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Everything posted by DigeratiPrime
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Thank you uid0 the Kiwi and Memtest86+ links are fixed and the GreenBow VPN Client was removed. New Additions... MSFN Member Projects Vista Codec Package Vize XPize Audio Players MediaMonkey Soundbase Audio Tools MilkyTracker MODPlug Tracker AntiMalware a-squared Free GMER SUPERAntiSpyware Burning Software ISO Recorder Disc Mounting ImDisk MagicDisc WinCDEmu Drive Imaging GImageX Paragon Drive Backup Express eBook ComicRack xCHM Network Scanner inSSIDer Office Apps Angel Writer PDF Software Pdf Split and Merge PDF-Xchange Viewer Perfect PDF Reader RSS FeedReader System Tools Anolis CloneSpy Dependency Walker HashCheck Web Browsers Apple Safari Avant Browser Video Tools Debut Video Capture Software FRAPS GraphStudio TSReader
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HP Notebook: The recovery partition could not be found
DigeratiPrime replied to ahmad2080's topic in Software Hangout
Greets :-) Well changing the partition table shouldn't affect the data in the recovery partition; not sure what HP software you are using though the actual filenames would help. So you can see the recovery partition as a seperate drive in My Computer? Can you post a screenshot or description of what files are inside the recovery volume? -
Fixes a critical 0day exploit it's already available if you don't want to wait: En-US http://releases.mozilla.org/pub/mozilla.or...tup%203.0.8.exe All Languages http://releases.mozilla.org/pub/mozilla.or...es/3.0.8/win32/ https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=485217
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Features http://www.ubuntu.com/products/whatisubuntu/904features/ Release Notes http://www.ubuntu.com/getubuntu/releasenotes/904overview Or download from the following links: http://noncdn.releases.ubuntu.com/jaunty/ http://noncdn.releases.ubuntu.com/kubuntu/jaunty/ http://cdimage.ubuntu.com/xubuntu/releases/9.04/release/
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If the recovery partition exists and there is a win32 program that can access it, you can probably inspect it or extract files from it by making the partition unhidden. I would reccomend doing this "offline" (live cd or connect to another pc) so if you have a sophisticated virus it doesn't modify the recovery volume. diskpart list volume select volume X detail volume attributes volume clear hidden
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Thanks Glenn9999 for the feedback; btw I read that IE7Pro has a new version in the works which will just be named IEPro.
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Are you using multiple versions of IE on the same Windows installation? I am confused as to what version you actually have installed. By safe-mode you mean you launch " Internet Explorer (No Add-ons)" aka "iexplore.exe -extoff"? Screenshots? Malware? Try pressing ALT on the keyboard when IE is the active window to show the Menu Bar, then try to re-enable the missing toolbars from the View menu. Also could try the Reset settings option under the Advanced tab in Internet Options, also accessible through the Control Panel.
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There is software that can copy a Wii or Gamecube DVD to your PC, but you would need to hack the Wii in some way to play the backup games.
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copy from full ntfs partition impossible?
DigeratiPrime replied to cooper2009's topic in Software Hangout
What version of TrueCrypt are you using to mount the container file? What is the filesystem of the container and what is the filesystem of the target partition? Process Monitor http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/sysinte...s/bb896645.aspx -
Yup EM64T is missing, so no x64. DSP is just a special packaging of OEM media and different support terms.
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Which "gunmetal" game? http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gunmetal_(PC) http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gun_Metal_(video_game) Generally if a game runs, but runs slow then their is a resource problem. Then depending on what exactly is slow, loading times or fps, we can determine where the inefficiency is. Low FPS is usually due to underpowered video cards and not enough cpu or memory whereas long loading times is usually due to a slow hard drive. If you think it's a software problem trying running the game on a more powerful system to test that idea.
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This might do what you want http://mh-nexus.de/en/hxd/ Might try opening a suspended vmware guest vmem file with a hex editor.
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Can not remove some exe files; Windows 7 or normal?
DigeratiPrime replied to XP_NO's topic in Windows 7
Three types of causes for not being able to delete a file / folder: A running process has a handle on the file or directory - stop the process or close the handle You do not have permissions to delete the file or directory - elevate your rights to gain or modify permissions The file or directory name is null - in folder root execute "rmdir /s /q" from command prompt -
Post Pictures and Specifications of your computer here!
