The Digital Surgery (computer questions/problems here)
Re: The Digital Surgery
No, my friend did the same - removed Betternet, and all was well. Any Betternet freebie users, please be aware - you could be next.
Championship Stoke City 3 - 0 Plymouth Argyle
Points 48; Position 20
Points 48; Position 20
- barrys
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- Joined: Fri Sep 23, 2005 1:52 pm
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Re: The Digital Surgery
buksida wrote: ↑Fri Jun 16, 2017 12:06 am But if you want something to last the next five years I'd go for the following ...
CPU: Intel i5 or AMD FX 9000 series
RAM: Kingston DDR4 16 GB
Hard Drive: SSD 256GB (keep your data on a portable hard drive)
Graphics: Nvidia GTX 1050 or Radeon R9 285
PSU: Coolermaster or Thermaltake 700 watts or above
Of course your mainboard will depend on which combination of the above you go for, if you have deep pockets go for the i7 CPU. The solid state drive will be a lot faster than a regular hard disk and you'll get a noticeable performance boost out of it - your data should be kept off the system drive. With graphics cards the sky is the limit, the two I've listed are both very capable but you can spend thousands on them. Most people over look the power supply and use a cheapo one that comes with the case and cannot produce the juice for the top end hardware. You should spend at least 3,000 baht on a decent PSU
Hi Buksi
Thanks for all the advice.
The end result was that I had a system built for me based on your advice.
So I got a new case containing:
CPU - Intel(R)Core(TM)i7-2600 @ 3.40 GHz
RAM - 16 GB
Hard Drive SSD - Samsung MZ7TY256 HDHP-000L7 ATA
PSU - 750 watts
External hard drive - ADATA HV 100 1TB
Windows 10 Pro and MS Office pre-installed
All of that set me back the equivalent of THB18,928
I took the graphics card from my previous machine to run my 3 monitors. It's a Nvidia GeForce GTX 660 Ti and the guy who built the new one said it was still ok - what d'you think?
I'm using the new system now and it's a joy. So, hopefully, that should do me for the next few year.
Thanks again for your help
Re: The Digital Surgery
Good job, should last you a while.
Who is the happier man, he who has braved the storm of life and lived or he who has stayed securely on shore and merely existed? - Hunter S Thompson
Re: The Digital Surgery
I've got a problem trying to get an Excel spreadsheet to transfer and work properly. Hopefully, I can explain the problem and someone can tell me where I'm going wrong.
So, I was sent the spreadsheet as an attachment. Gmail to gmail, attachment in Excel. Obviously, I'd like to be able to play around with this to work through any number of scenarios.
I've discovered that I can open the attachment in Google Sheets and that then I can enter and change any figures I want and the spreadsheet works it all through.
I saved that Google Sheet to my documents. However, when I try and open it in docs, it tries to do so in Explorer and fails - I get an error message (server error, I think).
OK, I can work with it from the email but as that dates back to 2015, I've got to search through pages of back mails to get there. For convenience sake, is there anything that I'm missing that that will allow me to get that attachment over to my docs and be able to work it from there?
Chok dii, in hope.
So, I was sent the spreadsheet as an attachment. Gmail to gmail, attachment in Excel. Obviously, I'd like to be able to play around with this to work through any number of scenarios.
I've discovered that I can open the attachment in Google Sheets and that then I can enter and change any figures I want and the spreadsheet works it all through.
I saved that Google Sheet to my documents. However, when I try and open it in docs, it tries to do so in Explorer and fails - I get an error message (server error, I think).
OK, I can work with it from the email but as that dates back to 2015, I've got to search through pages of back mails to get there. For convenience sake, is there anything that I'm missing that that will allow me to get that attachment over to my docs and be able to work it from there?
Chok dii, in hope.
Re: The Digital Surgery
Computer nerds hate doing things the computer can do MUCH better. Like searching. Google on how to use search operators, which includes limiting your search to just emails with attachments:
https://support.google.com/mail/answer/7190?hl=en
Explanation from makeuseof.com. Their articles are usually good. This one is from 2013. Given the nature of search, it's likely to still be up to date.
http://www.makeuseof.com/tag/quickly-fi ... nts-gmail/
Re: The Digital Surgery
Sandboxie is a sandbox program. It eliminates the need for common digital surgeries. It's like a condom for your computer. What's a sandbox? "A sandbox is a security mechanism for separating running programs. ... used to execute untested or untrusted programs or code, ... or websites, without risking harm to the host machine or operating system." https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sandbox_( ... _security)
Sandboxie FAQ https://www.sandboxie.com/index.php?Fre ... dQuestions
Try Sandboxie for 1 year $20.95, or a lifetime license $34.95. Or use the free version, which has 2 limitations making it less convenient to use.
Sandboxie is 12 years old, now on it's third owner. They've released new versions since acquisition, the most recent one last month.
