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Hi,
A bit of an odd one. Does anyone know what file system\format Canon EOS cameras use for there CF cards?
Thanks.
“If I had asked people what they wanted, they would have said faster horses.”
― Henry Ford
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Donated, free, Inspiron One (Dell) won't stay up for more than few hours.
After failure ( blue screen) the Setup (F2) shows NO internal HDD.
(Sorry, I have not figured it out on Win 7 how to stop restart after blue screen, so have no chance to read the blue screen)
Usually, not always, the box will recover after taking an over-nite nap.
This piece of cheap(ly build) PC gets pretty warm. So – I figured HDD going south.
Win 7 occasionally, not always, runs Check Disk on start up and reports no problems.
My question to the forum – Dell's “warranty” runs one year, I had HDD failures in past and recall that reputable manufacturer had THREE years warranty on HDD itself.
Am I living a dream or does this manufacturer warranty still applies?
I have no desire to talk to Dell.
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Vaclav_Sal wrote: I have no desire to talk to Dell. Unfortunately, they are the only people who can answer your question. And, unless you have documentation to support any claim on warranty you are unlikely to get any help.
One of these days I'm going to think of a really clever signature.
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Tonight I was listening to an album ripped from CD to my WD MyBook. About 2/3 of the way through the album, one of the tunes broke up badly, as if it was a scratched vinyl record. The original CD was not damaged, and the ripped files used to play perfectly - a year ago or so. I thought it might be just a communications problem, buffer overruns come to mind, since it's a USB connection. But after I was done with the entire album, I went back and tried to play the single track separately. It was still f'ed up. Is my external hard drive failing? Is there a way to refresh it, like a DRAM? Or do I have to re-rip the original CD to restore the proper bits?
Will Rogers never met me.
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Do I need to call WinUsb_FlushPipe after every write, if I need to be sure all the data is sent immediately?
Or is it only needed under certain conditions?
Thanks.
“If I had asked people what they wanted, they would have said faster horses.”
― Henry Ford
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Flushing will discard cached data in the receive buffer. This is probably not what you want during normal operation. It is usually done upon errors.
As far as I know data is always send immediately. But the USB device may not read it immediately. You may use the SHORT_PACKET_TERMINATE PolicyType to send a zero-length packet after each write request. This may trigger the USB device to read in all data. But before doing this I would check it it is really necessary.
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Thanks Jochen,
The USB device in question is implemented by me, so I know that ZLP's are not required and under normal operation all packets will be read imediatly (pretty quick anyway).
So I should not need to call WinUsb_FlushPipe.
Thanks again.
“If I had asked people what they wanted, they would have said faster horses.”
― Henry Ford
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I've been looking for new hardware to build a mini-ITX server. USB 3.0 support is a must as are SATA 6.0Gb/s, ECC DDR3 RAM, and gigabit Ethernet. Disappointingly, no such motherboard exists with all the features described.
Instead, after so much browsing and searching, I've noticed how so much hardware out there are USB 3.0-enabled and curiously, despite USB 3.0 being backwards-compatible with its predecessors I find that computer cases and motherboards will almost always have USB 2.0 ports coexisting with the newer USB 3.0 ports.
If USB 3.0 is the new standard and is backwards-compatible, why half-ass the hardware by providing "crippled" ports adjacent to the super speed ones? I'm just curious since I have been coming across computer cases with both USB 3.0 and 2.0 ports.
modified 28-Nov-12 22:06pm.
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I have the weirdest problem and am hoping someone with a greater mind than mine can help me figure it out.
I am running Windows 7 Home Edition Service Pack 1, Internet Explorer 9.0.8112, and Windows Media player 12.0.7601
Windows Media player will not play .wav files. It will play all other types of audio and video files that I throw at it.
I downloaded the VLC media player[^] and it plays .wav files just fine.
The reason it has become a problem for me is that I am writting a little app the makes use of the PlaySound[^] API to play short .wav files. This API will also not play the .wav files.
Anybody have any ideas where to start looking to solve this problem?
[EDIT]
I ended up going into the device manager and unistalling all the audio drivers and then rebooting. Upon reboot the system reinstalled the audio drivers and all is now good.
Dang that was simple, should have done that long ago
[/EDIT]
Independent ACN Business OwnerNeed a new cell phone? We supply most of the major carriers. Telus in Canada. Flash, Verizon, T-Mobile and Sprint in the USA. O 2, talkmobile, tmobile, orange, three, and vodafone in Europe. See my website for details.
Within you lies the power for good - Use it!
modified 15-Sep-12 12:33pm.
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XP keeps checking one of my hard drives. Runs check disk every time on start up. There are no errors found.
