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Help needed - Computer stuff
"John H." wrote in message
... On Thu, 10 Jan 2008 19:50:54 GMT, "JoeSpareBedroom" wrote: "John H." wrote in message . .. On Thu, 10 Jan 2008 19:07:37 GMT, "JoeSpareBedroom" wrote: "John H." wrote in message m... I have a 160 GB external hard disk to which I tried to back up my documents and settings using the Windows backup system. After about a half hour, I get a message saying there's not enough room for the backup, and that if the hard disk is FAT 32, the backup can be no larger than 4 GB. So I checked, and sure enough, the external HD is FAT 32. Now what? I already have about 50 GB of stuff on the external HD that I don't want to lose by reformatting (if that's what's required). -- John H When you get this working properly, where will the external hard drive be kept most of the time? Same place. -- John H Then, you are protecting yourself against only one type of catastrophe: A computer hardware failure. Storing both drives in the same building means that when the building burns to the ground, you lose everything. Got a safe deposit box at the bank, or is there another location where you could store one of the drives? Good idea. I wouldn't store a drive anywhere else, but putting some data on CD's and into the safe deposit box is an idea I hadn't thought of. Thanks. -- John H You should "freshen" those, too, occasionally. They don't last forever. |
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wrote in message
... On Thu, 10 Jan 2008 19:48:28 GMT, "JoeSpareBedroom" wrote: wrote in message . .. On Thu, 10 Jan 2008 19:21:58 GMT, "JoeSpareBedroom" wrote: wrote in message m... On Thu, 10 Jan 2008 19:07:37 GMT, "JoeSpareBedroom" wrote: "John H." wrote in message news:dp5co3do346t5dedeton6q6s2rrat5mhgt@4ax. com... I have a 160 GB external hard disk to which I tried to back up my documents and settings using the Windows backup system. After about a half hour, I get a message saying there's not enough room for the backup, and that if the hard disk is FAT 32, the backup can be no larger than 4 GB. So I checked, and sure enough, the external HD is FAT 32. Now what? I already have about 50 GB of stuff on the external HD that I don't want to lose by reformatting (if that's what's required). -- John H When you get this working properly, where will the external hard drive be kept most of the time? One step at a time, Doug. That issue was part of why I suggested the idea of buying another drive for this project to John. :') Small enough to fit his safe deposit box at the bank, right? :-) Probably, but that wouldn't be such a great spot for it. As I'm SURE you know, the biggest failure of any backup plan is that if it is too inconvenient, it won't get done. A backup stored onsite is 1000% better than a backup that doesn't get done. I do my backup onto an external drive and bring it to the office. John doesn't have an office. So, when his "onsite" burns to the ground, there goes his backup hardware, too. I'm in the same situation. I have a choice to make: Two sets of media, one of which I can't get to if the bank is closed. Or, no off-site media, and then I'm phuqued if the place burns down. John may or may not have an office, but I'll bet that unlike some sourpusses around here, he probably has a friend or friends who wouldn't mind being the offsite storage. I know many people who do this for each other. I even know one guy who keeps his backups in his pickup truck parked outside. Tupperware is a beautiful thing! Off site doesn't mean the backup doesn't get done. Use the one at home for a week, then take it to the the safe deposit box and swap for the other one. Or, someone else's house. Anything's better than storing all your backup media in the same building. No sane corporation does that, unless they have a storage arrangement like a bank's. For the overwhelming number of home users, having to go to the bank and get a safe deposit box to swap disks would be enough of an obstacle to make the plan fail. You can always improve on any backup system in some way. The worst backup is NO backup, and I hear about those tragedies all the time. A backup stored onsite is better than that by a country mile, even though it's not "as good as it gets". And major corporations generally hire a service that comes and swaps backup media on a schedule, and takes the fresh backups offsite. They also have a contract with a hotsite to use if they lose their building. That way, they can load their backups at the hotsite and have a place for the staff to work in a matter of hours, rather than going out of business. John probably won't need that level of security, either. I guess it depends on how much value you place on years' worth of digital pictures. There's a response to this issue that I haven't seen yet. It's one I know you're too smart to write. Let's see how long it takes before we see it. You know the one I mean. :-) |
