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Posts Tagged ‘computer’

We Shoot Photography Of The Day For 12/30/2019

Monday, December 30th, 2019

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Seattle Product Photography by We Shoot

 

Seattle Product Photography by We Shoot

1 GB 16-pin PCI Video Card. Seattle Product Photography by We Shoot. The original high-resolution image is available from us on Alamy, ID # 2AGRWYM.   Check out our Alamy portfolio at https://www.alamy.com/portfolio/652516.html .

Tags: 16-pin, 1gb, 7570, accelerator, card, computer, computing, electronic, electronics, expansion, fan pci, graphic, graphics, tech, technology, video
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We Shoot Photography Of The Day For 2/4/2019

Monday, February 4th, 2019

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Seattle Product Photography by We Shoot

 

Seattle Product Photography by We Shoot

E-SATA two-port expansion card for hooking up to two external e-SATA hard drives to a computer. Seattle Product Photography by We Shoot.  This image is available from us on Alamy, ID# is R9W6B6.  See our stock portfolio on Alamy at https://www.alamy.com/portfolio/652516.html

Tags: board, card, circuit, computer, controller, drive, drives, e-SATA, eSATA, expand, expanding, expansion, hard, install, installation, PCI, peripheral, red
Posted in Information, Lighting, Marketing, Photographs, Images | Comments Off on We Shoot Photography Of The Day For 2/4/2019

We Shoot Photography Of The Day For 3/27/2017

Monday, March 27th, 2017

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Seattle Product Photography by We Shoot

 

 Seattle Product Photography

An external computer hard-drive. Seattle Product Photography by We Shoot.

Tags: blue, computer, electronic, electronics, hard drive, harddrive, housing, indicator, light, memory, metal, modern, plastic, reflected, reflection, storage, white
Posted in Information, Lighting, Marketing, Photographs, Images | Comments Off on We Shoot Photography Of The Day For 3/27/2017

How To Recover An Unreadable Hard-Drive For Free (12/19/16)

Monday, December 19th, 2016

A few days ago, I was looking for some files that weren’t on my Win 7 Pro PC, but rather on a “retired” external USB hard-drive.  It was an old drive that had been taken out of service due to its age and the fact that it was almost full.  I attached the drive to electrical power and my computer, and the drive registered, but was unreadable.  A box popped up and asked if I wanted to format the drive.  I said no.  I knew that the files were still on that drive, but the computer couldn’t access them.   I tried a few things, but to no avail.  The company that manufactures the drive offers recovery software for $99.00 (not guaranteed), or will recover a drive if sent to them, starting at $499.00, up to $20,000.00.  There is no charge if they can’t recover anything.

Read all the text below before proceeding.

I didn’t think the files in question were worth anything near this expenditure, but other files on the drive may be.  Then I thought, “Find out what to do on YouTube!”  I found this 2-minute, 12-second video that saved me a lot of money at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ix13LRGmzk8 .

The one thing the video author didn’t address is how to get the correct command prompt to attempt this repair.  I will add this:  To get the proper Command Prompt, either find the short-cut in your Start Button Menu (usually in “All Programs”> Accessories) , and right-click it.  Then click “Run As Administrator.”  The command prompt will then say “C:\Windows\System32.”  If you can’t find the Command Prompt shortcut, simply type “cmd” (without the quote marks) in the query line at the bottom of the start menu, and cmd.exe will show up above in the list.  Right-click cmd.exe and “Run As Administrator.”  Then follow the YouTube video.  I don’t know if it will work for you (and I guarantee nothing, but it worked for me), and there may be files lost due to what caused the unreadable disk in the first place.

But give it some time as it takes a while, and the bigger the drive, the longer it takes.  On my drive, the program found 6 bad sectors and overwrote them and the drive was readable in a few minutes, once Windows had indexed the drive.  I was able to find and use the files I was looking for.  I do not know if I lost anything valuable as there are quite a lot of files on this drive.

(Only do this repair if you are willing to assume all the risk.)

Gary Silverstein

-We Shoot

Tags: computer, computers, data, hard drive, harddrive, storage
Posted in How To, Information, Learning, Tips | Comments Off on How To Recover An Unreadable Hard-Drive For Free (12/19/16)

We Shoot Photography Of The Day For 8/16/2016

Tuesday, August 16th, 2016

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Seattle Commercial Photography by We Shoot

 

Seattle Commercial Photography

Two circuit boards perpendicular to one another. One has some components and is out of focus, the other has no components and is in focus. Seattle Commercial Photography by We Shoot.

Tags: board, boards, capacitors, circuit, circuits, components, computer, computers, converter, electronic, electronics, focus, focused, focusing, out of focus, printed, transformer, transistor, transistors, wiring
Posted in Information, Marketing, Photographs, Images | Comments Off on We Shoot Photography Of The Day For 8/16/2016

And, Sometimes, It Just Blows Up!

