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Harmy's STAR WARS Despecialized Edition HD - V2.7 - MKV (Released) — Page 468

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Here's a mistake that I made when I built my first computer last summer. I was worried about static and me being the extra cautious type I bought myself one of those static discharging wristbands on amazon (very affordable and worth the peace of mind it brings) so in order for it to work you need to attach the alligator clip to a piece of metal in order to ground yourself. Most builders use the metal case itself which is safe to do so. Your motherboard needs brass standoffs so any static that passes along the chassis will not affect the motherboard. Now this is very important if you do use your case as a ground MAKE SURE THAT THE PART YOU ATTACH THE ALLIGATOR CLIP TO IS METAL!!!!!!

I made the mistake of assuming that just because something is hard and cold (stop laughing) that it was metal it later turned out to be plastic

Fortunately for me it was the summer and I was standing on a hardwood floor so I didn't have any static and the computer is still working so a potential disaster was avoided. 

Also this goes without saying that you need to go in another room without carpeting when it's build time.

Another thing to keep in mind is that although anti-static bags protect their contents from static charge the outside of these bags potentially has MASSIVE amounts of stored up charge I have heard of many people who will take out sensitive electronics and set them down on those bags this is a major no no

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michaelkirschner said:

Another thing to keep in mind is that although anti-static bags protect their contents from static charge the outside of these bags potentially has MASSIVE amounts of stored up charge I have heard of many people who will take out sensitive electronics and set them down on those bags this is a major no no

 Oh.

Um....

Well I learned a thing.

ROTJ Storyboard Reconstruction Project

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So the computer is up and running but I don't have legally activated Windows yet, because I ordered it slightly cheaper from a different company and it hasn't arrived yet - but hopefully it should arrive today or tomorrow at the latest. Meanwhile, now would be ideal time to test the HDDs but I really don't know how to go about it.

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Harmy said:

So the computer is up and running but I don't have legally activated Windows yet, because I ordered it slightly cheaper from a different company and it hasn't arrived yet - but hopefully it should arrive today or tomorrow at the latest. Meanwhile, now would be ideal time to test the HDDs but I really don't know how to go about it.

 Check this article out bro. It may help you out.

http://pcsupport.about.com/od/toolsofthetrade/tp/tophddiag.htm

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Harmy said:

So the computer is up and running but I don't have legally activated Windows yet, because I ordered it slightly cheaper from a different company and it hasn't arrived yet - but hopefully it should arrive today or tomorrow at the latest. Meanwhile, now would be ideal time to test the HDDs but I really don't know how to go about it.

 

That's not a problem, you can download official ISO of your version from Microsoft and install it now, you have like 30 days to enter product key.

Fanrestore - Fan Restoration Forum: https://fanrestore.com

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What brand of HDDs did you get? By any chance Seagate or Maxtor?

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As for HDDs, you can use CrystalDiskInfo or HD Tune to check for any errors. Even simple chkdsk would suffice IMO.

Fanrestore - Fan Restoration Forum: https://fanrestore.com

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 (Edited)

That'll work too.

Because now with a freshly installed system, you should make a backup image of your drive. You'll be thankful to have it when something goes very wrong. Not having to install all the drivers, browser, e-mail, video stuff (like Avisynth, Virtualdub and the likes) and especially all the Adobe stuff yet again saves a lot of nerves.

Like for Seagate and Maxtor drives, there's a special free edition of the great Acronis True Image backup software, which only works for WD drives (actually it works with any drive, as long as it finds a WD drive attached to your system): http://support.wdc.com/product/downloaddetail.asp?swid=119

Make a compressed image of your system and software drive(s) and put it some place safe.

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Clonezilla has worked great for me in the past.  It's pretty easy to install to a usb and then write the disk image to another usb drive as long as you aren't using raid on the OS. A 32gb usb stick ought to be able to hold an image of a fresh install of windows with all the apps installed that you'd want in case of a crash. Of course you can write the disk image to any other media other than the drive you are imaging. The clonezilla usb drive only needs to be about 200 mb in size.

Tuxboot will set up the bootable usb drive automatically with updated clonezilla.

Luke threw twice…maybe.

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So, the Windows did arrive today and everything seems to be running smoothly.

Here are some pictures:

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Looks Great Harmy!

Recently I upgraded to the latest VLC and re-watched 2.5 and it still has that repeat audio bug at the end of the credits when the usernames scroll by.  For fun, I pulled out my copy of 2.0 and it doesn't have the same problem.

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looks very nice.

looking for HDTV of the  Attack of the Clones and Revenge of the Sith.  Also HDTV of The Lord of the Rings trilogy

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porkinsred6 said:

Looks Great Harmy!

