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-   -   Mouse (http://cellar.org/showthread.php?t=32249)

xoxoxoBruce 10-18-2016 01:03 AM

Mouse
 
My mouse was worn out, the left button would double click on it's own occasionally, the center wheel only worked in one direction, and the right button had to be pressed sideways to work. But the thought of crawling through the dust bunnies and toe jam made me put up with it, even though I had several spare mice.

Saturday afternoon the PC wouldn't come up, it would get part way and stop. I figured out it must be the mouse but it wasn't. The Waber strip my brother gave me a couple years ago had failed. It was from Staples and when whatever was plugged into the master outlet was turned off, it would turn all the other outlets off. That was very convenient to have the monitor, speakers, scanner, etc, power down when the PC turned off. I think I'll get another one.

Anyway, a fully functional mouse is glorious, I now realize what a pain in the ass it was.

Beest 10-18-2016 07:51 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by xoxoxoBruce (Post 971410)
. It was from Staples and when whatever was plugged into the master outlet was turned off, it would turn all the other outlets off.

I bought a UPS a couple of years ago with this, I was amused to find the other sockets are not referred to with the S word, but simply as 'controlled by Master'.

glatt 10-18-2016 07:53 AM

You used "Warber strip" to avoid summoning you know who.

BigV 10-18-2016 10:03 PM

twoldemort?

Griff 10-19-2016 06:21 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by glatt (Post 971423)
You used "Warber strip" to avoid summoning you know who.

he is wise

Gravdigr 10-19-2016 01:21 PM

Careful, you're gonna talk him up...:worried:

John Sellers 10-19-2016 01:31 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by xoxoxoBruce (Post 971410)
That was very convenient to have the monitor, speakers, scanner, etc, power down when the PC turned off.

So, you just switch off your power strip without shutting down Windows first? You're not supposed to do that, ya know. You could end up with data corruption.

tw 10-19-2016 01:47 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by John Sellers (Post 971517)
So, you just switch off your power strip without shutting down Windows first? You're not supposed to do that, ya know. You could end up with data corruption.

That defective existed in obsolete technology DOS and Windows based systems. That defect was one of so many eliminated when NT made Windows 95 obsolete in the early 1990s.

Any data corruption or hardware damage from an unexpected blackout implies defective and totally improperly designed hardware.

Many assume unexpected power loss can damage a disk drive or its data. When does a disk drive first learn about power loss? When 5 or 12 volts start dropping to zero. All disk drives see a normal shutdown or unexpected township wide power loss as same. Data loss only occurred with and because of an obsolete file systems such as FAT.

Gravdigr 10-19-2016 01:51 PM

What did I just say?:eyebrow:

Gravdigr 10-19-2016 01:52 PM

:lol2:

xoxoxoBruce 10-19-2016 01:52 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by John Sellers (Post 971517)
So, you just switch off your power strip without shutting down Windows first? You're not supposed to do that, ya know. You could end up with data corruption.

No, I never switch off the power strip. With the one I had, when the PC was shut down, the power strip would turn off the rest of the outlets.

John Sellers 10-19-2016 04:31 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by tw (Post 971525)
That defective existed in obsolete technology DOS and Windows based systems. That defect was one of so many eliminated when NT made Windows 95 obsolete in the early 1990s.

Any data corruption or hardware damage from an unexpected blackout implies defective and totally improperly designed hardware.

Many assume unexpected power loss can damage a disk drive or its data. When does a disk drive first learn about power loss? When 5 or 12 volts start dropping to zero. All disk drives see a normal shutdown or unexpected township wide power loss as same. Data loss only occurred with and because of an obsolete file systems such as FAT.


Rly? It's always a good idea to let Windows go thru the shutdown process B4 switching off the PC, even in Windows 10, so it can properly close all programs running in the background, and stop the HDD. Beginning with Windows XP, Microsoft included the option to have Windows start the shutdown process simply by pressing your PC's power button.

xoxoxoBruce 10-19-2016 04:35 PM

No power button, click on shut down and let it do it's thing. When it shuts down the magic strip kills power to the peripherals.

John Sellers 10-19-2016 04:39 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by xoxoxoBruce (Post 971529)
No, I never switch off the power strip. With the one I had, when the PC was shut down, the power strip would turn off the rest of the outlets.

Ok. :)

xoxoxoBruce 10-19-2016 04:48 PM

After all, I wouldn't risk corrupting my porn files. ;)


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