Almighty Hat (
hat_plays_sims) wrote2016-01-29 01:48 am
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HEY GUESS WHAT
I got my desktop reassembled!
Couple of minor hiccups with things like having to go into BIOS and change a setting I did not and still kinda don't understand so Vista installation would finish, six years worth of Windows updates having to install at once, and so many drivers, but I'm up and running and a good chunk of tomorrow will be spent installing Sims 2 and possibly SC4. ... And all my Sims-related programs. I honestly might have more programs for Sims management and customization than I do for anything else I do on the computer. SimPE and a mess of plugins, Wardrobe Wrangler, Compressorizer, HomeCrafter, Hack Conflict Detection Utility, Delphy's Download Organizer, Clean Installer, Collection Creator, NPC Replacer, and I keep thinking I should get the Lot Resizer. Shoot, a bunch of my non-Sims programs, I got for Sims-related purposes (Irfanview, Bulk Rename Utility, Audacity, frickin' Photoshop).
I am so, so ready to be able to make things properly again. Full-sized keyboard, enormous monitor (the laptop is kinda letterboxed, so I can see a lot from side-to-side but I scroll a lot), comfy sitting arrangement, all the RAM, and I know all the old mistakes I made and I'm totally ready to never make those again and instead make all new mistakes.
And after a basically-five-month enforced hiatus from Serious Sims Creation, I bring lessons you can learn from my misfortune!
1. I am not sure how often you should blast the dust out of your tower, but it's evidently more often than I was doing it. Get some canned air and don't let your computer's innards turn into the Haunted Mansion.
2. Anti-static wrist straps cost eight bucks at Radio Shack and seventy-five cents shipped from China from a lot of eBay sellers. If your computer is not currently having an issue, you're in an excellent position to plonk down some spare change and wait patiently for an I Am Not Thor bracelet.
3. I got a passport drive for Christmas a few years back, and let me tell you internets, if it is remotely possible, get yourself a nice external hard drive and back up everything. Not just your Sims stuff (but back that up, too, a lot of TS2 links are going dead), but your taxes, your art, your fine collection of cat macros, your personal photos, your IM logs, your bookmarks, the unpackers for all those programs you've downloaded, the fanfic you're working on, old fanfic you've already posted. Back up your files as you go and you'll never have to pay for file recovery services.
4. Find out all the specs of your computer. All of them. Even if you don't understand them. It will help later when you're having to buy parts and there's a salesperson or a drop-down menu asking you what it is you're trying to fix.
5. I saved my graphics card's drivers! And then I didn't put them in a nice labeled subfolder on my passport drive, so I had to hunt for them and re-download. Also, I got Photoshop CS5 working, but I USED to have Photoshop 6 installed on this machine, too. If installation was a tricky process, write down what you did, and executables rarely come with descriptive filenames, so user-end labeling is key.
6. If it's remotely possible, try to own more than one device capable of browsing the internet. I don't know what I would've done without the ability to google 'my computer is freaking out what do' on a computer that was not freaking out. It was also nice to be able to google a fix for my installation issue (had to change a thing in the BIOS. Installed like a charm after that).
7. Recovery disks are not installation disks. Obtain an installation disk for your OS. If you're buying a new computer, you should be able to get one from the manufacturer or retailer, possibly for a small fee. I had to buy a disk meant for IT folks because I didn't know that six and a half years ago, when I got this well-loved box. Write down your product key and keep it with the installation disk, because chances are good it's in a spot that'll be hard to look at when you need to type it in.
8. Put the crevice tool or the upholstery tool on your vacuum and clean out your keyboard. It probably needs it.
9. Your hard drive may be held in the hard drive bay with two screws; mine was held in with four. Two of them appeared to be inaccessible against a non-removable tower wall... until I found the secret lever that released the entire hard drive bay and made switching out the drives super-easy. Check for secret levers.
10. Open your computer and check out your RAM setup before you buy more RAM. I was going to have two more gigs... but all my slots are full, so I ended up pulling a one gig stick and replacing it with the two gig stick. Kind of a 'half a loaf' moment, right there.
