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Hi,
in the past there have been some viruses showing exactly this behavior,
so I recommend you run a full AntiVirus scan...
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are you using some kind of graphics card?
Keshav Kamat
India
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it can also be an overheating issue. Check the fans.
I dont think you would be able to run an antivirus scan within the 5 minutes.
Keshav Kamat
India
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Please Help!!!
I mistakenly formatted my notebook Hard disk with HP PC Recovery Manager.
can anyone provide me with software to get my data from the formatted hard disk.
thanks in advance.
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Hi,
Correct me if I'm wrong but isn't it if you've formatted your hdd then every data inside is erased. Sorry friend but unless there's another way that I'm not aware of, your only resort is your backup files (assuming you have one).
Aim small, miss small
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but, have i tot there should be a software that can retrieve erased data on hdd.
please if u know of any kindly let me know, because i have google to find, all what have been seeing doesn't recover it, they are all scams telling you on their website their software can recover formatted data from hdd.
Please Help!!!
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First:
You need to start your recovery as soon as you realize that you made a mistake. Do not, under any circumstances, create new files, because they might get assigned sectors that contain your previous data.
The best way: do a complete backup of your HDD using a Boot-CD (like UBCD or Knoppix). Place that image on the network. Keep working with that Boot-CD. Do NOT reinstall Windows or anything.
First things first: Use recovery software to try and restore the Partition- and File-Tables. If they have been overwritten, the software might be able to "guess" some of the information. You need to restore the exact same partition table.
After restoring the file tables, you might have (nor not have) regained your data. If you do not see your data, the file-table might mark the files as deleted. Try any undelete-tool.
This is, by no means, a complete how-to, but it might help you find some starting points.
If you deem this to complicated, you can always hire a data recovery company. They do this kind of stuff all the time, and usually VERY welll, but their services are quite expensive. The last quote I saw was for an overnight recovery of an 40 GB HDD and the price was around 10.000 EUR.
Also, if you have accidentally overwritten any of the data that you now want to recover, all bets are off. Recovery companies might be able to use their special equipment to measure "magnetic leftovers" and restore portions of overwritten data, but there is no surefire way of recovering overwritten files. That, again, is even more expensive (six figures).
Cheers,
Sebastian
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Ceterum censeo, borlandem esse delendam.
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Hi all!
Does anyone know how I can keep ASUS fans quiet? I've recently upgraded my motherboard (still ASUS though) and I've noticed its fan is still quite noisy after an hour of use or so. Retailer said all heat sink fans connected with ASUS generate that kind of noise. He directed me to ASUS homepage to download a software for this but the download link generates runtime error thus I can't get through. Does anyone know what software he was referring to?
Any and all assistance is very much welcome. Thanx all!
Aim small, miss small
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Which fan is it? The Northbridge?
If yes, than he was probably referring to fan monitoring and controlling software.
Try Smartfan (I think) or another fan-tool.
If that fails you, remove the standard wiring (and hope that the MB does not shut down on fan failure) and hook the fans up to a fan controller. With that, you should be able to control the fan settings from the front panel of your computer.
However, in that case, you might want to monitor your temperatures to prevent overheating.
Cheers,
Sebastian
--
Ceterum censeo, borlandem esse delendam.
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Sebastian Schneider wrote: Try Smartfan (I think) or another fan-tool.
Amazing! Thanx that was exactly what he was referring to. I'l give it a go first then try tweaking with the wiring. Much thanx for the reply!
Aim small, miss small
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That's nice. Installing the CPU heatsink/fan always made me nervous because of the pressure (physical) involved, and I always felt the thermal goo wasn't spread thin enough.
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ya. i checked it out. it is a nice one.
Keshav Kamat
India
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Hello
At me such question:
As it is possible to change a line of initialization of the modem from the program
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Look up on AT-commands, which are commonly used to send commands to a modem.
You can configure almost everything with those.
If that is not what you are looking for, be more specific next time.
Cheers,
Sebastian
--
Ceterum censeo, borlandem esse delendam.
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Thanks, but at me other situation. I have cash terminal with the modem (Siemens M35i) and OS WinXP.
In it there are three network connections, and depending on a sim-card the necessary connection gets out. Connection to be made through RAS, therefore I cannot send a AT-command
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hey,
I was wondering, if i had to connect a phone line to the computer for call logging system what device will i be using???
Peace!!!
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u required modem and software for logging the calls.....
Regards,
Smart Boy
Mumbai,
(INDIA)
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you would require a modem, either internal or external ( a little costly than the internal one ) and a software (modem driver).
Keshav Kamat
India
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How can i control device Infrared like receiving and send data , close and open
thank u
world of vb.net 2005
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Depends. If you are lucky, its just "COM1" and you use it like you would use any serial port.
For USB-Ir-Devices: sorry, no idea.
Cheers,
Sebastian
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Ceterum censeo, borlandem esse delendam.
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Can you get an external hard drive that will fit in one of the 5 1/4 inch bays of a tower and doesn't require an external power supply?
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You are probably looking for one of the "docking" solutions. I've seen those in pre-manufactured computers from HP and Medion. They have a "docking port" in one of the 5.25" bays that takes a (i think) 2.5" notebook HDD in a special "docking case". If you want to take it along with you, you hook it up to a USB cable, which allows you to use it with other computers without a "docking port". As far as I know, the "docking port" is simply a modified USB-port and requires a mainboard with unused USB ports that you can use for this purpose.
Cheers,
Sebastian
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Contra vim mortem non est medicamen in hortem.
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A few years back, PC hardware suppliers stocked housings which you fitted into a 5.25 inch slot and connected to a motherboard IDE connector and to a hard-drive power supply cable. They had a removable tray which took a normal 3.5 inch IDE drive. Sometimes they had a small fan, other times they just let the hard drive overheat.
Very useful for large backups (cheaper than a tape drive, etc.)
The hard drive was not hot swappable, since it used the normal IDE interface.
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