I want to turn off my laptop at 11:00 PM on weekdays and can't turn it back on until 7:00 AM. Another way to say is: it can't be used from 11:00 PM to 7:00 AM weekdays.
I install Fresh Win 7. It had Win XP on it and when I install Win 7 I deleted all partitions to make only 1 partition to format, install Win 7. I did a lot of updates from Windows Update, Microsoft Office, Photoshop, ... also using Win Utilities to clean all the registries, tweak, scan...
(1) Mine is HP DV9600 I think (its' at home now), does it have Raid mode in bios? And if it does meaning that it has an intergrated raid controller?
Right now Windows is seeing them as 2 separated drives C and D, are they in a array of raid 1 or 0? How do I check?
(2) So it's not worth...
I have a notebook with 2 hard drives and I want to set up a raid 0 using Win 7 64 bit Ultimate:
- Is it possible to do? If so how?
- I've read somewhere a while ago that software raid (Windows 7 64 bit) is actually slower than non - raid: is it right?
My SSD is 256GB and I think it's big enough. But the problem is not only Windows 7, a lot more like Office, Photoshop, Illustrator, In Design, ... So if I make 2 partitions I need to reinstall all the applications without reactivate?
My new netbook is on the way and I'm thinking of putting the SSD in my 17" laptop into this machine, is there a problem? It's nice if I can use this same SSD on any machine when needed. They both support Win 7 Ultimate 64 bit. Do I need to reactivate Windows in the netbook and do it again...
I tried to upgrade to Win 7 Ultimate 64bit but it said the disc is not compatible. I don't want to format the drive and install a fresh Windows on it because there are too much stuffs in there and the system is still fresh less than a year old.
Anyone can show me how to get rid of this error message:
"One or more formulas contain a circular reference and may not calculate correctly. Circular references are any reference within a formula that depend upon the results of that same formula. For example, a cell that refers to its own...