That's great. It's nice when something actually works the way it's supposed to.
Richard P.
On Sun, Nov 2, 2008 at 4:49 PM, Stephen Brownfield
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Thanks. That worked for him.
>
> Steve
>
>
> Richard P. wrote:
>>
>> Will this work? Start>Set Program Access and Defaults>Cus
It did take awhile and getting the battery out wasn't easy. Manual
mentioned using a plastic screwdriver; maybe this is something I should get
for a next time. Now that I know how to open cover, that should be quicker
next time.
Randall
On Sun, Nov 2, 2008 at 8:53 PM, Marcio V. Pinheiro <[EMAIL
Just an advice on the side. I only open my computer to do whatever,
replace the CMOS battery, replace HD, etc
starting on a Sunday that I am free with my time, starting at 8 AM.
Prior to that I used to start after work in the
evening and spent the whole night struggling with it. No longer...
And
Except Vista isn't crappy. I've been running 64bit SP 1 since it was
released and had zero issues. Many changes in hardware and too many apps to
name have gone through this machine.
Vista was a problem when it first came out, you speak about it as though SP
1 never came out. What are your probl
> This "radical departure" is just claptrap from
> MS's PR department. Nothing to do with engineering.
You know this, how?
You weren't at PDC. I was. I talked at length with the coders. Not PR
people; not executives; the guys who write Windows. They told me what they
are doing. I saw what they h
I've never seen a BIOS that had audio volume. Maybe a switch to disable the
on-board audio.
On Sun, Nov 2, 2008 at 6:35 PM, Fred Holmes <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> At 06:11 PM 11/2/2008, Ranbo wrote:
> >After replacing CMOS battery the sound volume coming through speakers
> >connected to comput
At 06:11 PM 11/2/2008, Ranbo wrote:
>After replacing CMOS battery the sound volume coming through speakers
>connected to computer seems to have returned to normal. Does this make
>sense? Even if it doesn't, I'll take it. When I changed the battery it was
>the first time I ever took cover off the
>An an iMac running OS-10.5.5, does anyone know how to shut off this
>Real Player download manager thing?
Should never have allowed it to install in the first place.
Have you tried dragging RealPlayer or RealOne Player into the trash and
emptying the trash? That is the official uninstall metho
> I do question if the testing they will get in
> house will be as effective as a large number
> of outside testers. There will be beta tests
> of components but not of the really half done
> things that have been released to bets before.
But nothing is "half done". The stuff that wasn't deliv
After replacing CMOS battery the sound volume coming through speakers
connected to computer seems to have returned to normal. Does this make
sense? Even if it doesn't, I'll take it. When I changed the battery it was
the first time I ever took cover off the computer. I didn't notice any
ghosts i
You are exactly right. This "radical departure" is just claptrap from
MS's PR department. Nothing to do with engineering. The WFBs just lap it
up and tell us how great the next Windows version will be.
They also tell us of the greatness of Vista -- except that it has been so
much "misunderstoo
If W7 is now "feature complete" and MS has not yet figured out why Vista
is so crappy then why are they also telling us that W7 is not Vista
warmed over?
They are either not keeping their lies straight or they completely tossed
Vista and are building W7 on top of XP. Which is it?
>Right, I th
I don't care if they drink coffee, I just don't want them drinking
while at the computer.
Steve
Judy Cosler wrote:
>coffee isn't good for dogs! you shouldn't let them drink coffee!!! ;-)
>>> One of our dogs spilled coffee on my wife's Powerbook G3 keyboard
>>> (Bronze keyboard). Now a
On Sun, Nov 2, 2008 at 5:13 PM, Jordan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> mike wrote:
>
>> Windows 7 is a radical departure in the way MS builds it's OS. Instead of
>> each feature being worked on and added in at various times and various
>> stages of 'beta', these groups aren't allowed to include thei
> If Microsoft puts features in just as they ship, it won't be surprising
> that they won't work well.
> I don't think that's what they do.
Right, I think that's Mike's point--that is NOT what they're doing. MS insists
that Win7 is already feature-complete, and that the rest of the time will be
An an iMac running OS-10.5.5, does anyone know how to shut off this
Real Player download manager thing? Whenever I surf the web I run
across web pages that activate this thing. All it seems to be doing is
downloading streaming media or something from adds.
Jeff M
mike wrote:
Windows 7 is a radical departure in the way MS builds it's OS. Instead of
each feature being worked on and added in at various times and various
stages of 'beta', these groups aren't allowed to include their code in 7
until it is ready to ship.
If Microsoft puts features in just as
Thanks. That worked for him.
Steve
Richard P. wrote:
Will this work? Start>Set Program Access and Defaults>Custom>Choose a
default media player
Richard P.
A friend wants to stream on his computer using Windows Media Player. At
some point in the past he made Real Player his default play
Thanks. That not only answers my question, but it is a great resource
for me.
Steve
Steve Rigby wrote:
On Oct 31, 2008, at 10:06 PM, Stephen Brownfield wrote:
One of our dogs spilled coffee on my wife's Powerbook G3 keyboard
(Bronze keyboard). Now a few of the keys don't work. I know I can
Yes.
I have one machine in my office that insists that a Buffalo NAS device is
actually an Iomega StorCenter. It works just fine, but I cannot change its
mind, no matter how I try to convince it.
- Original Message -
From: "Wayne Dernoncourt" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Could the Zip d
Tony B
> Ignore it. It's not harming anything or taking up
> resources. Leave it alone.
> It may also be some driver needed by some program,
> which might explain why it keeps coming back when
> you try to delete it.
Could the Zip drive be masquerading as a tape drive...
--
Take care | This cl
Tom's been left standing in the middle of his living room with his prom
dress on and his dates not showing to believe anything has changed.
On Sun, Nov 2, 2008 at 10:30 AM, Tom Piwowar <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >In short, the stuff that's shown -will- be in Win7. Sorry.
>
> There is a river cr
Ignore it. It's not harming anything or taking up resources. Leave it alone.
It may also be some driver needed by some program, which might explain why
it keeps coming back when you try to delete it.
On Sun, Nov 2, 2008 at 1:25 PM, rlsimon <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> while trying to get my comp
If you have cpanel, that would be the quickest way. I do it manually once a
month. Once gunzipped, my biggest site is about 1.7gigs, which I just leave
downloading overnight.
On Sun, Nov 2, 2008 at 11:54 AM, gerald <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> my website consists mainly of scanned antique boat c
while trying to get my computer (xphomesp3) to recognize my internal iomega
zip100 drive to view library of zip100 disks I have, it somehow installed a
"tape drive" that is now in device manager and cannot be deleted ...it shows
no properties and no driver assigned and a message comes up saying to
>In short, the stuff that's shown -will- be in Win7. Sorry.
There is a river crossing on the east side of Manhattan availabe for
purchase.
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my website consists mainly of scanned antique boat catalogues, listed by page.
how would i back up the entire site? would probably fit on a dvd. could i do
this in a single pass?
regards
jer
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>Yep, I wonder what is up with that. This is a Mac computer wired directly
>into the hub with about thirty feet of cat Cat5- Could the Cat 5 be it?
Not likely. Cat-5 is 10 Mbps. Way above what you are looking at.
And a bad wire would limit you equally in both directions.
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