The Condor said:I tried 1 and 2 Sorceresss. Is number 2 normally supposed to take so long? I was doing it for like an hour.
Sorceresss said:No & Yes : it depends on the option you chose.
No, if you only selected the little box for the error-checking of the system-files (when you right-click on the drive's icon/properties + tools).
Yes, if you also selected the lower box for a scan for bad sectors on the C: drive. This might take a long time.
Usually, the error-checking of the system-files (the first box above) is sufficient, and that really does not take a long time when you reboot.
The other option (scan for bad sectors) takes much more time, and it is really not necessary to do it more than once a month (or so).
The Condor said:I clicked both (didn't think it would do any harm). It (hopefully) helped.
The Condor said:Editing edit: I might want it but how long does it stay there so don't delete it cuz I am thinking it over. To help settle this debate what does it do different and is it 100% safe and bug proof so it won't destroy my computer?
Exavier said:AHH I found one!!!
Like i said i have run it for a while on my computers... The version i put up there for you is about 2 months old. For the most part its the driver designed for the FX6800 series Nvidia card (the $400+ graphics card) that has been reconfigured to work on the GO style video cards (Laptop version of Nvidia cards). Not many other changes to it unless you want to get down to overclocking the card
Basicly toshiba will probobly never update their driver for your card... so if you want to make full use (or as close as your card can come to it) of Directx 9c and newer technologies you need to update drivers... Thats why i tracked it down myself.
As for bug proof I haven't run into anything yet... doesn't mean its not possible but you won't know if it has problems untill its installed... if there is a problem you can go in through safe mode and rollback the driver.
calyth said:Civ 4 only BSOD once on me, when I accidentally OCed my 2500+ to a 3200+. I was wondering if the machine would be stable if I ran it as a 3200+, so I ran prime95, with a cpu temperature monitor along side. The temperature kept climbing. Eventually it froze.
Waht you probably need is one of those laptop coolers which (hopefully) would push enough air to prevent your parts from overheating. Stress testing your system is also a good thing. I would recommend prime95 because it's sensitive and quite accurate.
Exavier said:I think by cooler he means one of those Laptop trays... its basicly a tray the laptop sits on (while on desk or lap) that has extra fans built into it for cooling... I never used one but i have seen them.