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Mad153

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Everything posted by Mad153

  1. I'm still a bit confused about this channel. Linus said in the wan show it's going to be tips and tricks, amongst other things. Coming from mainly Windows, I've seen a lot of bad "tips and tricks". Common ones being disabling mouse cursor shadows to "increase" pc speed and flushing your DNS to make your internet "faster". I know Mac os is different, but I assume there's still this sort of disinformation on how to maintain a pc etc. I really hope it isn't going to be like that.
  2. Hello, and welcome to the forum! Windows XP runs on x86, while your tablet most likely uses ARM. Hence you can't do this without an emulator. Then the performance will be very very bad. What tablet model is it?
  3. Bonjour, and welcome to the forum! My main concern is you have picked parts that are out of stock. (Your CPU and video card). Do you already have these?
  4. Hello, and welcome to the forum! Short answer: not for at least a year. Long answer: global chip shortage affecting everything doesn't seem to be going away any time soon. It's so hard to predict that any answer/ date is a vague guess. Depends on budget and availability and what games/ productivity you want to do.
  5. Help is here. You do need to... Write something though
  6. Welcome to the forum! Firstly, many other brands exist. You might be able to get a better PSU from someone else. Ok so there's an LTT video on this, but not all SSDs are equal. Many cheaper adata drives don't have a dram cache. This means performance will be slower. You pick. Personal preference. More to go wrong in a AIO but should be fine.
  7. Wow. That's a good spec. Especially a 3060. I'd say, though: Why do you have 2 ssds? Can you get a 5600x into your budget? Perhaps removing the additional ssd. Also, you'll need a windows license somehow. It's quite expensive directly from Microsoft, but if you're adventurous, you can find some that work but you technically shouldn't use for less.
  8. Mad153

    hello

    Hello
  9. Hello budget twitter

  10. I'd say most people on this site are enthusiasts and therefore our perception is slightly skewed. Most people would be fine with a 1tb SSD for games and windows. Personally I think 2TB is probably the best place to start if money wasn't an option but storage is so easily expandable to suit your needs
  11. Hello and welcome to the forum! I can't remember what the default multiplier on that chip is. I'm assuming it is not overclocked, and that the CPU is boosting?
  12. May I ask why? I'm hesitant to believe that people who have decompiled it would throw it out in the open for others to look at.
  13. Oh ok. Just to let you know, by default in this forum people aren't notified that you've replied unless you've @ them or pressed the reply button arrow below. Is this a fresh windows install?
  14. This is a good video with an interesting showcase: my friend in Shanghai has been telling me about getting steam. What Linus thought of as excessive personal data collection on valve's end is likely to do with China's real name verification. In china you can't use any major tech software without it and it's easy to guess why. Foreigners trying to sign up for WeChat currently understand this the most: the Google play version of the app seems to point blank refuse any foreign number. The lack of community tools is interesting. I assume valve didn't want to get in the grey area of automatically removing "wrong" messages etc.
  15. This is impressive, because HP SMART is down right now so I can't scan anything... *Sigh*
  16. HP "smart" is down. 

     

    I love printers...

