Emm (# 11411) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by mousethief:
Hey Linux Kool-Aid drinkers:
..

Avconv worked ok with some files I had.

But:
It's command line (which actually worked out better for what I wanted as I could could note down the start time and end while it still played, but different use cases...).

And I didn't use mp4 (it seems to be listed, though?), In a day or two can possibly check if I can. If so, will try and find some publicly available video and find options that seem to work on my PC.

And it's vaguely similar to ffmpeg, which you've tried.


I actually want to do some childish video editing (adding comments and the like), so if I find something that works really nicely I'll let you know (or if someone else has any good ideas, I might nick them)
 
Posted by Jay-Emm (# 11411) on :
 
This
quote:

avconv -i testinput.mp4 -strict experimental -t 30 test.mp4

Did seem to work with one MP4 extension file I had. But obviously...

Fortunately when I thought it was the output you specified, it prompted before overwriting the file [Hot and Hormonal] .
 
Posted by mousethief (# 953) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Jay-Emm:
This
quote:

avconv -i testinput.mp4 -strict experimental -t 30 test.mp4

Did seem to work with one MP4 extension file I had. But obviously...

Fortunately when I thought it was the output you specified, it prompted before overwriting the file [Hot and Hormonal] .

Thanks for looking at this for me. Can you tell it "start at time stamp xx:yy:zz and end at time stamp aa:bb:cc"?
 
Posted by Jay-Emm (# 11411) on :
 
Yesish
I did it with start and duration*, (having to convert before the call). If I could have done it with endstamp, I would have done

Still not sure about if there's anything funny with the input/output that could cause problems.

The fact it doesn't work without the -strict experimental with .mp4 (and doesn't prompt with .ogg), seems to suggest it is genuinely putting it in some mpeg format. But also that it's taking some shortcut that could be a pain with what you need.

Similarly if the others didn't work, there may be something different between our systems. In which case they'll also be problems (though can use AVPlay in the same package to check it can see the file, possibly).

*I believe with -ss -t respectively
 
Posted by Penny S (# 14768) on :
 
As a result of all my photo searching, I have found an enormous number of duplicates - due to my obsession with backing up, and copying from camera to storage drive, from camera to computer (several), from computers to the storage drive, and probably other processes, such as forgetting I have done it. (It applies to things other than photos, but they are the worst.)

In the past I have used Auslogics Duplicate File Finder effectively, but it won't see the powered storage drive, which is attached to the router via an ethernet cable. All the computers can see and access this thing, which is why I bought it. I tried to attach the drive to the computer via its ethernet socket, and the computer asked me if I wanted it to access the computer (Win 7). Naturally I told it to do so, but it never appeared anywhere, not even after rebooting. The message never appeared again, either.

So I need a duplicates finder which will work over the network connection. Has anyone any recommendations?

Otherwise it's down to eye-brain coordination and hours and hours of me doing the robotic stuff. The search function on Win 7 does not offer the date option found on older versions, which means I have to work in the less attractive office space on the XP machine instead, as using date limits would be helpful in a manual search.
 
Posted by Penny S (# 14768) on :
 
The corollary to the above is to ask if anyone knows a way to search on Win 7 with the date of the file included as a criterion. I've got files going back to when I used 98, at least, and I don't need to search them. I could search by small cohorts of files at a time, instead of the terabytes involved at the moment.

I have got as far as reducing all the files named DSC_0001, 0002, 0003 and 0004. Some use all four digits. Then I had a panic that I didn't have a backup copy of the ones I'd cut down to one copy - but only the recent ones, created after I bought the storage thingy, when I did a complete backup onto a USB hard drive. I have no way to sort out those recent files. (Except on the old computer.)

I am currently clearing videos off a 1Tb drive that goes with the TV onto the storage thingy so that I can copy everything else onto it in return. Then carry on with the duplicates search. Then backup again to the unsorted USB drive. Then copy the videos back to the TV drive.

Meanwhile I have to prune things in the garden, weed, build a drystone wall, keep track of my accounts (I'm not looking forward to checking my bond and my NISA, both in shares)... At least I can fit those in the hours when the copying is being done.

But why can't I search by date?
 
Posted by Snags (# 15351) on :
 
Penny S: type "date" into the search box and you'll see a search filter of "date modified" is available. You can use this to pick a date, or a range.

You might also find these search tips helpful.
 
Posted by Snags (# 15351) on :
 
Oh, and on the duplicates front, depending on exactly how you're looking for them, check out Beyond Compare from Scooter Software. I find it invaluable at work when moving/comparing large volumes of files, and it's more than happy over a LAN connection.

There's a 30 day trial (and unless it's changed, that's 30 elapsed days of use, not 30 calendar days from install).
 
Posted by Penny S (# 14768) on :
 
Snags, thanks for both of those - I'll be trying that program shortly. In the interim after my last posting, I found a page on the net which directed me to that box in Explorer - it's in a corner I had not looked at much - I've always used the search box bottom left, where the dog used to hang out. I don't think it's very intuitive, and I just assumed that in the MS way they had decided to abandon a useful feature because they didn't use it!
And I've gone off Auslogics as they managed to install a program I didn't ask for when I updated the existing version.
Meanwhile it's just wait while I make sure I don't only have one copy of the things I deleted copies of yesterday... One of the sites I looked for duplicate identifying programs did emphasise that!

[ 25. August 2015, 09:18: Message edited by: Penny S ]
 
Posted by Penny S (# 14768) on :
 
I like the look of them from their web site. And the pricing system. And that it will work on the Cloud - not that I intend to put anything up there, but many do, and will need to weed there as well. Thanks again.

I found one of the files I thought lost - a photo of a storm in a ship swimming pool - can't imagine why I didn't video it. But the lightning is lost forever. Since I have been obsessive with multiple backups, this is odd. I haven't had a clean out the clutter phase for months - you can tell I'm in one at the moment*. Have to be careful with it.

On the other hand, there's a folder on the TV drive labelled "Camera Files" which is empty. As is the "Dashcam Files" one - I know I had decided not to keep any of those. Idiot - kicks self for not checking.

[ 25. August 2015, 09:32: Message edited by: Penny S ]
 
Posted by Snags (# 15351) on :
 
Long shot, but it might be worth checking "Previous Versions".

This assumes that you have shadow copy enabled on your machine, but if you right-click on a folder (or drive) and go into Properties you should have a "Previous Versions" tab. If shadow copy is enabled that will have a series of snapshots of the drive/folder contents at a particular point in time.

Depending on if it's enabled, and if it is how much storage was allocated, how much time has passed, how much you have deleted etc. you may find historic stuff that was there but has been unintentionally zapped is still recoverable.
 
Posted by Penny S (# 14768) on :
 
OK, I'm now in the position of the woman with the lost coin - rejoice with me, for that which was lost has been found. On the USB drive I copied, or thought I had copied, everything from on to the LAN device. I have found the lightning videos!

But I will copy your advice somewhere for future reference - and back it up...

Now to find the one of my original, not very big, external hard drives which has gone missing. It is in a bright blue zip bag, and not as slim as new ones, so should not have gone missing as resolutely as it has. Along with my Shakespeare, which is even thicker.

I have been keeping multiple hard drives with everything on ever since a friend had his laptop stolen on the bus, and backing up to them frequently, and deleting stuff from the machines. I was interrupted in the process of updating the missing one, did a quick "put it out of sight" and forgot where...
 
Posted by Snags (# 15351) on :
 
At least you try to backup [Smile]

Most long in the tooth IT folk will cheerfully intone "It's not a backup until you've restored from it". Which all too often is as depressing as it sounds.
 
