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Blevins

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About Blevins

  • Birthday Nov 29, 1990

Contact Methods

  • Steam
    http://steamcommunity.com/id/Necrons4life/

Profile Information

  • Gender
    Male
  • Location
    Fairbanks, Ak

System

  • CPU
    Intel Core i7 3770
  • Motherboard
    ASRock H77 Pro4/MVP
  • RAM
    4x G.SKILL Value 4GB 240-Pin DDR3 SDRAM DDR3 1600
  • GPU
    Gigabyte GeForce GTX 780 Ti
  • Case
    Cooler Master Storm Trooper
  • Storage
    Samsung 850 Pro 512GB SSD + 1TB Hitachi HDD + 2x 3TB HDDs
  • PSU
    KINGWIN ABT-850MM 850W
  • Display(s)
    3x ASUS VS247H-P
  • Cooling
    CoolerMaster Hyper 212 Pro
  • Keyboard
    Corsair K65 Mechanical Gaming Keyboard
  • Mouse
    Corsair M65 RGB FPS Mouse
  • Sound
    AfterGlow Wireless Headphones
  • Operating System
    Windows 10 Pro
  1. Back in the recovery, bootrec commands need to be run from the drive where windows is installed. The X: drive (As shown in your screenshots) is the bootable media you're using to repair it. type "CD C:" to get over to the C: drive, then run them again. You can also try: sfc /scannow /offbootdir=C: /offwindir=C:\windows There's a DISM command as well, but I can't remember off the top of my head how to run it on an offline image. Something like dism /image:C:\windows /cleanup-image /restorehealth Run bcdedit and post a screenshot of what that gives you.
  2. Sounds like memory dumping isn't enabled. To enable it: Quoted from: http://www.resplendence.com/whocrashed_enablingdumps
  3. Hardware is my first thought. Especially if SFC didn't turn anything up. But it could also be OS corruption. Is it Windows 7, or Windows 10? You can try this from the command line as well: dism /online /cleanup-image /checkhealth If that comes up with corruption try replacing /checkhealth with /restorehealth And yes, for the most part I know to look at minidumps.
  4. This sounds like it could be a memory issue. Try running Memtest86. I don't have time to find you a link right now, but google should turn it up pretty quick. After that I'd test your hard drive/SSD, while probably not the problem, page file issues can cause similar problems to memory. I recommend SeaTools, or WD's Data Lifeguard software. Also, grab the dump files from C:\windows\minidump and upload them somewhere so we can see them. Or you can use BlueScreenView to get a more understandable look at what's going on.
  5. Get in touch with your boss's boss and tell them what's up. You can usually request anonymity in that sort of situation so your boss doesn't/can't retaliate for it.
  6. Hit start and type in "Show or Hide common icons". Select the checkbox by "Computer" and hit apply. If the icon isn't quite right, hit "Restore default" next to change icon. It's in the same show or hide common icons menu.
  7. Quoted from the manual for your motherboard:
  8. The Equipment: ASUS ROG GL752VW Laptop Intel Core i7-6700HQ 16GB RAM nVidia GeForce GTX 960M Windows 10 Home The Problem: Boots normally, after 20 minutes to 3 hours, screen goes black. Backlight is still on, but no display comes through. Issue occurs regardless of if screen is moved, or stationary for the duration. What i've tried: Changing power options. Installed newest graphics drivers, both from ASUS, and directly from nVidia. Ran SFC, DISM, and Chkdsk /f/ /r. Ran Memtest86, no errors. Investigated BIOS for possibly related settings, none found. Reset BIOS to defaults. Updates BIOS to latest per ASUS website. Ran Furmark over the weekend, 72 hours, no problems. Temps stabilized at 84C. During stress test, screen did not go blank. Swapped hard drive with known good drive, and installed a fresh copy of Windows 10. Prime95 stress test ran for 18 hours, no problems, screen did not go blank. Let system sit at "No bootable devices" screen for 5 hours. Issue did not occur. Disassembled system looking for any visible damage to internal components. None found. GPU is integrated into system board. None of the things I've tried have made a difference. I'm hoping someone here might have some other ideas for what to try. I've tried everything I could think of, short of replacing the system board/GPU. I'm hoping to avoid that if possible, but may do so if necessary.
  9. Those are definitely Wireless antennae mounts. I can't say any ol wire will work, but you might be able to get some antennae, or an ancient laptop on the cheap, if not free that you can salvage some out of. They've used those same plugs for quite a while.
  10. Only on All-In-One units, I wasn't really paying attention to the quality of their image though. 1080p had been fine on my 24", but I wasn't sure about anything larger. Things like this are the reason I'm asking for suggestions I've edited the original post to seek greater than 1080p.
  11. I'm looking to buy a new monitor, my ASUS 24" 144Hz(Can't remember exact model, but it was about $250USD) served me well, but it was physically damaged recently, and I'd like to upgrade. I've been looking at Monitors on Newegg and Amazon, but it seems like I can't find anything I particularly like. I'm shopping in the $400-$500 range. I'd like to get something bigger than my 24". Ultrawide would be cool, but I'm not opposed to a more standard aspect ratio. 144Hz is nice, but not a must, necessarily. The monitor will be used primarily for gaming, and web browsing. But also occasional amateur photo editing/movies. I'm currently using a GTX 980Ti, Requirements: Larger than 24" Greater than 1080p resolution No ghosting(Or non noticeable) Would be nice(Not a requirement) 4k 144Hz Ultrawide would be neat. G-Sync So if anyone could give me some suggestions so I have a better idea of what to look at, that would be great1 Thanks in advance!
  12. It might have to do with economic background of their families as well, it's more common for a child of a middle class household to be middle class later in life. Poorer families are less able to feed their children well, the poor nutrition being a factor in their shorter stature. While middle and upper class families are better able to provide proper nutrition, so they grow taller. This can also be seen in places like Africa, where the average height is significantly shorter than the average in wealthier parts of the world(IE First world countries). I don't have any studies or evidence for this, but that seems like a logical conclusion to me.
  13. Full system specs: Motherboard: ASUS ROG Maximus VIII Hero Z170 CPU: Intel Core i7-6700K RAM: 2x 8GB DDR4-2133 G.Skill Ripjaws V GPU: Nvidia GeForce GTX 980 Ti SSD: Samsung 850 PRO 512GB HDDs: WD Blue 4TB, WD Green 3TB, 3TB WD Red Display: Asus VG248QE
  14. I want the Kova, because it looks like a nice mouse, and I love trying new mice out. Always looking for something better than what I have.
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