Well I am using the 850 Evo 500GB drive in my desktop and I noticed the change right away.. It's a shitload faster then the mechanical drive I had in there, however I still have that as the emergency backup..
Damn. Nothing like digging through Windows Update. I have over 50 of them to check to make sure none of them are crap.
I don't see this one on my list for updates but I'm wondering what it is, aside from what I saw on Microsoft's site about it.
KB2882822 - Update adds ITraceRelogger interface support.
It sounds like a keylogger to me.
nah - though looking at the entry on Microsoft.com I'm still not sure what exactly it's for.
Microsoft need to improve the update information so you're not crawling through their blasted website to get info on what a patch is.
Doing a rebuild on my server at the moment so Windows Server 2012R2 I had to load something like 201 patches and that's just for the damn OS it's self.
Have all the patches stored locally via WSUS but was still pain because the updates borked up and had to be rolled back. Ended up starting from scratch again.
Damn. Nothing like digging through Windows Update. I have over 50 of them to check to make sure none of them are crap.
I don't see this one on my list for updates but I'm wondering what it is, aside from what I saw on Microsoft's site about it.
KB2882822 - Update adds ITraceRelogger interface support.
It sounds like a keylogger to me.
It could be telemetry tracking usage data...
But I found this also
The iTraceRelogger interface is a dependency for certain features to work (for example, the UI Responsiveness tool in Internet Explorer 11 F12 tools). After the update is installed, the application that is dependent on the iTraceRelogger interface can now enable certain features that runs in Windows Embedded Standard 7 SP1, Windows 7 SP1 and Windows Server 2008 R2 SP1.
You would need either a videocard that can run two monitors or a second video card.Quick question - with this set-up, what would I need card wise to drive two WQHD monitors ? (I don't game at all - it's purely work and web stuff):
Version 10.0.10586 Build 10586
System Manufacturer Gigabyte Technology Co., Ltd.
System Model H87-HD3
System Type x64-based PC
Processor Intel(R) Core(TM) i5-4570 CPU @ 3.20GHz, 3201 Mhz, 4 Core(s), 4 Logical Processor(s)
BIOS Version/Date American Megatrends Inc. F3, 09/05/2013
SMBIOS Version 2.7
Embedded Controller Version 255.255
BIOS Mode UEFI
BaseBoard Manufacturer Gigabyte Technology Co., Ltd.
Hardware Abstraction Layer Version = "10.0.10586.420"
Installed Physical Memory (RAM) 12.0 GB
Total Physical Memory 11.9 GB
Available Physical Memory 8.64 GB
Total Virtual Memory 13.7 GB
Available Virtual Memory 10.6 GB
A lot of the better video cards have 2 monitor capability. The one I bought 9 years ago (EVGA GeForce 8800 GTS KO ACS³ Edition) had dual DVI ports, and I wasn't even thinking about that sort of thing 9 years ago.
If you have a Windows CD then boot from that and run the repair option, if that fails, I usually would go to https://www.linuxmint.com/download.php
Get the cinnamon distro, burn it on DVD and boot from that, it has a program called "disks" run that, it will have an option to scan your harddrive's SMART status, it will tell you if the drive is on its way out.
If it is, buy a new drive, if its okay then maybe reinstall Windows from scratch.
Don't go to the Best Buy or Geek Squad ..... There's videos floating around where they got busted ripping people off for faults that could be fixed by changing whole parts that probably would work rather then look at the issue.
(rant) This is the problem with most current users, they don't know anything about their machines, can't fix hardware, can't fix software, they don't even know the basics of it, in the old days you either learned how to fix things or you would end up with a really, really REALLY expensive paperweight, so you learned and that was that. (end rant)
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