Posted by Penny S (# 14768) on :
 
The current stage in the process is this... I have removed all the videos from the 1 Tb hard drive which usually lives with the TV to the 2 Tb Seagate Central on the router, while the 1 Tb was plugged into the Seagate. I can watch them from there anyway, as the TV can read it. (I am constantly amazed at what I can do wirelessly- printing, sitting in bed programming the TiVo box with my smartphone...Arthur C Clarke's sufficiently advanced technology looks like magic comes to mind.)

Then I have copied any folder with images in it to the I Tb. These processes have taken a day and a half. I have done random checks on files to make sure they have copied across OK. I don't use actual backup programs, because some time ago I found that they were useless if I wanted to restore files to a new computer or OS. I'd rather do it myself, and forgo the pleasures of only backing up changed files automatically. Which is, of course, why I have so many copies of things.

I am now running the Auslogics program on the 1 Tb which is currently connected to the computer, and can be seen by it.

My intention is to end up with only three copies of everything (apart from the ones in active use on the computers), on three separate external drives. The router attached one, which can be accessed by any of my computers, for regular use. A USB hard drive, regularly updated from the first, to be used if away from the WiFi, and another USB hard drive for backup for those. Each drive to have only one copy of files, instead of, as at present, multiples. Not copying to them in a hurry from computers, cameras etc without putting things in the right places should diminish that happening again. As if.

In the depths of the night, I found myself listening to a radio sitcom about Bletchley Park. In this episode, they called upon one Ian Trench, known as IT, and found him answering a call from one of the huts. "Have you tried turning it off and on again?" Pause. "Is it plugged in?"* Pause. "That'll be it, then." They didn't get on to backing up and restoring!

*I know they have to ask this - when in charge of the IT at school, before we had a technician, this was precisely why the Deputy Head couldn't get her monitor to work.

[ 27. August 2015, 06:15: Message edited by: Penny S ]
 
Posted by Smudgie (# 2716) on :
 
OK, here I am, non-geek, asking a question on behalf of my geeky son..... I'll use the words he used on FB so as to make sure I get it right.

quote:

Fellow computer people, please help me.. Pretty please.
I cable tied all my wires nice and neatly in my machine - it now doesn't work.
I've removed everything so I've only got essentials left and know I've got power coming in as the board has a green led indicator. I've reseated my RAM, CPU. I've attempted clearing the CMOS (without and without a battery) .Reseated the connectors in my modular power supply. Tried short the switch pins with a screwdriver. I really don't know what's next.
I've even got my mum looking for damages in wires etc and she can't even see anything.

It's a bit of a nightmare because his laptop is currently away being checked out by the insurance company because he dropped it, and he's off to uni in three weeks to start a computer course.
 
Posted by Jengie jon (# 273) on :
 
Hang on, hang on, hang on.

Tied wires and things stopped working? If that is the case, the first suspect is surely a broken wire!

This is a sound system person rather than a computer technician but still where my instinct goes.

Jengie
 
Posted by Smudgie (# 2716) on :
 
He's done a bit more fiddling and it looks like it was a breakdown waiting to happen rather than the result of his wire-fiddling. Alas, looks as though it may be good only for parts [Frown]

quote:
The boy said....
I tested all the components and the power supply and the switch in another machine and they worked fine, which only leaves me with the rather expensive processor and the motherboard.


 
Posted by Penny S (# 14768) on :
 
Does anyone know of a free email provider which does not demand connections with everything else one does - which rules out gmail and Microsoft's latest version?
I looked at Mail.com, but it has had some very negative reviews.
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
Yahoo mail. They might ask for other connections, but they are not necessary. They do not hunt you across the globe like Google.
 
Posted by Snags (# 15351) on :
 
Yahoo is, however, frequently the subject of big security wobbles that tend to get hushed over.
 
Posted by TonyK (# 35) on :
 
PennyS

I use GMX as my main email provider. Works as webmail and I also read emails through Outlook. Works for me...

Here it is.

It seems to offer other services but I have only used their ordinary emails.
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
Snags,
Ok, so here is the problem.
You have the big entities where security issues are publicised and small entities where they are not. In the ye olde days of the Internet, obscurity meant safety. These days, with bots scanning the 'net, it is no longer so.
So who do you think is safe?

[ 31. August 2015, 17:56: Message edited by: lilBuddha ]
 
Posted by no prophet's flag is set so... (# 15560) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by TonyK:
PennyS

I use GMX as my main email provider. Works as webmail and I also read emails through Outlook. Works for me...

Here it is.

It seems to offer other services but I have only used their ordinary emails.

http://www.shtrudel.com/ is another. I use GMX and shtrudel.
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
Email safety article.
 
Posted by Penny S (# 14768) on :
 
Thank you very much. Thought will be applied.

I started getting suspicious when my sister started a gmail account instead of her academic one, and it insisted on calling me by the name I had entered into the account I set up to download apps on my Android phone, and which I was unaware I had given permission to use elsewhere.
On my new Win 8.1 computer, I had to search non-intuitively to set it up without granting permissions to MS to access everything.

Then when I tried to download Google Maps, it insisted on having permission to access my contacts. That's going beyond irritating into Data Protection territory as far as I am concerned. (I can use it online, of course.)

I can't get some apps for the tablet without a MS account, and that needs an alternate email address. Aha, I thought. Gmail, only for this purpose, never to use for anything else. MS and Google can stare at each other across their servers, and all they will know is that I have downloaded a planetarium program. So, after a lot of aborted attempts, which revealed that a number of people wanted accounts which were called "No account" "Not an account" "Doivtnuocca" and suchlike, I set up the gmail one.

And lo, it popped up on my Android phone, insisting that I verify it or something before I went on. (Incidentally, I rarely use that phone as a phone - it does the job my Palm Pilot used to do.) And that phone will now not update Google Maps unless I allow access to my contacts. Who the infernal regions do they think they are?

Which is why I want something that doesn't want my soul. (I almost feel that the NSA and GCHQ are nice and cosy.)
 
Posted by Snags (# 15351) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by lilBuddha:
Snags,
Ok, so here is the problem.
You have the big entities where security issues are publicised and small entities where they are not. In the ye olde days of the Internet, obscurity meant safety. These days, with bots scanning the 'net, it is no longer so.
So who do you think is safe?

Oh, totally accepted. Although I'd dispute that security by obscurity was ever a particularly cunning strategy.

My concerns with Yahoo are difficult to articulate clearly, as they are built up from a variety of factors and inputs, and none of it amounts to anything more tangible than (a lot) of circumstantial indicators and (a reasonable amount) of semi-informed speculation. As things can be clouded by folk not being able to distinguish between actual compromsies vs. fake from addresses etc. waters are further muddied. Also, if you're huge with a lot of general users, you're going to get a lot of people who don't exactly help their own cause.

However, I've seen enough, read enough, and discussed enough with the clueful that Yahoo would not be my go-to choice for a freebie account for anything that mattered.

Naturally, the alternatives all come with their attendant issues. AOL still seem to think it's 1995. Microsoft are desperate to "do a Google" with their Microsoft Account that seeks to pervade everything. Google obviously got in first with GMail. You (don't) pays yer money and makes yer choice, and it's going to come down to which set of conditions bother one less.

Personally I used to run on-premise Exchange for work, and have our own dedicated server hosted elsewhere that handled non-work domains and accounts. These days I've migrated work to Office 365 hosted Exchange, and personal domains are all run via virtual systems on a reseller platform we maintain.

However, given the extremely low cost of registering a domain, and the availability of reliable general mail hosting also at very low cost, I can't see me ever doing anything other than maintaining a personal domain and at least a basic semi-managed email service, even if I were to jack in the current livelihood and do something better. If I did, I'd probably go to either MS or Google, and be very circumspect about the privacy settings.