11. Changing a hard drive is a completely doable thing! It's like Advanced Lego. I found a bunch of tutorials so I'm not going to tell you how to do it, but what it TAKES to do it? You have to be able to physically lift your computer tower. You have to be able to use a hand screwdriver (my computer's screws accept flatheads or a size of allen wrench I do not have in my toolbox). You have to be able to unplug and re-plug cables that may be very firmly attached. You may need to be able to spot a secret lever (it was in plain sight, honestly, it just didn't happen to say PRESS HERE. I admit I kinda wish I'd marked it somehow while I had the case open). You'll need to be able to unplug all the cords and cables from the back of your computer before you start, and plug them all back in in the right spots when you're done. And although I had an installation hiccup (a Vista thing), reinstalling Windows was easier and more idiot-proof (if a little more high stakes) than a lot of things I've fiddled with in SimPE.
The chances are very good that you can fix it, if it happens to you. The chances are also very good that you can upgrade as you fix. I have a terabyte of hard drive space now, it feels positively luxurious, and everything is SO FAST I can transfer files from the passport to the new HD at about a gig a minute.
I feel like I've got more of my life in order than usual, it's nice.
(Also we got a kitten, because there was a cat-shaped gap in the household and it's been years since we've had a kitten. Her name is Penelope and I could babble about her, but this week her most fantastic feat has been jumping five feet straight up into the air to climb onto my computer armoire. We've had cats for as long as I can remember-- sometimes a lot of cats, I'm thirty-six and the late 80s and early 90s saw a lot of unfixed kitties at my house-- and I have never lived with one as dedicated to 'find the highest point of all the things' as Penelope.)
Couple of minor hiccups with things like having to go into BIOS and change a setting I did not and still kinda don't understand so Vista installation would finish, six years worth of Windows updates having to install at once, and so many drivers, but I'm up and running and a good chunk of tomorrow will be spent installing Sims 2 and possibly SC4. ... And all my Sims-related programs. I honestly might have more programs for Sims management and customization than I do for anything else I do on the computer. SimPE and a mess of plugins, Wardrobe Wrangler, Compressorizer, HomeCrafter, Hack Conflict Detection Utility, Delphy's Download Organizer, Clean Installer, Collection Creator, NPC Replacer, and I keep thinking I should get the Lot Resizer. Shoot, a bunch of my non-Sims programs, I got for Sims-related purposes (Irfanview, Bulk Rename Utility, Audacity, frickin' Photoshop).
I am so, so ready to be able to make things properly again. Full-sized keyboard, enormous monitor (the laptop is kinda letterboxed, so I can see a lot from side-to-side but I scroll a lot), comfy sitting arrangement, all the RAM, and I know all the old mistakes I made and I'm totally ready to never make those again and instead make all new mistakes.
And after a basically-five-month enforced hiatus from Serious Sims Creation, I bring lessons you can learn from my misfortune!
1. I am not sure how often you should blast the dust out of your tower, but it's evidently more often than I was doing it. Get some canned air and don't let your computer's innards turn into the Haunted Mansion.
2. Anti-static wrist straps cost eight bucks at Radio Shack and seventy-five cents shipped from China from a lot of eBay sellers. If your computer is not currently having an issue, you're in an excellent position to plonk down some spare change and wait patiently for an I Am Not Thor bracelet.
3. I got a passport drive for Christmas a few years back, and let me tell you internets, if it is remotely possible, get yourself a nice external hard drive and back up everything. Not just your Sims stuff (but back that up, too, a lot of TS2 links are going dead), but your taxes, your art, your fine collection of cat macros, your personal photos, your IM logs, your bookmarks, the unpackers for all those programs you've downloaded, the fanfic you're working on, old fanfic you've already posted. Back up your files as you go and you'll never have to pay for file recovery services.
4. Find out all the specs of your computer. All of them. Even if you don't understand them. It will help later when you're having to buy parts and there's a salesperson or a drop-down menu asking you what it is you're trying to fix.
