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Adding memory to Sky+
The wife and kids series link so much crap that we always have less
than 20% free on the planner, so rather than put a keep mark against any of my stuff, i thought I'd swap out the hard drive for a 160gb one. Is this a simple process, and apart from invalidating the warranty, are there any issues? Is it going to affect the performance of the software? And who will sell me the cheapest/best? Cheers Ed |
Adding memory to Sky+
"Ed" wrote in message oups.com... The wife and kids series link so much crap that we always have less than 20% free on the planner, so rather than put a keep mark against any of my stuff, i thought I'd swap out the hard drive for a 160gb one. Is this a simple process, and apart from invalidating the warranty, are there any issues? Is it going to affect the performance of the software? And who will sell me the cheapest/best? Cheers Ed The process is very easy, if I can do it then anyone can!! All the info you need is here - http://www.digitalspy.co.uk/forums/s...d.php?t=156344 One thing to note is that you may find the fan is on all the time if you upgrade, certainly on my Pace PVR2 box. It was annoying to begin with but we are used to it now. regards Norman |
Adding memory to Sky+
Norman wrote: "Ed" wrote in message oups.com... The wife and kids series link so much crap that we always have less than 20% free on the planner, so rather than put a keep mark against any of my stuff, i thought I'd swap out the hard drive for a 160gb one. Is this a simple process, and apart from invalidating the warranty, are there any issues? Is it going to affect the performance of the software? And who will sell me the cheapest/best? Cheers Ed The process is very easy, if I can do it then anyone can!! All the info you need is here - http://www.digitalspy.co.uk/forums/s...d.php?t=156344 One thing to note is that you may find the fan is on all the time if you upgrade, certainly on my Pace PVR2 box. It was annoying to begin with but we are used to it now. regards Norman Thanks Norman I can't believe there has been inflation in the memory market. What about Moore's law? The article says 250 gb maxtor should be £65, I can't find one cheaper than £85 |
Adding memory to Sky+
Ed wrote: Norman wrote: "Ed" wrote in message oups.com... The wife and kids series link so much crap that we always have less than 20% free on the planner, so rather than put a keep mark against any of my stuff, i thought I'd swap out the hard drive for a 160gb one. Is this a simple process, and apart from invalidating the warranty, are there any issues? Is it going to affect the performance of the software? And who will sell me the cheapest/best? Cheers Ed The process is very easy, if I can do it then anyone can!! All the info you need is here - http://www.digitalspy.co.uk/forums/s...d.php?t=156344 One thing to note is that you may find the fan is on all the time if you upgrade, certainly on my Pace PVR2 box. It was annoying to begin with but we are used to it now. regards Norman Thanks Norman I can't believe there has been inflation in the memory market. What about Moore's law? The article says 250 gb maxtor should be £65, I can't find one cheaper than £85 You're looking in the wrong place then :). http://www.ebuyer.com/UK/product/120289 Doc |
Adding memory to Sky+
Ed wrote:
Thanks Norman I can't believe there has been inflation in the memory market. What about Moore's law? The article says 250 gb maxtor should be £65, I can't find one cheaper than £85 I think you're talking about the hard disk market, not the memory market. |
Adding memory to Sky+
In article . com, Ed
writes Norman wrote: "Ed" wrote in message oups.com... The wife and kids series link so much crap that we always have less than 20% free on the planner, so rather than put a keep mark against any of my stuff, i thought I'd swap out the hard drive for a 160gb one. Is this a simple process, and apart from invalidating the warranty, are there any issues? Is it going to affect the performance of the software? And who will sell me the cheapest/best? Cheers Ed The process is very easy, if I can do it then anyone can!! All the info you need is here - http://www.digitalspy.co.uk/forums/s...d.php?t=156344 One thing to note is that you may find the fan is on all the time if you upgrade, certainly on my Pace PVR2 box. It was annoying to begin with but we are used to it now. regards Norman Thanks Norman I can't believe there has been inflation in the memory market. What about Moore's law? The article says 250 gb maxtor should be £65, I can't find one cheaper than £85 You wouldn't want a Maxtor, changed no end of those bl**dy things for Seagate's which give no bother:) £51-83 inc. VAT http://www.ebuyer.com/UK/product/102936 -- Tony Sayer |