For what it's worth, I do also have a range of accounts on all those systems and more, for all kinds of things. Just not for anything I particularly care about when it comes to primary communication.
 
Posted by Doc Tor (# 9748) on :
 
Miss Tor is desirous of a laptop - something relatively nippy, which she intends to take with her to university next September ( [Eek!] )

Any recommendations that won't break the bank?
 
Posted by Alisdair (# 15837) on :
 
1. A refurbished IBM/Lenovo Thinkpad, esp one of the X series for portability.

2. A Chromebook, using Google Docs (and possibly a Linux distro, e.g Mint, added via Crouton, if more versatile/serious computing is required)

3. Almost anything that is current and within your budget will do an adequate job if all that is needed is facilities for essay writing, web browsing, email and social media.

For university my three (daughter and two sons) all built their own desktop machines according to their own requirements (so they had no fear of maintaining them and no complaints about the equipment's capabilities); and alongside that each had a cheap netbook/Chromebook (fashions and technology change) that could be comfortably carried around the campus, for use in lectures/library/cafes, and made use of online storage (SpiderOak takes security seriously). Daughter used only Linux, sons prefer Windows.

No problems.

[ 08. September 2015, 12:03: Message edited by: Alisdair ]
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
A note regarding online storage. A problem I read about was beyond security in the theft department: data integrity.
First that what you sent and what was received are identical. Second that what was received is perfectly retained.
Perhaps I'm paranoid, but cloud storage as an additional safety measure makes sense, but not as a substitute. Backup drives are incredibly inexpensive.
 
Posted by Alisdair (# 15837) on :
 
I heartily agree, and in the case I mention the 'online storage' is merely a convenience for current data/material when working across machines, not a means of 'safe storage', and only a 'back-up' as part of a wider strategy.

For anyone trying to put together an effective back-up regime, the old adage is that data does not properly exist until it exists in at least two preferably three copies, and one at least in a completely separate location.

As one of her student jobs my daughter worked part-time on the IT Help Desk at the university library. The trail of woebegone students who arrived at the desk having (usually irrevocably) lost the only copy of their essay, due in tomorrow, was sad to see and never ending trickle.
 
Posted by Penny S (# 14768) on :
 
How I sympathise. I once had an assignment to submit to the OU. I was using - this is way back - a school BBC computer with a word-processing chip inserted in it. There was no way to load the whole essay at once, so the process was to load a part of the file, edit it, and save it to a new file. This went on automatically until the whole file had passed through the screen. In order to save space, and my memory, I only had two files. Since the essay concerned the possibility of opening up a gold mine in Wales, named the files "gold" and "mine". First I would load from "gold" and save in "mine", then reverse the process, saving the new file in the now empty "gold" file - which the computer had emptied.

Until, at 11pm, the day before it was due in, I accidentally loaded from the empty file, and watched it pour nothingness into the full file. No backup. Except early parts of the work on paper.

I worked into the small hours. I loaded the thing into the car, the huge cube of the monitor and the rest, and spent every break and the lunch hour, and then into the evening reconstituting from my brain, and I got it in in time. (Probably about 11.59 pm.)

Since then I have been a bit obsessive about backup. And while all my copies are about my house, some are very well hidden, and one I need to make easy to grab on the way out. As I will have to do with my friend's extra backup here.
 
Posted by Sparrow (# 2458) on :
 
I'm having an odd problem with a Yahoo email account. Nothing was coming in or going out yesterday, and this morning I have a weird message (twice) in the inbox saying:

" Dear Mail User,
Your Mail Outgoing and Incoming is blocked. Reason : Daily Mail Bounce Count Exceeds Limit [ Bounce count=10 ]
Please follow the link below to unblock yourself:


Update Now

-------------------------------------------
This is an automated message, please do not reply to this mail
Mail Team 2015

I obviously have not clicked on the link yet! Is it safe, or what?
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
Without seeing the link, I conditionally advise not to click. Instead, search within yahoo's help section for that message.
 
Posted by Penny S (# 14768) on :
 
I have just had to take my new hybrid tablet back to the shop. It was fine when it started, but it developed a charging problem. It has two batteries, one smaller one in the tablet part, the other with twice the cells in the keyboard section. In theory, it charges the tablet first, then the keyboard. In theory, it discharges the keyboard first (if attached), and then the tablet. In theory, it lasts 12 hours, depending on ambient temperature and what it has been asked to do.

This week, it decided it wasn't going to charge the keyboard battery. Or the software that reports on the charging decided that it wasn't going to tell me that it was charged. On one occasion it did tell me that there was 100% charge on the keyboard. For five minutes, until it was unplugged. Then it was 7%.

I found it was a rare intermittent problem with previous models. I tried charging it with the tablet raised in case the position of the connection was a problem. I discharged it completely and left it plugged in without using it for 24 hours. 100% charge on the tablet, 0% on the keyboard.

So I now have a new one of the same computer. This time I am following the practice that computer companies used to suggest, and charging it for 24 hours before switching it on and getting it going. Its quick start guide suggested plugging in and starting immediately. It doesn't have a charging light anywhere.

60 hours of not using the thing is trying my patience. Then I have to remember how to start up without getting a Microsoft account, which requires searching around various non-intuitive screens.
 
Posted by luvanddaisies (# 5761) on :
 
Not so much a translation request here as asking for advice...

I'm going to get myself a tablet (an Android one) putting my birthday Amazon vouchers towards it. Does anyone have any recommendations/suggestions?

I was initially thinking of a Kindle Fire, but it doesn't seem to appear on any "best android tablets" lists anywhere (although my having Amazon Prime might add value in my case?).

I'm thinking I'd quite like it to be running Lollipop (because it's what my phone has), and I'll mainly be using it for browsing - although I might start to use it for Netflix/amazon video/BBC iPlayer (radio and TV), which I can't really do on my elderly laptop (and it is elderly, and getting creaky - it's a MacBook 1.1. I think it's from 2002. Maybe 2001? It's from the very first generation of 13 inch MacBooks when they took over from iBooks).

Tablets that look from reading articles like this like they might be in the running are (in no particular order):
Kindle Fire
Tesco Hudl 2
Sony Xperia Z (except it's more expensive)
Samsung Galaxy Tab S 8.4

Oh - and another question (sorry, getting greedy now) - can I use my iTunes on an Android device? I don't think there's an app - I don't have one on my phone, but then I've not really looked. Or can I play the tracks I've downloaded from iTunes on an Android device?
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
Nexus 7. Fab tablet, reasonable price.
 
Posted by luvanddaisies (# 5761) on :
 
I've seen a lot of good reviews of the Nexus 7 - but I'm kind of thinking I might like to virtually replace my MacBook with this new Tablet, whatver it is I get, and I'd like it to last a while. Am I right in thinking that the Nexus 7 is a couple of years old now - and also, it might be a bit little in terms of screen size to do the job of a laptop. It doesn't have much storage either, and there's nowhere to stick a micro-SD card in it, as far as I understand. I was thinking I'd quite like to put my music collection onto it.

The one that's currently grabbing me is Sony Xperia Z4, but might I be just as well living with a smaller screen and slightly less spec and getting its predecessor the Z3?

I'm still wondering about the Kindle Fire too - I have Amazon Prime (I know, that probably makes me a bad person by default), but it might make sense to tie it in. I'm also seeing that most of the reviews say the iPad Air 2 is simply the best tablet out there. I've liked my MacBook (even though its creakiness now drives me bonkers), but my phone's Android - does it make sense to match my phone and my tablet?

