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Colin Angus Mackay wrote: Are you trying to spy on someone?
The answer could be yes and could be no. My main purpose to have this feature because i want to control my tablet pc only. On the other, it us useful to prevent unauthorize people to use my computer when i far away from it. If i really want to spy the other people, i will use spyware. But i'm not think in that way. Do you know how to do that?
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Hi, I found the information on the HDD about its speed. The label on the HDD tell me some HDD speed is 7200RPM, 42RPM, 5400RPM. If the HDD already plug in to the system and user forget to check the label for the speed of the HDD, is it possible for us to check the HDD speed in the windows OS?
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Why would you care about it? Seeing if you got what you purchased?
There's no classes or API function that specifically check this. You'd have to use low-level DeviceIO operations to get the status information from the drive itself. Exactly how this is done, like what commands to send and how to interpret the results, depend entirely on the drive.
But, if all you're doing is checking the drive RPM once, then you can use the diags disk, that comes from the manufacturer with the drive, to check the spindle speed. If not, download it from the manufacturers site. They all have them.
RageInTheMachine9532
"...a pungent, ghastly, stinky piece of cheese!" -- The Roaming Gnome
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Thank you very much Dave for your comment.
Dave Kreskowiak wrote: Why would you care about it? Seeing if you got what you purchased?
The reason that i worry about it because when i purchase the new computer, i choose 7200 RPM in the specification of the hard drive. And when i get the computer, it is already set up and i don't want to remove the hard drive from the system unit to check it. That is why i want to find any tool just to check the speed of the hard drive.
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Easy enough. Just download the diagnostics diskette image from the manufacturers web site. That will tell you everything you wated to know about the drive.
RageInTheMachine9532
"...a pungent, ghastly, stinky piece of cheese!" -- The Roaming Gnome
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Thank you very much Dave, I will try to find its dianostics tools.
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Hi, any electronic device when you use it for a long time it would in increase the temporature. For example TV, if you use and turn it off and after that you move it to any location (move because the TV is on the movable table) during the time that it steal hot, it would become easy to broken because the internal schema is hot and easy to disconnect from each other. Is the above statement is true? I do not have any reference or document about that, it just a comment from my friend. If the above statement is true, how about the tablet PC? People use it at school, during the time it turn on its internal schema would become hot and people use it on the hand and move around in the class. Is it easy to broken?
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No, it's not.
What will kill the electronics more than anything is their own heat. Expansion and contraction from it's own heat will put more stress on the internals of the components than any moving of the device while it's "warm".
RageInTheMachine9532
"...a pungent, ghastly, stinky piece of cheese!" -- The Roaming Gnome
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Thank you very much Dave!
Dave Kreskowiak wrote: What will kill the electronics more than anything is their own heat. Expansion and contraction from it's own heat will put more stress on the internals of the components than any moving of the device while it's "warm".
Here is what I concern, when the device become hot, does the schema of an electronic device become soft? (soft mean: like we use the fire to burn the metal until it melt). If it is become hot, then the schema easy to become disconnect from each other if the device are move around. This is what i mean, hope to see further comment.
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Roath Kanel wrote: schema
Do you have any idea what this word really means? If not, click[^].
Roath Kanel wrote: does the structure of an electronic device become soft? (soft mean: like we use the fire to burn the metal until it melt).
If it gets hot enough, anything becomes soft. But, by the time the internals of an electronic device become soft, they would have long since failed.
RageInTheMachine9532
"...a pungent, ghastly, stinky piece of cheese!" -- The Roaming Gnome
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Thank you very much for your comment.
Dave Kreskowiak wrote: they would have long since failed.
What do you mean?
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CPU aside, nothing in the PC gets hot enough while operating to be of any concern. Mine runs at an internal temperature of about 33C, far too cool to melt anything inside (or even soften it). The CPU, if operated without a heat sink can get hot enough to destroy itself, but even then it will not get soft. Plastic parts nearby may melt, but movement will not cause the problem - heat will, and then only in a severely misconfigured system with no CPU cooling.
If the inside of a device ever got hot enough to cause parts to soften, the electronic functions of the system would have failed long before that event. Semiconductor devices are very sensitive to heat, and are destroyed by temperatures much lower than any that would cause structural weakening of the physical hardware.
"...a photo album is like Life, but flat and stuck to pages." - Shog9
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Thank you very much for your detail explaination.
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Absolutely not true, unless the device is already broken internally. Heat will kill electronics, as will enough shock, but I assume you mean normal movements, not drop kicks across the room.
Jerky movements of a running device that includes moving components (a disk drive still in use, for instance) can cause damage, but powered off even laptop PCs are quite durable, hot or cold.
"...a photo album is like Life, but flat and stuck to pages." - Shog9
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Thank you very much for your comment.
Roger Wright wrote: Heat will kill electronics, as will enough shock, but I assume you mean normal movements, not drop kicks across the room.
I do not mean drop, just a normal movement. I also have some more question to ask, please check here.[^]
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In WIndows 2000 where is the option to calabrate a UBS joystick.
The Joystick works OK, but ranges a bit out!
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control panel > system > hardware > device manager
get the joystick, go to his properties, and there, there might be a calibrate button...
TOXCCT >>> GEII power [toxcct][VisualCalc 2.20] | soon : [VisualCalc 3.0]
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Did not find anything.
When searching for new h/w did see a USB Human Interface Device, but no options for calabrations.
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Control Panel > Game Controllers in XP. I don't have a Windows 2000 machine handy, but I seem to remember that the same control panel applet appears in Windows 2000.
Stability. What an interesting concept. -- Chris Maunder
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In 2000, it's the Gaming Options control panel. If you don't have any drivers, or incorrect drivers, installed for the Joystick, it won't show up in this panel. Try the manufacturer's website for updated drivers.
RageInTheMachine9532
"...a pungent, ghastly, stinky piece of cheese!" -- The Roaming Gnome
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Hi, does any one know how to activate the virus scan (suppose norton) to scan the flash drive everytime that i insert the flash drive to my computer USB port? The problem is when some one borrow my laptop they did not scan their flash drive and some flash drive contain virus that could be harmful to my laptop. Auto protect option is not meet what i need.
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Can any one please help me in giving me a program that will backup the settings of the users of the system. If not API then, any existing EXE or a DLL in the windows .
Bhargava Alanka
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Bhargava Alanka wrote: Can any one please help me in giving me a program that will backup the settings of the users of the system
What do you mean by setting of the user of the system? Do you mean the user profile of the user, if so try to log on as admin and copy the folder of user profile to any other back up devices. After you have fix the problem then you need to copy it back from the the backup device.
Note:
- You need to logon the user for first time to create the user profile folder before you replace the user profile with the one that you backup.
- During the time that you backup and restore the user profile make sure the user already log off the session.
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I want API through which I can backup the settings of a user.
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backing up is a file copying task, nothing more. You can do it he same way you copy any other files from one location to annother. Using NTFS you need administrator (backup admin?) rights to the machine in question.
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