Help needed - Computer stuff
wrote in message ... For the overwhelming number of home users, having to go to the bank and get a safe deposit box to swap disks would be enough of an obstacle to make the plan fail. You can always improve on any backup system in some way. The worst backup is NO backup, and I hear about those tragedies all the time. A backup stored onsite is better than that by a country mile, even though it's not "as good as it gets". I keep it very simple. There's virtually nothing stored on my computer that so important that it even needs to be backed up. I've occasionally burned some CD's with stuff I'd like to keep like pictures or special music, but if the computer died tomorrow, no big loss. I also don't have a clue what I'd do with a huge hard drive, internal or external. My 3 year old HP laptop has a 90 Gig hard drive. After 3 years 72 Gigs are still available. Eisboch |
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"Eisboch" wrote in message
... wrote in message ... For the overwhelming number of home users, having to go to the bank and get a safe deposit box to swap disks would be enough of an obstacle to make the plan fail. You can always improve on any backup system in some way. The worst backup is NO backup, and I hear about those tragedies all the time. A backup stored onsite is better than that by a country mile, even though it's not "as good as it gets". I keep it very simple. There's virtually nothing stored on my computer that so important that it even needs to be backed up. I've occasionally burned some CD's with stuff I'd like to keep like pictures or special music, but if the computer died tomorrow, no big loss. I also don't have a clue what I'd do with a huge hard drive, internal or external. My 3 year old HP laptop has a 90 Gig hard drive. After 3 years 72 Gigs are still available. Eisboch Highly technical answer: It all depends. |
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"John H." wrote in message
... I like the truck idea! It's a terrible idea. |
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wrote in message ... On Thu, 10 Jan 2008 12:17:29 -0500, HK wrote: I am not running XP yet but I have a shrinkwrapped "pro" sitting here for when I need to. 98SE still seems to be doing fine for what I do. Hmmm. Have you considered MS DOS 1.1? :} I used PCDOS 1.0 on my PC1 but I kept upgrading as long as I saw benefit. 6.3 is about as good as DOS got. I haven't seen the benefit in XP yet and Vista is a virus. I have Windows 98SE on an older laptop that I use for a midi interface and sequencer for the keyboards. It runs fine, but I haven't used it on the 'Net for a long time. The other computers, (this one on the boat) and my HP both run XP. I am no computer guru, but XP Pro has been the most stable Microsoft OS since Windows 3.1, in my experience. Eisboch |
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On Thu, 10 Jan 2008 15:35:04 -0500, "Eisboch"
wrote: wrote in message .. . For the overwhelming number of home users, having to go to the bank and get a safe deposit box to swap disks would be enough of an obstacle to make the plan fail. You can always improve on any backup system in some way. The worst backup is NO backup, and I hear about those tragedies all the time. A backup stored onsite is better than that by a country mile, even though it's not "as good as it gets". I keep it very simple. There's virtually nothing stored on my computer that so important that it even needs to be backed up. I've occasionally burned some CD's with stuff I'd like to keep like pictures or special music, but if the computer died tomorrow, no big loss. I also don't have a clue what I'd do with a huge hard drive, internal or external. My 3 year old HP laptop has a 90 Gig hard drive. After 3 years 72 Gigs are still available. I lost all my photos and still had them backed up on a seperate hard drive when I had the computer crash last year when the power supply blew up. Add insult to injury, I had the photos backed up online and guess what happened there - the company had a fire and I lost 90% of what I had backed up online. When I get around to it, I'm storing everything on hard DVD or CD as it comes in and I process them - immediately. |
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Help needed - Computer stuff
wrote:
