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Everything posted by jaclaz
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Steve, you already posted this, and you already had answers to it here: (just trying to keep things as together as possible) jaclaz
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You can normally expect *anything* between 30 and 40 Mbytes/second of data transfer on a USB 2.0. The 85 Gb should take, more or less, between 45 minutes and 1 hour. As a "generic" comparison, a direct SATA I or II connection would probably take about 2/3 of that time, say 30-40 minutes, a SATA III possibly 1/3 only, say 15-20 minutes. Of course actual speed depends on such a number of factors that it is impossible to have accurate estimation, if you check some benchmarks: http://www.tomshardware.com/charts/hard-drives-and-ssds,3.html you will see how a SATA disk can deliver *anything* between 50 and 150 Mb/s when writing. jaclaz
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Well, just for the record you can manage to have exFAT on XP too, see: Unofficial: http://www.merawindows.com/Forums/tabid/324/forumid/15/postid/35485/scope/posts/Default.aspx Official: http://support.microsoft.com/kb/955704/en-us And in DOS too: A 9ft cable is a particularly "longish" one (while largely within specs): http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Universal_Serial_Bus#Cabling but no wonder (should it be proved that the issue is the cable) that it can get some "interferences/noise" or simply that is a little bit "retarded" in acknowledge/return signals. jaclaz
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Need help with data recovery on HDD
jaclaz replied to mattiasnyc's topic in Hard Drive and Removable Media
Tiny hexer is GUI, not command line. It works more or less like *any* editor, the main difference is that when you operate on a disk or on disk image to avoid using too much memory it loads by default a sector at a time. File->Disk->Open Drive Choose "right" \\.\PhysicalDriven Press OK File->Disk->Goto Sector Replace by typing or pasting the highlighted text "+0x100" with "6291519" (without quotes) Press OK Use Shift+F8 to go forward and Shift+F7 to go back (one sector at the time) What do you see? All 00's and "dots" or you can read at very beginning of sectors "FILE0" and some text here and there? (like "$.M.F.T.", "$.M.F.T.m.i.r.r.o.r.", etc.)? Post a screenshot (if it is not all 00's) of sector 6291519 the windows should have a title like >\\.\PhysicalDriven , sector 6291519/xxxxxxxxxxx Once you are there: Edit-> Find/Replace write (or copy from here) in the "Enter text or hex data to search for" box this: "46494C4530" (without quotes) that is the hex of FILE0, and every two sectors in the $MFT there is an occurrence of "FILE0" Click on Find button A new popup will appear asking you to "Search following sector(s)", click on Yes (a few times, for the first few sectors), then press "yes to all", if no hit is found within a few minutes, click on "Cancel" jaclaz -
Sure , even on 20 Mb on a 8 MHz processor, JFYI: http://www.winhistory.de/more/386/xpmini.htm.en and of course nliting or however tweaking the install doesn't count, do a "normal" install, from the original "gold" MS CD, install an anti-virus, open a couple mid sized worksheets and go browsing the web with 256 Mb and the pagefile will be hit in no time (and I don't call a system that continuously pages on hard disk as "running pretty nicely"). jaclaz
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W98 fails to set-up hardware - help request please
jaclaz replied to Jonssen's topic in Windows 9x/ME
The "idea" behind removing "ALL" (which is NOT "some") detachable hardware is three-fold. The hardware detection "probes" the hardware in a given sequence, if it finds "an issue" it is possible that it fails and stops, you know like : For all we know either the PSU or *any* of the hardware add-ons may have "aged" and the former may provide less current than needed or the latter may require more current then before. The more hardware is connected to the mainboard, the more likely a IRQ or however resource conflict may arise. JFYI the Iomega docs: http://www.iomega.com/support/manuals/ioback/iomegabackup_c.pdf talk about a two floppy set for "emergency restore" jaclaz -
Possibly unrelated (or maybe not completely) Those kind of errors are typical (NOT on USB) of a "bad cable", as a matter of fact of a "disturbed" or "not shielded" cable. They were common in 2K (yes, many, many years ago) on IDE devices when 40 wire cables were used (instead of the 80 wires one). Typically an user would update his/her PC with a new disk (unknowingly getting an ATA 4 drive) without also upgrading the cable, and one could soon have the event log full of similar entries. If it's a desktop I would try (as a test) to connect that USB thingy to a port "on the back" of the PC (i.e. one of the ports that are directly soldered to the motherboard) and see if you still have those errors. If they "disappear" it is very likely that it is either the cable connecting the front USB port to the motherboard or the USB socket itself. JFYI, even more years ago, when SCSI drives were more common, the saying was "when you have an issue with a SCSI disk drive, it can be anything, but the culprit is the cable, change it". jaclaz
