Jump to content

Butter1484

Member
  • Posts

    107
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Awards

This user doesn't have any awards

Profile Information

  • Gender
    Not Telling

System

  • CPU
    AMD FX-8350
  • Motherboard
    Gigabyte GA-990FXA-UD3
  • RAM
    Corsair Dominator Platinum 16GB
  • GPU
    GTX 750 Ti
  • Case
    Thermaltake Chaser MK-I
  • Storage
    Samsung 840 EVO 250GB, Western Digital Caviar Blue 1TB
  • PSU
    EVGA 750W 80+ Gold
  • Display(s)
    2x Asus VS228H-P 21.5"
  • Cooling
    Cooler Master Hyper 212 EVO
  • Keyboard
    Corsair Raptor K40
  • Mouse
    Logitech G100s
  • Operating System
    Windows 10

Recent Profile Visitors

720 profile views
  1. My friend and I experienced this today as well
  2. Yes that is standard, but that does not directly translate to only one internal IP. Consider the fact that multiple users can connect to a router. The router itself will have only one IP to connect to the modem, but the router keeps track of which internal IP gets what traffic by using ports. By forwarding different ports to different IP addresses, you can allow external connections to multiple internal machines.
  3. Why can't you have two IPs? That is literally the point of port forwarding. Just forward the necessary ports to the different machines.
  4. System restore should fix the problem. If not, follow these instructions to access safe mode http://www.tomshardware.com/faq/id-2569556/safe-mode-windows.html
  5. Do you have an install cd or usb? They can be used to access recovery options
  6. If you can, give it a couple seconds before you do it
  7. Turn the power off while the computer is turning on, while the logo with the spinning circle is on the screen
  8. While the computer is booting, hard reset the machine. In most cases this will trigger automatic repair
  9. nVidia GeForce driver version 364.47 is causing some systems to become stuck in reboot loops. The issue seems to be caused when updating systems with multiple monitors using the express install option. nVidia has pulled the update and have released a beta update to resolve the problem. The driver can be uninstalled in safe mode on affected systems. The official statement from nVidia is I had installed the update, but luckily only on my laptop and not my multi-monitor desktop before I learned of the issue. http://www.pcworld.com/article/3041484/software/nvidias-new-36467-game-ready-drivers-are-crashing-systems-but-theres-a-fix.html
  10. Try restarting the computer during boot to prompt an automatic repair. After the repair tries to run, you should be able to choose an option called advanced options. You should then be able to select troubleshoot. Then you should be able to select advanced options. There should then be a system restore option.
  11. If you have a nVidia card and updated to driver version 364.47 that is likely the cause. The update has been pulled. If possible, you will want to try a system restore from the recovery menu.
  12. Just use the regular Windows 10 option
  13. At this point I believe that updates have been released to prevent overclocking a non K.
  14. Ok then, if after holding shift and clicking restart there should be an option to use a device. You should be able to choose the CD drive from there.
×