Printing in horizontal format should do the trick if there are not too many horizontal entries. Else try decreasing the font size so the columns don't take up so much space.
There are a lot of horizontal entries (53, to be exact).
Printing in horizontal format should do the trick if there are not too many horizontal entries. Else try decreasing the font size so the columns don't take up so much space.
There are a lot of horizontal entries (53, to be exact).
What do I do if I suspect someone has been hacking into my computer while I sleep, turning it on and deleting stuff, then turning it back off before I wake up?
What do I do if I suspect someone has been hacking into my computer while I sleep, turning it on and deleting stuff, then turning it back off before I wake up?
Yeah, that question probably came from me watching too many spy and conspiracy movies.That is one strange problem! Don't sleep.
Or disconnect power if you think it's over the network. Or wipe and reinstall to an encrypted disk.
There are a lot of horizontal entries (53, to be exact).
What do I do if I suspect someone has been hacking into my computer while I sleep, turning it on and deleting stuff, then turning it back off before I wake up?
My card's not listed.Go here, tell it what video card you have in the drop down menu, and under "details" it should list "OpenGL compliance".
My card's not listed.
It's a Nvidia GeForce GT 130M
Last machine was a Dell I got through my department, and I'm not too satisfied with them from a reliability perspective, and I've heard several people with HPs have similar problems. I've heard good things about Sony, Toshiba, Lenovo, and Asus (but Asus' website sucks and I can't figure out how to narrow down or search for a good machine).
Asus makes quality hardware, but they cut corners in other areas to be able to offer the kind of prices they do. Pray to god nothing you get from them is defective, because I swear their customer service department is located in hell: http://www.customerservicescoreboard.com/Asus
Is it possible to replace processing units in a computer? I have a single core AMD Sempron 140 Processor and would maybe like to upgrade.
Yes, I think this should do nicely, it is 3.2GHz (500MHz faster) and is dual core instead of single core. this also works, 300MHz faster and quad coreIs it possible to replace processing units in a computer? I have a single core AMD Sempron 140 Processor and would maybe like to upgrade.
So I've been shopping around for a new laptop and while I've narrowed down the field a little bit, I'm also looking for recommendations.
I'm looking for a decent 15" all-purpose-type laptop; netbooks and those other tiny ones won't cut it, and I don't want some massive 10 pound machine to lug around all the time. As far as gaming goes, I only need something that will run Civ4, Paradox games, and stuff like that--no FPS or anything that will be extremely taxing. Last machine was a Dell I got through my department, and I'm not too satisfied with them from a reliability perspective, and I've heard several people with HPs have similar problems. I've heard good things about Sony, Toshiba, Lenovo, and Asus (but Asus' website sucks and I can't figure out how to narrow down or search for a good machine).
I'm looking for something in the $1,200-$1,800 sticker range, but that's a little flexible (especially if I can get a good discount--I have time so I'm waiting for a good sale).
Currently, I'm leaning towards this Sony 15.5" Vaio with an Intel i7 quad core, 8 or 12 GB RAM, 640 GB (7200 rpm) hard drive, and a GeForce® GT 640M LE (2 GB) graphics card. 12 GB seems like more than I need on RAM, but I figure if its still in my price range, then I might as well get it. Does this sound like a machine that fits the above specs? Is there anything else on the market that comes close to these specs and is reliable?
Is it possible to replace processing units in a computer? I have a single core AMD Sempron 140 Processor and would maybe like to upgrade.