I'm finding it really hard to decide. I've got nearly £200 of accumulated Amazon vouchers, and I've just had a promotion at work that gave me a small raise - so I can about afford the Xperia, but it's a lot of money, and I don't want to spend it unwisely, and as I've had over a decade of use out of my MacBook, I want to get at least a decent innings out of whatever Tablet I buy.
 
Posted by Thyme (# 12360) on :
 
I wouldn't recommend a Kindle Fire as you will find it very limiting. It won't run a lot of things, from memory I don't think it will work with any Apple apps like itunes and it won't talk to Google.

If you are looking for something that will work like an ipad you will be very disappointed with a Kindle Fire.

I think you will find that Amazon Prime will run on other tablets/laptops.

Personally I also find the ipad a bit limiting, there are some things I do that don't work on it. I don't think it is just a tablet version of a Macbook. But that is just my opinion. I have a friend with a Macbook and an ipad and she has to have both. She couldn't manage with just the ipad.

I don't think you need to have the same system on your phone as on your tablet/laptop.

I love my my Surface 3. It does everything and works as a tablet and a laptop. The Kindle reading app is not such a good experience as on the ipad though.

It is not cheap though and you have to buy the keyboard separately, it is not included in the price.

I'm not sure if you will find a tablet that will do everything a laptop will do at a tablet price!

Maybe get a small laptop?

I've been having a conversation about phones with a friend recently and we have come to the conclusion that it is almost impossible to have one thing that does everything and you either have to have more than one piece of kit or decide what is most important in terms of function and live without the rest.
 
Posted by Penny S (# 14768) on :
 
I have just bought a Toshiba Click Mini. It is netbook sized, and the screen pops out of its dock to be used as a tablet, or pops in to use the keyboard. It is running Win 8.1. The first one I had had battery problems. It has SD and microSD sockets, plus a mini USB socket, and a normal USB socket. That, and the SD are in the keyboard, leaving only the smaller sockets in the tablet. I had been using an Asus Eeepc netbook, so the small size isn't a bother. It's sturdy and seems to do what I wanted it for - mainly accessing the Gb sizes of camera cards, and flicking through the photos quickly. I use OpenOffice on it for typing things out and so on.

Specs on this page

[ 19. September 2015, 22:26: Message edited by: Penny S ]
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by luvanddaisies:
I've seen a lot of good reviews of the Nexus 7 - but I'm kind of thinking I might like to virtually replace my MacBook with this new Tablet, whatver it is I get, and I'd like it to last a while.

No tablet, not even the new iPad "Pro" fully replaces a computer.* They do not run full programs.


*Yes, pedants, I know that tablets are technically computers, but you know what I mean.
 
Posted by luvanddaisies (# 5761) on :
 
Ah, I'd wondered about the Fire's tie down to Amazon. Yeah, that sounds like it's too restricting.

So, the iPad Air or an Android, maybe the Xperia (I don't like Windows, and although I've not used the windows OS for phones or tablets, that puts me off).
If I go iPad, it'll mean I have to re-find all the apps I have, although most of them are free, and there are actually one or two apps I'd like that are not available for Android devices.

It sounds like the Xperia might have a fair bit of bloatware, how's the iPad foot that? And will an iPad get arsey with my using gmail? Also, there's no way of expanding the storage on an iPad, is there? Although I guess I could plug in a hard drive if I needed to.

I'm planning on keeping my MacBook. It can stagger through word processing and stuff, so it wouldn't have to completely replace the laptop, hence why I said I wanted to "virtually replace" it.
 
Posted by Jengie jon (# 273) on :
 
Sony is like Apple and very good at holding your hand in case you get into difficulties. Unfortunately if you are the sort of person who likes to do things differently then both are a pain.

Oh I am banned from Apple at work (I break them in impossible ways*). I had an Xperia and it would not link to work network because of the hand holding.

Jengie

*Well actually only one and that a long time ago, nobody has dared to let me loose since.
 
Posted by Alisdair (# 15837) on :
 
@luvanddaisies
The iPad is certainly the slickest in terms of usability; you just have to know that Apple's 'walled garden' approach and the apps that are available fit your needs.

By all accounts the Xperia Z4 is a very decent bit of hardware, and in my experience Sony are quite light on 'bloatware' these days compared to many other suppliers. In fact you are less likely to find much to offend you on a tablet, compared with a phone where the ISP is often responsible for adding unwanted junk that cannot be removed.

So, if you know that Android's slightly more hairy user interface and security situation, and apps 'jungle', is okay for you then you will probably find the Xperia will serve you well.

It's definitely true that unless your needs are confined largely to 'consumption', and not much in the way of serious productivity software, then a tablet will not realistically replace a laptop (or desktop)---it's much more a convenient complement.

As always it's horses for courses, only you can know what your needs and abilities require.
 
Posted by Paul. (# 37) on :
 
I have a 2012 Nexus 7 and it's a nice device, the newer model is nicer. However I bought a Hudl 2 with some clubcard points and I use that now. I like it because it has a bigger screen and a slot for SD cards - which was handy when I flew to Australia and could take my own selection of videos to watch, music and podcasts to listen to.

I can't honestly say I've surveyed the market and know what's the best out there but the Hudl seems reasonable.

I'm also not sure about any tablet as a laptop replacement.
 
Posted by Curious Kitten (# 11953) on :
 
My ipad is suitable for general office use and internet browsing. I find the lack of mouse the biggest limit to what I can do with it. I can use my ipad as my primary computer turning to my macbook maybe once a week or if I want to play games.

Mum has a Windows tablet that I quite like and doesn't feel like the operating system is what would prevent me from using as my primary computer unlike the Android tablets I've played with.
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by luvanddaisies:
(I don't like Windows, and although I've not used the windows OS for phones or tablets, that puts me off).

Too bad, Windows has the absolute best mobile interface yet devised, IMO. In truth, Ios and Android feel like icon containers more than OS'. The newest version of either are a significant step forward, but still behind Microsoft.
quote:
Originally posted by luvanddaisies:

It sounds like the Xperia might have a fair bit of bloatware, how's the iPad foot that?

Not terrifically. Like all devices I have used, you only get a portion of the stated storage available, even before installing your own apps, adding music or taking photos. And there is a persistent "other" chuck of space that cannot be freed directly.

quote:
Originally posted by luvanddaisies:

And will an iPad get arsey with my using gmail?

I do not think so. But it does not work perfectly with yahoo.
quote:
Originally posted by luvanddaisies:

Also, there's no way of expanding the storage on an iPad, is there? Although I guess I could plug in a hard drive if I needed to.

There are wifi solutions as well, but nothing built in.

quote:
Originally posted by Alisdair:

The iPad is certainly the slickest in terms of usability;

Horses for courses, of course, but you are still wrong. [Biased]
Windows current mobile OS is the slickest. I would give a slight nod to Apple over Android, but much of that is familiarity, I think. I use my iPad more than my Nexus 7 because of the larger screen and because the apps I have for my iPhone are also available for the iPad.
 
Posted by Curious Kitten (# 11953) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by luvanddaisies:
It sounds like the Xperia might have a fair bit of bloatware, how's the iPad foot that?

Not as bad as the iphone. It comes with, and can't be deleted from it, Facetime, Calendar, Photos, Camera, Contacts, Clock, Maps, Video, Notes, Reminders, Photo Booth, Game Centre, Itunes Store, App Store, iBooks, Tips, Podcasts, Find Friends, Messages, Mail, Safari, and Music.
quote:
Originally posted by luvanddaisies:
And will an iPad get arsey with my using gmail?

At the moment Gmail isn't a problem but there was a stretch of time where you couldn't send gmail from the native app and had to have the third party app.
quote:
Originally posted by luvanddaisies:
I'm planning on keeping my MacBook. It can stagger through word processing and stuff, so it wouldn't have to completely replace the laptop, hence why I said I wanted to "virtually replace" it.

