Configuration required to use Ghost Windows XP Link Google Drive: First, the CPU must be 233 Mhz or more. Second, the minimum RAM is 64 MB. Third, the video card: Super-VGA with a minimum resolution of 800 x 600. 4th, hard drive memory: 1.5 GB free. The Internets largest database of PC Game Saves. Every PC game save provided here has been screened by the community and confirmed as working.
Tips for better search results • Ensure correct spelling and spacing - Examples: 'paper jam' • Use product model name: - Examples: “laserjet pro p1102”, “DeskJet 2130” • For HP products, enter a serial number or product number. - Examples: “HU265BM18V”, “LG534UA” • For Samsung Print products, enter the M/C or Model Code found on the product label. - Examples: “SL-M2020W/XAA” • Include keywords along with product name.
Examples: 'LaserJet Pro P1102 paper jam', 'EliteBook 840 G3 bios update' Need help finding your product name, number or serial number? The radiated output power of this device is far below the FCC radio frequency exposure limits. Nevertheless, the device shall be used in such a manner that the potential for human contact during normal operation is minimized.
This product and any attached external antenna, if supported, shall be placed in such a manner to minimize the potential for human contact during normal operation. In order to avoid the possibility of exceeding the FCC radio frequency exposure limits, human proximity to the antenna shall not be less than 20 cm (8 inches) during normal operation.
Canon MAXIFY MB2040 Driver Download OS compatibility Support for Free Driver: Win 8 Win 7 Win XP Win Vista. Monthly print variety of between 200 in. Repositories of spreadsheets to discover an organisation's dependence on spreadsheet usage for key business processes. Section 3 presents the technology used for collating and analysing data. Section 4 presents. Either a version of Windows 2000or Windows XP and using Microsoft Office 2003 or Office 2007.
Hi I've been given the task of looking at the options of reporting on some data presented in CSV files. Basically I will be receiving CSV files, each one containing the results of an assessment of someone. This will include the individuals data such as name, title and work area, the assessors data such as name, working relationship and finally the results of the assessment questions (which are answered by scoring on a rating scale 1-5). In an ideal world, I'd like to be able to use these files to create reports, including using charts, to show individual results and results across work area and organisation etc. As much as possible, I would like this to be automated. So, maybe manual importing of the files but the majority of report creating to be automatic.
With no budget to buy in expert software or consultancy, I'm wondering whether this can be done using Excel. A Linguagem Secreta Dos Relacionamentos Pdf To Excel. I'm competent with Excel but no expert. I do have access to some expertise though. I'm not looking for detailed step by step process at this stage but if it is possible with Excel, the basic functions/processes to be used and any limitations etc. Also, are there any alternative solutions which do not require specialist expertise or low cost software options which might give me a good case to plead for funds? Many thanks Mike. Hey Mike, Short answer is yes it can be done in Excel.
Excel is amazing at calculations and good at housing data, but it is not a database. I've used it as such in the past (lack of time spent with Access), and the more infomration the slowing Excel will be. If it is going to be a calculation intensive workbook using wild formulas with more than say 200,000 rows, I would suggest using an actual database program (Access is a good one). If you are looking for quick reports and the workbook will remain fairly small, then Excel will do what you want. Macro's are probably what you are going to end up using, at least for some of it.
What I am thinking is something like this: 1. Paste CSV information into column A of a dump sheet. Run a macro that will separate and organize the data the way you want. Have a worksheet with lookup formulas based on a cell value (this value will be for your 'individuals'). Graphs and 'individuals' data will autopopulate based on that value. Have a worksheet with lookup formulas based on cell value (this value will be for your 'work area'). Graphs and 'individuals' data will autopopulate based on that value.
If you want the report to be able to build, you will have to have a date system as well. That way you can reference time frames for data that was entered. If you design the layout of how you want the data presented and some raw data to work withwe can fill in the blanks. Design is by far my weakest point ^_^. I'll repeat one time just to be thorough. Databases are best in programs made for databases, such as Access. I personally cannot help you with Access very much.
Ciao, Robert D. Mike If you are using Excel 2007 - then post like minimu 2 CSV files you want to import - fonny info - but correct structure. I will write a small VBA program that allows you use the Windows API for file import - I will allow you to multiselect files.
Then import them into excel. In terms of how to chart data. I have today posted a question regarding charts - how to unjoin data points in a series of data. I uploaded code that generate a chart - so take a look at that in terms of how to add a chart - reading data in and so fourth. Not sure how much VBA experience you have - I am learning - the hard way.