Recently I upgraded to the latest VLC and re-watched 2.5 and it still has that repeat audio bug at the end of the credits when the usernames scroll by.  For fun, I pulled out my copy of 2.0 and it doesn't have the same problem.

It is, in fact, a VLC bug. It didn't happen with VLC 2.0.8, but now, with 2.1.3 it also happens with my German MKV.

The new version seems to have problems with audio tracks that are shorter than the video track.

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Laserschwert said:

That'll work too.

Because now with a freshly installed system, you should make a backup image of your drive. You'll be thankful to have it when something goes very wrong. Not having to install all the drivers, browser, e-mail, video stuff (like Avisynth, Virtualdub and the likes) and especially all the Adobe stuff yet again saves a lot of nerves.

Like for Seagate and Maxtor drives, there's a special free edition of the great Acronis True Image backup software, which only works for WD drives (actually it works with any drive, as long as it finds a WD drive attached to your system): http://support.wdc.com/product/downloaddetail.asp?swid=119

Make a compressed image of your system and software drive(s) and put it some place safe.

 +1 on the backup image. I cloned my hard drive after a fresh install, so any time I have to reinstall the system, I can just clone the disk back with all of my programs and prefs intact. Saves a lot of time.

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So, I've hit a bit of a snag with the new computer - there's exactly 746.52GB on each of the 3TB drives that the system simply refuses to allocate to a partition. I tried looking for solutions online but no luck - so far, I only managed to find out that I'm far from being the only one with this problem.

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Harmy said:

So, I've hit a bit of a snag with the new computer - on each of the discs, there's exactly 746.52GB on each of the 3TB drives that the system simply refuses to allocate to a partition. I tried looking for solutions online but no luck - so far, I only managed to find out that I'm far from being the only one with this problem.

You partitioned the HDDs with MBR rather than GPT. MBR only partitions up to ~2.19GiB, hence your loss of 746.52GiB.

Here's a detailed explanation of your problem (see post 2): http://forums.seagate.com/t5/Desktop-HDD-Desktop-SSHD/Hooking-up-3TB-seagate-barracuda-drive/td-p/102204

GPT FAQ from M$: http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/windows/hardware/gg463525.aspx

Are these internal or external HDDs? If external, then what enclosure are you using and how are you connecting it to the computer (e.g., eSATA, USB)?

A picture is worth a thousand words. Post 102 is worth more.

I’m late to the party, but I think this is the best song. Enjoy!

—Teams Jetrell Fo 1, Jetrell Fo 2, and Jetrell Fo 3

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 (Edited)

Well, I didn't choose to partition it this way - in the menu when installing Windows and selecting where I want to install the OS, the HDD space already showed up divided into two 2TB chunks of un-allocated space, which it was possible to allocate and two 746.52GB chunks of un-allocated space, which it was not possible to allocate.

And they are internal HDDs, one of which is my system HDD.

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Harmy said:

Well, I didn't choose to partition it this way - in the menu when installing Windows and selecting where I want to install the OS, the HDD space already showed up divided into two 2TB chunks of un-allocated space, which it was possible to allocate and two 746.52GB chunks of un-allocated space, which it was not possible to allocate.

Interesting. I guess Windows doesn't use GPT for partitioning during installation.

Are you willing to reinstall? The easiest way to do this is to use a Linux Live CD (e.g., Ubuntu) to do the partitioning prior to installing Windows.

A picture is worth a thousand words. Post 102 is worth more.

I’m late to the party, but I think this is the best song. Enjoy!

—Teams Jetrell Fo 1, Jetrell Fo 2, and Jetrell Fo 3

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Harmy said:

Yeah, I'll be reinstalling either way.

OK, cool. Shoot me a PM when you're ready and I can help via webchat.

A picture is worth a thousand words. Post 102 is worth more.

I’m late to the party, but I think this is the best song. Enjoy!

—Teams Jetrell Fo 1, Jetrell Fo 2, and Jetrell Fo 3

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I actually figured it out - I used these instructions on the non-system HDD and it worked just fine and I made two partitions on it, one large one and one small one, to which I'll install the Windows on re-install and then after the re-install, I'll do the same with the disc which currently has the system on it.

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Harmy said:

I actually figured it out - I used these instructions on the non-system HDD and it worked just fine and I made two partitions on it, one large one and one small one, to which I'll install the Windows on re-install and then after the re-install, I'll do the same with the disc which currently has the system on it.

Excellent! :-)

A picture is worth a thousand words. Post 102 is worth more.

I’m late to the party, but I think this is the best song. Enjoy!

—Teams Jetrell Fo 1, Jetrell Fo 2, and Jetrell Fo 3