OS Re-install?
-
Taka Muraoka wrote:
enhanced command-line processor
Quick question, what commandline processor do you use? I tried bash, but it comes with a very large load of other stuff that I really don't need. Normally I stick with the standard windows console, but I am wondering if there's something better out there besides powershell and bash.
WM. What about weapons of mass-construction? "What? Its an Apple MacBook Pro. They are sexy!" - Paul Watson
WillemM wrote:
Quick question, what commandline processor do you use?
I used to use Cygwin plus a very old version of 4NT but the latest version of 4NT lets me do almost everything I need. It's very powerful but it's scripting syntax is still very much like CMD i.e. horrible. I do any non-trivial script in Python but it's handy having something with a bit of grunt for simple scripts.
0 bottles of beer on the wall, 0 bottles of beer, you take 1 down, pass it around, 4294967295 bottles of beer on the wall. Awasu 2.2.4 [^]: A free RSS/Atom feed reader with support for Code Project.
-
What enterprisey software do you use that takes two days to install?
regards, Paul Watson Ireland & South Africa
Shog9 wrote:
I don't see it happening, at least not until it becomes pointless.
Win XP VS .NET IBM WSAD Remedy Notes X| X| X| MS Office SQL Server Visio This is what IT installs. At any rate, what I remember on a Sunday night. :zzz: Apart from that, I have to install NDoc, NUnit, FxCop, Firefox, Slickrun, Winamp, IrfanView, TweakUI, and a bunch of other stuff I don't remember. 'Night all. :zzz:
Cheers, Vikram.
"...we are disempowered to cultivate in their communities an inclination to assimilate to our culture." - Stan Shannon.
-
I've had my Dell laptop now for almost 3 years (about 100 days left in warranty), and I have this 'issue' with a graphics flicker. We've updated drivers, swapped graphics boards, still have the flicker. I know what is coming next - either a motherboard swap (shudder) or an OS re-install (shudder - shudder). These solutions seem to be pretty big hammers. So, you developers out there that maintain your own systems, you know who you are, especially the independents. We just don't have time to "scrub the hard drive" on a whim. Further, we usually have to have a really good reason to scrub the drive and reinstall the dozens of programs that we have installed. How many of you have had issues with your system (beta s/w excluded) such that an os re-install corrected the problem? Curious. Thanks.
Charlie Gilley Will program for food... Whoever said children were cheaper by the dozen... lied. My son's PDA is an M249 SAW. My other son commutes in an M1A2 Abrams
I can't see any clear reason to suspect the OS of causing screen flicker. A driver can cause that if it's set to screen values the physical screen can't support, and a motherboard or video card can also cause problems. The most likely culprit is the 3 year old LCD screen. They do have a limited lifetime, and 3 years is about when I'd expect to see trouble brewing. I've certainly got many issues with Windows, and have to rebuild systems from scratch regularly, but that's the last thing I would suspect is causing screen flicker.
"...a photo album is like Life, but flat and stuck to pages." - Shog9
-
I can't see any clear reason to suspect the OS of causing screen flicker. A driver can cause that if it's set to screen values the physical screen can't support, and a motherboard or video card can also cause problems. The most likely culprit is the 3 year old LCD screen. They do have a limited lifetime, and 3 years is about when I'd expect to see trouble brewing. I've certainly got many issues with Windows, and have to rebuild systems from scratch regularly, but that's the last thing I would suspect is causing screen flicker.
"...a photo album is like Life, but flat and stuck to pages." - Shog9
Roger, All good points, but I leave it as an exercise to the student to try and describe "flicker" in words. This is not a panel wide flicker, it's almost as if something burps in the electronics of the video card and a small refresh occurs... it happens at "random" times and is becoming more (just did it :)) frequent. It may be a small part of the display, or it may be the entire display. It also does it on internal and external monitors. So far, it has evaded diagnosis. chg
Charlie Gilley Will program for food... Whoever said children were cheaper by the dozen... lied. My son's PDA is an M249 SAW. My other son commutes in an M1A2 Abrams
-
Roger, All good points, but I leave it as an exercise to the student to try and describe "flicker" in words. This is not a panel wide flicker, it's almost as if something burps in the electronics of the video card and a small refresh occurs... it happens at "random" times and is becoming more (just did it :)) frequent. It may be a small part of the display, or it may be the entire display. It also does it on internal and external monitors. So far, it has evaded diagnosis. chg
Charlie Gilley Will program for food... Whoever said children were cheaper by the dozen... lied. My son's PDA is an M249 SAW. My other son commutes in an M1A2 Abrams
Hmmm... a friend of mine has a display-wide flicker - the problem turned out to be a bad wire connecting the backlight to the motherboard. But if the flicker is confined to s small part of the display - ie. one control or something - it is probably a software problem. Does it look like a control repainting?
