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Seagate had some older 640GB drives. But there is no 7200.12 640GB drive AFAIK. Anyway, its OT. Lets get back to win7.
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# ? Jul 19, 2009 17:07 |
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# ? Apr 20, 2024 03:39 |
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A friend of mine is having a problem where Win7 can't see an internal NTFS drive, but Ubuntu and WinXP can. He's tried reformatting it, but it still doesn't show up in explorer/Disk Manager, but it does in this 3rd-party program he downloaded. He's tried both 32 and 64bit versions of the win7 RC. I have no idea what could possibly be wrong.
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# ? Jul 19, 2009 17:19 |
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Does anyone know a good free program to image drives with so I can backup my XP system before switching to RC and for backing up the win7 system once its up?
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# ? Jul 19, 2009 17:23 |
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So some update installed last night, and now my battery's actually charging again I'm not lagging in everything I do.
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# ? Jul 19, 2009 17:41 |
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In my installation fiascos over the last two days I have learned a few lessons about Windows7 RC installation. In exchange for the previous help in this thread, I hope these random things I learned will help make others' lives easier (and not take two days to do it). 1) If you are doubtful about taking the 64bit plunge with Windows7, suck it up and do it. The internet is telling you to, the OP is telling you to, and now I am telling you to. I installed the 32bit version on my brand new 4gb memory Core2Duo E7400 2.8ghz machine. It ran ok, but I wasn't impressed. I finally got the 64bit version bootable via thumbdrive (more on this later), and installed it. Even with "only" 4gigs of memory, 64bit runs beautifully out of the box. The difference is striking, so go for 64bit. 2) Booting Windows 7 from a thumb drive is stupidly finicky. But it CAN be done. There are a number of guides out there for it. HOWEVER, most of them use the DISKPART utility in the command prompt, but this will only work if you are running Vista or Windows7. This guide walks you through creating a bootable thumb drive for creating a bootable Win7 thumb drive from within XP . 3) As a general rule, you cannot create a bootable 64bit Windows7 from within a 32 bit system. HOWEVER, if you follow a guide such as this one , it CAN be done. You will need to download both 32 and 64bit flavors of the Windows7 RC. Then, to create a bootable 64bit version in a 32bit environment, simply replace the "bootsect" file located in the boot folder of the 64bit folder with the 32bit version before Step 7 in the aforementioned guide. This worked for me, and lo it was good. The only real casualty (other than wasting most of a Saturday) of this process was a nuked LG dvd burner, which somehow had its firmware deleted by its own update file I ran after discovering it was not natively compatible with Win7. I'm pretty agitated about that and hope LG will be able to help me out.
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# ? Jul 19, 2009 17:41 |
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change my name posted:So some update installed last night, and now my battery's actually charging again I'm not lagging in everything I do. I knew the system assessment thing wasn't right, when I ran it last night I got 2.2 on my processor and RAM, then when I ran it today they both shot up to 5.4. I think the update made it so windows finally correctly recognizes my power adapter.
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# ? Jul 19, 2009 18:09 |
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regarding these UK deals, do the boxes contain both 32-bit and 64-bit versions?
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# ? Jul 19, 2009 18:12 |
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MrSlayer posted:regarding these UK deals, do the boxes contain both 32-bit and 64-bit versions?
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# ? Jul 19, 2009 21:28 |
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How can I edit this field in a files properties? I am using Media Center, and it is getting file names from that field. See example below. On a .jpg I can just double click the field and change it, but on .avi I can't do anything. This is on Windows 7 64bit. I have full ownership/control of the file.
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# ? Jul 19, 2009 23:07 |
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Greenfield posted:How can I edit this field in a files properties? Open the AVI in Virtualdub. Make sure Video>Direct Stream Copy and Audio>Direct Stream Copy are set. Go to file > Set Text Information. The field you need to edit is "Name". Then save a new AVI, delete your old one, ta-da!
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# ? Jul 19, 2009 23:24 |
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Does SteadyState work with Windows 7?