If you have like 200K (Excel 2003 is limited to 2^16 rows - so 2007 is a minimum) rows then make sure you set the sheet as an object - that way you can do all the work on the object and then release the memory in one go when you are done. Anyway - Not sure if you ready to get into coding - or simply was looking at options.
Cheers PS My sheets have up to 100K rows - you really gotta manage your resources. Especially if you are making charts - I think the max number of data points in a single series is 32K. Search this Thread Similar Threads Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post Vista x64 What was original installed OS on system? Custom built. OEM: Full Retail Version Age of system (hardware): 3 years Age of OS installation - have you re-installed the OS? CPU: Intel Core 2 Duo E8400 Wolfdale Video Card: EVGA GEforce 8800 GT.
Ajcc323 BSOD, App Crashes And Hangs 25 05:31 AM My computer is completely screwed! First no sound now this!
Almost every time I try to do something on the internet my page is getting redirected to something else! I always have to rush to click the X button to stop the page from loading. But I want a permanent fix! TheresMoreToMe Resolved HJT Threads 26 05:48 PM i cant play ghost recon on my pc. When i click the ghost recon.exe. It opens but suddenly it closes and nothing happens.
Pls help me. Here is my pc spec: processor: intel pentium 4 1.8ghz. Ram: 510mb video card: nvidia geforce fx 5200 128 mb, direct x version: 9.0c and here is the. Kyuubi08 PC Gaming Support 2 10:39 PM I have a burning error in audio blank using Nero 6.
Below is my log, What is the problem? Windows XP 5.1 IA32 WinAspi: - ahead WinASPI: File 'C: Program Files Ahead Nero Wnaspi32.dll': Ver=2.0.1.74, size=164112 bytes, created 5:35:34 PM zhong Windows XP Support 12 12:22 AM Hey, i have a loud buzzing noise coming from inside my computer. Thinking it would be the fans i cleaned them but the sounds are still there and sound much quieter when i tap the top of my computer with my hand. What do you think is the issue here and how would i go about fixing it? Boedicia RAM and Power Supply Support 6 03:21 PM Posting Rules.
By December 15th, 2004 With the cost of solid state disks like Compact Flash and USB thumb drives coming down in price, they have become an attractive option to use as a replacement for hard drives on home entertainment PCs. They are noise free and generate very little heat. This article describes how I was able to get, a.Net application, running Windows XP Home using an inexpensive compact flash card. As a disclaimer, please note that your mileage may vary when doing this procedure so please don’t blame me if things go badly, your spouse leaves you, and/or your dog bites you as a result of this article. My first attempt was to do this with a USB thumb drive, given the motherboard I was using, a, has an option in BIOS to boot to a USB drive. After many failed attempts and investigation, I believe Windows XP does not support booting off of a USB drive no matter how much wishful thinking, so I took an alternative road using a compact flash card and an IDE adaptor.
Tai Ban Ghost Win Xp Sp3 200mb mediafire links free download, download Ghost win XP Pro SP3 version 4 3 by Nguyen Anh, تحميل نسخة ويندوز Ghost Windows.
Please let me know in the comments if you have found a way to get USB drives to boot into Windows XP. I used a cheap 1 gig Compact Flash card but depending on your skill level and tolerance of repeated attempts, I believe this can be done on a 512MB card as well. BeyondTV Link (and the associated Firefly remote software) use.Net which increases the disk usage significantly, so if you are using a different application, I think 512MB is adequate. I also used a compact flash IDE adaptor which is pretty easy to find both online and at electronics stores.
I used two applications in the process. One I think is essential to the cause for anyone who isn’t an expert, a very handy application that will help you remove components from the Windows OS. The other is, which makes it easy to resize and copy one hard drive to another. I believe there are open source projects that can do some of this, but I find Partition Magic easy and dependable so it’s worth the cost to purchase it.
Step 1 – Build system using a hard drive Windows XP Home requires a minimum of 1.5Gigs of hard drive space, so the first step is to build the system using a standard hard drive. I created a partition of 2 Gigs but found it inadequate to installing Service Pack 2, so I suggest putting the OS on a 3 Gigs or bigger drive to start. I installed a fresh copy of the OS using NTFS since it has a handy “compress files” option which I use later. I then added the VIA drivers and spent a good deal of time in Windows Update getting all the latest patches.
I also installed BeyondTV Link and the Firefly Remote software. I then verified everything was working properly. At this point, it wouldn’t be a bad idea to back everything up using a tool like Partition Magic in case you need to come back to this point (I learned this the hard way) Step 2 – Turn off Virtual Memory The first thing you’ll want to do is turn off virtual memory so it doesn’t create a paging file on the drive. This can be found by right clicking “My Computer” and selecting “Properties”.