-
I've had my Dell laptop now for almost 3 years (about 100 days left in warranty), and I have this 'issue' with a graphics flicker. We've updated drivers, swapped graphics boards, still have the flicker. I know what is coming next - either a motherboard swap (shudder) or an OS re-install (shudder - shudder). These solutions seem to be pretty big hammers. So, you developers out there that maintain your own systems, you know who you are, especially the independents. We just don't have time to "scrub the hard drive" on a whim. Further, we usually have to have a really good reason to scrub the drive and reinstall the dozens of programs that we have installed. How many of you have had issues with your system (beta s/w excluded) such that an os re-install corrected the problem? Curious. Thanks.
Charlie Gilley Will program for food... Whoever said children were cheaper by the dozen... lied. My son's PDA is an M249 SAW. My other son commutes in an M1A2 Abrams
I think in your case investing some money in a program like Acronis True Image would be a good idea. Do a full image of your system. Then reformat and reinstall everything. If the problem is gone you are good to go. If it remains you can ship the box for repair (or whatever) or you can restore your OS from the Acronis image. Very low, to no risk involved.
-
I've had my Dell laptop now for almost 3 years (about 100 days left in warranty), and I have this 'issue' with a graphics flicker. We've updated drivers, swapped graphics boards, still have the flicker. I know what is coming next - either a motherboard swap (shudder) or an OS re-install (shudder - shudder). These solutions seem to be pretty big hammers. So, you developers out there that maintain your own systems, you know who you are, especially the independents. We just don't have time to "scrub the hard drive" on a whim. Further, we usually have to have a really good reason to scrub the drive and reinstall the dozens of programs that we have installed. How many of you have had issues with your system (beta s/w excluded) such that an os re-install corrected the problem? Curious. Thanks.
Charlie Gilley Will program for food... Whoever said children were cheaper by the dozen... lied. My son's PDA is an M249 SAW. My other son commutes in an M1A2 Abrams
*all* the time. My PC has been dead for a month or two, it just suddenly will grab each process as I click on a program, and max out a processor with it until I kill it. Have I had time to reinstall the OS ? No. Is it the only remaining option ? Yes. Notebook needs a reinstall, as well.
Christian Graus - C++ MVP 'Why don't we jump on a fad that hasn't already been widely discredited ?' - Dilbert
-
I think in your case investing some money in a program like Acronis True Image would be a good idea. Do a full image of your system. Then reformat and reinstall everything. If the problem is gone you are good to go. If it remains you can ship the box for repair (or whatever) or you can restore your OS from the Acronis image. Very low, to no risk involved.
code-frog - good idea :) I've been using acronis for about a year now. Works like a champ, and is great for laptops. It's probably my next step. The sporadic flicker is sporadic, so I'm just not willing to mess with it at the moment. Interestingly, I changed my background to a solid color, and I haven't seent the flicker yet. Odd.... the background is a standard MS background....
Charlie Gilley Will program for food... Whoever said children were cheaper by the dozen... lied. My son's PDA is an M249 SAW. My other son commutes in an M1A2 Abrams
-
Hmmm... a friend of mine has a display-wide flicker - the problem turned out to be a bad wire connecting the backlight to the motherboard. But if the flicker is confined to s small part of the display - ie. one control or something - it is probably a software problem. Does it look like a control repainting?
Right, if it was panel wide, then I would conclude a wire or subsystem failure, but in this case, it *does* look like a control is redrawing. The only problem is that the flicker is in the desktop background - not in any application. It is very bizarre. I just posted to another reply that I changed my background from a tiled bitmap to a solid color.... so far (couple of hours) I've not seen the flicker....
Charlie Gilley Will program for food... Whoever said children were cheaper by the dozen... lied. My son's PDA is an M249 SAW. My other son commutes in an M1A2 Abrams
-
Right, if it was panel wide, then I would conclude a wire or subsystem failure, but in this case, it *does* look like a control is redrawing. The only problem is that the flicker is in the desktop background - not in any application. It is very bizarre. I just posted to another reply that I changed my background from a tiled bitmap to a solid color.... so far (couple of hours) I've not seen the flicker....