5. I saved my graphics card's drivers! And then I didn't put them in a nice labeled subfolder on my passport drive, so I had to hunt for them and re-download. Also, I got Photoshop CS5 working, but I USED to have Photoshop 6 installed on this machine, too. If installation was a tricky process, write down what you did, and executables rarely come with descriptive filenames, so user-end labeling is key.
6. If it's remotely possible, try to own more than one device capable of browsing the internet. I don't know what I would've done without the ability to google 'my computer is freaking out what do' on a computer that was not freaking out. It was also nice to be able to google a fix for my installation issue (had to change a thing in the BIOS. Installed like a charm after that).
7. Recovery disks are not installation disks. Obtain an installation disk for your OS. If you're buying a new computer, you should be able to get one from the manufacturer or retailer, possibly for a small fee. I had to buy a disk meant for IT folks because I didn't know that six and a half years ago, when I got this well-loved box. Write down your product key and keep it with the installation disk, because chances are good it's in a spot that'll be hard to look at when you need to type it in.
8. Put the crevice tool or the upholstery tool on your vacuum and clean out your keyboard. It probably needs it.
9. Your hard drive may be held in the hard drive bay with two screws; mine was held in with four. Two of them appeared to be inaccessible against a non-removable tower wall... until I found the secret lever that released the entire hard drive bay and made switching out the drives super-easy. Check for secret levers.
10. Open your computer and check out your RAM setup before you buy more RAM. I was going to have two more gigs... but all my slots are full, so I ended up pulling a one gig stick and replacing it with the two gig stick. Kind of a 'half a loaf' moment, right there.
11. Changing a hard drive is a completely doable thing! It's like Advanced Lego. I found a bunch of tutorials so I'm not going to tell you how to do it, but what it TAKES to do it? You have to be able to physically lift your computer tower. You have to be able to use a hand screwdriver (my computer's screws accept flatheads or a size of allen wrench I do not have in my toolbox). You have to be able to unplug and re-plug cables that may be very firmly attached. You may need to be able to spot a secret lever (it was in plain sight, honestly, it just didn't happen to say PRESS HERE. I admit I kinda wish I'd marked it somehow while I had the case open). You'll need to be able to unplug all the cords and cables from the back of your computer before you start, and plug them all back in in the right spots when you're done. And although I had an installation hiccup (a Vista thing), reinstalling Windows was easier and more idiot-proof (if a little more high stakes) than a lot of things I've fiddled with in SimPE.
The chances are very good that you can fix it, if it happens to you. The chances are also very good that you can upgrade as you fix. I have a terabyte of hard drive space now, it feels positively luxurious, and everything is SO FAST I can transfer files from the passport to the new HD at about a gig a minute.
I feel like I've got more of my life in order than usual, it's nice.
(Also we got a kitten, because there was a cat-shaped gap in the household and it's been years since we've had a kitten. Her name is Penelope and I could babble about her, but this week her most fantastic feat has been jumping five feet straight up into the air to climb onto my computer armoire. We've had cats for as long as I can remember-- sometimes a lot of cats, I'm thirty-six and the late 80s and early 90s saw a lot of unfixed kitties at my house-- and I have never lived with one as dedicated to 'find the highest point of all the things' as Penelope.)
YES!!!!!
I had to replace my hard drive twice recently. Turned out my motherboard was going out and kept crashing the computer which killed the hard drive.
Sooo now I am getting money together for a new computer. At least the last hard drive is still good so all I have to do is hook it up as a secondary. I know this because the computer still will come up for about three minutes before shutting down and rebooting...:/ back up back up back up...
Re: YES!!!!!
Also, ouch. I'm sorry to hear about your motherboard! Can you save anything else, like your graphics card or your RAM? Soup up that new computer as soon as it arrives?
Backups: a seven letter word for peace of mind.
Re: YES!!!!!
(Anonymous) 2016-01-30 02:00 pm (UTC)(link)no subject
(Anonymous) 2016-01-30 06:09 pm (UTC)(link)And "Check for secret levers."? Useful for both adventures and tech work I guess!
