rudeguy
Lifer
- Dec 27, 2001
- 47,351
- 14
- 61
Pretty sure windows won't be able to see anything if there's a passcode lock on the device.
Well, I think that's how it works on my wife's non-upgraded 4s.
Just the pics.
Pretty sure windows won't be able to see anything if there's a passcode lock on the device.
Well, I think that's how it works on my wife's non-upgraded 4s.
When they know enough to know what they don't know.
when they can pull 13gb of photos and vids out of my aunt's iphone without installing itunes/icloud and not having access to wifi/internet.
i gave up and told her to get a better phone. im not gonna pull my hairs out for this one
When they can do a 1/1 interleave on an STFM controller and winchester drive.
winchester is a gun, not a drive
silly goose
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Anyone who gets this (w/o having to look it up) can be considered tech-savvy:
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Anyone who gets this (w/o having to look it up) can be considered tech-savvy:
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Building a computer is easy, but as I've learned from my last core i7 build, building a computer that actually is stable, is not cut and dry. I'd say the early 2000's were easier as hardware was not as fussy. Ram etc.. basically worked if it fits. Now you have to check compatibility lists and all that crap and DOA/flaky hardware is all too common and it's rare a brand new build "just works", whether there's faulty hardware somewhere and you have to play the "buy a new one and try it" game or perhaps some kind of incompatibility or known issue etc... Having to cross reference compatibility lists can be tedius as the product IDs they use may not be searchable on whatever retailer you use as they may not use the same product IDs so trying to find a motherboard and ram that is certified compatible, at a single retailer, can be tedious.
I've been fighting with my build for over a year now figuring out why I have so many random issues. I had solved the worse of it by changing the video card, which is something I just took a guess at, and bought another. But now I have random lockups. It makes it worse when the problems are not reproducible but instead, only happen randomly a few times per month. Random lockups are the worst too as they don't generate any kind of logs.
Someone who can figure out problems like this off the top of their head would be what I'd consider tech savvy. But simply building a computer that can boot, that's fairly standard and easy to do. The average person thinks it's really complicated but if you were to show them I'm sure it would be easy to teach someone how to do it.
What surprises me though is the amount of tech/IT people who are tech savvy in their field but don't know even basic programming. I worked in a few IT shops and I was usually the only person that knew basic coding. Was actually frustrating as that created an environment where custom code or even open source software was not allowed, making life harder in certain situations.
when they can pull 13gb of photos and vids out of my aunt's iphone without installing itunes/icloud and not having access to wifi/internet.
i gave up and told her to get a better phone. im not gonna pull my hairs out for this one