Charlie Gilley Will program for food... Whoever said children were cheaper by the dozen... lied. My son's PDA is an M249 SAW. My other son commutes in an M1A2 Abrams
Have you seen Raymond Chen's[^] explanation of a similar problem? Sounds like you might have a program doing something similar. And since invalidating and repainting a solid color doesn't involve painting a different color first, maybe you just haven't noticed it with the solid color. Do just the icons on your desktop flicker even with the solid color? Or does that solve the flicker entirely? Mike
-
Have you seen Raymond Chen's[^] explanation of a similar problem? Sounds like you might have a program doing something similar. And since invalidating and repainting a solid color doesn't involve painting a different color first, maybe you just haven't noticed it with the solid color. Do just the icons on your desktop flicker even with the solid color? Or does that solve the flicker entirely? Mike
Mike, Fascinating. This is *exactly* what I was thinking (that it was some kind of refresh). The part that has me a little puzzled is just why one little section and only in the background? I'm trying to narrow it down now... almost smells like my icon manager is doing it (Enterra Icon Keeper). Thanks for the pointer, learned something new. chg
Charlie Gilley Will program for food... Whoever said children were cheaper by the dozen... lied. My son's PDA is an M249 SAW. My other son commutes in an M1A2 Abrams
-
I've had my Dell laptop now for almost 3 years (about 100 days left in warranty), and I have this 'issue' with a graphics flicker. We've updated drivers, swapped graphics boards, still have the flicker. I know what is coming next - either a motherboard swap (shudder) or an OS re-install (shudder - shudder). These solutions seem to be pretty big hammers. So, you developers out there that maintain your own systems, you know who you are, especially the independents. We just don't have time to "scrub the hard drive" on a whim. Further, we usually have to have a really good reason to scrub the drive and reinstall the dozens of programs that we have installed. How many of you have had issues with your system (beta s/w excluded) such that an os re-install corrected the problem? Curious. Thanks.
Charlie Gilley Will program for food... Whoever said children were cheaper by the dozen... lied. My son's PDA is an M249 SAW. My other son commutes in an M1A2 Abrams
Burn & boot up one of those "Run from the CD" linux versions. If you see screen flicker, it's your hardware. If you don't, it's somehow Windows' fault.
-
JimmyRopes wrote:
What imaging software do you recommend?
I use Acronis TrueImage. It's been pretty reliable and works well. I think it's only failed on me once, not being able to restore from an image because it thought it was corrupt (even though I had previously verified it). But I was still able to open the image and manually extract files from it. I reckon someone from Acronis must hang out here because every time I recommend it, I get voted a 5 :-) :rolleyes:
0 bottles of beer on the wall, 0 bottles of beer, you take 1 down, pass it around, 4294967295 bottles of beer on the wall. Awasu 2.2.4 [^]: A free RSS/Atom feed reader with support for Code Project.
I agree, TrueImage is excellent. Be sure to make a TrueImage restore disk.
-
Burn & boot up one of those "Run from the CD" linux versions. If you see screen flicker, it's your hardware. If you don't, it's somehow Windows' fault.
-
JimmyRopes wrote:
What imaging software do you recommend?
I use Acronis TrueImage. It's been pretty reliable and works well. I think it's only failed on me once, not being able to restore from an image because it thought it was corrupt (even though I had previously verified it). But I was still able to open the image and manually extract files from it. I reckon someone from Acronis must hang out here because every time I recommend it, I get voted a 5 :-) :rolleyes:
0 bottles of beer on the wall, 0 bottles of beer, you take 1 down, pass it around, 4294967295 bottles of beer on the wall. Awasu 2.2.4 [^]: A free RSS/Atom feed reader with support for Code Project.
Thanks Taka - Looks like what I need.
Simply Elegant Designs JimmyRopes Designs
Think inside the box! ProActive Secure Systems
I'm on-line therefore I am. JimmyRopes -
What enterprisey software do you use that takes two days to install?
regards, Paul Watson Ireland & South Africa
Shog9 wrote:
I don't see it happening, at least not until it becomes pointless.