Adding memory to Sky+
You're looking in the wrong place then :). http://www.ebuyer.com/UK/product/120289 Doc Don't buy that particular one, its got no lid! -- Graham. %Profound_observation% |
Adding memory to Sky+
tony sayer wrote:
You wouldn't want a Maxtor, changed no end of those bl**dy things for Seagate's which give no bother:) Same company, of course... Not had any problem with any of my Maxtors. Was it a specific model you had trouble with? What were the nature of the failures? |
Adding memory to Sky+
In article , Pyriform
writes tony sayer wrote: You wouldn't want a Maxtor, changed no end of those bl**dy things for Seagate's which give no bother:) Same company, of course... Not had any problem with any of my Maxtors. Was it a specific model you had trouble with? What were the nature of the failures? The 40 and 80 GB drives mainly bad sectors and complete disk failure. Perhaps they had a bad batch, perhaps I was unlucky having bought a lot of them for a number of PC's we maintain, but never ever had a Seagate fail!... -- Tony Sayer |
Adding memory to Sky+
Pyriform wrote:
tony sayer wrote: You wouldn't want a Maxtor, changed no end of those bl**dy things for Seagate's which give no bother:) Same company, of course... Not had any problem with any of my Maxtors. Was it a specific model you had trouble with? What were the nature of the failures? The large capacity maxtors are incredibly unreliable, I have encountered a large number of failures, i have one in my machine at the moment holding some video, and other none essential stuff, it runs extremely hot, virtually burning to the touch, and i honestly expect it to fail. Gaz |
Adding memory to Sky+
tony sayer wrote:
Pyriform wrote: tony sayer wrote: You wouldn't want a Maxtor, changed no end of those bl**dy things for Seagate's which give no bother:) Same company, of course... Not had any problem with any of my Maxtors. Was it a specific model you had trouble with? What were the nature of the failures? The 40 and 80 GB drives mainly bad sectors and complete disk failure. Perhaps they had a bad batch, perhaps I was unlucky having bought a lot of them for a number of PC's we maintain, but never ever had a Seagate fail!... That's the trouble with hard drives. Most of us base our opinions on our own limited experience, and a few bad ones can colour our views for ever... Seagate acquired Maxtor a year or so ago, and before that Maxtor acquired Quantum. So the whole hard drive industry is rather inbred, and I have my doubts that there are significant differences in reliability between brands, except where there is a major design flaw in a particular model, as happens from time to time. Personally, I've yet to have a Maxtor fail, whereas the last hard drive I replaced because it was faulty was a Seagate, oddly enough! Of course, the fact that I've just rebuilt a PC for someone using a Maxtor drive makes me want them to be reliable! The curious thing is, I initially installed a Samsung drive, only to have it die completely during the install (click, click, click). I got an identical replacement and tested it using Samsung's software, and that yielded countless DRQ timeouts on two different motherboards using two different SATA cables. I returned it and swapped it for a Maxtor, which passed all the tests without error! There is a postscript to this sorry tale. I got a phone call to say that the PC wouldn't boot ("Insert proper boot media"). I decided to bring it home to look at it more closely. Of course, it booted perfectly. I used the PC at various times over the next few days, stress testing it thoroughly each time, and eventually the problem recurred. I determined that the cause was the SATA cable. Thermal stress and vibrations from the hard drive were causing it to slowly back out of the socket. This never manifested as data loss in a running system (though it might have done so eventually), but always as failure of the BIOS to detect the drive when the PC was rebooted after cooling down. Replacing it with a latching SATA connector seems to have solved the problem. I'm now wondering if the dodgy SATA cable somehow killed the Samsung drives, though this does seem implausible... But two faulty drives in succession seems equally implausible! |
Adding memory to Sky+
Pyriform wrote (apparently) in uk.tech.digital-tv on Thu 11 Jan