It’s under the Advanced Tab, buried in another dialog by selecting the “Settings” button under Performance. From there, it’s under yet another “Advanced” tab and it’s labeled Virtual Memory (). Make sure that when you select “No paging file” you hit the “Set” button or it won’t actually adjust the settings. Step 3 – XPLite from LitePC The next step for me was pruning back the OS using XPLite from LitePC. The first thing you should do is “disable” Windows File Protection in the aptly named “Window File Protection” tab ().
If you don’t, you’ll find windows constantly complaining about missing files. I removed most components including those Advanced Components you can get to show up by changing the default settings (). Be careful though, since you’ll likely remove the System Restore feature which gobbles up a lot of space, but prevents you from doing something completely irreversible.
For more information on how to use the product. Make sure you reboot a couple times afterwards to remove any system restore points. Step 4 – Clean up The next thing I did was to boot into Windows Safe Mode (hold down the F8 key) to do some basic clean up of the system. Make sure you have changed file explorer to show hidden and system files.
This can be found in the “Folder Options” menu in the “View” tab. Your final system will likely be different from mine, but here are a few good things to remove or change to get more disk space: • Delete anything in the Windows directory that starts with $NTUninstall. • Delete anything I the Windows/SoftwareDistribution/Download directory. • On larger directories, go to the properties dialog and select the “Advanced” button and pick “compress contents to save disk space”. Note that this is only available if you formatted your drive using NTFS. I did this to the following folders: Program Files, Windows/Microsoft.NET, Windows/.inf, Windows/system32.
Doing just that, I got the system down to 750MB or so. Being more aggressive, at one point I had a working system under 500MB. Step 5 – Resize and Copy I ran the floppy boot disks for Partition Magic to resize and move the OS to the compact flash card. Make sure you resize the hard drive partition small enough to fit the compact flash card, and then from within Partition Magic, copy the drive over to the compact flash drive. Final Step – Remove original Drive and put Compact Flash Drive in its place The final step is to remove the original hard drive and switch the connectors so it puts the compact flash drive in its place.
Make sure it’s in the same location on the ID Bus (e.g Master Drive, Primary IDE channel) or you’ll quickly run into a “NTloader is Missing” error. With any luck, it will boot up as it did before, albeit a lot more quietly than that squeaky old disk you were using before. That’s a good point about rewrites, jaxun. I’d heard about that limitation before, but didn’t consider it when I built my system. It would definitely be a bad idea to use the compact flash for the swap file. The other limitation of compact flash is speed, which in my system, didn’t have a real impact on BeyondTV Link, except for a slight extra delay when loading. Compact flash as a media is much slower than a traditional hard drive, and I was surprised by how vastly different the transfer rates are for different compact flash cards.
Has a good chart on the differences between cards. The overall point being that not only do applications that are disk intensive have an impact on the longevity of the card, but it also could make it slower than hell. I wish I would have made those two points in the original article, but I’m glad you posted the comment on them to make the point. I have tried this. However partition magic 7 and 8 both refuse to see my compact flash card. (within XP it is showing up fine as drive E: ) It doesn’t matter if I connect it as a USB drive or through the CF-to-IDE adpater on the secondary master IDE. It always shows up in windows xp as a removable 1GB drive and partition magic can not see it.
I can format it through xp to be an NTFS partition fine. But because it can not be seen in partition magic I am unable to copy the partition from my C: drive (hard disk) to my compact flash. I am not booting from a floppy. My PC does not have a floppy drive. Would this make a difference?
Can anybody help me. How do you make the CF appear as a drive in partition magic? Totally baffled •.
(updated 5/3/05) I had same issue with Partition Magic 8.0 I had same issue with Partition Magic 8.1 I had same issue with Norton Ghost v9.0 Worked with Norton Ghost v7.0 Following GHOSTing system would not boot from the CF card, error “NTLDR is missing” This is beacause I forgot that CF card MUST go back in same place as original drive same IDE cable/channel and same master/slave position (thank you Will for the reminder – see below). Finally I have found someone looking to do the same thing as me. I have been investigating HTPC’s for over a year now and everyone seems to want to create one box with their hard drives in it. Yet rather my idea was to create a small set top box that will interact with a media server. Anyway my question for you is this: If the settop box and server are connected to a wireless network do you believe the media will stream well?
I have yet to find anyone who is streaming their media from a media server to a small client settop box. If I find out that this is ok then I will purchase a wireless card to put in the settop box. Thanks in advance, Eugene Kelly •.