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I see no points of contention , actually you seem to say (just like I do) that Windows 2000 was an excellent Operating System, the "rightful" evolution of NT 4.00. I see 2000 as a technical, or if you prefer "natural, logical" evolution of NT and XP as a (mostly) commercial evolution of 2K., in the sense that a large part (but of course not all) the "added" features of XP are "eye candy" or "bells and whistles". Personally I rate *any* NT based system far more "stable" than any comparable DOS based one, but the argument that most people raise when this kind of discussion starts is "but NT has the far better NTFS filesystem that you cannot have in 9x/Me and thus you are limited to files 4 Gb in size" (no I don't want to start the usual flamewar about FAT32 vs. NTFS), with the not-so-hidden understatement that a Dos based OS cannot have NTFS because of technical reasons (while it has been a simple, plain, commercial one). The great idea was evidently something like let's consolidate our two largely different Operating System branches, one dedicated to the "Professional" use and one to "Home" and let's make a one-size-fits-all OS. It is rather obvious how in order to do that you need to impose on "home" customers that have not any need for them a number of "features" only useful in a "professional" environment, on the other hand, in order to let the "home" users be actually able to run, install, and "like" it etc. you need to add some "bells and whistles" that the "profesionals" have no or very little use for. If you think about it, the following iteration of the "higher level" Server edition offers - strangely enough - a "Core" edition, from the mouth of the wolf: http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/dd184075.aspx I will however re-state how pre-made machines (OEM) on sale during the very first period of XP, and expecially laptop/notebooks were largely underpowered, as well as later this happened AGAIN when Vista was launched. My personal rule of thumb has alway been that of taking the MS minimal requirements and at very least double them, whenever possible use a factor of 4x, example, XP minimal requirements: http://support.microsoft.com/kb/314865/en-us Pentium 233-megahertz (MHz) processor or faster (300 MHz is recommended) <- please read this as 1 Ghz processor At least 64 megabytes (MB) of RAM (128 MB is recommended) <- please read this as "512 Mbytes" if you want to actually run software on this OS jaclaz
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No. XP is a good OS, not as good as 2K for several aspects and far less suitable to "simple" home users EXACTLY because of the features that only professionals (and only in some given "corporate" environments) actually needed. All the rest (being cheap and having Server or Client capabilities) is ONLY related to Commercial decisions (anyone remember the differences between NT 4.0 Workstation and Server edition? so "deep" that one could be made into the second with a few tweaks). Now, if a bunch of "single guys" (among which rloew stands out ) have managed to have 98 run in a more than stable manner with lots of RAM and on fastish processors: with a few patches, are you telling me that the good MS guys would not have been able to do the same? And the NTFS filesystem being somehow "linked" to the NT series of OS is of course pure b**ls**it. Personally I would not even consider a DOS/9x based system at work (and I actually did not since NT 3.51 times) , but the "forced transplant" of XP on "home" users, as said initially on dramatically underpowered hardware, was not in any way "inevitable" and not even a "good idea". Well, this doesn't necessarily mean that you are as blinfdfolded as your leaders . jaclaz
