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PC Rant Thread
No questions just a rant:
I think I may have stumbled on an ancient PC curse somehow. I lost the boot sector on my hard drive on my PC about a month ago. After a slow week of recovery, it crashed again less than a week later. This time I decided the drive was faulty and went out and bought a new (and bigger) one. It's now up as we speak. Same week, my wife notifies me that my daughter's PC won't boot (operating system not found). I can't even get that one to bring up the BIOS menu! Before I take a mallet to it, I check the cables in the case and one of the drive cables had worked loose...VOILA! It boots up fine...everything is ok. Today, my dad calls me to tell me his 18-mo old Dell won't boot up. This, after talking to an offshore Dell support rep over the phone for a couple of hours, who gives up and tells him they can get him up and running for $200! I talk him through the BIOS boot sequence changes and reinstall of XP and now he is humming along doing the rest of the recovery himself. I'm now waiting for my laptop and my wife's workstation to get hit next... |
When things like this happen to basically good people, my answer is always:
Your life would be better with a Mac. They are stable and they just work. |
DO regular backups of important data.....this will happen to all of us sooner than later.
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Computers are very much like cars. They have similar component problems. They overheat, the drives can die prematurely, they have electrical shorts, they have shock damage, cables tear, get wired backwards etc. By the way, you can download updates for the BIOS on those Dells they often help stabilize problems with the board and I/O devices. Out of curiosity, what brand of drive did you have in your system. A few systems I have fixed are Dell desktops with IBM 20GB drives that are only 20 months old and are now paperweights. If you need any specific help or if other forum members do, save your money and shoot me an email and I will see if I can help. :) |
I get paid 35$ an hour to fix problems like this with my side job. Most problems are very easy, common fixes. If you do run into trouble, post a thread here, and I am sure that at least 10 percent of members here can help you with your problem.
I own/run a computer repair business as a side job. With my PC's, I barely have problems with them, as I maintain them regularly with updates and upgrades. I commonly have problems with dell's, hp's, compaq's, and Acer's. They are fairly basic problems, as it is just the bios not seeing a component. Ususally though, it is a printer not wanting to talk to the computer. They don't know you just have to restart it to take care of the most common problems. |
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Amen to that. I trashed windoze 6 years ago and will never go back. Great example; New laser printer, plug it, click print, great document (mac). Windows XP, plug in, new hardware found, can't find drivers, won't install off disk, download new ones off manufacturer website, install, prints come out garbled, give up and transfer document to mac, click print, it prints. True story. |
reason why i am waiting for the intel powered macs i need the intel chip for my engineering programs
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Nonetheless XP and MS products in general still have their problems once the hardware is sorted out. ;) |
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Mac engineering and science software is lean--like Ethiopian lean. I use a PC at work because of that very issue. Stick with the PC. You know the hardware. You know the software. I doubt that the high-end sci/eng software will ever get ported. Too much legacy and too many software engineers within the software companies that are Mac-averse. Except maybe sound engineers. I think that's a Mac-dominated domain. But I have Macs at home. In 2 minutes anybody is a Mac user. Bot |
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