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ninjaelectron

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  • Posts

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Contact Methods

  • Steam
    steamcommunity.com/id/ninjaelectron
  • Origin
    ninjaelectron

System

  • CPU
    Intel Core i5-4460
  • Motherboard
    Gigabyte GA-H97M-D3H Micro ATX
  • RAM
    8GB Kingston Fury Black
  • GPU
    ASUS GTX 1060
  • Case
    Cooler Master N200
  • Storage
    Kingston SSDNow 240GB + WD Blue 1TB
  • PSU
    Corsair CX 430M
  • Display(s)
    ASUS VN289QL
  • Cooling
    Stock Intel Cooler
  • Keyboard
    Corsair Strafe RGB
  • Mouse
    Logitech G502 Proteus Core
  • Sound
    HyperX Cloud II
  • Operating System
    Windows 10 Home
  • PCPartPicker URL

ninjaelectron's Achievements

  1. So this occurs every time the computer starts? What brand and model of fan is it?
  2. Is the fan spinning? If it isn't, try turning it on in the BIOS. If that doesn't work, try the other fan to see if it is a burnt out LED. Although I doubt that is the case.
  3. Just looked at the manual for your mobo, and it seems you only have one case fan port. While there are splitters for fans, it probably is not a good idea for you to connect two LED Fans to one port. To solve this you could connect an external fan splitter such as this NZXT splitter, which uses external power from the power supply to power the fans while still allowing control of fan speed through the motherboard.
  4. Do you know the exact motherboard product name/number? "AMD 760G" is a chipset, which wouldn't get you far. Usually product numbers look like "MSI-760GM-P23", for example. If you can't find the product number, try looking for headers like this.
  5. That would be the battery. (Remember to check the orientation.) Forgot to check, did you try loading default configuration in the motherboard Setup? you can by pressing <ESC> when the ASrock logo shows, and finding "load Default Settings" or something of that sort.
  6. Possibly you need to reset your motherboard's CMOS? Pull the coin cell battery out of the motherboard. press the power button as the computer is unplugged for 30 seconds, and put the battery back in. Switch your computer back on and see if that works.
  7. What are your specs? Have you tried reinstalling Intel/Nvidia/AMD drivers?
  8. You cannot connect two 1050 Ti's together via SLI. While the box is probably referencing DirectX 12's "Multi-GPU Modes", it is not supported on practically any games.
  9. You would take a display cable, such as an HDMI Cable, DVI Cable, VGA Cable, or DisplayPort Cable (Whichever has a port that exists on the back of the computer), and plug it into the back of the computer by lining up the port with the connector (all of the mentioned cables only go in only one way, so don't force it.) and pushing it in. If it does not go in, make sure you have it lined up and try again. once plugged in you may have to tighten the screws on the cable (if it has any) with your fingers. Do the same on the ports on the monitor. next, plug in both to wall power, and turn both on. You may need to switch inputs on the monitor, which will be in the manual that comes with it.
  10. A newish cryptocurrency has been making waves on the internet, called Ethereum. This has led to a spike in the amount of people buying graphics cards (mostly Radeon) to mine Ethereum, hence the lack of stock. Luckily, the difficulty of mining is skyrocketing, possibly leading to a future growth in the used market for GPUs in the coming months.
  11. I would definitely recommend them! One thing I'd recommend you to get alongside with them is a headset to headphone adapter and an extender cable. I've found that the USB box for the headphones is susceptible to static from the computer. the adapter will allow you to connect the headphones directly to the computer.
  12. Likely the Wi-Fi indicator is in the bottom right for Lubuntu. Click that and you should be brought to a Wi-Fi menu. if that doesn't work, you can go to the menu on the bottom left, open settings, and click Network. probably that will bring you to a network selection menu. As for DSL (I assume Damn Small Linux?), I don't know. Likely DSL doesn't support wireless. As @code_glitch stated, probably you should Try Xubuntu (Ubuntu Linux's XFCE variant) if you want to get started with Linux. It is a bit more fully featured, and is still lightweight for most people.
  13. Have you ever thrown Linux on a flash drive or CD? if so, remove them and it should go away. otherwise (as @Endeavor01 posted,) throw a Windows 10 Installer on a USB Drive from another machine (https://www.microsoft.com/en-ca/software-download/windows10) and boot to that. Click "Repair this PC" and hope for the best.
  14. It is entirely possible to have windows 7 on it. Only problem is that it will probably run horribly. Personally, I'd run some kind of lightweight linux distro on it, like Lubuntu: http://lubuntu.net/
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