On Thu, 10 Jan 2008 16:52:34 -0500, HK wrote: wrote: On Thu, 10 Jan 2008 14:47:03 -0500, John H. wrote: On Thu, 10 Jan 2008 18:48:22 GMT, wrote: On Thu, 10 Jan 2008 13:43:15 -0500, John H. wrote: On Thu, 10 Jan 2008 09:14:08 -0500, wrote: On Thu, 10 Jan 2008 08:41:43 -0500, HK wrote: wrote: On Thu, 10 Jan 2008 08:07:52 -0500, John H. wrote: I have a 160 GB external hard disk to which I tried to back up my documents and settings using the Windows backup system. After about a half hour, I get a message saying there's not enough room for the backup, and that if the hard disk is FAT 32, the backup can be no larger than 4 GB. So I checked, and sure enough, the external HD is FAT 32. Now what? I already have about 50 GB of stuff on the external HD that I don't want to lose by reformatting (if that's what's required). You have a couple of options. If there is enough room on your computer's harddrive, copy the archives there temporarily while you work on the external drive. Then you can use a program called "Partition Magic" to do the reconfiguration without risk to your archives. Partition Magic "could" do the conversion with the files in place, BUT: No matter what method you use to convert the disk to NTFS, the only way to guarantee your files will be safe is to back them up somewhere else. The other option is to buy another external hard drive. They are dirt cheap these days. Newegg is very reliable to deal with and has a ton of external drives to chose from. They even have a no name 160gb drive for less than $70 including shipping. I've got several Maxtor's and they have been great. Still relatively cheap. I also HIGHLY recommend that you do NOT use Windows Backup for anything you care about. The reason is simple: When you want to recover those backups a couple of years from now, you will find that every new version of Windows has a new version of windows backup, and they are NOT compatible! Use a separate backup program. Jesus. This is overkill. It is a relatively trivial task to convert a drive from FAT32 to the New Technology File System, aka NTFS. There's a simple procedure to accomplish it, which I posted here. You can do it without losing the data on the hard drive. I've done it a few times without any problems. I don't care if you've done it a thousand times with no problem. It's HIS data on the drive, and he said he doesn't want to lose it. I believe him, and took that into account. You have firmly established your lack of computer expertise in many previous posts. Now you are recommending that he risk data he said he doesn't want to lose. Guess what? You could cross the freeway blindfolded as many times as you've converted drives while they have data on them, and you might survive every time, as well. Please try THAT experiment and get back to us. One more time: "No matter what method you use to convert the disk to NTFS, the only way to guarantee your files will be safe is to back them up somewhere else" Which is the same advice Microsoft gives. It's also just plain common sense. The difference between me and HK is that I am presently employed by a medium sized city (one of the larger cities in Connecticut) to oversee the entire city network, which includes all city departments, Police, Fire, Utilities, school system and libraries. A few more than 40 servers, and 2500+ desktops. And this is my "retirement job"! Just keep in mind that Harry's probably managed *two* large city networks (LA and NYC, for example), with at least 100 servers, and well over 5000+ desktops. I rode in a lobster boat a few times... Does that count for anything? From what I have seen here of you, I doubt you could tie your shoes without help. In that regard, you and Herring are well-matched. He's pretty helpless, too. FIND SOMEONE TO HELP YOU FIX YOUR KILL FILTER. You're out of it for the moment. It's important to have one or two droolers around. That's your rice bowl here. Where do you keep your boat, by the way? |
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wrote in message
... On Thu, 10 Jan 2008 16:09:41 -0500, John H. wrote: Have you tried Norton NDD? It fixes lots of stuff CHKDSK and ScanDisk can't. No. I don't have anything Norton. For some reason, from many years ago, I got a bad taste in my mouth from Norton. Don't remember the details. -- Probably that lousy anti-virus software or something that happened when Symantec took over. When it was Peter Norton, they did some great things with disk recovery software. I have taken "broken" drives out of the trash and fixed them with NDD. http://esteroriverheights.com/electrical/norton/ They had an excellent backup software product, too. It was an un-raped version of the piece 'o **** that came with Windows back in the day. It was so good, they discontinued it. |
