Sounds like something with the outlet or cabling. Not using one of those cheap two-pin (ie no ground) extensions at your friend's house are you>?
Type: Posts; User: Kanata
Sounds like something with the outlet or cabling. Not using one of those cheap two-pin (ie no ground) extensions at your friend's house are you>?
Try this instead. It's from a Win 7 instruction, but may be the answer for you. You may have to do it from the actual folder rather than the start menu:
Click the Windows "Start" button and...
Cannot Change Desktop Background on Windows 10-What to Do
http://www.howtogeek.com/57552/the-10-most-ridiculously-awesome-geeky-computer-pranks/
Make sure all of your graphics drivers are up to date. It may be that this game works the system too hard. Try monitoring your system temperatures a while and see if we can at least rule that out.
When you changed the compatibility settings, did you change the option to run as administrator? If so, remove it.
Are you trying to map to a drive share that does not exist?
What happens when you go to the \Windows\System32\ folder and run calc.exe directly?
You sound computer savvy enough to build your own system. It won't necessarily be any cheaper in cost but you will have full control over what parts go into it and a little research will yield good...
Go to the search bar (lower left of desktop) and enter the word: cmd
Then within that black pop-up box enter: ipconfig
Press enter and tell us all you see (paste the image if possible).
It probably is normal because if the RAID is controlled by the Windows software rather than by a hardware controller then the new version of Windows likely needs to set it up within its own...
So first try a different physical USB port to see if it's a port issue or the drive. Chances are it's the port. Open Device Manager and find out which USB entry under 'Universal Serial Bus...
Ideally it should be in the C: drive and certainly a portion of it should be, but it can be moved entirely or partially to other drives if free space on C: is an issue.
For irritation1 , this is likely to do with the power management settings for the disk drive or the USB port. Try looking at the parameters for the other drives and compare the settings. Also see if...
If this is the system drive C: then I don't believe you can change it. If it is another drive, make sure it is not in use and that your paging (swap) file is not located there.
Check to see if another profile was made under the Users folder and see if the missing folders are there. Chances are they are somewhere in your system, even if not where you expect them. Do a...
Can you give us a couple of examples of the steps you are doing up until the point you don't get access? It's a bit odd the way you describe it. Of course you have backups for your valuable data I...
Exactly what happens when it crashes? Does it have a blue screen of death; does it reboot; any pop-up errors?
Also check in the Windows System event logs (if you can) around the time of the crash...
First thing to check is that it's not a overheating issue. Monitor your cpu and gpu temps and make sure the fans are all working properly and that air flow is correct.
You're welcome.
You're stuck with what you have and that you should be happy with it because it's for your own good not to have too much control.
I don't think Bill Gates has much to do with that these days.
But yes - many agree with you about having more control over updates.
Right click the entry in Device Manager and disable then enable it.
If that does not work, then right click and uninstall then at the top of the list (the computer name) right click and scan for...
Have a look here for Exchange 2013: Autodiscover service for Exchange 2013
What antivirus and firewall programs are you using? Try disabling one or both and see if you then get network access. If so, then you can reinstall the program that was the problem.
Outlook 2016 uses autodiscover to connect to an Exchange server and I don't think you can set it up without. That is a change from previous versions. It needs to be set up on the Exchange side...
Try both the in-built Windows 10 drivers, if they exist, as well as the ones from the manufacturer's site. Uninstall each before trying the other. Make sure there are no issues with other drivers...