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Deyan Georgiev wrote: Really?! I need to remove it from my CV then!
Yes please, and while you are at it you might want to give back your degree certificate to the university
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I would try, but they won’t let me to step back in the uni. I have a 10 kilometers restriction order from the campus.
The narrow specialist in the broad sense of the word is a complete idiot in the narrow sense of the word.
Advertise here – minimum three posts per day are guaranteed.
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Do you have the "Works on my machine[^]" certification?
(Also: do you mind if I move this thread to the Hardware forum?)
cheers,
Chris Maunder
The Code Project | Co-founder
Microsoft C++ MVP
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No and no
The narrow specialist in the broad sense of the word is a complete idiot in the narrow sense of the word.
Advertise here – minimum three posts per day are guaranteed.
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I've had this happen to a machine only after a Windows Update. Have you installed any lately? If so, you might try rolling back to a Restore point before the change to see if that helps.
Will Rogers never met me.
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I’ll try this too, thanks.
The narrow specialist in the broad sense of the word is a complete idiot in the narrow sense of the word.
Advertise here – minimum three posts per day are guaranteed.
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You need to reinstall the video card drivers I would say.
Morality is indistinguishable from social proscription
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Silly question:
At home I have two PC's both with Gigabit NICs, plus an Epson BX310FN network printer and a Media Player (definitely 10/100MHz).
Currently, I use a Netgear DG834G modem router.
I have just bought a Gigabit NAS and am wondering if it is worth upgrading the router and cables to CAT6/gigabit. Will the printer work at Gigabit if I do upgrade? Will it slow everything else down? The tech specs don't appear to list the network speed it copes with and I am not sure if you can mix Gigabit and 100Mhz on the same router.
Real men don't use instructions. They are only the manufacturers opinion on how to put the thing together.
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OriginalGriff wrote: Will the printer work at Gigabit if I do upgrade?
No, the speed of tx/rx is determined by the LAN HW on the device.
OriginalGriff wrote: Will it slow everything else down
No.
Morality is indistinguishable from social proscription
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I didn't think it would, but I am reluctant to replace working cabling, router, etc. if I wasn't sure. If it ain't broke, don't fix it certainly applies to cables-in-walls (even if they are in trunking). Unless you are going to get some real benefit and the wife won't notice until it is all working again of course...
So let's have a look for a five+ port gigabit ADSL router with wireless and CAT6 cables...
Thanks!
Real men don't use instructions. They are only the manufacturers opinion on how to put the thing together.
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I thought it used to be that some budget hardware fell back to the speed of hte slowest attached device. Am I misremembering or has that limitation been removed from even the cheapest networking gear today?
3x12=36
2x12=24
1x12=12
0x12=18
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You could have a point. My LAN knowledge is more theoretical (kernel side) than practical so if some cheap products mess up the protocol then it might happen.
Morality is indistinguishable from social proscription
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*nod*
however, now that I'm more awake I think the problem might've been limited to hubs which AFAIK had to send an identical data stream to every attached port.
3x12=36
2x12=24
1x12=12
0x12=18
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I think it has. Most of it anyway. Most switches and NICs these days transmit at the maximum rate supported along all points of the signal path. This means that if you had two 1G NICs connected they would use 1G. If they went through a 100M switch then they would use 100M.
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Hi,
I'm using Windows 7 Ultimate (64 bit).
I have a new USB hub that is causing some problems.
If the PC boots up with the hub attached then the hub isn't recognized and some of the built in ports don't work (these ports have an external hard drive and a wireless network adapter plugged in). Some of the built in ports do work (these ports have the mouse and keyboard plugged in).
If the PC boots up without the hub attached then all of the built in ports work fine. If I then plug in the hub all the devices plugged into it work fine.
Any ideas what I can do to make the PC boot up and have all built in ports and all ports on the hub work correctly?
Thanks,
dlarkin77
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Out of interest what are the error codes in device manager fo rthe failing hubs?
Do you know if the hub causes the same behaviour on XP?
Can you identify the driver associated with the hub? If so you could force it to start later, set its start type to 3 in the services\<driver name=""> key.
If you dont need USB boot capabilities then you could try moving it down the list in the BIOS, this might help.
Generlaly though this kind of thing is fairly typical of USB on post XP oses. Microsoft really messed around with the USB subsys on Vista, it caused a hell of a lot of problems which got carried over into 7. Previously working HW would fail, behave erratically, all sorts of stuff.
Morality is indistinguishable from social proscription
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Your suggestion led me to this [^] hotfix that seems to have sorted my problem.
Thanks for the help.
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My work notebook is horribly slow. I know this question has been aksed millions of times before, so I expect some answers to refer to standard guides or previous answers, but please help me preserve my sanity. I could use my home notebook, but I don't want to put it at risk travelling every day opn the scooter.
The machine is an Acer Travelmate 5730, Core2 Duo 2GHz with only 2GB ram.1 I am running Windows 7 Enterprise, Office 2007 Ultimate, and Visual Studio 2010 Ultimate, with ReSharper. Before removing essential tools like ReSharper, I'd like to cut out unncessary services, indexing, etc. Unwanted background processes and all that. I've run VS 2010 withj ReSharper before on 2GB and it's been streets ahead in terms of speed.
So, where do I start?
1 I will buy ram and lend it to the company when I have money.
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Brady Kelly wrote: I've run VS 2010 withj ReSharper before on 2GB
maybe that works good enough on a 32-bit Windows, however I wouldn't do it, all those fancy "Ultimate" and "Enterprise" words don't compensate for a lack of memory.
Isn't your Win7 a 64-bit edition? if so, I definitely would not go for only 2GB. Make it 4GB at once, then clean up your environment if necessary.
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Thanks Luc, but you have told me nothing I didn't already say I knew in my question. It is work issue machine, and all are standard 2GB. When I have cash, I will put my own 4GB in the machine, on loan to the company, until I prove myself and they give me a new HP, like the more senior guys have.
I'm looking for guidelines on which resource hogs to remove and which ones to detune.
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Brady Kelly wrote: you have told me nothing I didn't already say
really? one of us must have missed a few things then.
IMO if it is Win-64 (I'm still waiting on that info) then whatever you do with only 2GB is a waste of time. And if they want to save less than 100$ (that[^] is what 4GB cost) and don't care you're working well below your potential, then you're in the wrong company.
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Oh, I'm working in the right company alright, for many reasons. I'm sure if I motivate enough I'll get the 4GB, but I must first at least finish my first project on time (it's already over the 1st deadline) before I make any demands.
BTW, I'm running Win 32 bit.
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Brady Kelly wrote: I'm running Win 32 bit
Good. You'll have to put it on a diet now.
1.
Avoid all fancy stuff; e.g. turn off Aero and all kinds of animation.
2.
Use TaskManager and sysinternals/autoruns to identify each and every redundant process, and how it got started. Remove/disable everything you don't need. There will be dozens of "utilities" that periodically check for updates, (claim to) provide assistance at some tasks, etc. Chuck them all out. When in doubt, type the process name in Google's search box. Using a second PC for this is handy!
3.
Some people claim registry fragmentation is high on the list of suspects; and there are tools to deal with that. I have never used any though.
4.
Now take care of your disk. Remove unnecessary files, limit the size of the Recycle Bin, remove all your browser history and cache, and limit the size of your browser's cache, etc. Then defragment.
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STOP THIS NOW!
All of your posts will be deleted very shortly...
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and if you hadn't've replied to the spammer no trace of his hijinks would remain visible on the forum.
3x12=36
2x12=24
1x12=12
0x12=18
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