If your macbook can run Yosemite or higher and supports the handover feature then I'd say go for an ipad because it gets massively more functional in combination.

Otherwise I'd agree with lilBuddha get a Windows tablet if you want to use it more like a laptop than a phone.
 
Posted by Sandemaniac (# 12829) on :
 
Is there a way of permanently turning off Track Changes in Word 2013 so that it only shows when I want it to? At the moment my CV is completely red, and track changes is on every time I open it - plus it likes to get emailed to people in that state!

It's a PITA - can anyone tell me what I'm doing wrong? I can get it to show no markup, but I'd like it to open like that.

Thanks,

AG
 
Posted by Thyme (# 12360) on :
 
quote:Originally posted by luvanddaisies:
"I'm planning on keeping my MacBook. It can stagger through word processing and stuff, so it wouldn't have to completely replace the laptop, hence why I said I wanted to "virtually replace" it."
******************************

I found the usefulness of my ipad increased a thousand fold when I got a good keyboard for it. I don't like onscreen keyboards. I got an ultra thin logitech keyboard for ipad air which doubles as a stand and case. It makes it heavier but much easier to use. It is expensive but well worth it. I tried a cheap version and it was a total waste of money.

[ 21. September 2015, 11:48: Message edited by: Thyme ]
 
Posted by ElaineC (# 12244) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sandemaniac:
Is there a way of permanently turning off Track Changes in Word 2013 so that it only shows when I want it to? At the moment my CV is completely red, and track changes is on every time I open it - plus it likes to get emailed to people in that state!

It's a PITA - can anyone tell me what I'm doing wrong? I can get it to show no markup, but I'd like it to open like that.

Thanks,

AG

On the Review ribbon, in the Changes section Accept the changes, either individually or all at once. This should rid the document of all the red text.

In order to stop it happening again Press the Track Changes button in the Tracking section.

Hope this helps.
 
Posted by Sandemaniac (# 12829) on :
 
Ooh, thank you! That almost works - for some reason I'm left with three comment visible in the margin, but it's a huge improvement.

AG
 
Posted by ElaineC (# 12244) on :
 
Comments are a different beast!!

There should be a 'Delete' button on the Comments section - just to the left of Tracking.
 
Posted by Sandemaniac (# 12829) on :
 
Bingo - thank you very much!

AG
 
Posted by luvanddaisies (# 5761) on :
 
I went for an iPad Air 2 in the end - it's rather gorgeous. It arrived today from Amazon, and I'm rather in love with it. Thanks again for all the suggestions and comments here [Smile]
 
Posted by Thyme (# 12360) on :
 
I think you'll love it. Thanks for the update.
 
Posted by Firenze (# 619) on :
 
*bump*
 
Posted by Wesley J (# 6075) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Wesley J:
Is the Yahoo! e-mail/account login currently being hacked from Iran?

I've got Firefox, latest updates, with the Flagfox add-on, which displays a little flag in the address bar, identifying the country where the server you're trying to access is located. Today, and with quite some shock, I've discovered that there's no longer the US or UK flag, but the Iranian one.

Geotool, one of the Flagfox built-in IP lookups, shows the IP as 188.125.80.13, located in Iran. Apparently, I'm not the only one who noticed this - see TinyURL link. In this link, there is a further link to a screenshot which shows this, including the Iranian IP address. This is exactly the same IP addy I am being diverted to.

According to cnet from 2011 (link), sites like Yahoo, Google or Skype may indeed have been attacked or their login credentials faked by Iranian hackers.

Questions:

1. Can anyone else replicate this? (I've tried on different computers, from home and work: the same.)
2. How can I contact Yahoo mail to tell them my (and the first link's, above) observations?
3. What do I do? Shall I still log into the Iranian hacked site and change my password(s)?

This is pretty annoying. Please advise!

Thanks!

Finally a good outcome to the above, posted in May 2015: after several months of an Iranian server for the log-in (but apparently owned by Yahoo...!), everything has reverted back to a UK server.

Interestingly, a national cybercrime unit I got in touch with were able to replicate the Iran problem. It definitely wasn't just me. However, they didn't know why this was happening. It was some German cyber blogger who did some investigating: he suspected that Yahoo had indeed their own server in Iran, and probably in order to comply with Iranian legal procedures - but which would also allow the Iranian authorities to closely monitor Yahoo traffic and possibly messages.

His conclusion seems to be supported by the fact that I never received any reply or comment from Yahoo on this. (In my experience, they normally react quickly to other complaints.)

At the time being: problem solved.
 
Posted by Sandemaniac (# 12829) on :
 
Feckfeckfeck!

I've just discovered that Word is still putting some markup - vertical lines down the left hand side of the page - into my CV when I save as a PDF. How do I get rid, please?

AG
 
Posted by Sandemaniac (# 12829) on :
 
Anyone? This is important!

AG
 
Posted by ElaineC (# 12244) on :
 
I think you need to look at the Track Changes Option. (small Arrow on Track Changes Button, second item in list)

There is a Markup Section with options for Changed Lines. Appears to default to Outside Border.

I think this is what is causing the problem....
 
Posted by Sandemaniac (# 12829) on :
 
Thanks. I'll have ago and report back.

AG
 
Posted by Sandemaniac (# 12829) on :
 
Nope, I just get two options - Track Changes and Lock Tracking, which sets a password. This is Word 2013, could be a version thing?

AG
 
Posted by ElaineC (# 12244) on :
 
Possibly - I have Word 2010.
 
Posted by Sandemaniac (# 12829) on :
 
Bother, thank you for trying, anyone with 2013 who can beat this? It's not making my CV look good...

AG
 
Posted by Snags (# 15351) on :
 
I've got 2013 here. I can PM you an email address and you can send me a copy to fiddle with, if you want? I'm not convinced it's necessarily a Track Changes thing, but am not sure enough as to what it might be to be able to sort it without experimentation.

Alternatively, rather than using Word's Save As PDF which produces quite bulky PDFs, have you tried printing to a PDF printer (e.g. PDFill or CuteWriter)?
 
Posted by Sandemaniac (# 12829) on :
 
OK, I got some help here:
https://support.office.com/en-us/article/Turn-off-track-changes-d030a297-bf8e-451b-8e6d-2e40728dc45b

I know, I know, but how many people actually find Microsoft help useful?

and it seems that I can eliminate the little buggers by using File > Info > Check for issues . Inspect document.

Thank goodness for that!

AG
 
Posted by Amanda B. Reckondwythe (# 5521) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sandemaniac:
how many people actually find Microsoft help useful?

There's the story of the helicopter pilot who found himself beset by a sudden roll-in of fog and so was drawn considerably off course. When the fog finally lifted, he had no idea of where he was. But he saw that he was immediately outside an office building and could see people inside. So he made a sign that read "Where am I?" and held it up for the people to read. The people made their own sign and held it up for him: "You are in a helicopter." "Ah," the pilot thought, "I'm outside of Microsoft headquarters!"
 
Posted by Lyda*Rose (# 4544) on :
 
I have ordered my first Amazon Fire- my first pad of any kind. And I don't even have a smartphone so I don't even know how to download apps, music, anything onto one! [Eek!] Does anyone have suggestions for books or tutorials that would help a sixty year old, total neophyte get started on one?
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sandemaniac:

I know, I know, but how many people actually find Microsoft help useful?

I find the help for most software horrible. Most answers are found in their, or other, forums. This might be by design; free outsourcing of their Help departments.
Regarding Microsoft directly, at least they do not yell at their customers for failing to adapt to the product's shortcomings.
 