It is annoying, but I can live with it.
How can I get rid of it?
Any help is as always appreciated.
Cheers Vaclav
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Thanks, I briefly scanned the link.
I goes from obvious - bad drive to sometimes silly - " have you checked your cables", " did you power down properly" etc.
The best "guess", and they all are guesses - with one exception, is still a bad disk. My "problem" is that it is a part of what used to be main OS partition and I do not have problems with the other partitions. That still does not mean that the problematic one is not messed up.
I think I'll check what is on the partition / drive, it is part of my backup, and than reformat it.
Unless someone comes up with a real answer.
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I dont have XP, but it looks like (the second link) you can just can set some values in the registery and it wont run the disk check...
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I feel that my problem is related to the fact that this used to be active OS drive and the current one has some leftovers in registry about it. It will take some guts to really get into the registry to find it. But I need to finsh some software first - just in case!
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Hello everyone,
I want to read data from HID token in a PC(Personal Computer) bootloader.(For example in TrueCrypt bootloader).
I search very very long in Google but couldn't find any solution about it.
I am tired.
If you can, please help me.
Thanks very much.
modified 4-Sep-12 6:18am.
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First question...
WHY are you trying to get a HID toekn from a bootloader?? To what end?
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Hello everyone,
I posted this question in the C# forum, but felt that those on this forum might be able to help as well.
I have a project that requires me to gather inventory data for my computer. I am having problems trying to get the properties of the monitors attached to my computer.
I have one computer that can potentially use a max of 4 monitors, wherein I have a primary monitor and 3 other potential monitors which act as extension screens when I move my mouse to them ( depending on whether they are connected or not ).
I need to grab the following information from each monitor :
DeviceId,
Name,
Horizontal and Vertical resolution,
Whether or not the monitor is the primary one ( a true or false value will suffice ).
I tried using the WMI, Win32_DesktopMonitor class but it is only giving me ONE monitor's results ( the primary monitor ).
I then tried using the Win32_PnPEntity class.
This works, and gives me the number of monitors attached to my computer, but it only gives me Name and DeviceId ( no horizontal and vertical resolution information in this class ).
I then tried the Screen class (using the System.Windows.Forms.Screen), however the result is erratic. In one environment, it gives me the right number of monitors attached to my computer, in others, it does not.
Does anyone know of a Class provided by .NET 4 that will help me gather the information I need?
I am using .NET Framework 4 and building my application as a Console Application.
Any suggestions and advise will be highly appreciated.
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Don't post your question more than once. Pick a single forum and stick with it.
It makes collaboration on an answer nearly impossible when you cross post.
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I've been looking into getting a GPU.
In the spec sheet for the GPU it says this:
Quote: PCI Express® 2.1 x16 bus interface
Double slot form factor
Looking at a picture of the GPU it only has one PCI connector on it. Does "double form factor" mean that it has two PCI connectors on it, or that it simply takes up the available physical space of the other PCI slot?
Also, the motherboard I have been looking into says that All PCI Express slots conform to the PCI Express 2.0 Standard[^]
So will the GPU I have found work with a motherboard that only supports the 2.0 standard, instead of the 2.1 standard?
Thanks
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Lloyd Atkinson wrote: Looking at a picture of the GPU it only has one PCI connector on it. Does "double form factor" mean that it has two PCI connectors on it, or that it simply takes up the available physical space of the other PCI slot?
It only has one PCI connector, but the overall thickness of the graphics card covers two PCI widths, so if the motherboard doesn't allow for this with a gap you will have a PCI connector that can't be used.
Lloyd Atkinson wrote: So will the GPU I have found work with a motherboard that only supports the 2.0 standard, instead of the 2.1 standard?
I'm leaning towards yes, but wait until someone with more current knowledge ways in.
Michael Martin
Australia
"I controlled my laughter and simple said "No,I am very busy,so I can't write any code for you". The moment they heard this all the smiling face turned into a sad looking face and one of them farted. So I had to leave the place as soon as possible."
- Mr.Prakash One Fine Saturday. 24/04/2004
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You need to give more information about the :
* motherboard model
* graphic card model
then we can decide
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Hi,
I just bought a laptop which has an I7 2670QM processor the intel specs for this processor state is 4 cores and 8 threrads
I assume that 4 cores means that 4 threads/tasks can run simoustanly
would anyone what 8 threads mean
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Intel processors use something called Hyperthreading. This technology allows each core to behave as two separate cores, doubling its processing power.
So with 4 physical cores, you can have 8 separate threads running at once.
The difficult we do right away...
...the impossible takes slightly longer.
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