I can stream movies using the new standard 11g, but in my setup, 11b is choppy. Distance (and the number of obstructions) from your access point to your thin client computer is a factor and the weaker the signal, the lower the speed. I don’t know a lot about wireless technology, but if you go with 11g, you might want to pick the same vendor for both the client machine and the access point. Many of the vendors seem to have proprietary extensions to the protocol to further increase speed. It also makes it easier to set up encryption since the user interface will be the same for creating passwords. A complete system should be designed with an equal level of quality for all parts, your system will only be as good as “the weakest link”.
What type of media files as you trying to stream? For me I am trying to create the best possible within my budget so I start with all video files in.vob format – EXACTLY as they are from the DVD with NO compression, to save some space I only have the main movie file, with one type of audio track this removes any ads, directors commentry, trailers, different camera views etc. DVDShrink.vob copy tool DVDGenie is a useful tool PowerDVD, Meedio.vob playback software:eek: If you use.avi or Divx compressed files I have not tried these as the quality is reduced. Starting with the highest quality media will allow highest possible image. I was unable to stream a movie to a high quailty over 802.11g network. I did not spend much time on this as I feel this is the wrong route to go down for my main viewing system. I’ll explain A cable should never have the issue of missing data, wireless currently might have, for me this possible risk was enough to wire the main system.
As software develops in this area data may stream into a buffer then the risk of lost data is minimised, slowly more systems seem to be going down this route. Lets look at LCD projectors (personally a hugh waste of money but thats a different topic, and yes CRT is the way BUT there are fewer of us about each year who can set them up, DO NOT MAIL AND ASK ME TO) These are available with a wireless system built in to many new ones. They are able to stream Video data only but not the audio as well, there is not enough room in the data transmission to do this, this is my reason for asking what type of media you wish to stream wireless. A powerpoint presentation will be fine a DVD film may glitch, HP, Epson etc. Are all working on this technology. If you were to go down the wireless route a system might comprise of the following items 1 Media Server linked to wireless access point 2 Media playback PC 3 Wireless LCD projector 4 Tivo/Sky/Set top Box with wireless adaptor (Blue items mentioned in original question) Now there are 4 items trying to share the wireless link, maybe now you add 2 wireless networks in your playback pc one for data from server, one to projector.
One day you wake up and think “music in the bedroom, or even a film” and the wireless system gets a little bit bigger and slower. Am I a fan of wireless:)? Yes, It has its place At home my Printer, Tivo, and Latops are all wireless. Printer and Tivo are non critical items for data transfer, Laptop can be used in the garden to surf or to quickly pickup a file I need, for me this is the right technology in the right place.
In the process of building the wireless media network. I have also decided to use original DVD files. I found a program that will rip just the movie file from the DVD without the extras. I then tried to convert the video files to DIVX but even with a 2.4GHZ P4 it was taking nearly 5-6 hours. With a DVD collection approaching 400 there is just no time for that. For my media server I will be using: 4 x 400GB hard drives standard P4 motherboard 512 DDR P4 2.4GHZ Custom Acrylic Case For media client box I will be using VIA EPIA MII 12000 512MB Ram Wireless Adapter Card Custom Acrylic Case —— For our next topic check this idea out. I read somewhere that people were able to interact with there HTPC’s via PDA.
The new Palm Pilots have wireless capabilities and a roughly 256MB of space. Imagine loading software like myHTPC or medio on the palm and using that like a remote to interact with your client HTPC box. I believe by doing this we could bypass using Girder and an IR device. I hear the Girder software is a pain in the ass to learn. I have now started my own post “welcome to MY world” in the “Just Chatting” section as we are now way off topic but I feel still a very useful one. I have added answers as I see to your post.
In the process of building the wireless media network. THINK what you are try to achieve in the very long run, wireless could end up expensive and needing upgrades, Cable is still my prefered MAIN system. I have also decided to use original DVD files.- Excellent Choice I found a program that will rip just the movie file from the DVD without the extras. I use DVD shrink, what did you find? I then tried to convert the video files to DIVX but even with a 2.4GHZ P4 it was taking nearly 5-6 hours.
BAD IDEA, if you start with the original.vob files WHY would you ever try and make them worse? If you use DVDShrink you can compress any amount you want from the original in the same time as a normal rip, eg 9-20 minutes depending on your machine. Interbase Xe Server Keygen For Mac.
You could also end up with BIGGER divx files than you started with! DivX, AVi – good for internet downloads. With DVDShrink at about 10-15% compression you will start to loose picture sharpness and definition, depending on your screen size, how close you sit etc each person will have a different idea of “quality” they are happy with. With a DVD collection approaching 400 there is just no time for that. – currently 462 films on my server, 2.8 Tarra Bytes of info. HOWEVER if you do decide to divX them, the idea is to run batches overnight and slowly change your collection, though to me a waste.
