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5 September, 2005 at 6:28 pm #115716
Naa im just stirring the embers fatlad, you always bite back. :lol:
5 September, 2005 at 6:24 pm #115714Awww GG is that it? :lol:
5 September, 2005 at 6:16 pm #115711^
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^Wánker5 September, 2005 at 6:09 pm #35255^
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Wánker28 August, 2005 at 6:50 pm #134934There can be lots of reasons for this problem that your’e experiencing. First i’d try what morty said and if that fails, do a system restore.
28 August, 2005 at 6:42 pm #134940Edit your start up keys to remove all programs that are set to run at start up that you dont need.
start>run> type ‘msconfig’ click on the ‘start up’ tab and untick all the boxes for which programs you are sure you dont want to run at system start up. Try and untick as many as possible, the less programs that are set to run at boot, the quicker the systems boot time will become.
Also disable these.
Disable search network computers for scheduled tasks.
Disable search network for shared resources.
Disable error reporting.
Disable IE from checking for updates [optional but recommended].
If you have an intel chipset enable UDMA66 support.
Make sure your BIOS is configured to boot from the HDD first.
Enable the quick boot feature in your systems BIOS or disable it if your systems BIOS has the memory check utility.
Defragment your boot files.
Defragment the registry.
Also you can try disabling your paging file but beware this works for some systems and others it dont. My system has 1024 of physical RAM and my system boots 0.5 seconds quicker with the paging file disabled.
A majority of these tasks can be performed by downloading tune-up utilities 2004 from here http://www.tune-up.com
There are loads of hacks for improving pre and post logon boot times, use Google to search for them. Remeber MS XP alone needs 256 mb to boot efficiently, so if you have say something like 128 mb of RAM your systems boot time is going to be limited by your RAM.
19 August, 2005 at 8:03 pm #132397If you have what Temptress describes above [BroadJump Client Foundation] instaled onto your comp allow the program access rights and tick the box remeber settings and click allow.
If you dont have the [BroadJump Client Foundation] instaled onto your comp investigate what this program is before allowing access to the net.
15 August, 2005 at 7:01 pm #126062@forumhostpb wrote:
I always thought that MP3 files – especially those from doubtful sources – were riddled with viruses and other nasty payloads, in addition to the music.
Trojans can be encapsulated into the id3 tags of mp3 files.
Alot of ppl on here that use P2P software to download music scan the music file with the AV clients and get a negative result. If they were to scan the same music files using TDS-3 they’d be in for a shock.
25 July, 2005 at 10:35 pm #128054Bypass this simple censor by holding down keys ctlr and alt on the left handside of your keyboard and type any vowel.
Example.
shít
fúck
ásswipe
cúnt
díck:lol:
Sorry PB thought id ruin it for you.
13 July, 2005 at 6:14 pm #126293NTFS = Windows 2000 nt file system or for short NTFS. When you boot from the XP installation disc you will be given two format options one will be FAT32 and the other will be NTFS.
Choose NTFS as it is far more secure.
http://www.michaelstevenstech.com/XPrepairinstall.htm
Go to the link above and read the tutorial posted under XP repair install half way down the page. This will show you how to boot from the XP CD. Donot repair the installation though instead delete both partitions, format the HDD using the NTFS option and then instal XP.
It really is easy to do.
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