-
I've had my Dell laptop now for almost 3 years (about 100 days left in warranty), and I have this 'issue' with a graphics flicker. We've updated drivers, swapped graphics boards, still have the flicker. I know what is coming next - either a motherboard swap (shudder) or an OS re-install (shudder - shudder). These solutions seem to be pretty big hammers. So, you developers out there that maintain your own systems, you know who you are, especially the independents. We just don't have time to "scrub the hard drive" on a whim. Further, we usually have to have a really good reason to scrub the drive and reinstall the dozens of programs that we have installed. How many of you have had issues with your system (beta s/w excluded) such that an os re-install corrected the problem? Curious. Thanks.
Charlie Gilley Will program for food... Whoever said children were cheaper by the dozen... lied. My son's PDA is an M249 SAW. My other son commutes in an M1A2 Abrams
I would advise you to get a new machine, in my experience both as a programmer and a system administrator it's not worth the time to do a clean install on such an old machine to try to correct a problem which I think sounds like a hardware problem anyway. Unless of course you don't have the money to buy a new machine.
-
I've had my Dell laptop now for almost 3 years (about 100 days left in warranty), and I have this 'issue' with a graphics flicker. We've updated drivers, swapped graphics boards, still have the flicker. I know what is coming next - either a motherboard swap (shudder) or an OS re-install (shudder - shudder). These solutions seem to be pretty big hammers. So, you developers out there that maintain your own systems, you know who you are, especially the independents. We just don't have time to "scrub the hard drive" on a whim. Further, we usually have to have a really good reason to scrub the drive and reinstall the dozens of programs that we have installed. How many of you have had issues with your system (beta s/w excluded) such that an os re-install corrected the problem? Curious. Thanks.
Charlie Gilley Will program for food... Whoever said children were cheaper by the dozen... lied. My son's PDA is an M249 SAW. My other son commutes in an M1A2 Abrams
-
I've had my Dell laptop now for almost 3 years (about 100 days left in warranty), and I have this 'issue' with a graphics flicker. We've updated drivers, swapped graphics boards, still have the flicker. I know what is coming next - either a motherboard swap (shudder) or an OS re-install (shudder - shudder). These solutions seem to be pretty big hammers. So, you developers out there that maintain your own systems, you know who you are, especially the independents. We just don't have time to "scrub the hard drive" on a whim. Further, we usually have to have a really good reason to scrub the drive and reinstall the dozens of programs that we have installed. How many of you have had issues with your system (beta s/w excluded) such that an os re-install corrected the problem? Curious. Thanks.
Charlie Gilley Will program for food... Whoever said children were cheaper by the dozen... lied. My son's PDA is an M249 SAW. My other son commutes in an M1A2 Abrams
charlieg wrote:
I've had my Dell laptop now for almost 3 years (about 100 days left in warranty), and I have this 'issue' with a graphics flicker. We've updated drivers, swapped graphics boards, still have the flicker. I know what is coming next - either a motherboard swap (shudder) or an OS re-install (shudder - shudder). These solutions seem to be pretty big hammers. So, you developers out there that maintain your own systems, you know who you are, especially the independents. We just don't have time to "scrub the hard drive" on a whim. Further, we usually have to have a really good reason to scrub the drive and reinstall the dozens of programs that we have installed. How many of you have had issues with your system (beta s/w excluded) such that an os re-install corrected the problem?
I found the problem right from the start. It's a Dell, nough said.
Life is nothing but an individuals perception of an immortals dream. - ME
-
I've had my Dell laptop now for almost 3 years (about 100 days left in warranty), and I have this 'issue' with a graphics flicker. We've updated drivers, swapped graphics boards, still have the flicker. I know what is coming next - either a motherboard swap (shudder) or an OS re-install (shudder - shudder). These solutions seem to be pretty big hammers. So, you developers out there that maintain your own systems, you know who you are, especially the independents. We just don't have time to "scrub the hard drive" on a whim. Further, we usually have to have a really good reason to scrub the drive and reinstall the dozens of programs that we have installed. How many of you have had issues with your system (beta s/w excluded) such that an os re-install corrected the problem? Curious. Thanks.
Charlie Gilley Will program for food... Whoever said children were cheaper by the dozen... lied. My son's PDA is an M249 SAW. My other son commutes in an M1A2 Abrams
I had a Dell Inspiron (I forget which model number). It did the same thing -screen flicker-. Turns out, the graphics card fried. If you still have warrenty I'd do a mainboard replacement. It is only going to get worse with the flickering. Otherwise your going to pay enough money, down the line, to replace damaged components to buy a new computer all together. Samurai Sam-
OMG, what have I done now?