  17. Today, I have decided to review one of the worst pieces of technology to ever exist (in general) ... printers. Recently my old EPSON something or other died. It was quite annoying, because I have spare ink for it and, well there seems to be a printer shortage of some sort currently. Bored of having two EPSONs fail mechanically, I decided to buy a HP printer. Hence I bought another one. The HP 9020 seems to know it's place from a visual standpoint. It has a minimalist and space conserving design that is somewhat understated, as printers go. I'm not going to bother take photos. Google it if you want but it looks nice as printers go. Many of the parts of the printer feel reassuringly well made- the front panel that you can open is held on with some nice well made levers that slowly open the maintenance door. In standby mode it's silent, but when printing it gets moderately loud, but I don't mind that. It has USB-A, ethernet, WIFI (more on that later) and a phone port for those who like using fax in 2021. It supports printing from IOS devices and android devices natively, which I'd say is good, but not anything special. The setup It comes in a box that is somewhat well packaged, but HP seems to be hoping that no one will break it because it's somewhat heavy, and not because it is really well packaged. Inside came instructions in English, German, French and some other European languages and an EU and UK plug, which is really quite generous, despite probably being a cost saving measure. Also it came with Russian instructions and boring legal things printed in their own booklet (the other languages were just in one) twice. It comes with demo ink that apparently can do around 2,000 pages, but I'd say it's probably going to last around 750 - 800. Turning it on, it gives me a QR code after a bit of waiting on it's small but quite responsible display. I scan it, and it prompts me to download "HP smart", which is well designed, if a bit slow. It finds the ready to setup printer, and prompts me to enter my network details. Unfortunately, this is where things went wrong. It wouldn't pair to my Ubiquiti amplifi wifi, which is annoying. I assume it was confused by the different mesh points. I tried again, nothing. This greatly frustrated me, especially as it took around 5 MINUTES to fail to pair. I then decided to contact support to see what I could do (below). After giving up on support, eventually I turned it off and on and it prompted me to use WPS after pressing around aimlessly on the screen. It then connected fine, but my frustration was immense and I was angry. The support HP has a terrible support experience. on their website, is a chatbot who seemed useless for anything, and couldn't connect me to a human. I then searched the help pages, but couldn't find anything. I then turned to twitter, to see if they have a support account. They have a few dozen twitter accounts and I did not understand which one to annoy. No matter, because when I found a support one, they were replying to messages with a 3 to 4 day delay. Printer support from large companies tends to be quite bad, but this is the worst I've seen. I hope that if I had called them, someone would have been there to help, but from my experience, their support gets 1/10. Confusing and unhelpful. The printing and scanning and copying It is a good printer/scanner/ copier. It is fast and can hold lots of paper. I enjoy the high quality document feeder (ADF), which can scan both sides of a document simultaneously for you and scan many sheets at once without intervention. Too bad, then, that it sometimes scans slightly wonky with the ADF and therefore the paper needs to be lined up exactly. It prints quickly for an inkjet and seems to be quite efficient, ink wise. I wouldn't print too many photos with it, being an inkjet designed for a small office. The Scanning features are all done through the aforementioned HP smart app, that I will describe more below. It supports scanning to many formats(pdf, jpg, png). I haven't tried faxing anyone yet. It doesn't seem prone to printer jamming which is... good for a printer? The mediocre HP smart app The HP smart app is a Microsoft store exclusive on windows, App store exclusive on mac and IOS and Play store on android. This is somewhat annoying, not because I enjoy mindlessly shitting on the windows store, but rather because another option would be very nice. Luckily you don't need it to print though on any platform, but you do need it to scan on Windows (macOS users can use the default scanner app in system preferences). Now, you might be saying... a windows store app isn't that bad, is it? To use the scanning functionality of the printer that cost me £250/ around $350, I have to sign up for a HP account. This is abysmal. At least it works? right. On my parent's mac, it would hang on opening. they were one major update behind the latest MacOS release. This is just bad. I hope it was an issue with that build of MacOS, and does not mean that you need a new-ish mac that can run Big Sur to use a printer. I updated it, and about 30 minutes later, it was up to date and working fine. it does take a while to start but the UI is clean and customisable, which is good. It absolutely blows EPSON out of the water for their software offering (the EPSON scan program that you have to use goes unresponsive when a scan is in progress, and failed to detect the printer about 1/4 of the time I used it). Furthermore, it looks like it is from this era! EPSON scan hasn't changed design at all since 2000. A note on HP instant ink HP printers that are somewhat new support HP's ink subscription. It is optional, but somewhat strange. Instead of paying when you run out of ink, you pay for a quota of pages you print every month. You pay a surcharge for every extra page you print. The printer then orders ink when it is low straight to your house. It could work out cost effective for some people, but my printing usage is irregular and some months I print 100s of pages, the next 0. you can see the subscription plans on HP's website - it is the same for all printers I believe. Be aware however that if you sign up, your demo ink is enrolled in the program too. This means if you cancel, your ink stops working, despite the fact it came for free with the printer. This is the same with any other locked-in instant ink. You can only use Instant ink if you are on the subscription - I've seen some people online be caught out by this, and buying cheap ink on ebay to find out that the printer refuses to print with it, because they are locked. The webUI Possibly my favourite feature of the printer is the web interface. It is highly configurable and surprisingly powerful. You can from the interface, enable scan to email (however you need to setup your own SMTP details) and other features. Here you can change paper settings, view ink levels and change default settings. It is much nicer then using the small display on the device that can't display much at all, making setting up advanced configurations slightly frustrating. Unfortunately you cannot scan using it however, which is disappointing. Conclusion I really like this printer. The setup was frustrating but using it every day is enjoyable and it presents a great value option. The ink cartridges are of reasonable value and high capacity. It is energy efficient and has a great mixture of features. It does not have any frustrating connection issues that seem to plague many printers (including my old epson) that make printers come across as unreliable and annoying to deal with. It comes in 3 colours, but I have the best looking one imo, as the other variants have strange pastel accent colours on the ADF.
  18. Mad153

    This is probably my favorite tech channel at th…

    *orange triangle* *arrow* *scary red text* *pretending to be shocked* ah yes, not clickbait at all
  19. yeah! there's a lot of software to do this out there, but I've only successfully used easeus (I have no affiliation with them though, obviously): link deny any prompts to upgrade from the free version and select disk clone once installed. clone your hdd to the ssd and you should be good to go. Just format the HDD afterwards.
  20. I this would be interesting with laptops and see how like Microsoft and apple would compare to the major companies who sell most laptops like dell and hp
  21. HELP IS ON THE WAY!!!1!1 is your cpu overclocked?
  22. I didn't put this in the main post because it's not really needed, but the video of inside the call is hillarious
  23. I'd really hope so! Although I'm not sure that that's a great excuse though for such an obvious failure in security. I completely agree that it's hard for some users to use another layer of security, but when you're in charge of a somewhat important government, I think having secure accounts / operating 2fa equipment of some sort should be a required skill for the job.
  24. Summary Daniel Verlaan, who works for RTL, noticed that, in a now deleted tweet by Dutch Defence Minister Ank Bijleveld, of a picture of a private conference hosted online between EU defence ministers, the meeting id and 5 out of the 6 digits of the pin were in the picture. Having guessed the last digit, He then joined and said hello. Quotes My thoughts I'm surprised this hasn't happened sooner. So many systems work on outdated legacy software such as windows XP in ATMs, I'm not really surprised this happened. Sure, this conference software is quite new, but the execution of software (no 2fa) is still very old school, especially for a conference of such importance. i believe this really is a wake up call for companies and governments during this pandemic to make sure that their accounts and therefore meetings are secure. Sources https://www.google.com/amp/s/amp.dw.com/en/dutch-reporter-hacks-eu-defense-ministers-meeting/a-55682752 https://www.bbc.com/news/amp/world-europe-55027641 https://twitter.com/danielverlaan/status/1329835134879719426?s=19
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