2007 23:53:32: tony sayer wrote: Pyriform wrote: tony sayer wrote: You wouldn't want a Maxtor, changed no end of those bl**dy things for Seagate's which give no bother:) Same company, of course... Not had any problem with any of my Maxtors. Was it a specific model you had trouble with? What were the nature of the failures? The 40 and 80 GB drives mainly bad sectors and complete disk failure. Perhaps they had a bad batch, perhaps I was unlucky having bought a lot of them for a number of PC's we maintain, but never ever had a Seagate fail!... That's the trouble with hard drives. Most of us base our opinions on our own limited experience, and a few bad ones can colour our views for ever... Seagate acquired Maxtor a year or so ago, and before that Maxtor acquired Quantum. So the whole hard drive industry is rather inbred, and I have my doubts that there are significant differences in reliability between brands, except where there is a major design flaw in a particular model, as happens from time to time. Personally, I've yet to have a Maxtor fail, whereas the last hard drive I replaced because it was faulty was a Seagate, oddly enough! Of course, the fact that I've just rebuilt a PC for someone using a Maxtor drive makes me want them to be reliable! The curious thing is, I initially installed a Samsung drive, only to have it die completely during the install (click, click, click). I got an identical replacement and tested it using Samsung's software, and that yielded countless DRQ timeouts on two different motherboards using two different SATA cables. I returned it and swapped it for a Maxtor, which passed all the tests without error! There is a postscript to this sorry tale. I got a phone call to say that the PC wouldn't boot ("Insert proper boot media"). I decided to bring it home to look at it more closely. Of course, it booted perfectly. I used the PC at various times over the next few days, stress testing it thoroughly each time, and eventually the problem recurred. I determined that the cause was the SATA cable. Thermal stress and vibrations from the hard drive were causing it to slowly back out of the socket. This never manifested as data loss in a running system (though it might have done so eventually), but always as failure of the BIOS to detect the drive when the PC was rebooted after cooling down. Replacing it with a latching SATA connector seems to have solved the problem. I'm now wondering if the dodgy SATA cable somehow killed the Samsung drives, though this does seem implausible... But two faulty drives in succession seems equally implausible! Have had three failed Maxtor drives replaced under warranty in the last four years, out of five purchased. Also had a poor record with Fujitsu drives before that. Have decided for blood pressure reasons to just try a different manufacturer each time I buy a new one, at least with no brand allegiance it'll be more random if one fails. Saying that, I've never lost all the data with (P)ATA drives, having a spare power supply to power the drive separately to the rest of the PC has always given me the chance to copy all the data off before returning the faulty drive. -- MrGuest Always, seemingly, on the road to nowhere |
Adding memory to Sky+
tony sayer wrote:
You wouldn't want a Maxtor, changed no end of those bl**dy things for Seagate's which give no bother:) I'll second that. I've seen more dead Maxtors than any other brand. In fact of all the times I have been called out to change a dead drive (dozens of times), I can't remember an occasion when it wasn't a Maxtor. -- Digibox problem? : A reboot solves 90% of these. The Sky Digital FAQ: http://tinyurl.com/8vef5 UK TV overseas: http://tinyurl.com/6p73 BBC/ITV reception trouble? ; http://www.astra2d.com/ ---- Only the truth as I see it. No monies return'd. ;-) |
Adding memory to Sky+
Jomtien wrote:
tony sayer wrote: You wouldn't want a Maxtor, changed no end of those bl**dy things for Seagate's which give no bother:) I'll second that. I've seen more dead Maxtors than any other brand. In fact of all the times I have been called out to change a dead drive (dozens of times), I can't remember an occasion when it wasn't a Maxtor. How do you know this isn't simply because they are the most commonly fitted brand amongst your customer base? |
Adding memory to Sky+
Gaz wrote:
The large capacity maxtors are incredibly unreliable, I have encountered a large number of failures, i have one in my machine at the moment holding some video, and other none essential stuff, it runs extremely hot, virtually burning to the touch, and i honestly expect it to fail. Then why not add a 50p fan to prevent it failing? (assuming its a PC as it has "video and other non-essentail stuff") If you know its running too hot then its your own fault it fails when you didn't cool it properly. -- Mike |
Adding memory to Sky+
....snip...
