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Ask the DoctorAsk the Doctor: The Neverending Memtest

Posted 07/02/2009 at 07:00:03pm

Ask the Doctor LogoI downloaded memtest86+ 1.65 (on the recommendation of your magazine) and tried it out on one of my systems. I cannot get past the “auto” running memtest86+ to finish booting to Windows XP Pro. My system is an AMD 2.2GB dual core with 2GB of RAM on a TForce 550 SE mobo. How can I stop memtest86+ from automatically starting every time I boot? I assume there is an autoexec.bat file that is running. Memtest86+ ran for nearly 48 hours non-stop without ever finishing the tests. Is this normal? Should I have let it run to completion?

—Dave
Click for Dave's answer, after the jump!

FeaturesWindows 7 vs Linux: What's the Best OS for Your Netbook?

Posted 07/02/2009 at 10:30:00am

That shiny new netbook is light and portable, plays music and movies, and cost less than an iPhone (with service). Problem is: you might be ready to chuck it off a bridge. Running the Intel Atom processor at only 1.60GHz, netbooks are a bit on the clunky side when it comes to actual data processing. No one is going to play World of Warcraft on one of these thin machines, but it sure would be great if OpenOffice, a music player, and Mozilla Firefox could run a little faster.

The answer to the netbook dilemma is: find an alternative operating system. Of course, this is a time-consuming proposition, considering you have to download the OS, burn it to a CD or USB key, load the OS, and then configure it. To find out which OS will actually add pep to your Sony P – or any number of low-cost, Atom-based netbooks – we loaded six different options on the same machine and performed a series of tests – looking at the interface, networking features, the browser and built-in apps, and how much customization you can do and ended up picking a clear winner.

 

Linux or Windows? Read on to find out which OS is best for your netbook.

Ask the DoctorAsk the Doctor: Play It All

Posted 07/01/2009 at 10:00:00am

Ask the Doctor LogoDoc, I need some help! Using what I learned from your mag, I built a small home theater PC. Everything is good, except when I want to watch a movie I have ripped (I use SlySoft AnyDVD). I don’t know how to get the movie to run in one piece. I have to play the movie in sections. I have Nero 7 and PowerDVD but it happens the same way with either.

—Denny Morris
Click for Denny's answer, after the jump!

ColumnsGame Theory: Grassroots Gaming

Posted 07/01/2009 at 09:33:01am

PC gaming began on mainframes and research computers. It moved to personal computers when independent developers put their games on floppy disks, sealed them in Ziploc bags with Xeroxed art, and sold them in hobby stores. If it is going to have a future that is not yoked to console design paradigms, we are going to have to recapture those roots and start paying closer attention to the small developers who are designing with us, and not 14-year-old console gamers, as their primary market.

Continue reading after the jump!

ColumnsFast Forward: The Fix Is In

Posted 06/29/2009 at 09:00:00pm

Imagine having your car serviced and finding 100 unexplained miles on the odometer, plus evidence that burglary tools had been stashed in the trunk. Would you be pissed? I was.

Except it was my computer, not my car, that a repair shop messed with.

We’re so focused on threats coming from the Internet that it’s easy to forget the hazards closer to home. The best antivirus software, firewalls, and spyware scanners are worthless when someone violates a trusted relationship. Maybe you can learn from my experience.

Continue reading after the jump!

 

Ask the DoctorAsk the Doctor: Pluggin' the Analog Hole

Posted 06/29/2009 at 08:28:22pm

Ask the Doctor LogoOn my old Windows XP PC, I used Audacity to record music, etc., from the Internet with great results.

Recently I bought a Dell XPS 420 with Windows Vista 64-bit and now Audacity (or even the PC’s Creative Sound recording software) can’t record any audio. I came across some related forums and tried a couple of suggestions (check disabled items on the Sound properties, etc.), which haven’t worked.

In XP I used the Stereo Mix setting in Audacity but in Vista I don’t have that option. And recording from the mic isn’t an option, either. Is this a Vista “feature”? If so, how can I record audio from the Internet? Vista has grown on me so I’d rather not downgrade to XP.

—Suleman
Click for Suleman's answer, after the jump!

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