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JoeSpareBedroom wrote:
wrote in message ... On Thu, 10 Jan 2008 16:09:41 -0500, John H. wrote: Have you tried Norton NDD? It fixes lots of stuff CHKDSK and ScanDisk can't. No. I don't have anything Norton. For some reason, from many years ago, I got a bad taste in my mouth from Norton. Don't remember the details. -- Probably that lousy anti-virus software or something that happened when Symantec took over. When it was Peter Norton, they did some great things with disk recovery software. I have taken "broken" drives out of the trash and fixed them with NDD. http://esteroriverheights.com/electrical/norton/ They had an excellent backup software product, too. It was an un-raped version of the piece 'o **** that came with Windows back in the day. It was so good, they discontinued it. Just another example of what happens when a BIG corporation takes over another company. Almost invariably, the smaller company's product line is examined by the bigger company's MBAs and then turned into crap. |
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HK wrote:
FIND SOMEONE TO HELP YOU FIX YOUR KILL FILTER. You're out of it for the moment. It's important to have one or two droolers around. That's your rice bowl here. Harry and his fill filter, almost as elusive as his Lobster Boat. |
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On Thu, 10 Jan 2008 17:05:13 -0500, HK wrote:
JoeSpareBedroom wrote: wrote in message ... On Thu, 10 Jan 2008 16:09:41 -0500, John H. wrote: Have you tried Norton NDD? It fixes lots of stuff CHKDSK and ScanDisk can't. No. I don't have anything Norton. For some reason, from many years ago, I got a bad taste in my mouth from Norton. Don't remember the details. -- Probably that lousy anti-virus software or something that happened when Symantec took over. When it was Peter Norton, they did some great things with disk recovery software. I have taken "broken" drives out of the trash and fixed them with NDD. http://esteroriverheights.com/electrical/norton/ They had an excellent backup software product, too. It was an un-raped version of the piece 'o **** that came with Windows back in the day. It was so good, they discontinued it. Just another example of what happens when a BIG corporation takes over another company. Almost invariably, the smaller company's product line is examined by the bigger company's MBAs and then turned into crap. They should all be under government control! -- John H |
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On Thu, 10 Jan 2008 21:48:52 GMT, wrote:
On Thu, 10 Jan 2008 14:47:03 -0500, John H. wrote: On Thu, 10 Jan 2008 18:48:22 GMT, wrote: On Thu, 10 Jan 2008 13:43:15 -0500, John H. wrote: On Thu, 10 Jan 2008 09:14:08 -0500, wrote: On Thu, 10 Jan 2008 08:41:43 -0500, HK wrote: wrote: On Thu, 10 Jan 2008 08:07:52 -0500, John H. wrote: I have a 160 GB external hard disk to which I tried to back up my documents and settings using the Windows backup system. After about a half hour, I get a message saying there's not enough room for the backup, and that if the hard disk is FAT 32, the backup can be no larger than 4 GB. So I checked, and sure enough, the external HD is FAT 32. Now what? I already have about 50 GB of stuff on the external HD that I don't want to lose by reformatting (if that's what's required). You have a couple of options. If there is enough room on your computer's harddrive, copy the archives there temporarily while you work on the external drive. Then you can use a program called "Partition Magic" to do the reconfiguration without risk to your archives. Partition Magic "could" do the conversion with the files in place, BUT: No matter what method you use to convert the disk to NTFS, the only way to guarantee your files will be safe is to back them up somewhere else. The other option is to buy another external hard drive. They are dirt cheap these days. Newegg is very reliable to deal with and has a ton of external drives to chose from. They even have a no name 160gb drive for less than $70 including shipping. I've got several Maxtor's and they have been great. Still relatively cheap. I also HIGHLY recommend that you do NOT use Windows Backup for anything you care about. The reason is simple: When you want to recover those backups a couple of years from now, you will find that every new version of Windows has a new version of windows backup, and they are NOT compatible! Use a separate backup program. Jesus. This is overkill. It is a relatively trivial task to convert a drive from FAT32 to the New Technology