Do you lads all reboot your machines often? I have a number of old machines with equally old disks by various manufacturers none of which have ever failed (fingers well crossed here!). Similarly, my employers (software company - 100s of PCs) rarely see disk failures on desktops. The key point is that we NEVER turn the PCs off or let the disks spin down. Yes, I know, bad for the environment etc - but worse than having to manufacture a new drive and dispose of the old one because on/off cycles have killed it? Debatable (don't waste NG time on this, please!). The most stress a disk ever gets is when you turn it on - do this more often and they will fail more often. Paul DS. |
Adding memory to Sky+
The large capacity maxtors are incredibly unreliable, I have encountered a
large number of failures, i have one in my machine at the moment holding some video, and other none essential stuff, it runs extremely hot, virtually burning to the touch, and i honestly expect it to fail. Where is it physically in the machine? Even something as simply as moving the drive down one or two slots so that air can circulate around it more easily will help cooling no end. I find manufacturers often put all the drives/CD/DVD-ROMs as close together as possible which is rubbish from a cooling perspective. Paul DS. |
Adding memory to Sky+
Paul D.Smith wrote: The large capacity maxtors are incredibly unreliable, I have encountered a large number of failures, i have one in my machine at the moment holding some video, and other none essential stuff, it runs extremely hot, virtually burning to the touch, and i honestly expect it to fail. Where is it physically in the machine? Even something as simply as moving the drive down one or two slots so that air can circulate around it more easily will help cooling no end. I find manufacturers often put all the drives/CD/DVD-ROMs as close together as possible which is rubbish from a cooling perspective. Paul DS. I have a V3 pace box with a 160 drive of which half is locked. WTF? Why? If you install a 250 gb drive, will the box only use half of that as well? cheers |
Adding memory to Sky+
"Paul D.Smith" wrote:
Do you lads all reboot your machines often? I have a number of old machines with equally old disks by various manufacturers none of which have ever failed (fingers well crossed here!). Similarly, my employers (software company - 100s of PCs) rarely see disk failures on desktops. The key point is that we NEVER turn the PCs off or let the disks spin down. You can get good and bad batches of PCs, and that's more likely to colour your opinions than anything else, even if the problem is blamed on the wrong thing. Most PCs can be switched on and off without any reliability problems. Thing is... If you *do* have a bad batch - say PCs with an under-specified power supply, or PCs that write random corruptions to the disk, then you're most likely to discover the fault when the PC is switched on. When you're recovering from a power blackout, that's a bad time to discover that you've got a bunch of PC failures to deal with. So if you have some PCs that normally do have to be left switched on, because they are servers or whatever, then arrange a maintenance cycle in which they are power cycled individually about once per month. -- Dave Farrance |
Adding memory to Sky+
"Pyriform" wrote in message ... Jomtien wrote: tony sayer wrote: You wouldn't want a Maxtor, changed no end of those bl**dy things for Seagate's which give no bother:) I'll second that. I've seen more dead Maxtors than any other brand. In fact of all the times I have been called out to change a dead drive (dozens of times), I can't remember an occasion when it wasn't a Maxtor. How do you know this isn't simply because they are the most commonly fitted brand amongst your customer base? FWIW As with printers 99% of printers are fitted with Canon parts. The same for hard drives, all the platters and mechinisems are manufactured by one manufacture. Hey think about all the one brands in the super markets, you really think there are loads of factoreys making cornflakes. Get real guys. Joe |
Adding memory to Sky+
Joe wrote:
"Pyriform" wrote in message ... Jomtien wrote: tony sayer wrote: You wouldn't want a Maxtor, changed no end of those bl**dy things for Seagate's which give no bother:) I'll second that. I've seen more dead Maxtors than any other brand. In fact of all the times I have been called out to change a dead drive (dozens of times), I can't remember an occasion when it wasn't a Maxtor. How do you know this isn't simply because they are the most commonly fitted brand amongst your customer base? FWIW As with printers 99% of printers are fitted with Canon parts. The same for hard drives, all the platters and mechinisems are manufactured by one manufacture. Hey think about all the one brands in the super markets, you really think there are loads of factoreys making cornflakes. Get real guys. Joe What nonsense! |