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# ? Jul 19, 2009 23:28 |
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c0burn posted:Open the AVI in Virtualdub. Make sure Video>Direct Stream Copy and Audio>Direct Stream Copy are set. Go to file > Set Text Information. The field you need to edit is "Name". Then save a new AVI, delete your old one, ta-da! I tried that, but virtualdub gives me this error. I googled the error, and followed the directions from the second post on this page here Still same error. Is there a different way to edit it? EDIT-- Found a program called abcAVI Tag Editor. It worked like a charm. Greenfield fucked around with this message at 08:59 on Jul 20, 2009 |
# ? Jul 20, 2009 00:04 |
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I'm thinking of trying the RC, but don't know how it handles information on my computer. I'm running Vista 64 right now, and if I install the RC, I assume it will keep all my data. However, if/when I upgrade to the full version when it comes out, will that keep all my data as well? Or, if I go back to Vista, will it keep all my information? I'm also curious how I would go back to Vista, since my computer didn't come with an install DVD. I guess I would have to order one? Edit: Reading the installation FAQ, it looks like installingthe R requires a clean install. Guess I'll need to hunt down an external HDD I can use. A Bad Poster fucked around with this message at 11:35 on Jul 20, 2009 |
# ? Jul 20, 2009 07:34 |
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I just tried Windows 7 on my first generation Asus EEE PC, but unfortunately the results were pretty lackluster. Even after using vLite, it's near-impossible to get it down to a size where the 4 gig main hard drive is useable, plus I don't think disabling the physical pagefile was an option. I messed around with it for a while and ultimately went back to Windows XP on it. I think 7 should work fine on netbooks that had Vista on them, and any modern netbook should be fine, particularly if it doesn't use a solid state drive (or has a very large one, like a single 16 gig drive or larger) and has a minimum of 1 gig of RAM. Looks like at least one of my computers will be stuck on XP.
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# ? Jul 20, 2009 08:09 |
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4GB HDD? Good luck.
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# ? Jul 20, 2009 08:22 |
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I think if I'm going to go to Windows 7 on my media center PC, I will probably have to go with 32bit if only because of the annoyance with the codec situation. In the RC 64 bit I had the following issue that I could never figure out. 1. Switch media player to 64. Use command line thing and registry switch. 2. Try to play an Mp3 and open taskman, notice how WMPlayer has a * next to it . I also couldn't get resampling of audio working in FFDShow in x64, and my crappy realtek integrated audio wouldn't send 44hz through SPDIF it would send garbage. This wouldn't be so bad but the codec situation was a nightmare in that you needed both a 64 bit and a 32 bit codecs, sometimes Media Center would use FFDShow x64 audio, sometime x32 and my favorite is sometime it didn't use either and I would get no sound. WMPlayer would never used FFDshow video. Also Arcsoft TMT3 seem to crash more on x64 using the media center plugin. [which also didn't downmix but thats a different issue...]
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# ? Jul 20, 2009 16:10 |
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weaaddar posted:I think if I'm going to go to Windows 7 on my media center PC, I will probably have to go with 32bit if only because of the annoyance with the codec situation. I've been using 64 bit Vista and now 64 bit Win7 for years and I've never installed a 64 bit codec or player.
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# ? Jul 20, 2009 18:46 |
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univbee posted:I just tried Windows 7 on my first generation Asus EEE PC, but unfortunately the results were pretty lackluster. Even after using vLite, it's near-impossible to get it down to a size where the 4 gig main hard drive is useable, plus I don't think disabling the physical pagefile was an option. I messed around with it for a while and ultimately went back to Windows XP on it. I think 7 should work fine on netbooks that had Vista on them, and any modern netbook should be fine, particularly if it doesn't use a solid state drive (or has a very large one, like a single 16 gig drive or larger) and has a minimum of 1 gig of RAM. Looks like at least one of my computers will be stuck on XP. They make computers with 4GB hard-drives? My USB thumb drive is twice that and cost me a fiver. Probably a bad idea to run Win 7 on a 4GB hard drive.
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# ? Jul 20, 2009 18:57 |
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Xachariah posted:They make computers with 4GB hard-drives? My USB thumb drive is twice that and cost me a fiver. First gen Eee PCs like he said had super tiny SSDs.