Sandboxie FAQ https://www.sandboxie.com/index.php?Fre ... dQuestions
Try Sandboxie for 1 year $20.95, or a lifetime license $34.95. Or use the free version, which has 2 limitations making it less convenient to use.
Sandboxie is 12 years old, now on it's third owner. They've released new versions since acquisition, the most recent one last month.
Sandboxie
That's a quite agreeable statement considering Windows security (or lack thereof).
I use Sandboxie for ages, and nothing else for Win security on 3 boxes nowadays. Even the free version is good enough for most users. The only alternative (replacement if Sophos would abandon Sandboxie) I trust and occasionally use is Shadow Defender.
The critical issues: (a) the PC must be fully/repeatedly checked and cleaned before using it; (b) only visit the Net within a sandbox, else will need to repeat (a). In return, one can kiss all 'anti' software, firewalls, HIPS, and of course the rogue Win updates goodbye.
- barrys
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- Joined: Fri Sep 23, 2005 1:52 pm
- Location: Enjoying the sea air on a boat around Pak Nam Pran
Re: The Digital Surgery
I'm running a brand new PC with an i7 processor and 16 GM RAM.
OS is Windows 10 pro.
I'm getting just about daily Blue Screen errors, mostly with the message "Memory Management" or sometimes with "Critical Structure Corruption". I've tried googling this but there are so many different explanations out there, some saying it's a software and some a hardware problem.
Anyone have any ideas please?
OS is Windows 10 pro.
I'm getting just about daily Blue Screen errors, mostly with the message "Memory Management" or sometimes with "Critical Structure Corruption". I've tried googling this but there are so many different explanations out there, some saying it's a software and some a hardware problem.
Anyone have any ideas please?
- 404cameljockey
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Re: The Digital Surgery
My 10 Baht:barrys wrote: ↑Mon Jul 31, 2017 8:52 pm I'm running a brand new PC with an i7 processor and 16 GM RAM.
OS is Windows 10 pro.
I'm getting just about daily Blue Screen errors, mostly with the message "Memory Management" or sometimes with "Critical Structure Corruption". I've tried googling this but there are so many different explanations out there, some saying it's a software and some a hardware problem.
Anyone have any ideas please?
If it's brand new why not just let the retailer handler it? Alternatively the first thing to try would be to reinstall the OS (Win 10) as from what I can see it occurs after a Win 10 update (I refuse all updates for OSs until at least a couple of months after they come out, let other users find the bugs). Do backup your data first though please.
Then don't accept the update until after you researched good and hard online for problems that others have had with the update and whether Micro$h*t have patched it. If you have good antivirus software and don't visit dodgy websites you shouldn't worry about installing routine OS patches on 0 day.
Re: The Digital Surgery
Best single source for 'is it safe to update' is http://www.askwoody.com/ . Turn automatic updating off, then don't update until he says it's safe.404cameljockey wrote: ↑Mon Jul 31, 2017 9:11 pmThen don't accept the update until after you researched good and hard online for problems that others have had with the update and whether Micro$h*t have patched it.
- 404cameljockey
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Re: The Digital Surgery
Good call.Homer wrote: ↑Mon Jul 31, 2017 9:50 pmBest single source for 'is it safe to update' is http://www.askwoody.com/ . Turn automatic updating off, then don't update until he says it's safe.404cameljockey wrote: ↑Mon Jul 31, 2017 9:11 pmThen don't accept the update until after you researched good and hard online for problems that others have had with the update and whether Micro$h*t have patched it.
Re: The Digital Surgery
you could try removing one stick of ram and go down to 8gb ram , see if it fixes, try with both , one at a time.barrys wrote: ↑Mon Jul 31, 2017 8:52 pm I'm running a brand new PC with an i7 processor and 16 GM RAM.
OS is Windows 10 pro.
I'm getting just about daily Blue Screen errors, mostly with the message "Memory Management" or sometimes with "Critical Structure Corruption". I've tried googling this but there are so many different explanations out there, some saying it's a software and some a hardware problem.
Anyone have any ideas please?
if it is a memory issue this will help find out if one of your ram stick is faulty. If it is cheap ram modules this is highly likely.
- 404cameljockey
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Re: The Digital Surgery
You didn't reply whether the box still under warranty or not? If it is then you should actually do nothing yourself unless you're happy to void the warranty. Also if you're not computer literate you should just take it back to the shop/builder anyway.
Re: The Digital Surgery
I'd agree, memory stick error is a very likely cause. The suggested hands-on method works well but may take 2-3 days to see the results with the reported symptoms. There's good & free utility at http://www.memtest86.com/download.htm that detects memory faults fast.
Software (typically graphic card drivers) also can cause such problems, hence it's worth trying later/updated drivers.
- 404cameljockey
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Re: The Digital Surgery
barrys doesn't seem as interested in this problem as we are....