File System, aka NTFS. There's a simple procedure to accomplish it, which I posted here. You can do it without losing the data on the hard drive. I've done it a few times without any problems. I don't care if you've done it a thousand times with no problem. It's HIS data on the drive, and he said he doesn't want to lose it. I believe him, and took that into account. You have firmly established your lack of computer expertise in many previous posts. Now you are recommending that he risk data he said he doesn't want to lose. Guess what? You could cross the freeway blindfolded as many times as you've converted drives while they have data on them, and you might survive every time, as well. Please try THAT experiment and get back to us. One more time: "No matter what method you use to convert the disk to NTFS, the only way to guarantee your files will be safe is to back them up somewhere else" Which is the same advice Microsoft gives. It's also just plain common sense. The difference between me and HK is that I am presently employed by a medium sized city (one of the larger cities in Connecticut) to oversee the entire city network, which includes all city departments, Police, Fire, Utilities, school system and libraries. A few more than 40 servers, and 2500+ desktops. And this is my "retirement job"! Just keep in mind that Harry's probably managed *two* large city networks (LA and NYC, for example), with at least 100 servers, and well over 5000+ desktops. I rode in a lobster boat a few times... Does that count for anything? Only if you *owned* it. -- John H |
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On Thu, 10 Jan 2008 17:01:00 -0500, wrote:
On Thu, 10 Jan 2008 16:52:34 -0500, HK wrote: wrote: On Thu, 10 Jan 2008 14:47:03 -0500, John H. wrote: On Thu, 10 Jan 2008 18:48:22 GMT, wrote: On Thu, 10 Jan 2008 13:43:15 -0500, John H. wrote: On Thu, 10 Jan 2008 09:14:08 -0500, wrote: On Thu, 10 Jan 2008 08:41:43 -0500, HK wrote: wrote: On Thu, 10 Jan 2008 08:07:52 -0500, John H. wrote: I have a 160 GB external hard disk to which I tried to back up my documents and settings using the Windows backup system. After about a half hour, I get a message saying there's not enough room for the backup, and that if the hard disk is FAT 32, the backup can be no larger than 4 GB. So I checked, and sure enough, the external HD is FAT 32. Now what? I already have about 50 GB of stuff on the external HD that I don't want to lose by reformatting (if that's what's required). You have a couple of options. If there is enough room on your computer's harddrive, copy the archives there temporarily while you work on the external drive. Then you can use a program called "Partition Magic" to do the reconfiguration without risk to your archives. Partition Magic "could" do the conversion with the files in place, BUT: No matter what method you use to convert the disk to NTFS, the only way to guarantee your files will be safe is to back them up somewhere else. The other option is to buy another external hard drive. They are dirt cheap these days. Newegg is very reliable to deal with and has a ton of external drives to chose from. They even have a no name 160gb drive for less than $70 including shipping. I've got several Maxtor's and they have been great. Still relatively cheap. I also HIGHLY recommend that you do NOT use Windows Backup for anything you care about. The reason is simple: When you want to recover those backups a couple of years from now, you will find that every new version of Windows has a new version of windows backup, and they are NOT compatible! Use a separate backup program. Jesus. This is overkill. It is a relatively trivial task to convert a drive from FAT32 to the New Technology File System, aka NTFS. There's a simple procedure to accomplish it, which I posted here. You can do it without losing the data on the hard drive. I've done it a few times without any problems. I don't care if you've done it a thousand times with no problem. It's HIS data on the drive, and he said he doesn't want to lose it. I believe him, and took that into account. You have firmly established your lack of computer expertise in many previous posts. Now you are recommending that he risk data he said he doesn't want to lose. Guess what? You could cross the freeway blindfolded as many times as you've converted drives while they have data on them, and you might survive every time, as well. Please try THAT experiment and get back to us. One more time: "No matter what method you use to convert the disk to NTFS, the only way to guarantee your files will be safe is to back them up somewhere else" Which is the same advice Microsoft