• Hey Guest!
    British Car Forum has been supporting enthusiasts for over 25 years by providing a great place to share our love for British cars. You can support our efforts by upgrading your membership for less than the dues of most car clubs. There are some perks with a member upgrade!

    **Upgrade Now**
    (PS: Upgraded members don't see this banner, nor will you see the Google ads that appear on the site.)
Tips
Tips

Of bits 'n bytes

DrEntropy

Great Pumpkin
Platinum
Country flag
Offline
A pal of decades and a computer savvy chap, fellow pro photog, got himself a laptop with a 500G 7200RPM scratch drive and an SSD 350G secondary. He decided to get a 500G SSD and switch the C: and D: drive "jobs" to use the spinny one as file storage and the SSD for the O/S and app proggies. Seemed like a good idea. He "ghosted" the O/S from the disc drive to the larger SSD, but Winblows 10 REFUSED to disappear from the SATA 7200 RPM one. He gave up and brought it to me. I spent hours with all sorts of MILSPEC utilities trying to wipe that thing to the state of stupid, finally learned you must use partitioning warez on it first, eliminate the various MS-schemed partitions before it will allow you to "erase" the O/S.

MS Windows: More insidious with every incarnation.
 
Fdisk!
 
ਸਾਔੇ ਫੋਰਮ ਦੇ ąØ®ą©ˆąØ‚ąØ¬ąØ° ਬਣਨ ਲਈ ਧੰਨਵਾਦ (yeah that's what I understand of what I just read) :grin:
 

NOPE! That was useless. The secondary drive was still seen as having an O/S on it! Had to revert to an external disc drive to boot into Linux and kill the MS stuff with warez from Hades. :devilgrin:
 
hmmm - so FDisk couldn't identify/read/write the secondary drive?
 
Fdisk SAW the drive but wouldn't do anything with it! Booting to the SSD as the scratch drive, the SATA one had a question mark on it after the fdisk operation, but it could NOT be accessed, and wouldn't "initialize". The MBR for win10 apparently is highly protective of its existence! "Resistance is futile!"
 
Eventually these systems will be so secure - nothing will go IN, or OUT!
 
I just replaced my 5400 HDD with a 1T SSD. Migrated the OS to the SSD and disconnected the HDD. Much faster, of course.
 
Yes indeed faster. This lappy will boot up on the SSD so quickly it's scary.

Last year I put together an i7 machine for a client, as a workstation for designing with CAD warez. 32G RAM, SSD scratch drive... talk about fast!

And that Thing could just about suck the whole server down a CAT-6 cable.
 
Doc, I believe you need to turn secure boot off in the BIOS which can be a bunch of hoops to jump through. First being a password for the admin and user before secure boot can be touched in the BIOS. Deactivate secure boot, then wipe the UEFI partition. There are certain trusted keys that have to be erased too (and then put back in). I've stumbled through it twice and each mobo was a different.
 
I'd made sure secure boot was turned off in the BIOS, removed the SSD so only the SATA drive was in the machine. The Winblows 'Recovery' partition was what was giving me fits on this one. Once that was neutered the disc was wiped and then formatted in NTFS.
 
I always have trouble with the MSDFT bios when coupled with the 5400 CMOS bias filter, especially when coagulated with the BN7 defragulator. Anyone else have that problem?
 
I always have trouble with the MSDFT bios when coupled with the 5400 CMOS bias filter, especially when coagulated with the BN7 defragulator. Anyone else have that problem?

Nope - never have that problem, after I finally figured out the fix.

pull_the_plug.jpg
 
We use a lot of HMI’s and write code for them to operate our RO machines
we had one fail a while back so they bought one local and we emailed them the operating file to upload
this was a bran d new AB 700
it would not recognize the USB
after a few minutes of talking with asked him what size it was he said 1 gig
told him to go find one that had only a few 100 meg MB of space , getting hard to find one that small anymore
it found it and loaded the file.
i can’t belive that Rockwell -AB is still that for behind one there file - usb size requirements to recognize.
there is no documentation about this snaffu
just luck from the compact flash days
 
"i can’t belive that Rockwell -AB is still that for behind "

Probably typical of many many organizations today, I'm afraid. The tech guys recommend the new systems, but once they're in place, who checks the details as the years go by?

Remember the recent Hawaii "missile alert" warning? Hawaii's governor forgot his Twitter password, so couldn't issue a "not true" message for almost 20 minutes. Who'd have ever thought such an important/dangerous situation would result from one employee hitting a single button - all alone - and the Governor forgetting a Twitter password.

Government by Twitter? nah, never happen.

My "tag sale" analogy: just before a tag sale, you see posters stapled on dozens of telephone poles. But after the sale, no one checks that all the posters have been removed.

TM

 
SD Bugeye said:
i can’t belive that Rockwell -AB is still that for behind one there file


Amusing to hear Rockwell is among those who would rater "fight than switch"!

I've come across businesses here with systems so old they have to go "dumpster diving" to find component replacements. The claim is always: "Too expensive to upgrade". I've shrugged and left them to their delusion.
 
Yea I hear you we see it all the time
customers looking to replace bad PC5 and now SLC 500 IO cards crap from 20 years ago
all we can offer is an upgrade or go to EBay
amazing what that stuff goes for on eBay if you can salvage that stuff don’t throw it out the popular cards can fetch 3 times there original value
then there’s the licenses of the runtime software
Big bucks
 
Back
Top