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Doggie

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Posts posted by Doggie

  1. after closer inspection.. power supply box side is loose.. i cannot get it to sit proper.. no.. it aint on the carpet.. its sitting in a computer desk unit... above the ground.. allowing my 3 fans (on the bottom, on processor and powersupply) to flow evenly.. highest my pc gets is around 31c.. but normally its like 20 - 25c.. and again.. thanx for your great help :)

  2. well.. after looking at them.. my fans seem to be in order.. heatshrink is fine... the sound is coming from the bottom of my case where the fan it located... :rolleyes:

    edited: actually sound from power supply and fan above :)

  3. hi,

    of late.. my pc has been making strange noises like a Indy Car trying to get out of gear.. lol.. seems weird but it is.. i'm not sure of the source of the problem.. i think its the fan but i'm not sure how to see if it working proper.. any ideas ?

  4. Well its good for 0.1.

    Would be better if you did not use VB since I had to download runtimes, Delphi or C++ should be great for the program you are making, since VB programs are known to get very slow as they get more features.

    Well.. i'm pretty sure if u have XP installed , vb6 Runtimes are installed... ? if not i'll ave a look and include them next time.. and Windows.net.. thanx for your help :)

  5. hey,

    I am making a program to clean XP unwanted things like program logs.. i was wondering.. is there anything more than this that pplz wanted to get rid of?

    i need suggestions.. than i can get this program of the ground .. much appreciated

    doggie

  6. A doctor walked into a bank. Preparing to endorse a check, he pulled a rectal thermometer out of his shirt pocket and tried to 'write' with it.

    Realizing his mistake, he looked at the thermometer with annoyance and said, "Well that's great, just great... some as*****'s got my pen."

  7. Microsoft warned Outlook Express users late Thursday that a software flaw could allow an online vandal to control their computers.

    A critical vulnerability in the e-mail reader could allow an attacker to send a specially formatted message that would crash the software and potentially take control of the recipient's computer.

    The flaw occurs in how the software handles messages that include components using secure MIME (multipurpose Internet mail extensions), a standard that allows e-mail messages to contain encrypted data and digital signatures.

    "Outlook Express ships with every Windows system, or rather as part of IE, so it's on every system. But unless it is configured to receive mail, you are not at risk," said Scott Culp, manager for Microsoft security response.

    Microsoft Outlook Express 5.5 and 6.0 are both affected. Earlier versions of the software giant's default e-mail application may also carry the flaw, but Microsoft hasn't tested the applications because they are no longer supported. Microsoft Outlook, the giant's full-featured e-mail and workgroup software, is not affected, Culp said

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