Adding memory to Sky+
In article , Pyriform
writes tony sayer wrote: Pyriform wrote: tony sayer wrote: You wouldn't want a Maxtor, changed no end of those bl**dy things for Seagate's which give no bother:) Same company, of course... Not had any problem with any of my Maxtors. Was it a specific model you had trouble with? What were the nature of the failures? The 40 and 80 GB drives mainly bad sectors and complete disk failure. Perhaps they had a bad batch, perhaps I was unlucky having bought a lot of them for a number of PC's we maintain, but never ever had a Seagate fail!... That's the trouble with hard drives. Most of us base our opinions on our own limited experience, and a few bad ones can colour our views for ever... Seagate acquired Maxtor a year or so ago, and before that Maxtor acquired Quantum. So the whole hard drive industry is rather inbred, and I have my doubts that there are significant differences in reliability between brands, except where there is a major design flaw in a particular model, as happens from time to time. Had another one today a 120 went down pox!.. Personally, I've yet to have a Maxtor fail, whereas the last hard drive I replaced because it was faulty was a Seagate, oddly enough! Of course, the fact that I've just rebuilt a PC for someone using a Maxtor drive makes me want them to be reliable! The curious thing is, I initially installed a Samsung drive, only to have it die completely during the install (click, click, click). I got an identical replacement and tested it using Samsung's software, and that yielded countless DRQ timeouts on two different motherboards using two different SATA cables. I returned it and swapped it for a Maxtor, which passed all the tests without error! There is a postscript to this sorry tale. I got a phone call to say that the PC wouldn't boot ("Insert proper boot media"). I decided to bring it home to look at it more closely. Of course, it booted perfectly. I used the PC at various times over the next few days, stress testing it thoroughly each time, and eventually the problem recurred. I determined that the cause was the SATA cable. Yes the computer equivalent of the TV SCART eh;?.. Thermal stress and vibrations from the hard drive were causing it to slowly back out of the socket. This never manifested as data loss in a running system (though it might have done so eventually), but always as failure of the BIOS to detect the drive when the PC was rebooted after cooling down. Replacing it with a latching SATA connector seems to have solved the problem. I'm now wondering if the dodgy SATA cable somehow killed the Samsung drives, though this does seem implausible... But two faulty drives in succession seems equally implausible! Agree with that... -- Tony Sayer |
Adding memory to Sky+
On Fri, 12 Jan 2007 15:22:13 +0000, Mike Henry
wrote: In .com, "Ed" wrote: I have a V3 pace box with a 160 drive of which half is locked. WTF? Why? It's reserved by Sky for future push-TV applications. They control the disc space, not you. In 2002 one of TiVo's partners in the UK, the BBC, experimented once with a similar function. The UK TiVo has reserved a very modest(1GB approx) of a 40GB drive, and an episode of "Dossa and Joe" was auto-scheduled - but ONLY if your tivo wasn't set to record anything else. And since that 1GB had been reserved space since the day the machine was first turned on, no-one's recordings were "deleted to make room" for it. How could users tell that this had happened and wasn't just an off-the-wall suggestion, as happens sometimes (e.g. my TiVo recently went through a phase of recording WW2 documentaries off the History Channel, despite my never recording or thumbing-up anything remotely along those lines myself)? Did it have a different icon or position in Now Playing or something? Jerry Brown -- A cat may look at a king (but probably won't bother) http://www.jwbrown.co.uk |
Adding memory to Sky+
On 12 Jan 2007 00:28:57 GMT, Mr Guest
wrote: Have had three failed Maxtor drives replaced under warranty in the last four years, out of five purchased. I've had something like 10 drives replaced. Often the replacements fail too! Actually the failure is often more subtle - the drives will seem perfectly OK, but a quick scan with Maxtor's own disc check tools will see a disaster coming before you do. Happily the error code it gives you is all you need to perform an RMA on Maxtor's website. The RMA process is excellent.. then again, it needs to be. Well, to be fair, this was a few years ago. I don't know if it's got better under Seagate's watch. -- |
