Pretty scary that my dad was on one of those hot air balloons over Luxor just last year. RIP the 19 who died.
Just saw a video of it. Pretty scary.
Pretty scary that my dad was on one of those hot air balloons over Luxor just last year. RIP the 19 who died.
Just saw a video of it. Pretty scary.
Any one else think the Euro is dead?.
Nah, it's just ill.
I have an old Dell desktop that I haven't used in a couple of years because it has a crappy processor, runs really slowly now and can't connect to the internet for reasons I can't figure out. It's just been sitting in a box in my room. I also have an Acer laptop that is only a couple of years old, but has taken a bit of an accidental beating and currently won't charge, and also has a pretty severe overheating problem. I won't be throwing them out any time soon for the reasons you've mentioned, but I don't have the know-how to fix them up either and I don't want to pay extortionate amounts for someone else to do it. I tried to take the laptop apart the other day and I think I made the situation worse because it's almost impossible to get the damn thing open. So I'm stuck with two busted PCs that I can neither fix nor get rid of, and I'm typing this on a ****ty Toshiba netbook.
As for the OS debate, I consider Win XP and Win7 to be equals. Vista was a waste of time and Win8 is really only necessary on a touch-screen. Also I feel really sorry for your average family who don't know a great deal about this sort of thing and waste their money and computer's efficiency on anti-virus/malware/adware software that they don't need, because their PC came with McAfee or Norton which convinces them that it's totally necessary that they have it, and advisable that they pay for the full version. The best anti-virus softwares out there are free and work great, but your average person is going to be tricked into paying loads for an inferior product. People are being extorted on a massive scale. And don't even get me started on Apple.
I have an old Dell desktop that I haven't used in a couple of years because it has a crappy processor, runs really slowly now and can't connect to the internet for reasons I can't figure out. It's just been sitting in a box in my room. I also have an Acer laptop that is only a couple of years old, but has taken a bit of an accidental beating and currently won't charge, and also has a pretty severe overheating problem. I won't be throwing them out any time soon for the reasons you've mentioned, but I don't have the know-how to fix them up either and I don't want to pay extortionate amounts for someone else to do it. I tried to take the laptop apart the other day and I think I made the situation worse because it's almost impossible to get the damn thing open. So I'm stuck with two busted PCs that I can neither fix nor get rid of, and I'm typing this on a ****ty Toshiba netbook.
You need to cultivate a friendly techie guru, Joe. Or, if you want to try something for yourself, PM me the model numbers of your computers [or reply here], their state of upgrade/health and I'll look up the specs and advise what's worth pursuing and if it might be achieved cheaply.
What is its behaviour when you try to connect to the Internet? If it's over Ethernet, does it try to identify the connection and fail, leaving you with 'unidentified network/no network access' or does it simply not recognize the connection at all?
First thing to check would be the drivers; if it's XP, go to the Run dialog and type devmgmt.msc to open the Device Manager. Go to Network Adapters and check to see whether it's displaying the full name of your Ethernet adapter with or without an exclamation mark (which would indicate that it's there, but ain't doing what it ought to be doing), or if you have some friendly fellow by the name of Network Controller.
Can't be bothered to go digging around for the old desktop, but I can remember of the top of my head that it's a Dell Dimension 5150. Can't remember much about the specs but it was at the cheaper end of the range about 8 years ago when I bought it. Even if it was functioning perfectly, it would have a slow processor speed by today's standards. To be honest, I reckon I'll make a copy of everything that I still want from the HD and wipe the rest, then salvage the old gal for parts. I want to build my own desktop as soon as I can afford it, so I don't really foresee much need to rejuvenate this one.
My laptop is an Acer Aspire 5742 with an Intel i3 processor, Intel HD graphics, 640GB HDD and 8GB DDR3 memory. It has a serious overheating problem (for reasons unknown to me because I can't get the son of a bitch open), which means it must be placed with the fan vent precariously overhanging the edge of whatever surface I have it on otherwise it reaches 90C and switches itself off. Inevitably this eventually led to it taking a fall, and it landed on the side of the charger port, while the charger was in, which caused the shell to crack open. Now it doesn't charge, and I'm not sure if it's the port or the charger itself which needs replacing. I've decided that I'm not going to go and get this fixed at this time, because it will probably just happen again and cost me more money in the future. Until the overheating problem is sorted and I can properly put the laptop safely on a flat surface, it's going to be out of action.
Ah excellent, thanks. I'll give it a try tomorrow and hopefully won't break anything. A lot of the shell is cracked and there are screws missing, so I'll have to be extra careful.
The best anti-virus softwares out there are free and work great, but your average person is going to be tricked into paying loads for an inferior product. People are being extorted on a massive scale. And don't even get me started on Apple.
I always say this when I'm upgrading computer's and stuff to people, purely because these companies take advantage of them and make it seem like they have to pay £60 or whatever for Norton, when programs like Avast! are prefectly good, for free, downloadable from the internet. It's like one big con for your average person if you don't have the know-how.
Completely agree about Apple - constantly upgrading, wasting consumer's money but people are willing to pay. Hate Apple with a passion.