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Not really, there are excellent programmers in the East as well. What you may learn from the West (though I presume that there are similar approaches in the East) is : http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Occam's_razor And: Here : @echo off SETLOCAL ENABLEDELAYEDEXPANSION set Htm_title=Network Diagnostic Report - NT Shop Sdn Bhd set Htm_href="http://www.ntshop.com.my" set Htm_txt=www.ntshop.com.my set fnm=HOSTNAME.txt set lnm=RESULT.HTM del %lnm% ( ECHO ^<^!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 3.2 Final//EN"^> ECHO ^<html^>^<head^>^<title^>%Htm_title%^</title^>^</head^> ECHO ^<body^>^<h3^>%Htm_title%^</h3^> ECHO ^<br^>^<h4^> ^<a href=%Htm_href% target="newwin"^>%Htm_txt%^</a^>^</h4^>^<p^>^<table border="1" cellpadding="5"^>^<tr bgcolor="E0E0E0"^> ECHO ^<th^>No.^<th^>Store^<th^>Sales^<th^>VNC^<th^>DVR )>>%lnm% if exist HOSTNAME.txt set fnm=HOSTNAME.txt if exist C:\NT\HOSTNAME.txt set fnm=C:\NT\HOSTNAME.txt ::if not exist %fnm% goto :error set SALES=3050 set DVR=9696 set VNC=5900 set Counter=0 for /f "tokens=1,2 delims=," %%A in (%fnm%) do ( Set /A Counter+=1 set Line=^<tr^>^<td bgcolor=#FFFFFF^>!Counter!^<td^>%%B FOR %%C IN ( SALES DVR VNC ) DO ( call :do_paping %%A %%B %%C ) ECHO !Line!>>%lnm% ) ( ECHO ^</table^> ECHO ^</body^>^</html^> )>>%lnm% GOTO :EOF :do_paping set state=ONLINE echo Testing %1 for %3 paping.exe %1 -p !%3! -c 1 || set state=**OFFLINE** SET Line=!Line!^<td^>%state% goto :EOF :error echo. echo Cannot find %fnm% echo. Pause goto :EOF The expected result is a simple .htm table, let's simply build it.... jaclaz
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and Really I cannot understand: what exactly you did what exact result did you expect in what exactly what you got differs from what was expected If on the left panel of Explorer you select "Documents" on the right side you only see files that are registered as "Documents". (as in "Welcome to the senseless navigation panel of Windows 7" ): http://www.pcworld.com/article/206803/win7_file_nav.html http://windows.microsoft.com/en-US/windows7/products/features/libraries http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/magazine/dd861346.aspx or, if you prefer, this is "by design" jaclaz
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Need help with data recovery on HDD
jaclaz replied to mattiasnyc's topic in Hard Drive and Removable Media
Well, it cannot mathematically be FAT12 or 16 and logically it cannot be FAT32 either, since XP has dumbed down it to 32 Gb max size. Which leaves us with NTFS. So, if there was a single NTFS partition (or at least the first partition was NTFS and not very, very small) the $MFT must exist (and exist at a specific address). This address is in these cases: 786432*8+63=6291456+63=6291519 Try getting Tiny Hexer and open the disk, then go to absolute sector 6291519. (and check a few sectors after it), but if DMDE didn't find anytihing it is really improbable that *something* exists. http://www.softpedia.com/get/Others/Miscellaneous/tiny-hexer.shtml I am starting to think that *somehow* the original disk has issues that were not solved by the "unbricking". jaclaz -
and jaclaz
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cmd/bat to uninstall IE ?
jaclaz replied to vinifera's topic in Programming (C++, Delphi, VB/VBS, CMD/batch, etc.)
Well, not really. nlite does remove things at installation, not after it. And then if you want a true IE-less XP you could use FdV's (Fred De Vorck) approach/inf's, etc. To clarify, these methods "prevent install", do not "uninstall". Possibly the Commercial XPlite would do "after install". jaclaz -
If you are prepared to a lot of words, you may get the XP from the already installed hard disk, reading here: http://www.911cd.net/forums//index.php?showtopic=24161&hl= jaclaz
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FACEPALM.(with.frown.&.no.arms) approved! The: is mostly OK The "kilroy" checking if ti safe to come up is perfect! Thanks to dencorso for providing the "facepalm" and to bphlt for the reupload of the cached images. Let's hope that the reboot.pro issue is just a temporary glitch in the matrix. jaclaz
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Need help with data recovery on HDD
jaclaz replied to mattiasnyc's topic in Hard Drive and Removable Media
Yep , the command is correct, but the result is far from "good". The first sector is the MBR (which you already have posted) with all it's code but with no DATA in the partition table. All the rest are 00's sectors . Here the A025 I mentioned has disappeared Questions: Is there any chance that that disk was originally partitioned under Vista or 7? Do you remember how it was partitioned originally? (Like a single NTFS volume, several volumes, which filesystems, etc.?) jaclaz -