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# ? Jul 20, 2009 19:23 |
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Thermopyle posted:I've been using 64 bit Vista and now 64 bit Win7 for years and I've never installed a 64 bit codec or player. Ditto. I've been running 64-bit Windows for a long time now. I didn't switch because I wanted to start using 64-bit-EVERYTHING, I switched so all of my 32-bit applications had more breathing room. I have 8 Gigs RAM, and all my 32-bit apps are pleased as punch, as they all get to grab their 2 Gigs or whatever and not have to fight. When I try to think of any disadvantage of 64-bit Windows, the driver-signing requirement is the only thing I can think of. I think WinRAR is the only 64-bit application I've bothered downloading. I know 64-bit would help something like that. If you can't find 64-bit Codecs, then how the hell will switching to 32-bit Windows make things better??? Using all your 32-bit stuff on 64-bit Windows is better than using it under 32-bit Windows.
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# ? Jul 20, 2009 19:33 |
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Xachariah posted:They make computers with 4GB hard-drives? My USB thumb drive is twice that and cost me a fiver. Semi-beaten, but the first-gen Asus EEE Laptops had 4 gig SSD hard drives, and even a lot of the later ones (their biggest is I think 20 gigs) has a 4 gig fast OS drive and then the rest on a slower data drive (the system actually has two physical drives). Newer systems like the Dell Mini 9 will either have a traditional hard drive with platters, or a large, single SSD. Basically, I wouldn't run 7 on a comp with less than a 16 gig drive.
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# ? Jul 20, 2009 21:32 |
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Xenomorph posted:Ditto. Yes, I can use MPC-HC x64 and that works pretty well, but I like media center and the built-in codecs for windows 7 sometimes choke on files that FFDshow will play fine.
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# ? Jul 20, 2009 22:55 |
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Also can't you insert SD cards for extra storage space? I'm pretty sure most netbooks have the slot.
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# ? Jul 20, 2009 23:08 |
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change my name posted:Also can't you insert SD cards for extra storage space? I'm pretty sure most netbooks have the slot. Yes, but they don't expand the SSD, they're a separate partition, just like installing a second hard drive would give you C: and D:. No good for installing an OS to, and with a max speed of roughly 8mbit/s, I wouldn't wanna run anything off of one.
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# ? Jul 20, 2009 23:24 |
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weaaddar posted:I can find 64 bit codecs that's not the problem! Its the inconsistent usage of them. If you switch WMP to 64 bit it will randomly decide to run in 32 bit mode. It also may decide to play back certain things in 32 bit mode, and sometimes simultaneously. Having both FFDShow 32 and 64 bit installed can lead to really hosed up results like 2 FFDShow audio decoding something [and butchering my ears in the process]. The "best" you can hope for is that it will play video in 64 and audio in 32 and even that is sketchy at best. Plus in x64 using WMP in 32bit mode it doesn't resample my audio. In Vista 32 I never had this problem. My Media center PC can only support 2 gigs of ram and a 512 meg video card so I don't need the extra address space. I'm not even sure I will update it despite my company granting me a MSDN subscription. I don't think you understand. There's no reason to install 64 bit codecs. Don't do it.
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# ? Jul 21, 2009 00:05 |
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Thermopyle posted:I don't think you understand. There's no reason to install 64 bit codecs. Don't do it. Isn't Windows Media Center only 64bit on Windows 7 64bit? I can play .mkv on WMP, but I can't play them in WMC because I don't have 64bit codecs installed. Maybe I am wrong though.
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# ? Jul 21, 2009 01:26 |
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Casao posted:Yes, but they don't expand the SSD, they're a separate partition, just like installing a second hard drive would give you C: and D:. No good for installing an OS to, and with a max speed of roughly 8mbit/s, I wouldn't wanna run anything off of one. This, plus SD cards aren't designed for the constant reading and writing an OS does and will die very quickly with those kinds of stresses. Yes, it's possible to install it, and people have done it with Windows XP and Vista, but I wouldn't recommend it.
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# ? Jul 21, 2009 02:07 |
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Greenfield posted:Isn't Windows Media Center only 64bit on Windows 7 64bit? I can play .mkv on WMP, but I can't play them in WMC because I don't have 64bit codecs installed. Not quiet. its a WPF app in x64, but the playback engine is still WMP and so it can switch down to 32bit for some illogical reason. And before you say don't install 64 bit codecs if you use MC you sort of need to or else [sometimes] it won't be able to split an MKV. At minimum you need a splitter for MKVs in 64bit and potentially other things if your need is there, like audio mixing.
