Well in christ's name (your terminology), your solution doesn't solve Andy's 
problem of putting personal software on a company computer. You missed the part 
that the registry is going to get updated (if it is even accessible). Read on.

Credible IT departments tie down the operating system very tight in order to 
reduce the probability of employees hauling worms, viruses, and other crap into 
the office and spreading it across the Enterprise. I know, I ran a corporate IT 
department for 8 years. From a pure IT perspective, laptops are the most 
dangerous PC's on the Enterprise. It's much easier to control and manage 
desktop machines.

The solution I would propose is to purchase a new drive and caddy for the 
laptop. Typically there is one screw that holds the HDD into the laptop and 
that screw is accessible from the outside of the case. Depending on the drive 
size you want, this can be less than a $100 investment.

Get your own drive, format it up, load your OS, and install your personal 
applications. Swap the drives when you want to run your radio applications at 
home. But be aware if you bring your laptop into work with your personal drive 
installed, you'll get hauled in front of the CIO to explain why you are putting 
the company infrastructure in jeopardy. And the incident will be written up in 
your permanent record.

If this sounds blunt and excessive... well you don't understand the nightmares 
IT departments face, trying to support large networks that wrap around the 
world.

I don't know for whom Andy works, but if it's a large corporation with an IT 
staff, he may find the screw holding the disk caddy into his new laptop has 
been superglued into place. My engineers didn't go to that extreme, but if 
there was a laptop suspected of "issues", it got a fresh format and a "standard 
build" of corporate licensed software installed.

73 de Bob - KØRC in MN


  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Salomao Fresco 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Friday, December 29, 2006 2:26 PM
  Subject: Re: [digitalradio] Re: External hard drives?



  Hi to all!

  I believe there is a big confusion!

  On the first post Andy states this:
  I just got a new company laptop.

  What the heck does he need to know about master, slave, falt cables and color 
of the power cables?
  He is talking about a laptop for Christ sake.
  He is asking you the time and you're telling him how the clocks work.

  He only wants to know if it is possible to load the Ham radio software that 
he needs to work digi modes on a External Hard Disk.
  I answer him YES, but there is no need to do it, why don't you try a Pen 
Drive, there are lots on the market now and the prices are low enough, I bought 
one with 1Gb for 19,99 euros a few months ago.

  How to use it?
  Instead of installing the software in the Computers own hard disk, install it 
on the flash drive (pen).
  This way you can use work your digimodes in about any computer. (it might not 
work with all programs, because some of them need to install some files in the 
Windows folder).



  Regards & Happy new 2007

  Sal
   
  On 12/29/06, Dave Doc Corio <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: 
    Excuse me for jumping in here, but I'd like to add one thing. Please be 
sure the power supply in the PC is capable of carrying the extra load. Many 
computers being made contain only a bare minimum power supply - usually on the 
order of 200 or 250 watts. While this is adequate for what is in the PC at the 
time it is shipped, adding peripherals can overload the power supply. Adding an 
extra hard drive, CD/DVD burner, video card and audio card can tax a minimal 
power supply and cause many problems. Usually, just adding one of these is not 
a major concern, but consider upgrading the power supply if you're adding 
several. A 450 watt power supply is generally fairly cheap - on the order of 
$35 to $60, and can save headaches down the road! 

    73
    Dave
    KB3MOW

    > A computer, intelligent, friend of mine has been educating me of swapping 
    > hard drives... For example, drive C..is usually marked at 'master' and 
the 
    > others are marked as slaves.... 
    > The marking is a jumper .. 
    > On the bank of your hard drive are three recepticles... 
    > The first one is a long plug, of which the data flows... 
    > The second plug / receptical contain 4 rather heavy wires.. marked 
yellow, 
    > black, black and red.. they contain the D.C. wiring.. I assume by the 
    > colours.... 
    > The third plug has no opposite polarity receptical but contains 
    > jumper(s)... This is the jumper which determnes whether or not the hard 
    > drive is a slave or master drive... 
    > On one side of your hard drive, you should notice some printing which 
    > tells you how to make the drive a master or slave... 
    > You follow the instructions to make that drive a master or slave.... 
    > This will allow you to put another drive onto your existing computer.... 
    > including removing them should you desire.... 
    > I had three computers.. I took the oldest computer's hard drive out and 
    > put them into my newer computer... making the older computer's drive C my 
    > newer computer's drive D, or which ever letter was available.... 
    > Now I do realise I have probably drifted somewhat off topic but I hope 
the 
    > information was of some value... 
    > 
    > Larry ve3fxq 
    > 




  -- 
  Cumprimentos 

  Salomão Fresco
  CT2IRJ

  If it works... dont fix it! 

   

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