Posted by TonyK (# 35) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Lyda*Rose:
I have ordered my first Amazon Fire- my first pad of any kind. And I don't even have a smartphone so I don't even know how to download apps, music, anything onto one! [Eek!] Does anyone have suggestions for books or tutorials that would help a sixty year old, total neophyte get started on one?

Lyda*Rose - assuming location CA is for California, US Amazon has a range of 'Dummies' books.

What I always buy when I've got a new bit of kit!
 
Posted by Lyda*Rose (# 4544) on :
 
Thanks, Tony. My Fire will be the new Amazon Fire 7 (not HD) but I imagine the advice in Dummies will still generally apply.
 
Posted by mousethief (# 953) on :
 
Help linux gurus! I can't print. I copied the ppd file from my older linux puter to my new one, and the old one prints just fine, but the new one refuses and says "Out of ink." There's nothing on the printer screen that says anything about ink. I think it's a bogus error messsage and something else is going on. But of course getting usable, timely online help for Linux is only slightly less difficult than finding an original owner's manual for a 17th century sword.

If I can't get this thing to print I'm going to have to go back to Windows, because a computer I can't print from is worthless. Help me, Obi Wan.
 
Posted by mousethief (# 953) on :
 
Well now it doesn't say out of ink, just "there was a problem processing document [document name]." Perhaps that's an improvement. Still can't print though, so not really.
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
Not that I'm using Linux any more, but when I did swap between Linux machines, there were a series of hoops to getting the printers to work (not helped by using different versions of Linux on each machine).

- find the printer drivers in the repository
- that downloaded HP drivers too, for an Epson printer and for some reason the Linux machine needed HP stuff downloaded
- go through the three different programmes to check that the printer was switched on in each and every one and make sure there was nothing else lurking.

(current Windows machine talks to same printer by wireless, so I can print from anywhere in the flat and externally if I can be bothered and set it up, from my phone, laptop and tablet)
 
Posted by mousethief (# 953) on :
 
I can't imagine why, if I do the exact same thing on both machines, it shouldn't work in both cases. There must be something (I'm thinking) about the setup of the one computer that is sufficiently different to prevent printing. Something that interferes somehow with the printing process, or the installation process (to glitch it).

It's probably something simple and benign if I could find a person who has dealt with it and fixed it.
 
Posted by mousethief (# 953) on :
 
Well, I said "screw it" and installed Windows. Life's too short, and I have work to do that requires a printer and reliable software. I will wait to go Linux until it grows up into an adult operating system that's usable by people who aren't 35 year old males sitting in their underwear in their mother's basement writing BASH scripts to make the CD Rom tray go in and out.
 
Posted by Lamb Chopped (# 5528) on :
 
How have the mighty fallen!
 
Posted by Thyme (# 12360) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by mousethief:
Well, I said "screw it" and installed Windows. Life's too short, and I have work to do that requires a printer and reliable software. I will wait to go Linux until it grows up into an adult operating system that's usable by people who aren't 35 year old males sitting in their underwear in their mother's basement writing BASH scripts to make the CD Rom tray go in and out.

[Killing me]
 
Posted by Doublethink. (# 1984) on :
 
Can anyone tell me what the difference would be between; buying a steam machine, and a barebone and adding a beefed up graphics card ?
 
Posted by Alisdair (# 15837) on :
 
Mousethief - what's the printer, and which distro are you/were you using?

It's 4-5 years since I've had to mess around with PPDs, but then I choose my printers to work with Linux. Until manufacturers generally start offering drivers for Linux (which, to be fair, quite a few more do these days) it's always going to be a lottery hoping a random printer will be supported.

For anyone wondering: HP printers are pretty well universally supported through the HPLIP driver, which on many distros comes already installed; Epson are not too bad; Canon are notoriously rubbish (unless there's been a recent transformation); and everyone else is variable (my Kyocera laser ptr. works beautifully, but requires a download from Kyocera).

Visit: http://www.openprinting.org/printers/ if you want to check the current status of your printer's support with Linux.

Almost anything that is fully/mostly supported will have its driver automatically supplied through the CUPs printing system, so to that extent the days of wrangling PPDs are long gone.

Anyone thinking of moving away from the Windows 10 panopticon and trying Linux for a bit more control should definitely do their research, and remind themselves continually that 'Linux is not Windows'. To be honest running Linux these days is generally no more troublesome than running Windows or OS-X, i.e. somewhat, but different---it takes getting used to, but one thing is for sure: anyone who tells you you have to use a 'command line' all the time (or even at all) is well behind the times or not being honest. Distros like Ubuntu, Mint, or SUSE are all perfectly usable as 'point-and-click' systems.

Have fun :-)
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
I was using Linux until earlier this year, most recently Magiea, (based on Mandriva) preceded by Cinnamon (a version of Mint) on one machine and Pear, which was a Apple look alike based on Debian, on a very ancient laptop.

All three were like using Windows or Apple when they were set up, and much easier to download programmes so long as I went through the repository. I can and did go into the command lines, occasionally, but I've done that on Windows machines too (recently to sort out problems with work computers).

I was running first an HP then an Epson printer off all three Distros. I had to download CUPS and HPLIP to run both printers - and I had to go into both programmes on occasion to get the printer working, but not at command line, just the through the menu, as I would with Microsoft machines. CUPS downloaded HPLIP automatically as part of the upload. And to get the Epson working with Windows 10 I had to download the right drivers (as I had to for the Brother at work and Windows 7 to get it to scan recently).

My big problem with the Linux distros, other than the machines both eventually died, was lack of compatibility with Microsoft documents with a lot of formatting, so I couldn't switch between machines for work stuff and the one that really upset me was that I couldn't easily complete online application forms because they were set up in Word with flashy formatting which fell apart when opened in .ods. Linux is fine if you don't want to use stuff from other places seriously, but if you're running anything else that others are using it's tough.

I am enjoying the way all my Windows phone, tablet and laptop synchronise calendars and could synchronise a lot more if I set it all up in cloud, which is practically impossible to organise in Linux in the same way.
 
Posted by Alisdair (# 15837) on :
 
I completely agree with you about the compatibility issues, but for philosophical reasons I am willing to live with it. To often 'incompatibility' isn't a sign of Linux being inferior or wilfully 'different', but of proprietorial corporate interests determined to lock-in their customers/prey as hard as they can. their interest is directly opposed to enabling compatibility and maximising their revenue stream, even if that means hindering (even opposing) the free and legal exchange of data.

I support 'Free/Open Source Software' because of the 'freedom' it stands for and seeks to enable.; and the way it stands against the attempts to make users into into just customers (which is fine), but prisoners of other people's agendas and motives.

For that reason I am more than willing to live with the (for me relatively minor) downsides, e.g. occasional lack of compatibility and absence of particular software packages. In practice I find there are almost always usable workarounds.

But it's horses for courses, and clearly some of us will have use cases that demand use of Windows/OS-X, fair enough.
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
I miss the control of Linux distros. The fact that I chose what to update and download when I wanted to, rather than the Microsoft's control of Windows 10 when it is practically impossible to turn some things off, and takes paying attention to not leave it open to the wind when setting up.
 
Posted by lilBuddha (# 14333) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Doublethink.:
Can anyone tell me what the difference would be between; buying a steam machine, and a barebone and adding a beefed up graphics card ?

Not a Linux person, but from what I've read it depends on what you want.
Steam OS is made for games. It is more an HTPC than a general use computer. So, if general use is your purpose, than another Linux distro will likely be more advantageous.
If you are just concerned about the hardware end, Steam Machines are highly variable, so you would need to do a unit by unit comparison.
Here is a link to 14 different options.
 
Posted by mousethief (# 953) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Alisdair:
Mousethief - what's the printer, and which distro are you/were you using?

