Re: Kernel Panic
- From: "Jesus" <rustybucket666@xxxxxxxxx>
- Date: 5 Apr 2007 20:16:23 -0700
On Apr 5, 9:06 pm, "John" <nos...@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
"Jesus" <rustybucket...@xxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:1175821027.048693.285810@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
On Apr 5, 7:03 pm, "John" <nos...@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
"Jesus" <rustybucket...@xxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:1175814134.530753.39370@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
On Apr 5, 6:44 pm, "John" <nos...@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
"Jesus" <rustybucket...@xxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:1175812999.240830.195150@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
On Apr 5, 6:35 pm, "John" <nos...@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
"Jesus" <rustybucket...@xxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:1175812241.223040.93650@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
On Apr 5, 6:18 pm, "John" <nos...@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
"Jesus" <rustybucket...@xxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:1175124110.951361.265130@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
On Mar 28, 1:08 am, "John" <nos...@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
"Snit" <S...@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:C22F42DD.7BF80%SNIT@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Well I'll be... I have now actually seen a panic in a
modern
version
of
OS
X... I think the last one I saw was in 10.2. Came home
tonight...
woke
my
computer and the mouse would not move (well, the *mouse*
would...
just
not
the mouse *pointer*... tee hee). I unpluged and replugged
the
mouse
with
no
effect... unplugged the hub it is attached to... plugged it
back
and
and
*BAM* kernel panic.
Weird. Wonder if I have some hardware going bad? I do run
USB
Overdrive...
though I have been for a while with no such problems.
Anyway, figured I should share the bad since I talk of the
good.
My
Mac
let
me down tonight... even lost some edits on a PhotoShop file
I
had
forgotten
to save (no big deal... about 2 minutes of work lost).
--
I am currently being "targeted" by a forger.
Check the headers to make sure this is not from
Individual.net
--
? OS X is partially based on BSD (esp. FreeBSD)
? OS X users are at far less risk of malware then are XP
users
? Photoshop is an image editing application
It's entirely normal to get a Kernal Pnic every 3 or 4 years.
Wish
my
Windows Vista box could go that long!
Vista can run that long if you manage it properly... given the
fact
that you have no clue how to use Vista (judging by your
description
of
UAC), that probably doesn't include you, but other people can
keep
Vista running. My computer with XP never blue-screened except
for
one
time due to a hardware failure. I have yet to have Vista lock
up
on
me on either of my machines.
If someone only installs a few Microsoft programs, and no
external
hardware
other than a printer than Vista will run fine. Start adding a
few
hardware drivers and installing a few programs that end up
messing
up
the
*** core operating system than your "experience" will no
longer
apply.
I don't know a single person with a lot of legacy software and
multiple
peripherals that has a stable Vista installation. I spent
hundreds
of
hours troubleshooting my system the last few months and finally
it
has
run
as of today 2 weeks crash free. I am not counting on it to go
much
longer
than that. Nowhere even close to the month after month after
month
stable
reliability of Mac OS 10.4.
Why do you keep assuming you know my hardware setup?
You seem like the type of person that would have a simple laptop
and
maybe a
desktop.
Based on what?
And based on the "information" you provided me on UAC I know
fucking well you have practically NO software on it except for
maybe
Office
2003 and a couple of other Microsoft programs.
So because you don't understand how UAC works, you've decided I have
Office 2003 (wrong... Office 2007) and a few other Microsoft
programs? That's funny... I count AT LEAST 23 non-Microsoft
programs. Many of them aren't Vista-aware. ALL of them installed
flawlessly without right-clicking and saying "Run as Administrator".
It would be impossible for
you to get it to install without seeing a lot of error writing to
directory
X errors and you then giving up!!!!!
I'm not stupid. I know you need admin privileges to write in HKLM,
C:
\Program Files, and C:\Windows. I'm also smart enough to see that
if
the Windows security shield is on the icon, I can double-click the
icon and click "Continue" to run the installer with FULL admin
privileges. You, on the other hand, are not. If trying to figure
out
what to do with permissions errors was why you spent "hundreds" of
hours on troubleshooting, you're a real idiot.
So how many programs do you have installed? Not many with your
"knowledge"!!!
What does the number of installed programs on my machine have to do
with my understanding of Windows?
Anyways, I have 56 entries in "Programs and Features", so 56, give or
take a few.
I am just trying to find out why after having Vista a few months you know
so
little. LOL!!!
As if. You're the one claiming that you're right and Microsoft
TechNet is wrong.
Again, what does number of installed programs have to do with
knowledge about Windows? The fact that you think that can even
remotely be used as an indicator of knowledge shows you're a complete
idiot.
You are soooo stupid it just isn't worth the time to repond to you!!!!!
You're the one who's been killfiled by over half the group for being
an idiot...
.
- Follow-Ups:
- Re: Kernel Panic
- From: Sandman
- Re: Kernel Panic
- From: John
- Re: Kernel Panic
- References:
- Re: Kernel Panic
- From: John
- Re: Kernel Panic
- From: Jesus
- Re: Kernel Panic
- From: John
- Re: Kernel Panic
- From: Jesus
- Re: Kernel Panic
- From: John
- Re: Kernel Panic
- From: Jesus
- Re: Kernel Panic
- From: John
- Re: Kernel Panic
- From: Jesus
- Re: Kernel Panic
- From: John
- Re: Kernel Panic
- Prev by Date: Re: Quick: Where is the equivalent of the Display control panel in Vista?
- Next by Date: Re: Creating 2 pages of Widgets
- Previous by thread: Re: Kernel Panic
- Next by thread: Re: Kernel Panic
- Index(es):
Loading