Re: YES!!!!!
*flips keyboard over* ... how is this still raining gunk... Oh hey a model number! Honestly that's super inconveniently placed. Thanks for the advice, I'll see what I can find!
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Laptops are fantastic, but when I got mine, it was for travel-- I did not spend the money to get a gaming laptop. (I do kinda wish I'd spent the money to get the one with the blu ray drive, though.)
And there's totally a secret lever! You press on it and the whole bay just lifts right out!
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I plan on having an external hard drive to back everything up once this is all said and done. My Dropbox and overdrive are kind of full of important sims things right now.
I am just so happy for you, back online and with new kitty! Sorry to hear about your other precious baby.:( New kitten sounds like a hoot! I have a couple that think they are neck warmers.
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Penelope is trying to drive me mad today. Her first month here, the computer armoire was basically constantly closed, so now that it's open and in use, she wants to be in it. It was cute when she just wanted to curl up near my feet in the printer shelf I don't use (because 'directly under the keyboard' is a ridiculous place for a printer but a comfy place to put your feet up, and also because my printer won't print anymore), but she graduated to 'crawling through every cubbyhole' and managed to stomp on the tower's power button hard enough to turn it off THREE TIMES. We are working very hard on "no" today.
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Also, yay at new kitten, but I'm so very sorry to hear Harley is no longer with us. :(
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I do still miss Harley. I probably will for a very long time-- she was special. Penelope's a very different personality, lovey and exasperating in all-new ways. (Also the first shorthaired cat I've lived with in more than a decade. It's so weird. All sleek and no floof, like the feline version of a pixie haircut.)
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Please give Penelope a cuddle (or scritch or whatever she prefers) from me. :)
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I shall indeed, once she's in the mood for affection rather than scattering styrofoam peanuts all over my floor.
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(Anonymous) 2016-04-03 11:52 pm (UTC)(link)Sorry for the annoying wcif comment... but where did you find the Compressorizer? I've been searching for it cause Jfade's site is defunct and I can't live without it. :(
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(Anonymous) 2016-04-05 12:36 am (UTC)(link)I love not only your mods but all the gorgeous pics you take and the loads of information you give too. Thanks so much for sharing all your stuff with us.
Congrats on your new kitten. Cats can be a constant delight. Of course they can also cause a lot of hair pulling but they are worth it. I have 4 but like you I have had many more than that in the past. They can multiply almost as fast as rabbits. LOL
hedgekat
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(Anonymous) 2016-04-07 03:14 am (UTC)(link)I've been intrigued by the few things you have said about your playstyle and would love to hear more about it. In one post you mentioned girls rolling to see if they wanted to become knights.
Oh, and a question. Do you ever share the Sims you have created? There is one of your male sims I would love to have. The model for your beard dump plus many of your hairs. He reminds me so much of someone I know and also of the actor Vincent D'Onofrio from Law and Order-Criminal Intent.
hedgekat
no subject
I'm trying to think what I'd say about my playstyle and mostly coming up with "research all the things." I'm not sure how egalitarian things are going to be yet, and I know 'move up through the nobility ranks' isn't going to be a goal for me-- it's not realistic for everyone to do that, even if it's possible to a degree-- but I basically have lists of rules about everything. I got rules about marriage, rules about class, rules about trade, rules about ecology, rules about taxes that I haven't fully tested, rules about religion, rules about names... Is there something specific you want me to go on about, besides lady knights? Cos that's the egalitarian thing I haven't decided about yet-- my Athletic career default (career defaults are works in progress) is Knighthood, which is probably why it came up. Probably instead of rolling a die or flipping a coin, I'd just go with it if that were a young maid's first lifetime want.
I'm usually sort-of willing to share Sims-- it gets complicated cos I bundle my hairs once I've uploaded them-- but that particular Sim is an edit of one that isn't one I made-- he was sent to me by someone I'm no longer friends with, so I'm not super-comfortable sharing him (since I don't talk to her anymore to ask her permission).