gives. It's also just plain common sense. The difference between me and HK is that I am presently employed by a medium sized city (one of the larger cities in Connecticut) to oversee the entire city network, which includes all city departments, Police, Fire, Utilities, school system and libraries. A few more than 40 servers, and 2500+ desktops. And this is my "retirement job"! Just keep in mind that Harry's probably managed *two* large city networks (LA and NYC, for example), with at least 100 servers, and well over 5000+ desktops. I rode in a lobster boat a few times... Does that count for anything? From what I have seen here of you, I doubt you could tie your shoes without help. In that regard, you and Herring are well-matched. He's pretty helpless, too. FIND SOMEONE TO HELP YOU FIX YOUR KILL FILTER. He was probably using the 'puter on the lobsta' boat. When you have ten or twelve 'puters, it's hard to keep track of your filters. Hell, it's hard to remember where you keep the Excell spreadsheet used to keep track of all the filters! -- John H |
Help needed - Computer stuff
John H. wrote:
And this is my "retirement job"! Just keep in mind that Harry's probably managed *two* large city networks (LA and NYC, for example), with at least 100 servers, and well over 5000+ desktops. I rode in a lobster boat a few times... Does that count for anything? Only if you *owned* it. I saw a Lobster Boat, and wondered what it would be like to own one. Does that count? |
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Help needed - Computer stuff
wrote:
On Thu, 10 Jan 2008 18:03:00 -0500, HK wrote: wrote: On Thu, 10 Jan 2008 18:00:27 -0500, HK wrote: wrote: Damn! So, what sort of boat do you own, and where do you keep it? Why? Need a place to sleep? I have a feeling the closest you get to deep water is during your weekly sheep dip. I'm glad for you. So, where in New Haven do you live... |
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"HK" wrote in message
... JoeSpareBedroom wrote: wrote in message ... On Thu, 10 Jan 2008 16:09:41 -0500, John H. wrote: Have you tried Norton NDD? It fixes lots of stuff CHKDSK and ScanDisk can't. No. I don't have anything Norton. For some reason, from many years ago, I got a bad taste in my mouth from Norton. Don't remember the details. -- Probably that lousy anti-virus software or something that happened when Symantec took over. When it was Peter Norton, they did some great things with disk recovery software. I have taken "broken" drives out of the trash and fixed them with NDD. http://esteroriverheights.com/electrical/norton/ They had an excellent backup software product, too. It was an un-raped version of the piece 'o **** that came with Windows back in the day. It was so good, they discontinued it. Just another example of what happens when a BIG corporation takes over another company. Almost invariably, the smaller company's product line is examined by the bigger company's MBAs and then turned into crap. Actually, it was the other way around. |
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wrote:
On Thu, 10 Jan 2008 18:08:51 -0500, HK wrote: wrote: On Thu, 10 Jan 2008 18:03:00 -0500, HK wrote: wrote: On Thu, 10 Jan 2008 18:00:27 -0500, HK wrote: wrote: Damn! So, what sort of boat do you own, and where do you keep it? Why? Need a place to sleep? I have a feeling the closest you get to deep water is during your weekly sheep dip. I'm glad for you. So, where in New Haven do you live... Not even close, Dopey. Go play in traffic. Uh-huh. |
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On Jan 10, 5:22*pm, "Reginald P. Smithers III" "Reggie is Here
wrote: John H. wrote: And this is my "retirement job"! Just keep in mind that Harry's probably managed *two* large city networks (LA and NYC, for example), with at least 100 servers, and well over 5000+ desktops. I rode in a lobster boat a few times... Does that count for anything? Only if you *owned* it. I saw a Lobster Boat, and wondered what it would be like to own one. Does that count? Apparently it makes you a seasoned captain.;) |
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On Thu, 10 Jan 2008 18:08:51 -0500, HK wrote:
So, where in New Haven do you live... He lives in Wallingford, probably works in Hartford or New Haven. |
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On Jan 10, 7:50*pm, wrote:
On Thu, 10 Jan 2008 19:29:58 -0500, HK wrote: wrote: On Thu, 10 Jan 2008 18:08:51 -0500, HK wrote: wrote: On Thu, 10 Jan 2008 18:03:00 -0500, HK wrote: wrote: On Thu, 10 Jan 2008 18:00:27 -0500, HK wrote: wrote: Damn! So, what sort of boat do you own, and where do you keep it? Why? Need a place to sleep? I have a feeling the closest you get to deep water is during your weekly sheep dip. I'm glad for you. So, where in New Haven do you live... Not even close, Dopey. Go play in traffic. Uh-huh. I just posted a picture of me sailing PAST New Haven a few years ago, "over there". *I don't live in New Haven or even particularly close. I don't keep my boats there either. It's been a pretty rough day for you here in rec.boats. Why don't you go try to get some sleep.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Hey Salty, you in CT?? |
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wrote in message
... On Jan 10, 7:50 pm, wrote: On Thu, 10 Jan 2008 19:29:58 -0500, HK wrote: wrote: On Thu, 10 Jan 2008 18:08:51 -0500, HK wrote: wrote: On Thu, 10 Jan 2008 18:03:00 -0500, HK wrote: wrote: On Thu, 10 Jan 2008 18:00:27 -0500, HK wrote: wrote: Damn! So, what sort of boat do you own, and where do you keep it? Why? Need a place to sleep? I have a feeling the closest you get to deep water is during your weekly sheep dip. I'm glad for you. So, where in New Haven do you live... Not even close, Dopey. Go play in traffic. Uh-huh. I just posted a picture of me sailing PAST New Haven a few years ago, "over there". I don't live in New Haven or even particularly close. I don't keep my boats there either. It's been a pretty rough day for you here in rec.boats. Why don't you go try to get some sleep.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Hey Salty, you in CT?? ======================== Salty - don't tell him! He's tryin' to get you to come over and show him how to refill the toilet paper thing. |
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On Thu, 10 Jan 2008 16:08:04 -0500, "Eisboch"
wrote: I have Windows 98SE on an older laptop that I use for a midi interface and sequencer for the keyboards. It runs fine, but I haven't used it on the 'Net for a long time. The other computers, (this one on the boat) and my HP both run XP. I am no computer guru, but XP Pro has been the most stable Microsoft OS since Windows 3.1, in my experience. I run XP Pro on my primary laptop because it came that way but all of my other machines run Win2K. I've probably overlooked a few but there are only two things about XP that I perceive to be an improvement: The image/slideshow viewer, and the network "repair" function. Vista? Who needs it. Maybe after SP3 or so. |
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On Thu, 10 Jan 2008 16:43:11 -0500, wrote:
If your usage doesn't change, why should you buy new software?. Exactly. It's like buying a new car because the style changed. |
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Help needed - Computer stuff
On Thu, 10 Jan 2008 19:11:25 -0500, WaIIy wrote:
On Thu, 10 Jan 2008 08:07:52 -0500, John H. wrote: I have a 160 GB external hard disk to which I tried to back up my documents and settings using the Windows backup system. After about a half hour, I get a message saying there's not enough room for the backup, and that if the hard disk is FAT 32, the backup can be no larger than 4 GB. So I checked, and sure enough, the external HD is FAT 32. Now what? I already have about 50 GB of stuff on the external HD that I don't want to lose by reformatting (if that's what's required). I think your problem is file size. If I recall correctly, a Fat32 file can be no larger than about 4 gigs. I think the Windows utility made one giant file. The Windows backup system sucks. Get something like Second Copy.... http://www.centered.com/ A good freeware... http://www.karenware.com/powertools/ptreplicator.asp You're correct about the file size and the making of one giant file. Once the size hit 4gigs, the backup stopped. Thanks for the freeware site. That looks inter4esting. Have you used it (the karenware)? -- John H |
Help needed - Computer stuff
On Thu, 10 Jan 2008 20:09:07 -0500, Wayne.B
wrote: On Thu, 10 Jan 2008 16:08:04 -0500, "Eisboch" wrote: I have Windows 98SE on an older laptop that I use for a midi interface and sequencer for the keyboards. It runs fine, but I haven't used it on the 'Net for a long time. The other computers, (this one on the boat) and my HP both run XP. I am no computer guru, but XP Pro has been the most stable Microsoft OS since Windows 3.1, in my experience. I run XP Pro on my primary laptop because it came that way but all of my other machines run Win2K. I've probably overlooked a few but there are only two things about XP that I perceive to be an improvement: The image/slideshow viewer, and the network "repair" function. Vista? Who needs it. Maybe after SP3 or so. IrfanView has a great slideshow/image viewer, and does well at small changes to images. It's still free. http://www.irfanview.com/ -- John H |
