[QUOTE=pentium;43555420][IMG]http://i11.photobucket.com/albums/a166/ballsandy/Computer%20related/bitch.png[/IMG]
Why are you bitching about 17MB of space? Shut up.[/QUOTE]
Considering how much money you spent on low capacity storage mediums all the time, that 17MB would usually sound premium to you.
[QUOTE=B!N4RY;43558849]Considering how much money you spent on low capacity storage mediums all the time, that 17MB would usually sound premium to you.[/QUOTE]
I used the last of my 36gb drives for this.
[QUOTE=fishyfish777;43557543]help my t42's gpu came desoldered
i can't see anything aaaaaa
[editline]16th January 2014[/editline]
its getting WORSE i can't read what im typing[/QUOTE]
Reminds me of the 5 Xbox 360s I had where the GPU broke on me.
[QUOTE=benjgvps;43557567]The short version is some clever people turned a chipset found in $10-20 USB DVB-T (Digital TV in europe and other places) tuners into a software defined radio. This means you can tune into frequencies between 24 and 1766 MHz, assuming you have an antenna that can receive the frequency that you're interested in. The antenna that it comes with is pretty shitty though.
Some examples of things you can pick up:
[url]http://www.rtl-sdr.com/about-rtl-sdr/[/url]
radioreference.com will usually list some frequencies used by public safety. Some forums or pages will list some other miscellaneous frequencies. The rest I've found by looking for common frequency ranges and sweeping through them manually. I got lucky with some two-way radio frequencies, since you can only see them when people are communicating.
For non voice traffic, you have to determine which protocol it uses based on what it sounds like or what frequency range it's in. Then you can look for a program to decode it with (PDW for POCSAG/FLEX pagers, for example). These programs use an audio input, so for the USB dongle you need to install Virtual Audio Cable or the free VB-Cable.
I think it's worth looking into since it allows you to see how RF works for a pretty low cost.[/QUOTE]
i have a like three rtl-sdr dongles i ordered, also i definately didn't decrypt gsm traffic using a rechargable sim card and a rtldongle
[QUOTE=Warship;43554626]My school is pretty neat
[t]https://fbcdn-sphotos-a-a.akamaihd.net/hphotos-ak-prn2/t31/1097640_558004930930081_1628852792_o.jpg[/t][/QUOTE]
...Woah, I had a dream about a school with that exact layout once. What the hell.
god damnit, my ps2 fat refuses to work with a game
the disc has nothing visually wrong with it and the ps2 plays other games fine
but when I get near a mission objective all music stops, all radio chatter stops, and if I finish the mission it's stuck loading forever
weren't consoles supposed to "just work"?
[QUOTE=Zezibesh;43560152]weren't consoles supposed to "just work"?[/QUOTE]
lolnope
afaik the disc doesn't need physical damage to not work. exposed to excess heat? drive failure?
[QUOTE=B!N4RY;43558849]Considering how much money you spent on low capacity storage mediums all the time, that 17MB would usually sound premium to you.[/QUOTE]
17MB is a lot of internal storage on my phone :v:
[QUOTE=Turing;43559650]i have a like three rtl-sdr dongles i ordered, also i definately didn't decrypt gsm traffic using a rechargable sim card and a rtldongle[/QUOTE]
Have you had any luck with trunked radio / Unitrunker? It will pick up the protocol being Provoice and the health is 99-100%, though apparently I should get a Site window after 10-20 seconds, which I never do.
EDIT:
Since I now work for the college, I can get access to the sweet, sweet Staff WiFi:
[IMG]http://www.speedtest.net/result/3236393647.png[/IMG]
(needs less speed test results)
[QUOTE=garychencool;43560422]17MB is a lot of internal storage on my phone :v:[/QUOTE]
Your phone is shit, we know. Why do you feel the need to remind us at every opportunity?
[QUOTE=kaukassus;43560791]please don't start.[/QUOTE]
Ok sorry
I just ordered an Intel i7 4770K along with an ASUS Z87 + 8GB DDR3 RAM to replace my Gigabyte X48-DS5 w/ Core 2 Duo E8400 + 4GB DDR2 RAM.
Did I make a smart choice.
Anyone getting massive memory leaking in Battlefield 4? I can play about 2 maps max, and then it just eats shit hard, and takes the OS with it, forcing a reboot.
And the memory stays allocated even if you manage to close the game down, so you still need to reboot because you just permanently lost 2GiB of RAM.
[QUOTE=nikomo;43561637]Anyone getting massive memory leaking in Battlefield 4? I can play about 2 maps max, and then it just eats shit hard, and takes the OS with it, forcing a reboot.
And the memory stays allocated even if you manage to close the game down, so you still need to reboot because you just permanently lost 2GiB of RAM.[/QUOTE]
Betafield 4
The beta ran great, after the first patch I had no crashes. What the hell happened?
DICE suddenly remembered that they're EA's bitch, so they quickly ruined the game.
Anyone else getting errors when they try and use PCPartPicker?
[QUOTE=Saturn V;43561468]I just ordered an Intel i7 4770K along with an ASUS Z87 + 8GB DDR3 RAM to replace my Gigabyte X48-DS5 w/ Core 2 Duo E8400 + 4GB DDR2 RAM.
Did I make a smart choice.[/QUOTE]
No you need an AMD FX superbitchinfast. with 32 cores and 50 ghz.
[QUOTE=Skanic;43563047]No you need an AMD FX superbitchinfast. with 32 cores and 50 ghz.[/QUOTE]
downloadmoreghz.com
more cores for more whores
Old gold.
[IMG]http://i.imgur.com/Vxovp7E.jpg[/IMG]
[QUOTE=Skanic;43563047]No you need an AMD FX superbitchinfast. with 32 cores and 50 ghz.[/QUOTE]
If AMD had that (Although 50Ghz on CMOS... Engineering nightmare), even at single issue, they would be dominating everyone right now :v:
I've had my laptop for what, one and a half years now, and hibernate had never worked under Linux, but I never needed it, so I didn't bother thinking about it.
I just updated to latest UEFI and tried hibernate. Yeah... the update is from 2012 too, I feel really stupid for not updating before.
IBM's SreveRAID utility is weeeeird.
So you already know it bitches about mismatched drives (both capacity and brand) but after you build, initialize and sync a volume (takes about eight hours) with the tool it's STILL a pain in the ass. Window's disk management agent has a shit fit when you partition it. Makes the partition, then can't format because it says the drive is offline (it's all hardware RAID so Windows only sees one volume ). A reboot later it still can't understand how to fucking format the disk. Then the odd idea to format using the command line comes up and bam, formatting away.
Finishes, assigns a drive letter and.....It's still only visible at the command line. The fuck?
Reboot again, still no dice, CHKDSK it from the command line. Suddenly it's globally visible and pops up in My Computer. Disk agent STILL can't admit that it's formatted and has a valid filesystem even though it has no issues reading and writing files and benchmarks.
[IMG]http://i11.photobucket.com/albums/a166/ballsandy/read.png[/IMG][IMG]http://i11.photobucket.com/albums/a166/ballsandy/write.png[/IMG]
Okay, I lied. Even giving it dedicated RAID hardware and a U160 SCSI channel it's still pretty poor. Oh well. That's what happens when you don't use new shit.
[QUOTE=pentium;43565480][...]That's what happens when you don't use new shit.[/QUOTE]
You're honestly the last person I'd expect to hear anything like this in any context :v:
I'm pretty sure the Flash in my Galaxy S2 gets better performance than that RAID.
Then stop masturbating over old bad hardware.
RAID aka "yep, old technology still sucks"
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