I just took a quick look at my older EPoX EP-8K3PRO and what do I find: Four bulged capacitors near the voltage regulators. :Q OK... This board has been running 24/7 for over a year, but surprisigly it still runs normally. Some of the capacitors look normal so heat generation may be the one to...
For my part, it was cheaper to change the capacitors myself than to online RMA the board. I would have had to ship it to Epox Germany or Epox Netherlands for repair/replacement and it would have cost me more than fixing the board myself. Since the board was no longer under warranty, the board...
My EPoX EP-8RDA+ has this problem. I had to retire it from my computer because of a severe stabillity issue. The computer was not crashing, but was extremely slow and locked up all my optical drives at startup and sometimes lost them in the process. At first I thought this was a problem with the...
- Does the router broadcast it's SSID? It is one of the biggest reasons, why it doesn't show up on the list.
- Check that the connection's WEP password is keyed in exactly the same as it is set in the router and that the type method is correct (in HEX or ASCII)
It's also possible that your...
Have You checked if there are any firmware updates available. Usually that sort of problems are fixed by upgrading the router's Firmware first.
Don't count out the possibility of a defective router or misconfiguration of it.
This problam has similar features than what I experienced with my D-Link DWL2000AP+ Access Point and a Buffalo Tech. Ethernet to Wireless converter. Both were 802.11g devices, but I never got them to communicate with each other, no matter what I did. I rectified the situation by installing back...
That sounds like you have a transparent proxy server set by your ISP between you and the Internet. The proxy may be set to function on certain web sites/top-level domains where in others, it provides a straight connection. The IP address you are seeing is probably the address of the proxy...
That would probably be the case. It looked like a full article to me (I did read it through) and with good instructions on how to modify the chip.
Once again it happened. Once we read about the truth, it is taken away. :frown:
AT did nothing wrong n posting that article. The culprit is Nvidia.
I have to admit I've never seen anything like that before. Every type of a DVD burner had work for me without problems.
My thoughts turn to Windows XP SP2. I've ran into an issue where Nero refused to cooperate completely with a CDR burner. That was strangely solved by reverting back to SP1...
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