Forget who was looking for a power supply but just found this ---
PC Power Cooling, Inc
MAXIMUM PERFORMANCE PSU: TURBO-COOLR 850 SSI
! 850W continuous and 950W peak
This will solve all your power issues - oh yeah - the price?
$469.00
Lol, that is insane!
Bob
Yeah, saw it...not only is the price outrageous, but the +12V is split into
4 separate rails. Bleh. No thanks.
Greg
- Original Message -
From: rls [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: 'The Hardware List' hardware@hardwaregroup.com
Sent: Thursday, May 12, 2005 2:17 AM
Subject: [H] You need a stinkin
At 09:50 PM 11/05/2005, Chris Reeves wrote:
Still on the sickly side; about a week and a half ago, got hit by a drunk
(beauty: no insurance, no suspended license as well) so I'm still getting
around on the slow side ;)
Jesus. Glad you are still around, and I hope you're feeling better soon.
T
How did you type this so fast? Is this a form letter!?!?
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
The problem with super expensive items is they become obsolete long
before they wear out. I could give numerous examples. One example is new
technology that comes with power supply units. What if you had bought
I also always include a floppy drive, at this point seems
ridiculous not to. though rarely needed, occasionally are.
fp
At 05:09 AM 5/12/2005, [EMAIL PROTECTED] Poked the stick
with:
Another example is the floppy
drive. I got ridiculed on another list because I hang onto the floppy
drive and I
Get it here: http://www.mozilla.org/products/firefox/
Bobby
At 09:39 AM 12/05/2005, FORC5 wrote:
I also always include a floppy drive, at this point seems ridiculous not
to. though rarely needed, occasionally are.
I agree. Why not throw in a floppy. It's cheap, it's universal, and it
doesn't take up any space. Leaving it out is simply a megacorp way
Thane Sherrington wrote:
Beat that speed for fixing vulnerabilities, MS. :)
I really think that Firefox and OpenOffice are OSS' greatest hopes.
I hope that is not the case. As an OSS fan, I would NOT want to be
represented by Firefox. Although I am not sure on OpenOffice since I
have not used
At 11:08 AM 12/05/2005, Carroll Kong wrote:
IE, Opera, and Mozilla (original) never leaked memory up to 90 megs of RAM
just because I was sitting on ONE webpage. Nothing fancy either, just my
IMP login or maybe maps.google.com. I also rarely reboot, and rarely shut
down any programs so the
At 11:36 AM 12/05/2005, Carroll Kong wrote:
Well having some OSS exposure is better than nothing. I just wish we had
someone better on the OSS side up there. In a way it follows the natural
law of humans marketing and image is everything, the technical details
are secondary.
Sizzle before
On 5/11/05, joeuser [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Got hit by a drunk or a drunk beauty?
Either way glad your still around.
Ditto. God williing you'll at least get some rest out of this!
At 12:17 PM 12/05/2005, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
to return one are more than a new one. Even with the inexpensive floppy
drive, I brag on the failure rate on every component I sell. Rarely (far
less than one per year) does one of my Mitsumi floppy drives go bad.
Possibly because they are only
on start up of outlook
The add-in
C:\PROGRA~1\hotbar\bin\450~1.0\SBOLExt.dll could not be
installed or loaded. This problem may be resolved by using Detect and
Repair on the Help menu. Unable to load
C:\PROGRA~1\hotbar\bin\450~1.0\SBOLExt.d
. You may be out of
memory, out of system resources,
Run a
file called scanpst.exe (You should know where the outlook.pst file
resides).
You
can also access the file from the Outlook help menu.
007
-Original Message-From:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]On Behalf Of
FORC5Sent: Thursday, May 12, 2005 12:03 PMTo:
Uninstall via
Control Panel, Add/Remove Programs. Then delete the following registry keys:
HKCU\SOFTWARE\Hotbar
HK_USERS\.DEFAULT\Software\HotbarHKLM\SOFTWARE\Hotbar
HKLM\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Internet
Explorer\Toolbar\B195B3B3-8A05-11D3-97A4-0004ACA6948E
At 09:50 PM 11/05/2005, Chris Reeves wrote:
One other program recommend:
A2HijackFree. It's basically HiJackThis! On steroids.
http://www.hijackfree.com/en/
This is a very cool program - it's like information overload at first,
though. :)
T
---
[This E-mail scanned for viruses by Declude
On a good year...