Mint Cinnamon 17.1, and Epson WorkForce WF-2650.

quote:
I support 'Free/Open Source Software' because of the 'freedom' it stands for and seeks to enable.; and the way it stands against the attempts to make users into into just customers (which is fine), but prisoners of other people's agendas and motives.

For that reason I am more than willing to live with the (for me relatively minor) downsides, e.g. occasional lack of compatibility and absence of particular software packages. In practice I find there are almost always usable workarounds.

I like the idea of open source. But inability to print is not a minor downside, it's a deal-breaker for a middle-school math(s) teacher. Also my main tool for work does not come in a free Linux version (SMART Notebook™).

[ 26. October 2015, 01:36: Message edited by: mousethief ]
 
Posted by mousethief (# 953) on :
 
And like I said, I found a driver (ppd), and it works for one of my two machines, but not the other.
 
Posted by Alisdair (# 15837) on :
 
Mousethief, as far as I can see your printer should be fully supported through a driver - 'ESC/P-R' - supplied as part of the CUPS system, so your problem does seem somewhat esoteric.

Sympathy is little help, but I feel your pain, and fully appreciate the necessity of finding something that works, including installing a different OS, when it comes to printing!

Someone with a more in depth knowledge may have a simple/complicated solution, but at the moment your solution looks like the 'best' one.
 
Posted by Doublethink. (# 1984) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by lilBuddha:
quote:
Originally posted by Doublethink.:
Can anyone tell me what the difference would be between; buying a steam machine, and a barebone and adding a beefed up graphics card ?

Not a Linux person, but from what I've read it depends on what you want.
Steam OS is made for games. It is more an HTPC than a general use computer. So, if general use is your purpose, than another Linux distro will likely be more advantageous.
If you are just concerned about the hardware end, Steam Machines are highly variable, so you would need to do a unit by unit comparison.
Here is a link to 14 different options.

I suppose what I am asking is whether a steam machine is just a clever rebrand of a small form factor pc, that you could get as a barebone and add souped up components, or whether they'd be worth buying.
 
Posted by Alisdair (# 15837) on :
 
I think you are on the right track there. 'Steam Machine' is like a reference specification for manufacturers to produce kit that meets Steam's gaming requirements; with Steam also producing their own kit, rather as Google do with the Nexus phones/tablets.

So, if you are happier having something that 'just works' out of the box then paying the premium for a 'Steam Machine' will be the way to go. OTOH, if you prefer the fun of putting together your own system you may(!?) save some money, but you will hopefully have fun and come out with something tailored to your particular needs/desires.

It's probably six of one and half a dozen of the other when it comes to deciding which is the most cost effective route; just depends on individual requirements.

[ 26. October 2015, 08:52: Message edited by: Alisdair ]
 
Posted by Sparrow (# 2458) on :
 
I'm thinking of getting a TV streaming device and hesitating between the Chromecast or Amazon Fire TV stick. Has anyone had experience of either of these, what problems have you had, what can you recommend please?

[ 10. November 2015, 15:06: Message edited by: Sparrow ]
 
Posted by Ricardus (# 8757) on :
 
Why do Excel macros take up so much space? I had a spreadsheet that was about 250 KB in size, and then I wrote a macro to help me fill it in. The macro was only about 200 lines of code, but the file ballooned to about 5 MB.

I would have thought that the code itself wouldn't take up much more space than a plain-text file of equivalent length (i.e. not much), and surely the gubbins that makes the macro work is stored somewhere in Excel the programme, rather than in the individual file. So what do all the megabytes do?
 
Posted by North East Quine (# 13049) on :
 
Prompted by a "what would you save if your house caught fire?" question, I am contemplating scanning various documents and putting them into a private dropbox file.

I'm thinking of things like my degree certificates, PVG certificate etc. Possibly other documentation.

What is safe to put on the cloud in a private dropbox file? Is there any risk of identity theft? The alternative would be to scan and save onto a disc to be kept at my parents' house, but that might get tidied away and vanish.

Currently I have several hundred photos on dropbox, but nothing else.
 
Posted by Baptist Trainfan (# 15128) on :
 
You can, of course, buy fireproof boxes such as these for precisely that reason.
 
Posted by North East Quine (# 13049) on :
 
What about certificates of baptism / church membership / ownership of a burial plot / boiler warranty?
 
Posted by North East Quine (# 13049) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Baptist Trainfan:
You can, of course, buy fireproof boxes such as these for precisely that reason.

The more I thought about it, the more bits of paper it occurred to me would be handy to have scanned and saved. My list so far wouldn't fit into that box!
 
Posted by North East Quine (# 13049) on :
 
So, the best option would be to scan, save onto a disc or data stick, and then store that in a fireproof box?
 
Posted by Jengie jon (# 273) on :
 
I think if I was doing it I would use a professional backup company such as Carbonite rather than something aimed at sharing.

Jengie
 
Posted by Leorning Cniht (# 17564) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by North East Quine:
So, the best option would be to scan, save onto a disc or data stick, and then store that in a fireproof box?

...and keep your backups up to date. Good CDs or DVDs are probably good for a couple of decades or more, but don't expect to be able to read one in 50 years time.

A decent usb stick might last decades (but will you have a computer with usb in decades)

At some level, it's hard to beat paper [Smile]
 
Posted by Paul. (# 37) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Leorning Cniht:
At some level, it's hard to beat paper [Smile]

Actually it's only relatively recently that we've been able to make paper that lasts. If you have any paperbacks from the 60s, 70s or 80s you might be surprised how much they've deteriorated.

If you want long term storage you've got to look into stone tablets! [Biased]
 
Posted by Lamb Chopped (# 5528) on :
 
That's 20th century paper. Paper from 1600 or so is just fine. (no acid)
 
Posted by mousethief (# 953) on :
 
We (Josephine and I) have books from the 18th and 19th centuries that show no signs of deterioration. It was when we (as a book-creating culture) switched to cheap wood pulp from cotton that paper started rotting between the boards. Which is why we (as a book-creating culture) need to move from wood pulp to hemp for the mass of paper production. But that's a story for another day.

[ 19. November 2015, 03:16: Message edited by: mousethief ]
 
Posted by Schroedinger's cat (# 64) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Lamb Chopped:
That's 20th century paper. Paper from 1600 or so is just fine. (no acid)

I am presuming that NEQ is not quite old enough to have degree certificates from the 1600s.

I would broadly concur that using a sharing platform is probably not a good idea. As well as other things, if you are not paying for it, they could decide to stop supporting it for you, and your data would be lost.

A paid for provider of secure storage would be a better bet for these sorts of crucial documents. The idea of scanning them is and saving a copy that way is very forward thinking, so make sure that your storage is also forward thinking. It is like an online bank security box - you pay something for it, and the bank takes responsibility for it. If you pay nothing for it, then you get what you pay for.
 
Posted by Alisdair (# 15837) on :
 
Re secure online storage.

Dropbox may have cleaned up its act, but security has not been its strong suit.

Have a look at Tresorit, which offers client side encryption, is based in Switzerland, and offers 3GB of free storage. https://tresorit.com/

Other services are also available.
 
Posted by moonlitdoor (# 11707) on :
 
I'm hoping this may be a simple question for someone, but it's got me fooled, which isn't too difficult when it comes to technology.

I've got some photos I took on my phone Alcatel C1 which appear in the photos application, or gallery. If I touch them I can see file names like 20141109_0857.jpg. But if I mount this phone as usb external storage on my computer, and search the removable drive E in windows explorer, these file names are not found in any directory.

Many other file names are found so it can see the phone's file system. I would really like to upload these photos but I can't find them ! Any ideas ?
 
