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psnewuser

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  1. It looks like some people have had success with UnRaid recognizing their IDE drives. I'd look into some BIOS settings and see if switching around some of the hard drive settings would get the OS to recognize the drives. Eg. legacy ide
  2. What are the specs of your computer? How much are you overclocking? Does it still happen when you're not overclocked? Can you use a tool like BlueScreenView from NirSoft and give us the .txt files of your crash dumps? That'll help pin things down.
  3. Here is a link on creating exceptions for ISP signatures in Norton.
  4. +1 more for the Ubiquiti Unifi Pros. The APs are amazing, support POE and come with an optional POE adapter. The hardware is excellent and setting up the controller software is easy as pie with tutorials on how to do it on both Windows and Linux.
  5. I don't have a 3750 in front of me, but doesn't Cisco flash the LEDS green when it's 1000mbps and keep them solid green when it's 100mbps? You'll have to use button to switch to "SPEED" mode instead of "STAT" mode.
  6. Okay so in that dump you're getting a bug check code: 0x139 which is described here. Your parameter 1 is a value of 3, so according to the article: Causes Resolution I would start by checking device manager and the event log for any messages pertaining to a broken driver. I would also try to reinstall new versions of all my drivers.
  7. Sorry for double post: Furthermore -- if you download NirSofts BlueScreenView you can select all the dumps by pressing ctrl+A , go to "File" at the top, and then "Save Selected Items". If you upload that text file, that will help me and others on the forum pinpoint the problem.
  8. Perhaps some of the new components caused some weird driver conflict. How hot are we talking? If you go to the folder C:\Windows\Minidump it should have some .dmp files. These are memory dump files that can contain information about the crashes that can be extremely helpful. You can open these files with something like NirSoft's BlueScreenView tool.
  9. +1 more for building your own. The flexibility in software alone makes it worth it in my opinion. For hardware, you don't need anything crazy. Requirements will depend on what software and features you're looking for though. I do recommend a RAID controller. If you're doing ZFS, remember the necessary amount of memory for the tables is directly related to how much storage space you have.
  10. WereCatf is correct, you'll want to run this file with the Java Run Time Environment. Checkout a tutorial here which explains everything. There's a section on Java. https://minecraft.gamepedia.com/Tutorials/Setting_up_a_server
  11. When writing to the NAS, it could be using memory to speed up write transfers, but reading will still be slower. That being said 2MB/s still seems very low for a read speed, even for a single drive. What are you using for a NAS, like the hardware and/or software?
  12. I don't sorry -- I haven't messed with that stuff in a while. Amazon might be a good start, but remember your antenna is going to be based on frequency.
  13. Checkout the SDRplay products. RSP1A is the entry level at around $100, RSP2 is a kick up at around $170, and their RSP2pro is just the RSP2 in a steel case. All capable of 1kHz to 2GHz.
  14. What are you looking for in terms of features that the R820T2 doesn't have?
  15. It might be due to some other software, I know FoxIt PDF Reader in the past caused similar issues because of their faulty Print To PDF printer. Do you have any other printers installed like a PDF printer, etc? You can try getting rid of those printers temporary and see if your crashing stops.
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