Man, just ascend already.

Willow ,'Chosen'


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!


amych - Mar 20, 2007 9:23:14 am PDT #947 of 25496
Now let us crush something soft and watch it fountain blood. That is a girlish thing to want to do, yes?

At my job, in a University library, we had a hardware failure and then discovered that the backup procedure had failed and nobody had noticed.

Was that the day I happened to see you first thing and you said "THEY DELETED THE CATALOG!", or was there some other 6-weeks-of-work disaster that I missed?


flea - Mar 20, 2007 9:27:47 am PDT #948 of 25496
information libertarian

No, just the one time. So far. September 11, 2004, and we're still fixing problems from it.


DCJensen - Mar 20, 2007 9:31:00 am PDT #949 of 25496
All is well that ends in pizza.

I was surprised by the question they didn't address was "did they even bother to send the formatted drives to a recovery service?"

Sure they got people in there from Microsoft and Dell, but how about Ontrack?


tommyrot - Mar 20, 2007 10:00:33 am PDT #950 of 25496
Sir, it's not an offence to let your cat eat your bacon. Okay? And we don't arrest cats, I'm very sorry.

OK, WinXP client, Win2003 (I think - maybe 2000) server - is there a simple way to tell from the client machine if a file on the server is locked, and what type of locking it is? I mean, I know you do those things with API calls, but absent that, can you tell?

eta: I suppose attempting to rename a file would tell you if there's any sort of lock, right?


Jon B. - Mar 20, 2007 10:30:28 am PDT #951 of 25496
A turkey in every toilet -- only in America!

Does a $4,000 celebrity grill count as Technology? Sure, why not! [link]


§ ita § - Mar 20, 2007 10:38:10 am PDT #952 of 25496
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

Oh, that kind of grill.


Jon B. - Mar 20, 2007 11:00:10 am PDT #953 of 25496
A turkey in every toilet -- only in America!

Ha! The other kind would have been even funnier.


meara - Mar 20, 2007 1:10:30 pm PDT #954 of 25496

I totally thought mouth-grill too. And then was a little surprised a $4K one would be noteworthy. Oh, how sad.


Sean K - Mar 20, 2007 1:48:24 pm PDT #955 of 25496
You can't leave me to my own devices; my devices are Nap and Eat. -Zenkitty

sumi, from three days ago:

Okay, my computer just did this thing -- where it went to blue screen and told me that if it was the first time this happened I should restart, but if it had happened before I needed to do something. The message said something about a "device driver."

1. What is a device driver?

2. Messages from microsoft tell me how to get to the device driver but I have no idea how to figure out which thing is the one I need to do something about -- is there somewhere to go to figure that out?

I haven't loaded any new hardware and I think that the latest program I downloaded was an update of McAfee. I'm running Windows XP.

Did you ever get any of this answered? Have you had further problems along these lines?

1. A device driver is the little piece of software that tells XP how to make all your devices (basically, every individual hardware component of your computer) operate properly.

2. One way to check which device might be having problems is to right click on My Computer and select Properties. Once the Properties window is open, click on the Hardware tab. On that tab, click on the Device Manager button.

This will produce an expandable list of your devices (meaning they'll all have plus signs next to them, which will expand a detailed sublist if you were to click on any of those plus signs). If there is a problem with one of your device drivers, one of the expandable items will be expanded, and the problem device will be noted with a (I *think*) question mark. Either that or an exclamation point. I misremember.

If nothing is expanded, that is, if you just se a simple list of devices (computer, disk drives, display adapters, DVD/CD ROM drives, etc...), you probably don't have a driver problem.

That's the best way I know to check for driver problems.


sumi - Mar 20, 2007 3:48:57 pm PDT #956 of 25496
Art Crawl!!!

Ah, thank you!

And, no, nobody else answered my question.