Adding memory to Sky+
On Fri, 12 Jan 2007 15:22:13 +0000, Mike Henry
wrote: In 2002 one of TiVo's partners in the UK, the BBC, experimented once with a similar function. The UK TiVo has reserved a very modest(1GB approx) of a 40GB drive, and an episode of "Dossa and Joe" was auto-scheduled And not only was the start/end missing, but it wasn't even the first episode. Muppets. Fast-forward 5 years and Sky are about to do the same. But as you say, Sky are reserving half of the disc! I can only wait to see how much of a stink there will be when they use this functionality. I think the difference is that the Sky service is likely to be just that - an extra service that you don't have to use if you don't want to. -- |
Adding memory to Sky+
Paul D.Smith wrote (apparently) in uk.tech.digital-tv on Fri 12 Jan
2007 10:43:49: ...snip... Do you lads all reboot your machines often? I have a number of old machines with equally old disks by various manufacturers none of which have ever failed (fingers well crossed here!). Similarly, my employers (software company - 100s of PCs) rarely see disk failures on desktops. The key point is that we NEVER turn the PCs off or let the disks spin down. [Snipped...] This is on a couple of PCs that have been on all the time and only have the disks spin down when there's been a power cut and the UPS battery has given up (probably three or four times). I have now ended up with more capacity on external hard drives than in all the PCs here, just need to remember to back everything up regularly... -- MrGuest Always, seemingly, on the road to nowhere |
Adding memory to Sky+
Pyriform wrote:
I've seen more dead Maxtors than any other brand. In fact of all the times I have been called out to change a dead drive (dozens of times), I can't remember an occasion when it wasn't a Maxtor. How do you know this isn't simply because they are the most commonly fitted brand amongst your customer base? Because they aren't! Believe it or not I do actually check the drive brand when setting a new machine up. Maxtor are not ubiquitous and probably only account for 25% of the working drives that I see. -- Digibox problem? : A reboot solves 90% of these. The Sky Digital FAQ: http://tinyurl.com/8vef5 UK TV overseas: http://tinyurl.com/6p73 BBC/ITV reception trouble? ; http://www.astra2d.com/ ---- Only the truth as I see it. No monies return'd. ;-) |
Adding memory to Sky+
Believe it or not I do actually check the drive brand when setting a new machine up. Maxtor are not ubiquitous and probably only account for 25% of the working drives that I see. Maxtors, at the moment, seem to be failing more than other brands. But to be fair I have had mdoels from all makers fail at one time or another, a few years back IBMS 'deathstars' were all the rage. These things go in cycles. Who knows, in a few months, it might be Seagates. Dave |
Adding memory to Sky+
On Fri, 12 Jan 2007 21:11:37 +0000, Mike Henry
wrote: In , Jerry Brown wrote: On Fri, 12 Jan 2007 15:22:13 +0000, Mike Henry wrote: In 2002 one of TiVo's partners in the UK, the BBC, experimented once with a similar function. The UK TiVo has reserved a very modest(1GB approx) of a 40GB drive, and an episode of "Dossa and Joe" was auto-scheduled - but ONLY if your tivo wasn't set to record anything else. And since that 1GB had been reserved space since the day the machine was first turned on, no-one's recordings were "deleted to make room" for it. How could users tell that this had happened and wasn't just an off-the-wall suggestion, as happens sometimes (e.g. my TiVo recently went through a phase of recording WW2 documentaries off the History Channel, despite my never recording or thumbing-up anything remotely along those lines myself)? Did it have a different icon or position in Now Playing or something? Yes, it appeared on the main "TiVo Central" menu, with a green clapperboard icon. Similar to the first image on this page for ("Go behind the scenes of Seabiscuit"): http://www.pvrcompare.com/dtimages.html (they use a yellow star these days in the USA for a similar function) HTH Thanks Mike. That's cleared up something I've wondered about for years (I didn't have a TiVo at the time of the incident).. Jerry Brown -- A cat may look at a king (but probably won't bother) http://www.jwbrown.co.uk |
Adding memory to Sky+
On Fri, 12 Jan 2007 20:55:31 +0000, Mike Henry
wrote: The difference is that Sky's service locks off a whopping half of the disc space. Disc space that was never 'yours' to start with, so no different to TiVo. -- |
Adding memory to Sky+
