Newsletter Archives
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Making connections between computers and monitors
ISSUE 19.16 • 2022-04-18 HARDWARE
By Ben Myers
With four different standards for video ports and cables, as well as some “mini” ports, it can be downright confusing to come up with the right cables to connect your computer to a monitor.
In the best of all possible worlds, we would all want to buy a computer and a monitor at the same time, ensuring that they connect to one another and work well together with the right cabling. In our real world, a computer meets an untimely demise and an upscale monitor is still exactly what we need. Or maybe the monitor fails to light up, it becomes too dim, you punch out the screen in anger, or it is simply time for a larger monitor. Possibly you want to attach a monitor to your laptop, duplicating the laptop screen on a larger viewing area or using dual screens to see more information.
Read the full story in our Plus Newsletter (19.16.0, 2022-04-18).
This story also appears in our public Newsletter. -
BitLocker and the dead: The story of a successful transplant
HARDWARE
By Ben Myers
The CPU is the heart of a laptop, but we do the brain transplants here. BWA! HA! HA! HA!
Recently, a long-time client who had moved several towns away called me in a panic. A two-year-old Lenovo Yoga laptop had failed.
When I got my hands on the computer, I surmised that the probable cause was the third-party charger, which had blown out a circuit inside the laptop when the charger itself had failed. The charger did not function when plugged into another laptop, confirming my suspicions.
Read the full story in our Plus Newsletter (19.12.0, 2022-03-21).
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Our world is not very S.M.A.R.T. about SSDs
ISSUE 19.06 • 2022-02-07 HARDWARE
By Ben Myers
With solid-state drives (SSDs), the SMART ante is raised because an SSD can fail catastrophically — CLUNK! — without warning and with no possibility of recovering data.
In my recent article “Hard drives — still pretty S.M.A.R.T.” (AskWoody, 2021-12-27), I was hardly overwhelmed by the treatment of the S.M.A.R.T. (Self-Monitoring, Analysis, and Reporting Technology) data kept on traditional spinning hard drives by Microsoft Windows and the rest of the industry. But at least, if your computer started to hiccup, you could almost always look at the SMART data to find a possible cause.
Read the full story in the AskWoody Plus Newsletter 19.06.0 (2022-02-07).
This story also appears in the AskWoody Free Newsletter 19.06.F (2022-02-07). -
Hard drives – still pretty S.M.A.R.T.
HARDWARE
By Ben Myers
In my last article, Breaking and entering with Linux: What you see (AskWoody 2021-09-27), I said that there were issues with the S.M.A.R.T. system built into the firmware of both old-time spinning hard drives and solid-state drives (SSDs).
S.M.A.R.T. (Self-Monitoring, Analysis, and Reporting Technology, hereinafter referred to simply as “SMART”) provides real-time recordkeeping about the health of your hard drive. It is all about system reliability, of which drives are a major element and a significant point of failure.
Read the full story in the AskWoody Plus Newsletter 18.50.0 (2021-12-27).
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Breaking and entering with Linux: What you see
HARDWARE
By Ben Myers
In my first “Breaking and entering” article, you saw what to do step-by-step to get an unbootable system into legacy boot mode and how to prepare a UEFI USB stick with Linux Mint.
Now, boot your system with that Linux USB stick.
Read the full story in the AskWoody Plus Newsletter 18.37.0 (2021-09-27).
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Breaking and entering with Linux
HARDWARE
By Ben Myers
Use Linux on a USB stick to diagnose a Windows system.
My working premise here is that your Windows system will not boot, not even in safe or any other degraded mode. You have no idea what’s going on, and it is premature, time-consuming, and sometimes futile to rip a computer open to see what is inside. The solution is to boot another operating system from a USB stick and use it to explore and diagnose problems.
Read the full story in the AskWoody Plus Newsletter 18.33.0 (2021-08-30).
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The Trusted Platform Module has just become important
HARDWARE
By Ben Myers
Microsoft has said that the Trusted Platform Module 2.0 is a firm requirement for Windows 11. Why?
The leak of an early version of Windows 11 forced its hasty announcement by Microsoft, rather than the usual smooth, well-orchestrated effort supported by thorough technical information about the requirements to run the new operating system. The eye candy of a perky and pretty Mac-like desktop wallpapered over many technical details, some still unclear. It is somewhat ironic that an operating system intended to be trusted was leaked.
Read the full story in the AskWoody Plus Newsletter 18.26.0 (2021-07-12).
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Why Wi-Fi 6, aka 802.11ax, for wireless?
HARDWARE
By Ben Myers
Now that there is broad availability of routers compatible with the new Wi-Fi 6 standard, it’s easy to ask, “What’s in it for me?”
There is a myriad of devices that are compatible with the 802.11ac specification, from laptops to cell phones to tablets to Internet of Things (IoT) devices. But the 802.11ac spec is not without limitations.
Read the full story in the AskWoody Plus Newsletter 18.23.0 (2021-06-21).
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Anatomy of a malware
ISSUE 18.17 • 2021-05-10 SAFETY
By Ben Myers
Things are not always as they seem. What might appear to be a devastating, PC-destroying piece of malware can sometimes be a spoof.
Recently, a client gave me his laptop, which displayed a frightening message as soon he logged in. This variety of malware is all too popular. Here is a step-by-step process to remove it, expecting that the antivirus software installed in the computer cannot do its job. Along the way, you will see where malware is often hidden.
Read the full story in the AskWoody Plus Newsletter 18.17.0 (2021-05-10).
This story also appears in the AskWoody Free Newsletter 18.17.F (2021-05-10). -
New PC? Lost your Microsoft account password?
ISSUE 18.15 • 2021-04-26 MICROSOFT
By Ben Myers
If your dog ate your Microsoft account credentials, Microsoft will welcome you to the tenth circle of hell.
You probably don’t want to hear this, because you’ve been nagged this way before; but make sure you have a safe record of your user credentials for every online account you maintain. Just do it.
Read the full story in the AskWoody Plus Newsletter 18.15.0 (2021-04-26).
This story also appears in the AskWoody Free Newsletter 18.15.F (2021-04-26).