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How to reactivate Windows XP after replacing faulty motherboard?

new motherboard

Actually you can transfer harddisk with Windows XP to any new computer or same computer replaced with a new motherboard.

My 4 years old motherboard condemned two weeks ago and I was quite worry for re-installing a fresh copy of Windows OS and more than 30 softwares.

You still need to install all drivers come with new motherboard for Windows XP to run properly. I repaired Windows OS from the Windows XP CD to detect new motherboard and install all necessary drivers.

In Windows XP, you have to re-activate the OS after installing new hardware like motherboard. Unfortunately, the user cannot access Windows XP and re-activate it by phone in or internet connection.

I have followed the instructions in the link below to log into Windows XP and re-activate Windows XP online.

http://community.spiceworks.com/how_to/show/3381-how-to-fix-windows-xp-activation-after-a-windows-xp-repair

1. Start the PC into Safe mode with command prompt

Power on the PC and press F8 right before Windows begins to load. Select “Safe mode with command prompt”

2. Run Explorer from the Command prompt to start Windows

Once the Command prompt loads, type in “explorer” to start Windows within Safe mode.

3. Run “Rundll32.exe syssetup,SetupOobeBnk” from the “Run” box.

Now click on “Start” and in the “Run” box type “Rundll32.exe syssetup,SetupOobeBnk”. Press Enter. This will re-set activation to 30 days

4. Modify the wpaevents folder in the Registry.

Once more, click on “Start” then go to the “Run” box and type in “Regedit”. Make sure that in Regedit you are highlighting “My Computer” at the very top. Now go up to “Edit” then “Find” and type in “wpaevents” then press Enter. Right click on the “wpaevents” folder and go down to “Permissions”. Highlight “User” and place a check mark in the box labeled “full control”. Click “Apply” and exit regedit.

5. Modify the C: drives permissions.

Now double click “My Computer”. Right click the C: drive and go down to “Properties”. Now click on the “Security” tab and modify “User”, “Administrator”, and “System” so that they all have “Full control”. Click “Apply” and reboot the PC.

6. Run Windows activation

Now Windows activation will run and the PC will become usable again.

Hardware >>>

iPhone 5 or Galaxy S3: which should you buy?

iphone-galaxy_2426969b

I definitely go to Samsung Galaxy S3 if I wanna dispose my N82 smartphone. Anyway, my N82 is still serving my needs like GPS navigation, GPS-photo taking, voice call (need to repair broken microphone) and SMS calls perfectly. There is no valid reason to spend money on a new phone gadget unless my dad is as rich as Sarawak Chief Minister, Talib.

The only drawback is the support from Samsung’s local distributor is quite suck.

More reading from The Telegrahy’s article >>>

Hardware >>>

Malaysia ISPs support Nano-SIM card?

If you want to buy iPhone 5, make sure local ISPs already support nano-SIM, otherwise your iPhone is not a phone, it’s more like a PDA.

Anyway, I never buy any Apple products.

Ford used to sell T-Model car in its early day, a famous marketing slogan is you can buy any model you like as long the color is black.

The same marketing trick is used by Apple hundred years late by selling a single model black color smartphone.

Hardware >>>

China Gen-Z sees Apple's products a must to save face

Chinese university students demand 3-piece Apple gadgets; iPhone, Ipad and Mac from their parents as a MUST-have gift, otherwise they are losing face to their peers in university.

Apple’s weak distribution networks in China and stiff price may be reasons for losing share market in China.

IDC: Apple’s China iPhone almost halves in Q2

Summary: Apple’s mobile market share in China has dropped by almost half, while Lenovo saw its share rocket. Is China still a tough cookie for Apple to crack?

By Zack Whittaker for Between the Lines | August 24, 2012 — 07:52 GMT (15:52 SGT)

Apple’s mobile market share in China has almost halved to 10 percent in the second-quarter, according to figures released by research firm IDC today.

The numbers suggest that soon-to-be and existing Apple customers are waiting for the next iPhone, expected in September, or jumped ship entirely in favor of rival smartphones.

Enter Lenovo, which managed to knock Apple off its second place perch to fourth place in the world’s largest market, despite smartphones overtaking feature phones for the first time during the April–June period.

Continue reading >> China Gen-Z sees Apple’s products a must to save face

Hardware >>>

Repost :: Invisible helmet

The ‘invisible helmet’ makes cycling cool again

Model showing off the Hovding ‘invisible helmet’

By Dan Satherley

Put off cycling because you don’t like wearing a helmet? A new Swedish invention means there’s no longer any excuse.

The Hövding is an inflatable “invisible helmet” that slips around your neck in a deflated state, leaving the head exposed.

It’s equipped with accelerometers and gyroscopes that can detect when you’re falling off your bike, rapidly filling a nylon bag with helium.

The Hövding then cushions your head from potentially brain-damaging impacts. It only takes one-tenth of a second to inflate.

Sweden made wearing bike helmets compulsory 15 years ago.

“To people like us, who wouldn’t be seen dead in a polystyrene helmet, the thought that we might be forced to wear one by law was cause for concern,” Hövding creators Anna Haupt and Terese Alstin say on their website.

“Producing a bicycle helmet that people would be happy to put on looked like a much better way to go than legislation forcing people to wear one or else.”

Work on the Hövding began in 2005, and has cost over $10 million to develop. They cost around NZ$740, and only work once.

http://www.3news.co.nz/The-invisible-helmet-makes-cycling-cool-again/tabid/1160/articleID/266054/Default.aspx