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# ? Jul 21, 2009 02:42 |
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weaaddar posted:Not quiet. its a WPF app in x64, but the playback engine is still WMP and so it can switch down to 32bit for some illogical reason. I did not realize this. I just assumed WMC would not be a douchebag and work like every other video player on Windows.
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# ? Jul 21, 2009 02:49 |
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With Vista I had programs pinned to the taskbar, but now it only shows the "type of program" instead of what I want. Let me clarify: I have a Loveline.pls in a folder somewhere in C:\ and .pls files are associated with VLC. When I drag the .pls file to the taskbar it says it's pinned but when I click on it, it doesn't open the .pls file, it just opens VLC. The same goes for folders. I used to have C:\Stuff\Stuff2 pinned to the taskbar, but now when I drag the folder either from explorer or from a shortcut or whatever it just turns into the annoying "Libraries" thing. And again when I open it, it goes straight to "Libraries" and not to the folder. Has anybody else had this problem and figured out a solution? (also the watermark is annoying)
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# ? Jul 21, 2009 16:21 |
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thehandtruck posted:Has anybody else had this problem and figured out a solution?
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# ? Jul 21, 2009 17:06 |
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ilkhan posted:Right click and select it from the pinned menu. Oh gotchya, is there any way the icon starts the .pls by default instead of me having to right click everytime. I mean the whole point of it is convenience which is gone now. thehandtruck fucked around with this message at 17:19 on Jul 21, 2009 |
# ? Jul 21, 2009 17:17 |
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Regarding the UK deal, it says that in order to qualify you need to be running a genuine XP or Vista install. I'm currently running Linux. None of the retailers selling it mention this requirement, so what's the actual deal here?
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# ? Jul 21, 2009 18:51 |
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There are no upgrade editions in the UK.
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# ? Jul 21, 2009 18:59 |
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Lum posted:Regarding the UK deal, it says that in order to qualify you need to be running a genuine XP or Vista install. I'm currently running Linux. All transitory
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# ? Jul 21, 2009 19:00 |
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From the MS site: http://www.microsoft.com/uk/windows/buy/offers/pre-order-faq.aspxMicrosoft posted:How do I know if I am eligible for this offer? This is what I'm asking about. Is it going to ask for a Vista product key or something? Edit: Also, do you get downgrade rights? Lum fucked around with this message at 19:07 on Jul 21, 2009 |
# ? Jul 21, 2009 19:02 |
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Lum posted:From the MS site: http://www.microsoft.com/uk/windows/buy/offers/pre-order-faq.aspx I've read a few things that make it seem like Microsoft are unclear about this at present.
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# ? Jul 21, 2009 19:44 |
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How do I stop Windows 7 from installing generic plug and play drivers as soon as I uninstall my current drivers? For instance, I bought a new wireless card (D-link WDA-1320) and I downloaded the latest version of the atheros driver from a website. When I try to manually point Windows to the directory with the (obviously newer) drivers, it says it's already up to date. When I uninstall it, the card does not show up in the Device Manager, which doesn't even allow me to point it to the directory with the new drivers. When I refresh it, the PnP drivers automatically install. Any ideas? Cromlech fucked around with this message at 20:34 on Jul 21, 2009 |
# ? Jul 21, 2009 20:28 |
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Hello all. I have 2 Dell computers [one laptop and one desktop]. Both are currently running the RC and I enjoy them very much. I bought the preorder for Win7 $50 buck upgrade, two copies. What will I have to do to install the actual OS when the disks come? Will I be able to preform a clean install from the RC? [will it recoginze the RC as a legitimate OS from which to use the upgrade disk?] Or if that won't work, if I use the OS recover thing which is on the computer, can I then use that OS as the 'upgrade platform' to perform a clean install? I'm sorry these questsions have probably been asked an answered. I read the OP but didn't see an exact reference to what I am asking.
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# ? Jul 21, 2009 21:05 |
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# ? Apr 20, 2024 03:39 |
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tijag posted:Hello all.
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# ? Jul 21, 2009 22:02 |