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Everything posted by D.Draker
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Nonsense! You can, and there's nothing in the rules about it, talk about the direct consequences (economical and environmental), just exclude the political part. We all know who's to blame and what country is the source of evil anyways. Just omit that part.
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I gave you the links for comparison our climate in 2009 vs 2023, which added almost + 10 degrees in my city.
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All man made objects that use heating or result in heating are the cause of the warming, including the phosphorous blasts you chose to ignore (why?), of course in addition to emissions, there's no argument here. For example, we've got plenty of (don't know how to call them politely) that make floors with heating in our already warm Vichy climate so "their dogs feel cosy".
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Right! It looks like the culprit. I have it running. I didn't remove it from the ISO, I simple remove the startup checkbox, when it's needed.
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You aren't being polite in the conversation, you asked for "a SCIENTIFIC APPROACH", I gave you one, now you didn't like the truth, so it looks like you're a simple climate change denier rather than someone who supposed to be neutral.
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Those exe installers are usually crap/bloatware. It's advised to install via inf directly. Here's a bit older driver. https://catalog.s.download.windowsupdate.com/msdownload/update/driver/drvs/2013/04/20282278_868cfb4f48fe8f4333115ab525ef46c66316ddc9.cab Edit. This one worked for me.
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Why won't you just install the driver manually, then? https://catalog.s.download.windowsupdate.com/msdownload/update/driver/drvs/2012/10/20510300_11ca9b2b0951f4907dd6858719316a8af79749f8.cab
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Here you go. The temperature in my city has risen by approx. 10 degrees Celsius only in 14 years alone (it's a very big rise!). An the charts don't go below 2009, otherwise you'd see a much, much bigger rise. 35 °C (4 Sep, 16:30) 2023 https://www.timeanddate.com/weather/@2969392/historic?month=9&year=2023 26 °C (9 Sep, 13:00) https://www.timeanddate.com/weather/@2969392/historic?month=9&year=2009
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I don't, but you forgot* about numerous thermobaric and white phosphorus blasts going on near European borders for two years every day. *intentionally or not
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Go to the closest car, touch the engine, is it warm? You betcha! Now calculate the approx. amount of cars in the world.
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Will you please finally stop with check disk? It's been explained to you by UCyborg, it's dangerous in such cases. And I agree with him. And that error code is very generic.
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WhoCrashed Free Home Edition - marvellous tool! Old versions should work with XP, check it out. "It will perform a post-mortem crashdump analysis and present all gathered information in an understandable way." https://www.resplendence.com/whocrashed
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I live in a house built in the 17th or 18th century, it still has a big and functioning wood oven from bricks, but I don't use it anymore, will you guess why yourself? And now I have eight air-conditioners in my flat. Yes, I still don't own the full house, but I intend to. It's only six flats. When I do, I hope the temperature in it will go down due to the now absent dwellers. I'm now in the process of making money for the purchase, it's a very expensive place, so I don't know how long it will take, but I'll make sure to notify. Is it good enough for the scientific proof? Edit: I live in Vichy, in case you're wondering,
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Finally! A new member with proper English, in addition to AstroSkipper and Dave, of course! You can't even imagine how sick I can get when reading dry English. I hope it evolves into a pleasant conversation.
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I have my personal, obviously terrible experience with that drive, run from it! It works today, tomorrow it simply loses 75% of the files on it. Dave, do you have another over 3TB disk to test, maybe? Edit. I just found them, I still have some left in my basement, (non-functional)
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ST3000DM001, introduced by Seagate in 2011, is the famous Deathstar v2.0. I was under the impression you knew that, didn't you, Dave? "This particular drive model was reported to have unusually high failure rates" "In July 2021, 9to5Mac reported that because the disk was included in the Apple Time Capsule it started to show high failure rates. The issue was caused by the parking ramp that was made out of different materials, according to the German data recovery company Datenrettung.[5]" Class action "In 2016, Seagate faced a class action over the failure rates of its ST3000DM001 3 TB drives.[4][6][7][8] Law firm Hagens Berman filed the lawsuit on 1 February in the United States District Court for the Northern District of California, and primarily cited reliability data provided by Backblaze." https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ST3000DM001
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I was born in the seventies (exactly the time you say it's started to get warmer), I remember those already heated up seventies very good. But even comparing to the already hot late seventies, what we have have here today is bloody hell, mind you - it exceeds the mentioned 30 years average weather period by almost 80%. So yeah, it's good enough to make clear observations, and not trust those 'official' sources.
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I had bsod c0000005 with some software when my HDD (Seagate) was dying out.
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It's still way too many, comparing to other ports of Chrome that work on Vista without the EX-kernel. I was shocked by the screenshot, honestly, but anyways, maybe the dude is just a huge fan of running 255 extensions all at once, who knows.
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You could try changing the BIOS setting to "allow memory remap:ON", it will give you 300mb of additional RAM for Supermim on a 32bit OS.
- 1,239 replies
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I liked the covid times, it was much quieter in my town, I live in a town with lots of tourists, obviously covid was a man-made crap, but it works for de-pop, and that is good for us and the climate. Less people, more oxygen.
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How then would you explain winters in my region are getting hotter and hotter after the Millennium, especially? How old are you? I'm old enough to remember what was happening in the past, when the climate was normal.
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In this case the actual power capabilities of the PSU doesn't matter for the PC to just turn on. Full load under heavy gaming is another matter.
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And obviously it needs to be a classic bulb, not the diode ones they shove our throats at every store. Like this one. 100W is good enough.
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There's another method for old schoolers, but maybe dangerous for others, it tests PSU with an electric bulb as its load. I shall not write it here, I'm not gonna be responsible if someone electrocutes himself. But it can be found on the internet, I like this method and always use it. I also test any PSU for the real protections it has (I don't trust whether they claim it to have them), so I short the pins and watch if it goes kaboom, if it's a good one - the short will lead to the PSU just going off. Edit: Again, it's dangerous for inexperienced users.