hmm.. doesn't sound good..
Assuming first that the drive is not the problem.
I'd try a new ribbon
Check the jumper settings
Make sure that the bois is set properly for your configuration
Make sure that your version of the motherboard bios supports a drive that big
I actually had a 80gig drive...
With my experience dual booting XP Pro with redhat 9. I would recommend the following config:
hard drive 1 partition 1(primary master):
Redhat 9 - 5+ gigs for full install(ext3 partition mounting to /)
hard drive 1 partition 2(primary master):
Swap file for Redhat 9 - twice the size of ram...
All I can say is check the ribbon and the jumpers.
I had a similar problem with a drive I hadn't used in a while that was set for cable select (which I never use) on the same ribbon as a master hdd.
You can also try it on it's on a different IDE channel.
Sounds like the harddrive you put in was partitioned into 2 drive letters by someone before you got it. This should not be a problem but more of an inconvenience if you want all of the space to be C and not C and D.
See if any of the drivers on this page work for your sound card...
In my situation I have exchange 5.5 on 2kserver and OWA on 2kpro. In order to get OWA to work at all I had to install the latest service pack from Microsoft. I never check the administrator acount even before the service pack.
http://www.microsoft.com/exchange/downloads/55/sp4dl_en.asp
I...
(Win2K)
administrative tools ->
local security policy ->
local policies ->
user rights assignment.
these users must be in a group that has the effective setting to log on locally
The drive needs to be set at a different ID number than the other drive and the SCSI card itself. What kind of SCSI is/are the drives? Does the cable have a terminator on it? If it does not then the last drive on the cable should be terminated and the one in the middle should not be
If the user account is still on the laptop you should beable to logon with that account and get into the folders. Do you have the password to that account?
the password is broken up into hash files on the hard drive and cannot be retreived easily and not without special software. It's part of the Windows 2000 security. I'm not sure of any that will give you the password but I have seen some that will let you boot to a disk and change a password...
They have 2 drivers for XP for that printer:
lj631en.exe (PCL5 driver) and
lj631en.exe (Post Script driver)
Download the lj631en.exe to your desktop. Run it and click Unzip. This will unzip the files to a folder on your C: called lj631en.
Add a local printer. Make sure that you don't have...
Hi Curtis,
You need to change one end to
WO, O, WG, BL, WBL, G, WB, BR
The standard on a straight through cable is actually the wiring code I have above and then you change one of the ends to the wiring code you wrote in your post... just some info.
But reguardless of the color code the...
Go to the properties of exchange in IIS.
Go to the Directory Security tab.
Click the edit button under Anonymous access and authentication control.
Under Authenticated access put a check in the box next to Basic authentication and click the edit button.
Type your domain name in the Domain Name...
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