Giles, if you would like to get by in American society, then you are going to have to follow our traditions. You're the patriarch. You have to host the festivities, or it's all meaningless.

Buffy ,'Sleeper'


Buffistechnology 3: "Press Some Buttons, See What Happens."

Got a question about technology? Ask it here. Discussion of hardware, software, TiVos, multi-region DVDs, Windows, Macs, LINUX, hand-helds, iPods, anything tech related. Better than any helpdesk!


JohnSweden - Mar 27, 2007 11:38:17 am PDT #1021 of 25496
I can't even.

Hivemind in action!


Jon B. - Mar 28, 2007 9:35:42 am PDT #1022 of 25496
A turkey in every toilet -- only in America!

How well-implemented is AJAX? I just read this excellent tutorial that makes me want to use it on my website, but if older browsers, or like Opera and Safari, don\'t play well with it (as is hinted at here), then I don\'t want to bother.


Tom Scola - Mar 28, 2007 9:38:51 am PDT #1023 of 25496
Mr. Scola’s wardrobe by Botany 500

How well-implemented is AJAX?

Since AJAX isn't a well-defined term, there's no clear-cut answer to this question. It all depends on what JavaScript features you are planning on using.


Jon B. - Mar 28, 2007 9:44:22 am PDT #1024 of 25496
A turkey in every toilet -- only in America!

Good point! Initially, I\'m interested in using Javascript to call a php function. The result of that function would replace the contents of a div without reloading the page.


Liese S. - Mar 28, 2007 12:46:32 pm PDT #1025 of 25496
"Faded like the lilac, he thought."

You know what's more boring than copying stuff off old zip discs to dvd? Copying stuff off old floppies to dvd.


amych - Mar 28, 2007 2:25:57 pm PDT #1026 of 25496
Now let us crush something soft and watch it fountain blood. That is a girlish thing to want to do, yes?

Does anyone have any experience with the do-it-yourself TiVo upgrade instructions at tivo.upgrade-instructions.com (that is, the instructions that WeaKnees offers for people who'd rather start from scratch than buy an upgrade kit)? My TiVo HD is dying, and since I have a spare 250GB sitting around*, I'd rather use it than pay umpty times more for a preformatted drive.

From the site, it looks like a pretty straightforward "boot from TiVo-flavored Linux CD -> format new drive -> copy stuff" operation, but if anyone's done it and run into any pitfalls, I'd love to hear it before I, umm, disassemble the precious. (The TiVo is already way the hell out of warranty, and I'm comfy in the command line, for whatever it's worth.)

* Also, I think I'm getting way old, because that clause is stubbornly refusing to make sense even though the thing is sitting right here.


Theodosia - Mar 28, 2007 2:52:40 pm PDT #1027 of 25496
'we all walk this earth feeling we are frauds. The trick is to be grateful and hope the caper doesn't end any time soon"

I'm afraid I bought the pre-formatted disc from Weaknees for my upgrade, so no help from here.

The tivocommunity forum should have plenty of DIY stories and cautions, though.


Liese S. - Mar 28, 2007 5:07:23 pm PDT #1028 of 25496
"Faded like the lilac, he thought."

No, I was wrong. More boring than copying stuff off old floppies to dvd is troubleshooting the whackaloon install job the local shop did on the SO's new hard drive. We put in the shop so as they'd image it for us and we wouldn't have to deal with the installs. A day and a half later, after many many broken deadlines, they tell us Dell's got some proprietary junk on, and they can't image the drive. So they install the new drive and stick the old one in an enclosure, which we could have done ourselves.

At some point in the install, after jacking with a frelled up Thunderbird, we've corrupted the pagefile. Microsoft's two solutions involve Intel something something Accelerator, which we downloaded, but doesn't apply to our chipset, and setting NTFS permissions which we can't do, because this hd came with XP home and only has simple sharing enabled.

I'd install XP pro, but I can't figure out where that particular disc went, and he'd restore from his system discs, but that requires a...no, wait...lemme see...


d - Mar 29, 2007 4:04:25 am PDT #1029 of 25496
It's nice to see some brave pretenders trying to make it interesting.

Please help me before I do bodily damage to people.

I have a Toshiba laptop. It recently broke and I sent it off for repair under my extended warranty. Those bastards used the restoration disk and set me back to zero. I have been trying for DAYS to do all the frelling microsoft updates. When it gets to Service Pack 2 the thing hangs on the reboot. I'm currently operating in safe mode. I have restored prior to service pack 2 and it wanted to redo the update. It STILL hangs in reboot.

I don't know what to do. I google searched before but didn't come up with anything that seemed that promising. I may have been doing it wrong. I think I need the sp2 in order to get the stupid DST patch, non?


esse - Mar 29, 2007 4:10:46 am PDT #1030 of 25496
S to the A -- using they/them pronouns!

dp, you can download SP2 manually without going through the Microsoft Update control panel. If you install it locally instead of relying on the control panel there is a strong chance you will be able to bypass the hanging issues--but I can't make a promise, since I don't know your setup and I'm not there to do it myself. *grin* Anyway, it's another option to try: [link]

SP2 is what I would consider an essential upgrade, DST patch or no; but yes, you need SP2 to get the patch to the best of my knowledge.