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Big Booger

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Everything posted by Big Booger

  1. HERE IT IS BACKED THE DRIVER BACK TO 21.83 hahahah p***ed on me again! I have finally removed the rinky dink fan from the Nvidia chip, and am playing with it until i get my new radeon AGP 8500 card. I am thinking my Nvidia card is overheating, but we shall see. I will post results later from my experiment.
  2. and I will show you what the new 23.11 drivers did attachment is below
  3. take a look for yourself, I finally caught my Geforce 2 MX400 takin a s*** on my PC. Attachment will be posted in a reply, it was too big 1.5 MB. sorry Removed the card, waiting for a new Radeon 8500!
  4. open outlook go to tools, accounts, click on your pop mail account connection make sure you have the box checked for your internet service, if you are a dialup user make sure the box for LAN is unchecked or grayed out, otherwise it will prompt you for your Lan password. Big Booger:cool:
  5. loose balls, that is what it is, just tie a rubberband around your scrotum, and it will repair the damage, oooopppppssss wrong forum, Uhhhh try looking on the back of the tower, and make sure the power voltage is set at whatever current you are using, I know i set it in the wrong setting, and it would not work, when I switched it back to 110V it worked fine. Another thing, is try try a spare PS if you have one, if not you can pick a cheap 300Watt up for around 25 bucks US. http://www.sysopt.com/articles/troubleshoot/ try that site, kind of beginner, but does offer a way to test a p***y Power supply! http://www.pcpowercooling.com/support/ATX_troubleshoot.htm and yet another site dedicated to ATX power supply troubleshooting Scenario - Stone Dead. You switch on your new system and there are no signs of life; the power supply fan doesn't turn, there are no sounds, no lights. Power supply - Make sure the power cord is fully inserted into the power supply, that the override switch on the back of the supply (if so equipped) is turned on, that the voltage switch is set correctly. Don't neglect to make sure the wall socket you are plugged into is live by unplugging the computer and plugging in a radio or lamp to check. Motherboard connections - Recheck the motherboard documentation for the proper connection of the leads from the front panel power switch. Don't settle for just looking at the switch connection to the motherboard; remove the lead, check that the terminal block matches the documentation then reconnect it. Undo the main power supply connection to the motherboard (this requires pressing in the clasp as you pull gently on the connector), inspect the connectors for damage, and reconnect. Bad component - Disconnect the power cables and ribbon cables from the drives, one drive at a time, retrying power-up after each drive is disconnected. Without reconnecting the drives, remove each adapter card (leave video for last) one at a time, retrying power-up after each removal. Motherboard components - Remove and reinstall memory DIMMs or RIMMs, inspecting for physical damage. Remove and reinstall the heatsink and CPU, double checking the CPU fan is connected to the proper terminal on the motherboard. Never attempt to power up the system without the heatsink installed. Switch - In extremely rare cases, the power switch on the front panel may be faulty. You can use a continuity checker or Ohm-meter to check the switch, or you can carefully, carefully, take a screwdriver with an insulated handle and momentarily short the two pins where the switch lead connects to the motherboard. Although the switch works on low voltage, you may be startled if and when the machine comes on and rake the screwdriver tip across to motherboard, so don't try this unless you have some experience working with live systems. Remove the motherboard from the case and check for loose screws, extra standoffs, and anything else that could cause a short circuit to the motherboard circuitry. Reinstall the motherboard in the case and reinstall the video adapter, then try powering up. If you still have no power, than the problem is most likely a defective power supply or defective motherboard. Big Booger
  6. I did a search on Edonkey and it came up with over 2000 titles for burning on the PSX platform. Try there, if you really want to pad the pockets of Sony and other conglomerates, I'd try here for chrono cross http://www.ebgames.com/ebx/scripts/texis.exe/ebprod Amazon has suikoden II brand new, a bit pricy, but hey http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B00...7848746-0659032 and vandal hearts 2 located at your neighborhood amazon etailer 10 bucks US http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B00...7848746-0659032 If you are looking for a physical location i'd try CD warehouse, they have s***loads of games old and new. http://www.cdwi.com/cdwi/international.html
  7. http://www.xp-skins.de/ Hope you can read german, nice skins, To all the peppy's posters, Black War would like the B Spears skinz, Big Booger
  8. http://jeffweb.free.fr/win_xp/cpt_webcam.htm One question, have you tried unistalling the camera in safemode just to make sure you rid your system of any and all reminance of your camera, and then reinstall it in XP. Give that a go, and post your results. It says ur CAMERA is compatible. Big Booger:assshake
  9. that is why I choose Geforce 2 MX you might try a different software that is compatible with your camera, i'd suggest a search on altavista.com, or mamma.com or jeeves.com. One of those search engines will turn up a software that is compatible with your camera. If not, write the companies tech support line and see if they have an updated driver/software that is compatible with XP. Or you could just dual boot, and anytime you want to you use your camera, you'd have to boot into your old OS. But let me keep working on this one and see what I can come up with, Big Booger
  10. I think I actually linked this post in another post for a user who needed help, it can be deleted, and I am sorry! Big Booger
  11. way to go, now that is what I call computer resolution, as in to resolve an issue. Big Booger
  12. ....diasable POST in BIOS, it might stop the error, if the error is all that you care to remove. Big Booger
  13. Why don't they just put the **** thing in a cryogenic vault, and do their PCing from there? LOL Big Booger:assshake
  14. Make a partition of your current HDD, set the partition to NTFS, move your crap over to that partition, then reboot the machine with your XP disk in the drive, making sure to set your BIOS to read the CDROM first, beforehand, then format the old OS partition, and install XP as stated in the aforementioned posts. Big Booger
  15. never thought about that one, but why would he be using a ramdisk in during an installation of XP? Strange indeed! big booger
  16. insulation, you stuff your comp full of sound insulation like they use in recording studios, then you seal that baby with JB weld, or duck tape, and she's silent. Or you just have a comp room like me Big Booger
  17. I don't really know what fastram.sys is, however the name implies RAM as in Random Access Memory. It could be a ram memory manager file, or it could be you have crappy ram. My question is are you/is he installing XP/2K on a clean install as in a format of the HDD, is it a brand new HDD, or what? When do you receive the following error, also are you installing a borrowed/evaluation copy of XP/2K or have you purchased the legitimate OS? Big Booger:assshake
  18. system restore? that might fix the problem, howeverm, you'd have to go back to the day it screwed up/you renamed the folder. Another thing you can try is going into the registry as stated below and make sure its there, that is the registry entry for the shared document folder. big Booger:hohum
  19. I have to confer with the previous posters on the upgrading using the fresh/clean install of XP whether its the upgrade or full version, by all means do it as a fresh install. That's it nuff said, goodbye.
  20. one other thing about proportions, had I made it in proportion, you would not have been able to read the CD. As the writing would have been so small it would not be noticed. If I had increased the size of bill in proportion to the size of the CD, it would have made the image far to big to post. If you have any suggestions please, by all means, lets hear them Big Booger:assshake
  21. BUt I think its a bit of an overkill. I mean, I just dont like hoses and crap running all over the place in my setup. Also, the hard drive water coolers are too much. Unless you are running a whopping 15,000 RPM or something. It just seems like to much for me, though the price is nice. Big Booger
  22. just let that puppy run all day and all night, shut it down once or twice a year, or maybe for upgrades. Its all about the wattage baby. Big Booger As far as the guy with the heat problems, I'd say go with a peltier, water cooling all the way. Screw the fans, and if you have to go with fans, stick with thermaltake, very nice. I sit my Comp near the AC duct in summer, and near the window in winter, keeps the temp down.
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