Memory is my friend!
Jan. 31st, 2008 01:07 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
I've had the laptop for about 8 months now, running Vista with 1GB RAM. This was fine at first but recently it's been getting slower and slower and I have one programme that I couldn't use because it would just bluescreen immediately.
So today I bit the bullet and took it in to Circuit City, paid the money and came home with 3GB RAM installed. Honestly, the computer now works faster than my brain. It's scary! It feels like having a new computer again.
ETA: Why are things never that straightforward with computers?
About an hour in, I suddenly got a dark blue screen with the ominous words 'Hardware Malfunction'. I did what any normal person would do - ignored it. Turned the computer off and on again. It worked perfectly, at the lightning fast speed, for the rest of the afternoon. Put it on hibernate to come home, try turning it back on - nothing. Just the Vaio flash, then no Windows, nothing.
Took it back to Circuit City where another teenager looked at it and shook his head. Apparently my computer (or possibly my version of Vista) won't cope with 3GB. So he took out one of the newly installed cards, and voilá, it works again, though not quite so fast. We're not back to yesterday's level of slowness. I'd say it's now about the speed of my brain, so that's good. Plus I get to return the memory card I didn't need, so it's saved money too.
I think I'm happy. So long as it WORKS this time!
So today I bit the bullet and took it in to Circuit City, paid the money and came home with 3GB RAM installed. Honestly, the computer now works faster than my brain. It's scary! It feels like having a new computer again.
ETA: Why are things never that straightforward with computers?
About an hour in, I suddenly got a dark blue screen with the ominous words 'Hardware Malfunction'. I did what any normal person would do - ignored it. Turned the computer off and on again. It worked perfectly, at the lightning fast speed, for the rest of the afternoon. Put it on hibernate to come home, try turning it back on - nothing. Just the Vaio flash, then no Windows, nothing.
Took it back to Circuit City where another teenager looked at it and shook his head. Apparently my computer (or possibly my version of Vista) won't cope with 3GB. So he took out one of the newly installed cards, and voilá, it works again, though not quite so fast. We're not back to yesterday's level of slowness. I'd say it's now about the speed of my brain, so that's good. Plus I get to return the memory card I didn't need, so it's saved money too.
I think I'm happy. So long as it WORKS this time!
(no subject)
Date: 2008-01-31 08:53 pm (UTC)I've been meaning to leave a comment on your post about cancer and Jane Austen, to say congratulations and also, I think the current 'series' of films is a pretty mixed bag. Some were BBC productions and others made for a commercial channel in the UK - and I think that shows. The most recent crop (Northanger Abbey, Persuasion and Mansfield Park) really don't have a lot to recommend them.
For Persuasion, you can't beat the Ciaran Hinds/Amanda Root version that came out about 10 years ago. It was beautifully filmed with some of the best acting I've ever seen, a great script that stayed close to the book - just a joy to watch.
I do love Mansfield Park and Fanny Price, though I know that's not a popular opinion. I think that's why so many of the adaptations fail - because they're written by people who don't really like the book or the characters as they are, so they try to change them.
I've never much cared for Northanger Abbey and I haven't seen this adaptation, so I can't comment.
For Emma, the Gwyneth Paltrow version was, surprisingly, far superior to the Kate Beckinsale one. And for S&S and P&P, of course, you can't beat Emma Thompson and Colin Firth respectively.
I really disliked Becoming Jane, but I'll be interested to see what you make of the bio that they're showing.