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Posts tagged with "tech"

computer weirdness suddenly subsides

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For quite awhile now this machine has been acting strangely (posts here and here), then suddenly everything is OK again.

The problem was that the hard drive kept showing errors, or the swap wouldn't mount, or the main partition wouldn't mount. I ran an fsck manually one time after the system went down, and it fixed a lot of errors, then the system went down again. I'm not that much of a geek about these things, so I have to guess at what to do as best I can.

I kept checking the IDE drive connections and even replaced the cable one time. Same problem.

I wanted to drop in a new SATA hard drive to see if the old IDE drive was what was giving problems, but I had to flash the BIOS to get it to work. This machine is about five years old, I think, and probably SATA's weren't around that much back then.

Anyway, once I flashed the BIOS, all is OK again. I didn't even install the new drive. Why would the BIOS make any difference? It's the same firmware that has worked correctly for years. I'll cross my fingers. All is running well for three days now, but probably it will go down again after this post. :lol:

All this reminds me of an English car I had many years ago. I would replace the brakes only to find out that some wiring went bad afterwards. I'd repack a wheel bearing and then the muffler would fall off. That car was the master of strange unrelated problems. The computer seems to be acting the same.

computer anatomy post deleted - lol

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I'll post pics of the computer internals again later after I get it working OK. I'm stress testing it at the moment.

:D :D :D

Hmmm, I just can't say it. :lol: :devil: Flickr, ummmm.

Added later:

Here are the family-friendly (expurgated) computer internals pictures.

Image #1: Stack of Western Digital hardness.

Computer Internals - Expurgated

Image #2: I hope the years of smooth running return soon. After flashing the BIOS, all seems strangely fine again.

Computer Internals - Expurgated

still working on the computer - sheesh

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My computer locked up again with hard drive errors (some prior posts). In the process of working out a solution, I ran into so many roadblocks it was crazy. Here's part of the sad tale.

My main hard drive is a 320GB IDE drive. I want to install a 750GB SATA drive, install Ubuntu to that, then just copy my home directory over to the larger drive. Even though the 320GB IDE drive is giving errors, I can read it from a CD boot of Linux, so the files seem safe.

Soooo, I install the SATA drive and discover that the BIOS hangs. Reading the Asus webpages about this old motherboard, I discover that a BIOS update will fix that, but this update must take place using a 3.5 inch floppy, but the floppy drive is in the non-booting computer, so I can't get online with the floppy-capable machine to write a file to a floppy. *sigh* Booting the ailing machine with a Linux CD results in all kinds of crazy problems trying to mount and write a msdos floppy. I'm starting to get madly frustrated at this point.

Now, let's select another machine that has a floppy drive and try to move on. More hell follows.

My attic is full of old computers that people have given me over the years, and they all have floppy drives, but I discover that only one machine also has an ethernet card. All the others just have dialup modems. I take the machine into another room where I have an ethernet connection, but my house is old, and the power outlet in there is the 2-prong type, and the computer power cords are all 3-prong. I can't find an adapter. This is crazy. I finally stretch the cords to a 3-prong outlet behind a heavy dresser and I boot the one ethernet capable machine and discover that it has WindowsME on it. Oh, that's nasty.

I then find out the WindowsME machine blue screens every time I try to unzip the needed update file, so I try to download the file again to Brian's Linux laptop, but then the Asus file server falls over dead. *DAMN!* After finally getting the file on the laptop (which has no floppy drive), I get it unzipped and e-mail the frigging .bin file over to the WindowsME machine so I can fetch it in with just a web browser and write it to the floppy before ME bluescreens again. Meanwhile, I am searching the house from top to bottom trying to find a damned 3.5 inch diskette. I finally found one in the bottom of a closet. This is getting to be WAAAYYY too much trouble.

I finally get the file written to the floppy and walk it over to the original ailing computer so I can start it up while holding down ALT+F2 to start the AWARDFLASH update utility. I then get an error message that I am using a file for the version 1 motherboard, and I have the version 2. I then have to repeat the steps above, AGAIN, while fighting the WindowsME blue screens.

I finally get the mo-phuck BIOS updated so I can now choose to boot from a SATA drive. Now I just have to hook the SATA drive back up and see what other weirdness awaits me.

Suddenly the original IDE drive is no longer giving errors. :lol:

Thinking of all the stuff above, the roadblock of a 2-prong versus 3-prong power outlet brought me the closest to bursting into tears.

Now I'm still not sure that the 320GB IDE drive is really bad. Is it memory? Before I plunk down $50 on more memory, I want to exhaust all the hard drive options.

It's tempting to just buy a new machine, but the 850 dollars for the one I want would screw my budget through probably February, and it would take may favorite computer store 4 days to get it ready anyway. I'd hate to retire an old machine just because of some silly error. I might as well work with this one some more and learn some stuff.

I better just take a break and go outside. :cry:



netbook has to work like a desktop for awhile

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As I mentioned previously (here and here), my sturdy desktop computer seems determined to have a catastrophic hardware failure. I don't have time to troubleshoot it anymore until next week, so I have pressed the little netbook I have into service as the main machine for awhile. It looks a little funny with so much stuff jacked into it. Connecting it to a regular monitor and a USB keyboard makes things a lot more comfortable. It's hard to believe this tiny little thing with an Atom processor runs so well.

All images are clickable for greater detail on flickr.

Image #1: Ubuntu Netbook Remix is designed to make the most of a tiny screen of a netbook. It looks a little funny running at 1280 x 1024 on a regular monitor.

Netbook Working Like a Desktop Computer for Awhile

Image 2: I'm lucky this little babe has a place to hook up an external monitor.

Netbook Working Like a Desktop Computer for Awhile

Image 3: Stuff all hooked up.

Netbook Working Like a Desktop Computer for Awhile

Image 4: She workin' like a big girl now.

Netbook Working Like a Desktop Computer for Awhile

playing with some new computer parts

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Yesterday, I was sure my hard drive was failing, but it seems OK now. I'm keeping an eye on it.

Why not use that as an excuse to buy some fun geek stuff. I went and got a 750GB hard drive and a USB enclosure. At some point I'll just install the hard drive internally, but for now it will be a portable backup storage device. My first computer hard drive years ago was 1.5GB, and I paid a princely sum for that. I remember the excitement when I got a 7GB one. Oh, I'll *never* use all that! There were terabyte drives looking at me from the store shelves today, but I got the 750GB. I'll *never* use all that! I got the usual Western Digital. Never had nuttin' else.

Below you'll see the sexy sleek black drive enclosure. Then you'll see the partition being written. I'm just doing one big partition for now to use it as backup storage. Later, if I put it into "production", I'll divide it up into swap and ext3. Geek fun on a Saturday night. Now I just need some geeks to play with. :yes:



ubuntu netbook remix 9.10

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The obligatory screenshot after upgrading my netbook to Ubuntu Netbook Remix 9.10 (Karmic Koala).

It just gets more beautiful with each release, jawdropping almost. The Netbook Remix makes the most out of the small screen sizes of netbooks. I can use it fine, even with my weak near vision.

Image is clickable for greater detail. Select "all sizes" after landing on the flickr page.

Ubuntu Netbook Remix 9.10
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