Entries Tagged 'batteries For Advent' ↓

How do you access the recovery console on an Advent 7111 notebook ?

Upon start up, i see the POST (power on self test) thing working, the ram clock ticks up and so forth and after afew seconds I get this message:

Windows could not start because the following file is missing or corrupt:
<Windows root>system32ntoskrnl.exe
Please reinstall a copy of the above file

I've tried pressing the F10 and F11 key in the hope of entering some kind of recovery console – but to no avail.

Is there even a recovery console there on the hard disk ? remember I can't even access windows right now – the version being, windows xp media center edition 2005.

I have a CD called 'Driver & Utility v1.4' but again, when insert thsi and boot up the machine it does nothing at all – just keep seeing teh above message.

There is a serial number for the windows xp , a sticker on the back of the machine.

Is it possible to download a new windows xp onto disc and then install/ it onto the laptop some how using that serial number ?

more importantly where the hell is the recovery console for this damn machine ?

Nothing found for Living Do-parents-need-to-prevent-their-kids-from-overdosing-on-technology-64930 < Link><guid

#ToTheContrary Facebook and drugs: the link-up is amusing, mr Califona

Open letter to mr Joseph A Califona Jr, CASA Columbia’s, Founder and Chairman, who says Facebook turns teenagers to drinks and drugs.

#TheBigSeries Just for once, Dravid should say ‘No’

If you pick Dravid – you drop one of the youngsters. And if you keep doing that, how do you build for the future?

#PoliticalPlay Anna may end fast, Parliament to debate Jan Lokpal tomorrow

When will Anna Hazare end his fast? As talks find steam, an anxious country gets eager by the moment.

#WhatNext Bear grip is getting tighter, Nifty can vouch for that

Rising inflation is making things worse as it has forced the central bank to maintain high interest rates. Analysts are playing their part too with their sectoral downgrades.

#ToTheContrary India’s seniors have too much say in selection: Chappell

The former Australian captain Ian Chappell also feel the negligence of the selection committee led by Krish Srikkanth has led to this debacle in England.

As the whales return, the world is waking up to its bloodied past

IT'S very sad the baby humpback had to be put down off Queensland's Gold Coast this week, but there's no doubting the care and concern of the many volunteers who turned out to try to save it.

These days, the general public turns out in droves to see whales. they have long been a staple of the tourist industry, but there’s nothing quite like the delight of seeing whales arrive in Sydney Harbour.

It was different for the whale that swam up the Derwent into central Hobart in 1852. the Colonial Times reported that "On Wednesday morning last much excitement was caused on the wharves by the novel appearance of a black whale which was first seen to approach Battery Point, thence swim along the New Wharf to Constitution Dock. Crowds of people gathered, shouting ‘There he is’ and ‘Here he is’ as a whale moved along the waterfront."

Immediately, those who could do so took to their boats to give chase. "they were the first to ‘get fast’ and to plunge the harpoon into the monster of the deep." the dead whale was hauled alongside, and cut up for its oil. It measured 12m, and was expected to yield 5 tonnes of oil.

Attitudes change. in the last few days there have been reports that Japan may be reassessing its "scientific whaling".

Australia has a long history of whaling. some of the ships of the first Fleet were whalers, and until the 1830s, whale oil was a more valuable export than wool. It continued to be important throughout the 19th century. in the 20th century, kerosene replaced whale oil, and plastics replaced whalebone, but the industry continued on a limited scale for another 70 years.

Whale numbers were already declining in the 19th century, and the situation grew worse with the development of new, post-Moby-Dick technologies such as factory boats and mechanical harpoons.

In the 1930s nations began to demand regulation of whaling. the League of Nations supported a Convention for the Regulation of Whaling, but more than 46,000 whales were killed in the southern oceans in one year, 1937-38. in 1939 a 10-year moratorium on killing humpbacks was declared. the naval war probably protected whales more effectively — except for those occasionally mistaken for submarines and killed by depth charges.

The International Whaling Commission was established in 1948. the original aim of the IWC was not to outlaw whaling, but to regulate it. Mathematical models attempted to estimate how many whales could be killed sustainably. Australia set up a commission to regulate the industry when humpback whaling began again in 1949, with whaling stations at Albany in Western Australia, Eden and Byron Bay in NSW and Queensland’s Moreton Island.

Inspectors visited regularly during the winter season.

At that point, the humpback population was estimated at approximately 10,000. However the IWC’s modelling seemed wrong, for throughout the 1950s, the numbers of whales continued to fall. By 1960, Moreton Island’s Tangalooma station couldn’t find enough whales to meet its quota, and closed in 1962, and the final station, Albany, in 1973.

Why were the models wrong? It was only in the 1990s, when the old Soviet archives were opened, that zoologists discovered that during the 1950s and 60s, a Soviet whaling fleet was operating in Antarctic waters, killing large numbers of whales without any respect for the quotas imposed by the IWC. This slaughter made the mathematical model irrelevant, and whale numbers plummeted.

Eventually, in the Antarctic as well, the numbers of whales fell so low that harvesting became unprofitable. Since the 1970s the numbers of most species have been rising, but in some species, the selective slaughter of the largest animals has probably affected the gene pool so individual animals are smaller than the average size in earlier centuries.

For one baby humpback, the natural risks of life proved too great, but the man-made risks are no longer a worry, and fortunately the species is doing well these days. Long may this continue.

Marion Diamond blogs at Historians are past Caring.

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Advent Webcam Driver HELP!?

Help i just bought a advent m100 and theres a built in webcam but it isnt working i dont think the driver is installed is there anyone that can give me a website to get it iv looked everywhere cant seem to find the right thing thanksx

How to write a leaver letter for my kid need holiday due to her mother pregnant?

i want to write a letter to my daughter's school. Reason is she went to her home country for her mother baby delivery. she cannot attend the class from this date to this date.

MODIFIED MOUSE RUNS ON LITHIUM ION CELL PHONE BATTERY

I got a couple of Logitech cordless, optical mice for cheap from an eBay auction. They work great, but they are battery hogs. A pair of AA alkalines only lasted a week or two, and when I used rechargeables, they only lasted a couple of days before needing a recharge.

At one point I mused that it would be nice to be able to power the mice with the BL-5C Lithium Ion batteries that power my cell phone. They recharge quickly and hold a lot of current. Only problem is they are 3.7 volt batteries and the mice are designed to run on a couple of AA’s in series… 3 volts. I wondered if the extra .7 volt would be a problem. One way to find out. A couple of jumpers later, I had my answer… the mouse seemed quite happy with 3.7 volts.

the hard part was finding a way to stuff the battery inside the mouse. You have to chop a lot of the battery compartment plastic out, remove the springs, and install a connector assembly that will match up with the BL-5C terminals (if you want it to be removable, more on that later).