Thursday, 3 October 2013

02/10/13

Today in class we chose out own computers to use and learned about troubleshooting. We made flow charts on how to troubleshoot a certain thing. I chose my computer to be alfred. We removed each part of the computer to see what error pops up so that we know how to deal with the problem. We also learned how to convert iso to USB, and we learned to make a copy of a disk, which we mostly did windows XP or Risk

7 comments:

  1. If your computer seems to be frozen wait. Give the computer a few minutes to process, sometimes a computer may appear to be froze but is really just slow or busy processing a complex task.

    ReplyDelete
  2. This comment has been removed by the author.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Just thought i'd share this website with you, http://goo.gl/uzeTXU It gives you some of the most common problems with PC's today and it could be helpfull to you! Of course you may know some of them already but it never hurts to read more guides to expan your knowledge.

    ReplyDelete
  4. When you know your motherboard is fried or missing, it is when your computer is running, but you have no signal with the monitor and its plugged in, you also know when your mouse is plugged in and keyboard and if they light up when their are on they are lighting up. This means that the motherboard is most likely fried.

    ReplyDelete
  5. If your computer doesnt turn on, theres probably a problem with the power, check the outlet, the EC320 power cable, and the PSU.

    ReplyDelete
  6. One thing when cloning CD's is dont put it into the optical drive upside down

    ReplyDelete
  7. Not every USB stick is bootable. A lot of cheaper ones cant be made to boot from and no one really is sure why, they just don't work. If you mess around and test all your usb sticks you will know which ones you can boot from and which ones you cannot which may save your hide int the future or at least prevent frustration.

    ReplyDelete