• WSklourash

    WSklourash

    @wsklourash

    Viewing 15 replies - 1 through 15 (of 17 total)
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    • in reply to: Copy Windows Recovery Partition to new SSD? #1587386

      I’ll be lazy & just tell my experience, which is something like Stan’s. I did the same thing & then added the Restore partition & had a copied Restore partition which had a drive letter & probably not functional.

      Instead of a partition copy, one needs to do a DISK copy and copy all partitions at once. However, copying the boot disk & having it work right means the disk ID must be also copied by the copy software. When this is done, the PC will be confused if it tries to start with 2 disks with identical ID’s, so the PC should shut down/be shut down immediately after the copy. The copied disk should be installed in the old disk’s place. I guess one could connect the old disk later via USB without problems & reformat it – I have multiple PC’s & never had to try that.

      Also messy if one has more files on the old disk than the new one (an SSD?) can hold.

      Instead of having a restore partition, one can make an install disk:
      https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/software-download/windows10

      As I understand it, MS updates the inet install image regularly, so it isn’t static. A pain to do, but one could make a new one every 6 months or so… Don’t know if a recovery partition is static or updated at intervals – does anyone know?

      … and also one can make a disk image (you currently have to use the Win 7 control panel backup option for that) at regular intervals – it’s fast & easy & disk space is cheap. Also currently, Win 10 shuts off System Restore by default & depends on the flakey Refresh, which often wants to throw one’s programs away, so I think System Images are the way to go.

      Sorry, for the barebones explanation, the rest is left as an exercise for the reader, as they say.

      Kerry

    • in reply to: Firefox 47 broke eBay’s Paypal login? #1569805

      I disabled an addon called “Privacy Badger” & was able to use Paypal from eBay again. I might be able to tweak its settings and re-enable it.

    • in reply to: Firefox 47 broke eBay’s Paypal login? #1569756

      Paul, I think the thread starter missed my point. I was hoping he would took a hard and long look at the plugins, addons, extension — one or more may now be clashing with that FF version.

      No, I didn’t miss the point:
      https://support.mozilla.org/en-US/kb/troubleshoot-firefox-issues-using-safe-mode

      If it works in safe mode, I’ll start removing extensions until I find the culprit.

      Thanks,
      Kerry

    • in reply to: Firefox 47 broke eBay’s Paypal login? #1569706

      Thanks! I’ll try FF Safe mode next time I buy an eBay item.

    • in reply to: Making Windows a sight for sore eyes #1563527

      If you get a MS mouse (haven’t been able to do this with other brands) you can use the settings to make the scroll wheel magnify.

    • in reply to: Dell 7010 MT brackets? #1554632

      In throwing out old parts such as fans for 80486 CPUs it came to me that maybe a finned heatsink from a junked computer could be fastened to the label side of an SSD to help dissipate heat.

      I decided to install the SSD using a generic metal 2 1/2 to 3 1/2 metal adapter for a heat sink and a stock caddy. I did it, but it was a tussle, with different port location of SSD versus HD, power cable too short, data cables too long, marginal-dimensioned adapter, flimsy caddy. Might have been easier with the stock Dell 2 1/2 to 3 1/2 adapter, but it’s plastic too, so no heat sink effect. I should have tried cable ties with generic adapter & saved time & money.

      Still don’t know what the brackets are for. I’ve heard opinion they’re for a non-std card reader, but no pic of it, it would have to incorporate/replace the I/O area.

    • in reply to: Dell 7010 MT brackets? #1554510

      A search for “ssd mounting brackets” brings up lots of cheap options.
      I’ve used a cable tie instead of brackets. SSDs don’t weigh anything.

      cheers, Paul

      Yeah, done that. It’s bugging me what those brackets are for, tho…

      I have some metal adapters & will see how they work with the Dell 3.5″ plastic caddy. I think Dell has a 2.5″ plastic caddy that fits in the 3.5″ caddy (in the spirit of no-tools), but I’d like some additional heat dissipation.

      Here’s a PCI-slot solution:
      http://www.moddiy.com/products/PCI-Slot-to-Dual-2.5%22-IDE%7B47%7DSATA%7B47%7DSSD-Adapter-Hard-Drive-Rack-%282-x-SSD%29.html

      Thanks,
      Kerry

    • Copy & Paste to a word processor is usually what I do, but has given me mixed results: Sometimes I get a link to pictures which quits working with no inet connection or when pic is taken down on the net. Sometimes formatting imported with text makes editing difficult. I copy & paste the pics and/or do Paste/Special as a workaround.

    • in reply to: Improve Internet Explorer 11’s security settings #1550468

      Thanks, but… Are we going to see an article about Edge security, or do IE’s settings also affect Edge?

    • Nothing can be better than a dedicated script, but I find this to be a good, general-purpose renamer. It shows you what your filenames will look like BEFORE you commit the rename process, which is wonderful. There’s also an Expert mode:

      http://www.1-4a.com/rename

    • in reply to: Adding new hard drive and cloning all files to it #1503917

      If one is transferring partitions, formatting is a waste unless one wants to be reeeally careful with a used drive. That said, it may take a long time, but it’s set & forget & one may be able to use the PC for other things. I had some problems with quick-format drives failing at a later date, having to be wiped & reformatted – nothing wrong with the drive. Admittedly that was long ago & may be fixed now. Quick-format tells nothing about future problems with a drive.

    • in reply to: Adding new hard drive and cloning all files to it #1503361

      Thanks, but the directions leave out what to do in cases where one has a data partition in addition to the system partition and cases where Windows installation on the original disk has created a boot partition and a system partition. Maybe one wants to keep the old disk? Making the new disk bootable means copying the old disk’s ID, which means Windows wants nothing to do with the old disk.

      I recently put an SSD on a couple of my PC’s. I had to back up my old data partition & restore it to the old disk. Because the transfer software was going to try to stuff all files from a 500 GB disk to the 100 GB SSD. I had to reformat the old disk on another system to re-use it. I had to use the Win install disk & the Repair option when copying the boot & system partions over didn’t work. None of the 3 pieces of software I had even mentioned these scenarios or how to to re-use the old disk!

    • in reply to: Firefox 34.0.0 search function #1479883

      Yes! I have 8, including Amazon, IMDB, Youtube, Wikipedia. They are harder to find than a couple of years ago, but I don’t like the ones that install in the right-click menu.

    • in reply to: Firefox 34.0.0 search function #1479747

      A couple of useful suggestions on how to restore the old search bar (without having to download and use a previous version of Firefox)

      https://support.mozilla.org/en-US/questions/1033923

      Many thanks for this tip! I had gone back to ver 33 to escape this “improvement”.

    • in reply to: Strange windows.old search results #1440606

      Guess I’ll try TeraCopy again. It does substantially the same.

    Viewing 15 replies - 1 through 15 (of 17 total)