Posted by Alisdair (# 15837) on :
 
Moonlitdoor,

Your phone uses (I think) the Android operating system, manufacturers are free (to some extent) to do their own thing when it comes to where they put things in the file system, but we'll assume Alcatel have left well alone.

Try looking for a Folder called 'storage', or 'sdcard' (sdcard may be numbered, e.g. sdcard0).

Inside this folder you should look for a folder called 'DCIM' (short for 'Digital Camera Images').

Inside 'DCIM' there may be several folders, but one of them will probably/hopefully have what you are looking for.

You could just try getting Windows File Explorer to search for 'DCIM', but as you have seen the results may not be helpful.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Moonlitdoor - I had a similar confusion a while ago and solved it by realising that my phone has two distinct storage areas, one being in the phone itself and the other being on the MicroSD card - and they don't really seem to talk to one another. If you can't find it in one it is probably in the other.
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
Sorry moonlitdoor, I keep forgetting to try attaching my Alcatel phone to my Windows laptop. I'll try to look over the weekend. (Last time I did this was on Linux laptops the photos off that phone being not worth bothering with).
 
Posted by Wesley J (# 6075) on :
 
This might help? --> Alcatel C1 resource page. (I guess the C1 POP is not too dissimilar.)

Pp. 84-86 in the pdf manual seem relevant. [Smile]
 
Posted by moonlitdoor (# 11707) on :
 
My photos are worth bothering with to me, CK, not because of their quality as pictures, but they are of the poppy exhibition at the Tower of London, and I should be sorry to lose them.

There is a directory called DCIM in the root of the phone file system as it appears in windows explorer. That has some pictures in it but not any of the ones that appear in the Gallery application.

There is also a sdcard0 directory, but according to windows explorer, that doesn't have any files in it at all.
 
Posted by Alisdair (# 15837) on :
 
Moonlitdoor - As Android is basically a Linux kernel, with Google's own software stack on top, it's likely that the extra storage defined by 'sdcard0' is set up using a filing system that Windows doesn't recognise (probably 'ext4').

If you can install 'Wifi File Explorer' on your phone - http://tinyurl.com/bodva6q - and follow the pretty straightforward instructions, you should be able to access the contents of 'sdcard0' - where you are likely to find another 'DCIM' folder - through your web browser and download the photographs you are after.

I can't guarantee this is where your pictures are, but the Album/Gallery program doesn't normally shift stuff around, it just trawls the file system logging where picture files are located so it can display them.
 
Posted by Alisdair (# 15837) on :
 
And just for the record: the reason manufacturers have taken to using a non-Windows filing system on internal storage is because Microsoft demands a licence fee payment for using their 'FAT' filing system.

If the manufacturer uses a non-removable micro-sd card for extra storage they can use any filing system they like, and one of the open source Linux systems - like 'EXT4' - incurs no extra cost. Which given the razor thin margins a lot of phones are sold at makes a valuable difference to the manufacturer's bottom line.

If you want to blame anyone blame Microsoft for being so one eyed as to refuse to recognise other widely used filing systems. EXT4 is robust, efficient and widely used - outside the Windows world, obviously!
 
Posted by Wesley J (# 6075) on :
 
Good thinking re the missing piece of software!

In fact, in my link above, there is some dedicated Alcatel-own brand software to download, named 'SmartSuite'. This should normally work.

quote:
It is a powerful software with which you can manage phonebook, SMS, logo, ring tone and other files of your mobile phone simply and easily by PC.
Worth a try, meseems.
 
Posted by Alisdair (# 15837) on :
 
And one more, for the road - Moonlitdoor, if you open one of the photographs in Album/Gallery and tap on the picture a range of options should appear.

On my phone one of those is the 'menu' icon - three dots in a vertical row. Tap on this and one of the options that appears is 'Details'. Tap that and amongst the information is the file path indicating the location of the picture in the phone's file system.

The one I am looking at now says: /storage/emulated/0/Edited/photograph.jpg

I hope that helps, all the best in your quest.
 
Posted by moonlitdoor (# 11707) on :
 
many thanks Alisdair, the wifi file explorer has shown a number of directories which Windows explorer did not, including one with these photos in it, and I have downloaded them successfully.

I am very grateful to you as I would not have managed that without your help.
 
Posted by Baptist Trainfan (# 15128) on :
 
Can anyone help me? In the past, I have been able to display Google books on my computer (or, at least, sections of them).

Now, if I try to do this, I get the headings and can click on the contents list, but the bit of the page where the text should be displayed is blank.

I am not registered for Google Play - is this the root of my problem? My browser is the most recent version of IE.
 
Posted by Tubbs (# 440) on :
 
Anyone know the answer to Baptist Trainfan's question:

quote:
Can anyone help me? In the past, I have been able to display Google books on my computer (or, at least, sections of them).

Now, if I try to do this, I get the headings and can click on the contents list, but the bit of the page where the text should be displayed is blank.

I am not registered for Google Play - is this the root of my problem? My browser is the most recent version of IE.

Ta v m

Tubbs
 
Posted by Snags (# 15351) on :
 
I don't know but my first thought would be to either use an alternative browser, or to add the 'site' in question to IE's Compatibility View, as it's potentially just a browser rendering issue.
 
Posted by Baptist Trainfan (# 15128) on :
 
The question is, though, why would it have suddenly stopped working? I've checked to see if it could be a result of any recent Windows updates, but there aren't any.
 
Posted by Baptist Trainfan (# 15128) on :
 
I added Google to the Compatibility View - it works! Thank you.
 
Posted by Jengie jon (# 273) on :
 
Why this happens?

Because the browsers developers are constantly "improving" them and compatibility comes a poor second to "improvements".

I think the scare quotes are self-explanatory in this context.

Jengie
 
Posted by Sparrow (# 2458) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sparrow:
I'm thinking of getting a TV streaming device and hesitating between the Chromecast or Amazon Fire TV stick. Has anyone had experience of either of these, what problems have you had, what can you recommend please?

Can anyone help with this question of mine please? I would really like to get one device or the other before Christmas.
 
Posted by Alisdair (# 15837) on :
 
Do a search on something like 'best tv streaming 2015' and read the reviews.

AFAIK, the most common problem seems to concern devices maintaining a good connection. The 'stick' type can end up losing signal from the router because the TV ends up blocking the signal, hence some of them being supplied with a stand-off cable to allow better positioning.

Of the stick type the Amazon Fire (2015) seems okay, but for something with more power and capability have a look at the Roku 2 (2015), which isn't much more expensive, but offers rather more.
 
Posted by Paul. (# 37) on :
 
I really like my Chromecast. I actually built a media PC to run Plex because of it. But I also use it for Netflix, Youtube, NowTV (SKY channels), Google Play content.

I've actually found it really reliable. I have heard of people having WiFi issues but my router is right next to my TV in any case.

The Fire Stick has the advantage of having its own remote rather than using your phone. Although for me that's another remote to lose whereas I always know where my phone is. [Smile]
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
What's the easiest way to stop Google Chrome doing auto-updates - I have it on my pc but I hardly ever use it and it effectively stops activity for some minutes while doing this. There are no options in the Settings menu.

The internet seems to think editing the registry is the way forward but I don't want to do this.
 
Posted by Amanda B. Reckondwythe (# 5521) on :
 
Start Task Manager by pressing Ctrl-Alt-DEL and choosing Start Task Manager.

When Task Manager opens, click the Services tab.

In the lower right corner, click the Services button.

Scroll down and you will see two Google Update services. Double-click each, and for the Startup Type choose Disabled.

Click the X in the upper right corner to close Services.

Likewise, close Task Manager.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Thanks for that, that sounds straightforward enough (so long as there aren't other processes that rely on these). Will give that a go.
 


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