Wednesday, September 11th, 2013

In the past, a professional, commercial photographer needed a camera and film, to put it simply, to put an image into media.  A commercial lab or a photographer’s darkroom was needed to process that image and turn it into something a client could use.  Those labs largely have just about disappeared.  And so, now digital is king.

In the present, a professional, commercial photographer’s computer is as important to him or her as a camera.  The computer takes the place of the lab and/or darkroom.

When that computer goes on the fritz, it can be a bumpy ride.  Take my old Intel-based i7 workstation computer as an example.  Although very powerful when I bought it (it is still serviceable and still considered powerful today), it was getting a bit long in the tooth at 3.5 years old.  Several months ago, I started to notice things happening for which I had no explanation.  After leaving my computer idle for a time, I would come back to it, and programs I had left open would be gone and off the task bar.  Passwords I had earlier put in on some web pages had to be reloaded again.  I thought maybe I had only imagined I had put in the passwords or opened programs.  Then one day something happened to illuminate that I was having computer malfunctions when I was working on an image, and the screen went black, stayed black for a number of seconds and then the computer rebooted.  Now I realized something really bad was afoot.  The reason my websites had to be reopened with a password again, and programs that had been open had closed, was that the computer had an intermittent failure for some reason, and had rebooted while I was away from it.  What could be causing this?

The first problem I noticed was that the image file I had just spent two hours working on in Photoshop, although saved at intervals, was now corrupted.  I still had the original file, but all the work I had done had vanished into thin air.  The reason is the file was open, hadn’t been closed properly, Photoshop hadn’t been exited properly, and Windows hadn’t also been shut down properly.  When a computer crashes like that, it can’t close out anything on the hard drive, and so a corruption occurs.  The second thing that dawned on me was that this could definitely happen again.  This was totally unacceptable.  This either means repairs or replacement of this computer.  Either way, it is going to be expensive, and very time-consuming.

I used to fix cars for a living a long time ago at a new car dealership, and one of the things the boss used to stick me with was fixing odd intermittent problems.  These were more numerous than one would think.  I did learn one thing about intermittent problems.  They invariably would show as “no fault found” (NFF) when the car was working OK.  All testing devices said that things were working to specification and, because the problem was intermittent, it was my job to drive the car until it happened again.  I would take these cars home with me and drive them like they were mine until I experienced the problem.  I would sometimes drive the car for weeks!  My experience would lead me to note everything about why the car had failed:  Was the car warmed up, was it a cool day, was it uphill or downhill, etc., all clues that would lead me to some conclusion.  Sometimes I experienced the failure once in maybe a week, sometimes several times an hour.  But I knew the problem the customer had, and I had seen it first-hand.  Since cars have electricity, and in the later years, electronics, most of the time the culprit would be there.  Sometimes I would find the problem: a wire that had touched a hot surface and the insulation had burned off and allowed the wire to ground when movement of the car caused the wire to touch ground, or a plug that didn’t lock into place properly from the factory and lost contact with movement of the car.  But, electronics added a whole new dimension to the intermittent problem – that of the failed sensor or computer.  These units were sealed, and when you tested them, and the car was running, there was NFF, but failure could happen for almost any reason.  The fix for this was to start replacing parts with known good parts, and an educated guess.  At the dealership, that meant taking a part off the shelf, putting it in the car and letting the customer drive away with it to see if it still had the problem.  It was not a problem while the car was in warranty as the old part was kept and returned to the car should that not be the problem.  By process of elimination, even very knotty problems could be fixed.  The problem became more complicated on customer pay, as I had to charge the customer for labor, but I could still refund the money on the part, as long as I returned it to the parts shelf.  When working with an independent shop, however, the customer and the independent repair garage can’t return used electrical parts to their suppliers, and that is where this gets back to my computer.

The computer was past the warranty, so anybody I took it to could test it and find something wrong, or, nothing wrong.  It could crash twice in an hour or go as long as ten days without crashing.  You had to be watching it to see it happen.  An unlikely scenario at a computer repair facility.  The computer can’t record why it crashed as the crash wipes out that capability.

I consulted the Internet, and got several ideas of what it could be:  anything and everything.  It could be the video card.  In my case, it has to be more than just a video card.  It has to be an Adobe-certified video card.  For some of my work, 3D capability is something that may be needed in Photoshop or some of my video programs.  This also means this card is relatively expensive.  It could be the motherboard.  It could be the processor.  It could be the memory, etc.  I ran the manufacturer’s diagnostic for five hours, and it tested just about everything in the computer.  NFF.  I had an expert steer me to a free downloadable diagnostic program on the ‘Net called memtest 86 that ran from a disk in the CD drive.  He said he uses it and it really wrings out the processor, motherboard, and the memory, and usually finds failures within 10 minutes.  I ran it for five hours, and it found absolutely nothing wrong.

