Jump to content

oskarha

Member
  • Posts

    912
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Everything posted by oskarha

  1. Isnt the 650 a cut down GK106 or is that he 650 Ti (Boost)? Edit: The 650 is a GK106 part.
  2. So essentially the same limitations as crossfire (same core = ok).
  3. Interesting, most of those cards are GK104 but the 660 is GK106, although it might be refeering to the OEM GK104 version.
  4. Cool, look similar to the way Crossfire works.
  5. True, but OP was asking about SLI specifically.
  6. You will have no bottle necking with either CPUs. The difference between the 7500 and the 7600k in games with a 1060 is marginal, even when overclocked. As you are not going to overclock, i would recommend the 7500.
  7. Wow how did it die from that?
  8. Yea, I shot a quick video with the 18-55 kit lens and AF on the built in mic, and all you can hear is the lens focusing. I currently use a Sigma 17-70 F2.8-4 and a Takstar shotgun mic when filming, so noise from the AF motor isn't to big of a problem anymore.
  9. I guess that explains it, as well as the fact that its full frame and not DX. I find that the little thing in the middle that you line up to focus on the FM is really helpful when focusing, i guess thats whats makes you faster. When I use old manual focus lenses on my D5100 (such as the Nikkor 85mm f2) I usually use live view and digitally zoom to grab focus, as I tend to miss focus using the viewfinder at f2.
  10. I guess it also gives a wider FOV and better bokeh because of the larger size of 35mm film compared to APS-C sensors. I have to say though the the viewfinder in the FM is a million times better than the one on the D5100.
  11. What makes you carry the Nikon FM? I own a D5100 but I have access to my fathers old FM, when would it be able to create better results, and is it worth the hassle of shooting on film?
  12. I would try testdisk, it can probably help you save your files, and its free http://www.cgsecurity.org/wiki/TestDisk_Step_By_Step
  13. What happened to the USB? How did it die? If you are dealing with deleted partitions, try testdisk.
  14. Ive got my domain working no problem. I used dot.tk and freehostingeu to set up my website.
  15. .tk domains are free. http://www.dot.tk/en/index.html?lang=en
  16. You would definitely see a measurable difference. I would say go for it
  17. I seem to have found a solution, but it wasn't what I expected. To start, I recreated your partition structure on one of my spare drives. I created and deleted partitions in the manner that I described above. This did not have the effect I intended it to have, but it did still work. When making and deleting partitions, I reached the max number of primary partitions for an MBR disk 3 and one extended partition. This makes it so that windows is not able to make a separate system reserved partition. When windows cannot make a system reserved partition, it uses the main partition (C:) as the system reserved partition, hence solving our problem of the system reserved partition being put in a bad area of the disk. So I think this is what you need to do: - Make sure the disk is MBR and not GPT - Make sure that no more primary partitions can be created on the disk (Either 4 primary or 3 primary and one extended). - Install Windows - Profit? I hope this helps. I did take a few screenshots underway, but I don't think these will be as helpful as they will be misleading.
  18. How about this: Make partitions in the bad areas, and delete the good paritions (exept for the big one). Install windows onto the big parition, and as the only free space on the disk is the good area on the disk, windows will hopefully put the system reserved partitions there. You have to reformat the partitions anyway as windows requires NTFS. I have no idea if it works, but it might be worth a try.
  19. Task manager is known to report clock speeds incorrectly. Try using other software like CPU-Z to correctly monitor your clock speed.
  20. I'm not too sure if you can "convert" standard partitions into system reserved partitions. I think your best bet is to create new partitions in the same sectors as the old ones.
  21. This might help you create the needed system reserved paritions: https://social.technet.microsoft.com/wiki/contents/articles/14286.converting-windows-bios-installation-to-uefi.aspx Also, i would recommend you to make yourself familiar with diskpart (disk partitioning utility in cmd).
  22. This might work: - Install windows on another drive - Copy the main windows partition to the drive with bad sectors - Use cmd from the windows install disc to make the other paritions act like system reserved partitions
×