Help needed - Computer stuff
On Thu, 10 Jan 2008 20:14:20 -0500, Wayne.B
wrote: On Thu, 10 Jan 2008 20:10:35 GMT, wrote: I even know one guy who keeps his backups in his pickup truck parked outside. Tupperware is a beautiful thing! Some of us here even own boats. Imagine that. Hell, some of us own the boats we *say* we own! -- John H |
Help needed - Computer stuff
On Thu, 10 Jan 2008 20:10:34 -0500, Wayne.B
wrote: It's like buying a new car because the style changed. Um.... Never mind. :) |
Help needed - Computer stuff
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Help needed - Computer stuff
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Help needed - Computer stuff
wrote in message ... On Thu, 10 Jan 2008 13:43:15 -0500, John H. wrote: On Thu, 10 Jan 2008 09:14:08 -0500, wrote: On Thu, 10 Jan 2008 08:41:43 -0500, HK wrote: wrote: On Thu, 10 Jan 2008 08:07:52 -0500, John H. wrote: I have a 160 GB external hard disk to which I tried to back up my documents and settings using the Windows backup system. After about a half hour, I get a message saying there's not enough room for the backup, and that if the hard disk is FAT 32, the backup can be no larger than 4 GB. So I checked, and sure enough, the external HD is FAT 32. Now what? I already have about 50 GB of stuff on the external HD that I don't want to lose by reformatting (if that's what's required). You have a couple of options. If there is enough room on your computer's harddrive, copy the archives there temporarily while you work on the external drive. Then you can use a program called "Partition Magic" to do the reconfiguration without risk to your archives. Partition Magic "could" do the conversion with the files in place, BUT: No matter what method you use to convert the disk to NTFS, the only way to guarantee your files will be safe is to back them up somewhere else. The other option is to buy another external hard drive. They are dirt cheap these days. Newegg is very reliable to deal with and has a ton of external drives to chose from. They even have a no name 160gb drive for less than $70 including shipping. I've got several Maxtor's and they have been great. Still relatively cheap. I also HIGHLY recommend that you do NOT use Windows Backup for anything you care about. The reason is simple: When you want to recover those backups a couple of years from now, you will find that every new version of Windows has a new version of windows backup, and they are NOT compatible! Use a separate backup program. Jesus. This is overkill. It is a relatively trivial task to convert a drive from FAT32 to the New Technology File System, aka NTFS. There's a simple procedure to accomplish it, which I posted here. You can do it without losing the data on the hard drive. I've done it a few times without any problems. I don't care if you've done it a thousand times with no problem. It's HIS data on the drive, and he said he doesn't want to lose it. I believe him, and took that into account. You have firmly established your lack of computer expertise in many previous posts. Now you are recommending that he risk data he said he doesn't want to lose. Guess what? You could cross the freeway blindfolded as many times as you've converted drives while they have data on them, and you might survive every time, as well. Please try THAT experiment and get back to us. One more time: "No matter what method you use to convert the disk to NTFS, the only way to guarantee your files will be safe is to back them up somewhere else" Which is the same advice Microsoft gives. It's also just plain common sense. The difference between me and HK is that I am presently employed by a medium sized city (one of the larger cities in Connecticut) to oversee the entire city network, which includes all city departments, Police, Fire, Utilities, school system and libraries. A few more than 40 servers, and 2500+ desktops. And this is my "retirement job"! Any you use Microsoft for anything critical? |
Help needed - Computer stuff
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Help needed - Computer stuff
HK wrote:
wrote: On Thu, 10 Jan 2008 18:03:00 -0500, HK wrote: wrote: On Thu, 10 Jan 2008 18:00:27 -0500, HK wrote: wrote: Damn! So, what sort of boat do you own, and where do you keep it? Why? Need a place to sleep? I have a feeling the closest you get to deep water is during your weekly sheep dip. I'm glad for you. So, where in New Haven do you live... Why don't you hire a PI to build a dossier on him? Or, you could do the legwork your self. |
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