DigeratiPrime replied to ripken204's topic in Hardware Hangout
Here is my current desktop as of 2009 Shuttle SP35P2 | E8400 | 9800GT | 8GB DDR2-800 | Matrix RAID WD6400AAKS | SH-S203B HP Mini 1000 | 2GB DDR2-800 | 16GB SSD | 16GB SD T-Mobile G1 | 8GB SD -
Poll and Discuss Defragmentation Software
DigeratiPrime replied to DigeratiPrime's topic in Software Hangout
In basic theory it should definitely help with reads scattered over a disc, since the header has to physically move between tracks; the whole process of which creates an access time. Then hopefully all the data is contiguous on that track so it doesn't have to go through the expensive process again. This doesn't pertain to SSD drives where the access time is virtually wirespeed and uniform. These days it matters less with discs being generally faster, thus reduced latency, and having better seek logic such as NCQ. Also memory is relatively cheap, and Operating Systems like Vista have SuperFetch, so we need to access the disk less often. -
Take advatage of 4GB+ RAM in Windows 7 32-bit
DigeratiPrime replied to BoardBabe's topic in Windows 7
Here are screenshots of Vmmap analysing Explorer.exe under Vista x86 and x64 guests with 1024MB of RAM. Note the difference in Free virtual memory from about 2GB to 9TB. X86 X64 -
Take advatage of 4GB+ RAM in Windows 7 32-bit
DigeratiPrime replied to BoardBabe's topic in Windows 7
I remember Mark Russinovich specifically blaming video card drivers causing crashes under XP with more than 4GB. [EDIT] Found it: http://blogs.technet.com/markrussinovich/a...21/3092070.aspx Related: http://support.microsoft.com/kb/929605 http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/aa366778.aspx http://support.microsoft.com/kb/294418 Coincidentally Sysinternals recently released a new program called Vmmap which is a process virtual and physical memory analysis utility. http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/sysinte...s/dd535533.aspx -
Opened with a hex editor, it is completely filled with zeros AKA junk.
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If you can ping external sites, then your "internet" is working. ping.exe on windows uses ICMP (and DNS to resolve domains), so if that works but you are unable to connect to webpages, then the problem is either with your web browser, HTTP, or TCP. Easiest thing to do is install Firefox, if that works then something is wrong with IE. Otherwise as CoffeeFiend pointed out there could be some Symantec service that is hooking HTTP requests.
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Basic Idea IRPs Are Different From Fast I/O http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms790753.aspx
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Turn on your pc, hit the Pause key before Windows loads, insert USB device. If it locks up, try another USB Port or USB Device. Reboot into Safe Mode (hold F8 right before Windows boots) insert USB device. If it locks up, try another USB Port or USB Device. Please tell us what happens in both scenarios. Might also want to disable Autoplay / Autorun Start > Run > gpedit.msc > [Computer Configuration\Administrative Templates\System] Enabled Turn off Autoplay on: All drives
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^ I will fix the topic title for us The following freeware claims to convert UIF to other image formats such as ISO http://aluigi.altervista.org/mytoolz.htm BTW the author has an article on history of MagicISO and evidence of GPL code theft http://aluigi.altervista.org/misc/magiciso_gpl_violation.txt And I am not sure but IsoBuster, might be able to open it. There is a limited free version. http://www.isobuster.com/license-models.php
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I thought this was a joke or a troll, but if your serious those are normal Windows files and folders which have a purpose. BTW what version of Windows are you experiencing this "problem" with?
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WOW or Windows On Windows essentially means that two copies of Windows exist on the computer. With WOW64 there is both 32bit and 64bit Program Files and Windows files; thus why these versions of Windows require more disk space to install. Having both types basically allows 32bit and 64bit programs to run native without emulation. With Itanium 32bit was emulated, with x86-64 the processor can just switch between modes. IMO the only reason not to go for x64 is: You have less than 4GB of RAM You have software or hardware which requires a driver but doesn't have 64bit available. Since Microsoft now requires both 32bit and 64bit drivers to get a WHQL digital signature, that problem should only apply to beta drivers. BTW we had another topic on this with some relevant information, just ignore the flaming http://www.msfn.org/board/index.php?showtopic=129971