It basically means the parition table is screwed up on that hard disk. You need to use some recovery program to rebuild the partition table and get acess to the partitions.
Its possible, but you gonna end up running both cards at the 6600gt speed. It would be better if you remove both the 6600's and run your system with a single 7800gt.
1) Why are you cross posting this in 2 different forums? Was it really necessary to start similar topics in different areas? 2) No one can help you unless you specify exactly what the problem is with your video card? I doubt if MSFN has a crystal ball to figure the problem with your videocard! In addition to that what are your hardware specs?
The high pitch squealing sound is more than likely coming from the Mosfets that are overheating. Mosfets let out high pitched ultrasonic squeals when they overheat and this can cause headaches. Your best option would be small passive heatsinks on mosfets to provide better cooling on them.
Stick with the Asus. Its an excellent mobo even if you are planning to run everything at stock. The DFI mobos are good but they are just too hyped up and requires a lot of tweakings even to get them running at stock speeds. I know this because I got the DFI SLI-DR before I returned it and got the ASUS SLI Premium. Absolutely stable out of the box without any major tweakings required. Screw Creative sound cards! Go for the HDA X-mystique Dolby Digital Live 5.1 or a similar DD Live card from Turtle Beach.
Most of the HDD's that support SATA II have SATA II disabled by default via jumper. You will have to reposition the jumpers to enable SATA II features.
First and foremost go to the netgear website and download the manual for your router from there. Read the manual and go through chapter 4 which is basically wireless settings.
If you cant understand the router configuration from the netgear manual then you ARE a dumbass. I have a netgear router too and it took me about 5 minutes to configure my wireless settings from the information printed in the manual. FYI.....Configuring the wireless settings and setting up the router correctly has got everything to do with your laptop connectivity!
For starters it would actually help if you would RTFM and familiarize yourself with some common wireless terminologies!!! It has probably more information than you actually think. P.S. If you dont know what RTFM is, do a simple search in google!!
Its not a question of being stuck up . You basically ended up wasting everyone's effort over here by not being able to distinguish between a BIOS beep and OS beep.