My local computer boutique wanted $39.00 to diagnose the problem.  There was just one problem, however.  It was Monday, and they were backed up until Thursday.  For an extra $89.00, they would move me up in the queue to next.

So, for $138.00 I could get a diagnosis.  Not fixed, mind you, just diagnosed.  My mechanical sense about intermittent problems started tingling, and I knew that I could get the dreaded NFF from them.  Or they could surmise what was wrong and we would start sticking new parts in my old computer until it was either fixed, or I could watch someone scratch his head and say, “Gee, I’ve never seen that before!´  All after lightening my wallet for greenbacks I would need in order to replace my aging box.

Not wanting to take out my wallet and throw parts at this problem until it was fixed, I had to take action.  The one item it could be was a bad C:drive.  If it was that, I would have to spend $100 to $200 and go through the two weeks or so it would take to reload and configure all my programs, desktop, network, and so on, and I still wouldn’t be sure it was fixed until it could run for months without failure.  Other components in this computer were as old as any part I would be replacing.

So, I opted to the one approach that should work – replace the car, er – computer.  Sorry, I have cars on the brain.

I can’t buy just any computer, either.  Considering the fact that I work with large image files with multiple layers, and video programs that suck up processor speed and memory, I need something powerful.  I need another i7 box, with lots of memory, a big hard-drive, an Adobe-certified video card.  It needs to have several USB 3.0 ports as I back up my work on high-speed USB 3.0 drives that can transfer multi-gigabyte files in seconds rather than minutes.

Another thing I would look for is getting the computer with Windows 7 Professional.  It was what I worked with in my old box, and I didn’t know if some of my old programs would be compatible with Windows 8.

Fortunately, I found almost what I was looking for in a Dell from Office Depot.  A fourth-generation i7 processor, an Adobe-certified video card, eight GB of ram (expandable to 32 GB), a one-TB hard drive, and Win 7 Pro.  Expansion slots.  Etc.  For less than my last computer, but still more than one would pay for just an everyday computer.  It would need more memory, of course, available from third party suppliers.  It would need an additional third-party expansion card to run another of my drives (an eSATA) as there is no native port built in for that connection.

I purchased this hot rod and it actually came in two days with free shipping.  I then began the arduous task of getting it to where I could work with it through configuration, calling Adobe and Microsoft to move licenses to my new computer.

I never got that far.  Two hours after firing up this turbo computer, it crashed.  Not quite the same as my old one.  This time it was software-related.  This one had the “Blue Screen of Death” or BSoD.  I didn’t think much of it until it happened a couple more times.  After much wrangling, I shipped the computer back through Office Depot and got a refund, and since the deal on this same model computer was still going on, I ordered another and kept my fingers crossed.  It also came in two days with free shipping.

After several weeks of installing and configuring hell, upgrading the memory, and adding the eSATA expansion card, I am typing this blog post on my second new computer.  Hopefully this one will last as long or longer than my 3.5 year-old computer.

BTW, I still don’t know what is wrong with the old computer.  Fortunately, I don’t have to find out.

My clients may sometimes wonder why pro commercial photography costs what it does.  Part of the reason is that I – and my computer – really are the lab, and my computer has to be up to the task.  The end result is great images that help my clients make money.

– Gary Silverstein

Tags: blue screen of death, computer, crash, graphics card, hard drive, http://weshoot.com, i7, intermittent, memory, problem, processor, ram, reboot
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Protecting Your iPad, Part 2 . . .

Friday, March 15th, 2013

It has come to my attention that some out there may not be adept at using Photoshop to make a lockout screen image for protecting their iPad in the event of theft or loss.  If you read over my last post, at http://weshoot.com/wordpress/?p=591, it relies on using a photo editing program (in this case, Photoshop) to make an attractive lockout screen wallpaper to help get an iPad recovered to its rightful owner.  Well, if you don’t have Photoshop or graphics capability, you can use the iPad itself to make an image that will help.

First, get a piece of paper and write something on it to help get the iPad back to you, like the image below:

Property of We Shoot

Now, get the iPad and capture an image of what was written on the paper using the Camera App.  This will automatically place the image in both the photostream and the camera roll.  Go into the Settings App.  Go to “Brightness and Wall Paper” and find the just-taken image for your lockout screen wallpaper.  Although it’s not as elegant-looking as the image in my previous post, it will be as effective in getting your iPad back, should it be stolen or lost.

– Gary Silverstein

We Shoot

Tags: computer, iPad, lock screen, lockout, loss, recover, screen, stolen, tablet, theft
Posted in How To, Learning, Tips | Comments Off on Protecting Your iPad, Part 2 . . .

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