Well, no. Before 2000 there was NT 4.0 a "professional only" Operating System and 98 a "home only" Operating System. 2000 is substantially NT 4.0 with some betterings. Me is substantially 98 SE with some betterings (and of course with some new "features" - some of which actually worsening the OS - that would have needed time to "mature"). BOTH (of course Me was much more affected that 2K) were simply killed too young by the advent of XP which was for some aspects a bettered 2K, only worsened in many others. The real point that people sometimes forget is the utter stupidity of XP Home for Home use and of XP Professional for Professional use. You have a "professional only" Operating system (basically a NT 4.00 with a bettered filesystem and easier to install = Win2K betttered for some marginal aspects and with a lot of completely unneeded bells and whistles = XP) that you dumb down for professionals by adding all sorts of senseless graphical additions, wizards and what not (and this may - with a lot of tolerance be called "progress") but you force upon home users a senseless piece of bloat (compared to the previous 98/Me), normally pre-installed on senselessly underpowered machines, with a number of features that only make sense in Corporate/Office use (and some of which actually only useful on "servers"). Okay, raise your hands anyone that has set an XP (Home or Professional edition doesn't matter) on his/her own "home" laptop with: Admin + multiple non-admin account (and please state the number, besides "Power Users", of accounts that you have EVER set as "Backup Operator" ) GPO's Disk Quota's On the other hand, on the "professional" side they "hid" the "real" Administrator account (causing every kind of issues with LAN authentication for Admins) they added (finally) modern features (but provided not simple ways to use them, or mis- or under- documented them) such as streams, hard links, etc. XP was as a matter of fact the first sign of the concept of an "unified" OS, good for "everyone", and for "every use" on "every machine", the same concept that will make you have the same stupid tablet oriented OS on your desktop now... The nice thing is that since they seemingly understood how it made no sense to have (behind the bells and whistles) a "dumbed down" "server OS" on an underpowered, crappy tablet, they created a brand new OS, the RT, with the same bells and whistles, that will create each and every compatibility problem possible +1 (beside having succeeded in completely disorienting customers) jaclaz
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I am not sure to get it (actually I am sure I don't get it). Your screenshot is of a windowed VM, what happens if you make the windows larger (or full-screen)? Which resolution is your "real" display? jaclaz
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It seems to me like an overcomplex way. The batch can be much simplified, quick example: @echo off SETLOCAL ENABLEDELAYEDEXPANSION set fnm=HOSTNAME.txt set lnm=RESULT.txt del %lnm% if exist HOSTNAME.txt set fnm=HOSTNAME.txt if exist C:\NT\HOSTNAME.txt set fnm=C:\NT\HOSTNAME.txt if not exist %fnm% goto :error set SALES=3050 set DVR=9696 set VNC=5900 FOR %%A IN ( SALES DVR VNC ) DO ( ECHO %%A for /f "tokens=1,2 delims=," %%i in (%fnm%) do call :do_paping %%i %%j %%A ) ::GENERATE.BAT GOTO :EOF :do_paping set state=ONLINE echo Testing %1 for %3 paping %1 -p !%3! -c 1 if errorlevel 1 set state=**OFFLINE** echo %2,!%3!,%state% >> %lnm% goto :EOF :error echo. echo Cannot find %fnm% echo. Pause goto :EOF And most probably you can even remove the if errorlevel by using either of || or &&. jaclaz
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Traitor! I casually found this emoticon, that may be of use : jaclaz
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Everything is perfect BUT: 6R#2 is somehow disappointing (I mean the kind/quality of the emoticon, it's right arm is "static" and makes no sense and it seems like it is wearing gloves, it would be better if the emoticon's left hand appears from thin air before going to it's head in a "facepalm" like motion, more like these: (the way the "by definition" handless emoticon has it's hand appear I mean) in 7 the first "satisfied smile" could be better rendered with The #3R is perfect, maybe - but I fear that it would draw too much attention from the "main" character on the left - it could hit a few times it's head against the wall This could be an alternate source to get a few frames of the "disappointed, going away" Another (new, additional) idea could be to take the "whistling and walking away" from this one and have the L character "walk away" from the right (and re-enter form the left for the "cycle") About the "kilroy" character, see if this can be of inspiration: but I'll look for more.... jaclaz
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Of course I was joking , you compared the (IMHO) most stable NT based system ever made with the least stable DOS based one. Though - strangely enough - I am one of the very few people on Earth that considers Me as a largely misunderstood/underrated Operating System (i.e. in my opinion it is much better than most people think) you simply cannot compare it with 2K. A heavily modified (KernelEx) Me can actually run almost the same "last" version of some web browsers as an "untouched" 2K can, you are perfectly right on this . jaclaz