Anyways, since I have both computers in my room, I have been using his to game on while using mine to download torrents onto a shared folder on to his hard drive. This was working well untill a recent batch went into a sort of limbo. Exsisting in my hdd, yet not exsisting in the shared network folder. I used the windows search tool to find that the batch folder does not exsist on my hdd. However, when I run the torrent, it seeds from my hdd, it also shows that the batch was downloaded to my hdd to a folder with the same name as the shared network folder.
I tried making a folder with the same name as the shared network folder locally, but it opened up empty. Also, the torrent client did not read this folder.
So is there a way to find this batch of anime I downloaded, or should I get everything sorted for a format?
Thanks.
It's pretty rad, it found said anime files. May want to take a look at it if you ever lose a file.
As for this thread, it will now segue into randomness
Every HDD I have is labeled with model number and jumper settings and all that shit.
It's not something people hear about.
Hold on..
code:
C S M
S L A
I take it to mean that shorting CS would be cable select, SL would be slave, and MA would be master?
quote:
We were all impressed when Delphi Aegis wrote:
Was given it and was told it was attached to the bay permanently.. but I just unscrewed it, and hey, it's there. It's a Western Digitial 120g, but I don't see any jumper settings.Hold on..
code:
C S M
S L AI take it to mean that shorting CS would be cable select, SL would be slave, and MA would be master?
Correct. Out of habit I always put it to Slave or Master even if CS technically should work.
quote:
x--AlaanO-('-'Q) :
Correct. Out of habit I always put it to Slave or Master even if CS technically should work.
Yeah. Cable select is just one more thing to fail
quote:
Over the mountain, in between the ups and downs, I ran into Delphi Aegis who doth quote:
Now the real query is where I find a jumper short..er.. thing. Since this doesn't.. have one? haha.
If you're careful, tinfoil works, or just bend the pins together so they touch.
Alternately you could go to any computer repair shop and ask for one and there's a 99% chance they'll give you one for free.