On Sat, 13 Jan 2007 11:34:53 +0000, Mike Henry
wrote: In , Jerry Brown wrote: On Fri, 12 Jan 2007 21:11:37 +0000, Mike Henry wrote: Yes, it appeared on the main "TiVo Central" menu, with a green clapperboard icon. Similar to the first image on this page for ("Go behind the scenes of Seabiscuit"): http://www.pvrcompare.com/dtimages.html (they use a yellow star these days in the USA for a similar function) HTH Thanks Mike. That's cleared up something I've wondered about for years (I didn't have a TiVo at the time of the incident).. You're welcome. I had my TiVo at the time, but I had deleted D&J from the To Do list a few days earlier so I missed out on all the fun! (I used to regularly prune scheduled suggestions that I didn't like the look of from the To Do list, hoping it'd pick something else for the same timeslot instead! There is a backdoor code to make scheduled suggestions appear in To Do - and D&J was in amongst other suggestions). Any chance of sharing the code please. I know the usual ones (30 second skip, quick disappear of time bar, etc). Jerry Brown -- A cat may look at a king (but probably won't bother) http://www.jwbrown.co.uk |
Adding memory to Sky+
On Sun, 14 Jan 2007 11:43:41 +0000, Mike Henry
wrote: In , Jerry Brown wrote: On Sat, 13 Jan 2007 11:34:53 +0000, Mike Henry wrote: You're welcome. I had my TiVo at the time, but I had deleted D&J from the To Do list a few days earlier so I missed out on all the fun! (I used to regularly prune scheduled suggestions that I didn't like the look of from the To Do list, hoping it'd pick something else for the same timeslot instead! There is a backdoor code to make scheduled suggestions appear in To Do - and D&J was in amongst other suggestions). Any chance of sharing the code please. I know the usual ones (30 second skip, quick disappear of time bar, etc). Jerry Brown http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&r...22&btnG=Search 2nd result, "New Almost Complete TiVo Codes List" Look in that thread for "scheduled suggestions". "It's in the 6. Triple Thumb codes (new to 2.5 and up)" bit. Ta, but I can't seem to get it to work (my system is 2.5.5, so should work). I'll have another try tomorrow anyway. Jerry Brown -- A cat may look at a king (but probably won't bother) http://www.jwbrown.co.uk |
Adding memory to Sky+
....snip...
Thing is... If you *do* have a bad batch - say PCs with an under-specified power supply, or PCs that write random corruptions to the disk, then you're most likely to discover the fault when the PC is switched on. When you're recovering from a power blackout, that's a bad time to discover that you've got a bunch of PC failures to deal with. So if you have some PCs that normally do have to be left switched on, because they are servers or whatever, then arrange a maintenance cycle in which they are power cycled individually about once per month. That's a very interesting point that I'd never considered. Yet another almost unmeasurable benefit/risk comparison to throw into the mix :-). Paul DS. |
Adding memory to Sky+
....snip...
This is on a couple of PCs that have been on all the time and only have the disks spin down when there's been a power cut and the UPS battery has given up (probably three or four times). I have now ended up with more capacity on external hard drives than in all the PCs here, just need to remember to back everything up regularly... Beware of the following. Our company invested in some APC UPSes about 5 years ago and they came with a "test cycle". We naively assumed this would be useful but we discovered that the "test" was to internally disconnect the mains power, switching 100% to battery for a few seconds. Guess what happened when we ran a test on a UPS whose battery had died - it wasn't pleasant! Paul DS. |
Adding memory to Sky+
"gort" wrote in message ... Believe it or not I do actually check the drive brand when setting a new machine up. Maxtor are not ubiquitous and probably only account for 25% of the working drives that I see. Maxtors, at the moment, seem to be failing more than other brands. But to be fair I have had mdoels from all makers fail at one time or another, a few years back IBMS 'deathstars' were all the rage. These things go in cycles. Who knows, in a few months, it might be Seagates. Dave I've had 5 Maxtors fail in the 3 years, a replacement failed 6 weeks after receiving it and I got caught up in the transfer of Maxtor to Seagate, had to provide all sorts of info & proof of delivery, went bananas with them about the time being taken to process. Received 2 drives last week after waiting for 10 weeks, demanded compensation or an extra drive, another 2 to fail??? SM |
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