Thane Sherrington wrote:
Possibly because they are only used once a year? :)
--
Cheers,
joeuser (still looking for the 'any' key)
At 02:47 PM 12/05/2005, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
450. I will keep one on hand to offer as an option. My reasoning is if the
350 watt has done well with the Intel 3.2 GHz CPU up until now. To force
feed a 450 watt power supply case to my new customers would be like saying
all those 350 watt
Yep.
OK, onto my point regarding the format option.
Yes, in most cases, spyware problems, etc. can be cured with good registry
editing, the proper tools, etc.
However, I've found cases were combinations of virus, spyware, and idiocy of
installed programs create a situation in which while
Winterlight [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Anybody else having trouble getting into the ATI Drivers and Software
page?
http://www.ati.com/
Comes right up, here.
https://support.ati.com/ics/support/default.asp?deptID=894task=knowledgefolderID=27
Al
-
al_anger
Truly dangerous with a
The difference between an Antec True330 (which is the absolute bare
minimum I would ever put in any computer, period) and an Antec True430 is
$10. To go to 480 watts is just another $10. That doesn't seem like too
much to ask--plus the supply will be less stressed and run cooler during
Brian Weeden wrote:
What is better for the future of OSS - having a program that is easy
to use and popular that has a few flaws, or something that is flawless
and rigorous but only the geeks know about and use?
I would argue that you need both. Just because a few of us geeks have
some issues
E for effort, they'll get a higher grade when we stop seeing new
exploits of the more secure browser.
OSS greatest hope is some rich bastard giving money to projects so they
can do it right and not asking to make $.01 in return. Otherwise it will
flounder along or switch to closed charging
On Thu, 12 May 2005, Thane Sherrington wrote:
That's a good point. I generally start by trying to clean the machine, and I
have that pretty automated by now. Once I've done all the basic cleaning I
try to clean up the obvious damage. I don't put more than 30 minutes into
repairing before I
And go bad from lack of use collecting dust bunnies long before they
die of overuse or manf flaws.
Chuck-
I can't see how you can defend that clunky old FDD based digital camera
in this day and age. They're slow, bulky low res if nothing else.
Argue BIOS updates, emergency boot floppy, or
Posting this original thread I didn't add the rest I wanted to because of
time.
In close to 20 years of computing I have had only 2 power supplies fail. One
was a PCPC- about 4 years old at the time. Served its warranty, but
obviously not a lifetime investment either.
I was also somewhat annoyed
did all that, no joy :'(
At 09:28 AM 5/12/2005, Mark Dodge Poked the stick with:
Uninstall via Control Panel, Add/Remove Programs. Then delete the following
registry keys:
HKCU\SOFTWARE\Hotbar
HK_USERS\.DEFAULT\Software\Hotbar
HKLM\SOFTWARE\Hotbar
HKLM\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Internet
Then you have it your sysbackup folder and winders is puttin it back in...
One more thang to try
http://www3.ca.com/securityadvisor/pest/pest.aspx?id=453075474
It is complicated but should do the trick.
Mark Dodge
MD Computers
602-421-0329
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL
- Original Message -
From: Thane Sherrington [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: The Hardware List hardware@hardwaregroup.com
Sent: Thursday, May 12, 2005 2:58 PM
Subject: Re: [H] You need a stinkin POWER SUPPLY?
I think a PS should be able to handle the components in the case, with
room to upgrade
On 5/12/05, warpmedia [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
People can learn and do learn. They didn't switch to FF because it was
easier or to diss M$, they did so because everyone his mother was
pushing it as more secure at a time when security is in the news daily..
In fact there's less vectors, but
--- Note please comment if you have had hands on experience with both of
these CPU's
1 - AMD 939 with 90 nano design
And
2 - Intel 6xx with 90 nano design
Both cpu's can operate in an 64-bit environement
Both cpu's are designed to run 'cooler'
The AMD is cheaper clock v clock
The Intel
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