For my media server I will be using: 4 x 400GB hard drives – IF you dont have these yet look at 250 & 300, more space for your £,$ – cheaper to have more smaller drives, Raidcore / Broadcom SATA 8ch card about £225.00 MAKE SURE YOU COOL YOUR DRIVES, dont have to be cold but airflow is what matters standard P4 motherboard 512 DDR P4 2.4GHZ Custom Acrylic Case For media client box I will be using VIA EPIA MII 12000 512MB Ram – Same here always has 50%+ free so you could use less. Wireless Adapter Card – If you have too!!!!! Custom Acrylic Case All the best, •. Hello I have the same problem as MrJambo.
Tried Acronis Tue Image 8 and Partition Magic 8 and Norton Ghost 9: all refuse to see my compact flash card. (within XP it is showing up fine as drive D: ) It doesn’t matter if I connect it as a USB drive or through the CF-to-IDE adpater on the secondary master IDE (type CFDISK.2E see ) BIOS identifies it as Samsung CF/ATA (CFC is a Kingston Elite Pro 1Gb). Quote”It always shows up in windows xp as a removable 1GB drive and partition magic can not see it. I can format it through xp to be an NTFS partition fine.” (similar problem But because it can not be seen in partition magic I am unable to copy the partition from my C: drive (hard disk) to my compact flash. How do you make the CF appear as a drive in partition magic?
Or is it possible to use “bootprep”? Or something else? Regards, XTZebra •. The problem with booting from a USB is that XP will take control of the USB ports and reset them during the boot process. There is a great program utility called pebuilder (freeware for private) that is available. It is originally intended for creating a bootable WinXP CDROM.
Great for testing systems or recovering a crashed system. Recently they have also added support to create a bootable USB stick. The following link will point you to a very good article on how to do this.
I downloaded this and created a bootable stick with no problem. Took about 45 minutes from start to finish.
One other problem that can come up with booting XP from a Compact Flash module also is that the Hardware ID is set to REMOVABLE and it needs to be set to FIXED. You should be able to get a utility from your manufacturer that will allow you to change this (usually requires booting from DOS – Yuck!) or you can use a CF module from Simple Tech () since they come set to FIXED already. Hope this helps someone.
Regarding the limited re-write lifespan of CF memory cells, it is true that the “average” number of rewrites is about 100,000 before you get ONE bit error. Most data systems are made to compensate for single bit-errors.
According to Intel (inventors of strata-flash memory) and SanDisk, trademark holders of Compact Flash) there is an underlying “wear levelling” file system that prevents the same cells from being repeatedly overwritten. This underlies whatever filesystem you’re using. Therefore with respect to “wearing out” your precious (getting less precious) CF card, I’d say “fuggetaboutit”. Supernova sayang. I actually have a htpc using flash as an os drive and a server the htpc uses and ocz ssd the server uses a transcend flash module that (in my case) is plugged directly in the ide socket on the mobo, leaving me with 4 sata harddisk to work with. You can find them under industrial products, decent performance, long guarantee and simple to use. @mrjambo not al cf cards are created equal, cards need to support ultra dma mode 4 also i would recommend nlite (and its vista brother vlite) this allows you to remove and add components from xp and create a custom install drive, that way you never get the bloat on the disk allowing you to start small. (btw for server use, there is a tiny windows server build out there that not only use little disk space but also only `200mb ram) •.
Thanks for a very interesting read peeps. Been there and done it, as they say. This pc I am using now, is a CF 8Gb sandisk in a dual IDE converter plugged straight into the mobo IDE 0 (zero) socket. Windows XP SP3 and Office XP 2003 plus the usual crap (firefox, thunderbird, antivirus and firewall). External Maxtor 500 GB finishes it off.
Oh yeah, a 4GB CF card on the back = 12GB flash drive. Slow to boot but once running, no appreciable lag over a spinning platter. Just under a minute from power on to windows up and running. One piece of advice DO NOT USE HIBERNATE ON A CF CARD BASED SYSTEM! My God it is so bad!
Go make a cup of tea, take the dog for a walk round the block and catch a movie whilst you are out. Recovery from hibernate is so slow. It is quicker on my system to cold boot every time. Maybe I have missed something out on the setup side of things, but once running, I defy anyone to say it is slow. Benchtesting gives 50mbs read and 20mbs write speeds which is very good for cf cards.
Had my system running for about 18months now with few if any grievances. No loss of performance that I can see.
- Author: admin
- Category: Category