This innovative charger is compatible with up to 95% of current notebook laptop computers on the market with 8 different adaptors. It also automatically switch according to your notebook laptop computer’s voltage setting between 15V-19.5V, unlike others that require switching manually by hand! This charger will work with most notebooks and laptops with one of the round AC plugs that are included. You won’t need to purchase another A/C adaptor when you get a new notebook laptop computer. Superior quality at a great price, it is definitely the smartest way to go! Acer, Ams Tech Rodeo, Compaq, Dell, Fujitsu, Gateway, HP, IBM, NEC, Panasonic, Presario, Pocket Gear, Sony, Toshiba, and Versa. Features: * With High efficiency and true voltage output automatically (without operation by hand) * Auto-reset to the lowest voltage (+15 V) after current interruption to protect your laptop/notebook computer * Input voltage: AC 86-264 v 50-60Hz * Output voltage: DC 15v 16v 18.5v 19v 19.5v * 8 different adaptors * Comes with US 110V Plug * Can be use anywhere with different adaptor plug * Active PFC design * OPP/OCP/OVP/SCP protection * 1 year warranty * Easy set up in just minutes * If your notebook laptop adapter plug is rounded, then it will work!
I have a laptop that only has the capability for wireless B. If I buy a wireless G adapter like this one http://www.futureshop.ca/catalog/proddetail.asp?logon=&langid=EN&sku_id=0665000FS10076870&catid=
or this one http://www.futureshop.ca/catalog/proddetail.asp?logon=&langid=EN&sku_id=0665000FS10080888&catid=
will I be able to connect to wireless G networks and have the full 54mbs (I know its only half that but 25-27 mbs is better than 11(5-6mbs) and does anyone know what if tigerdirect sells laptop hard drives that are compatible with a IBM Thinkpad T40.
Sorry too fast typing thinking about other things. I meant does anyone know if tigerdirect sells laptop hard drives that are compatible with a IBM Thinkpad T40 laptop, or are all 2.5" HDD’s the same?
More details : The laptop kid of died a couple of times but I managed to bring it back to life with the crash-recovery disk that came from the manufacturer ( Sony ). But then it crashed again..tried to use the recover cd again…and crashed in the middle of the process.
Now when I boot the laptop I only get the message ‘no operating system found’.
The hard drive had a partition with the personal stuff on it…music and pictures..that kind of stuff and it´s what I am trying to recover.
I have removed the hard drive and plugged to my desktop pc through one of those USB adapters..but it doesnt actually reads anything..it´s like it´s not even connected.
I have even tried to start the laptop with a Linux boot cd….as if I wanted to install Linux as a new partition there, just to see if it reads the old data (music/photos) partition still there…but again, can´t see it there..
So, any other options I have to see if the data partition ( music/photos ) has survived the ‘crash’…that I can try at home?
Imagine if all the devices in a home office – such as printer, scanner, external hard drive, and digital camera – could be connected to your PC without any wires. Imagine if digital pictures could be transferred to a photo print kiosk for instant printing without the need for a cable.
This video is on a very useful data recovery tool that you can get from ebay for about 5 bucks and recover data from your supposedly “crashed” hard drive
I have a USB NexStar adapter that I am using to connect my laptop xp hard drive to my windows 7 computer. In Disk Management I can see it is connected and it shows the amount of used space on the hard drive and it says unallocated on my computer. How do I go about transferring the files from the hard drive onto my computer?
How do I know what file type it is? I cannot boot from it or find the file type under properties when its connected to the adapter.
My System Specs: Intel® Core™ i7 Extreme Edition Cosmic Black Base AlienFX RED Intel® Core™ i7-920XM Processor Extreme (2GHz,4 Cores/8 Threads,turbo up to 3.2GHz, 8MB Cache) Genuine Windows® 7 Ultimate 64bit (English) 8GB Dual-channel 1333MHz DDR3 SDRAM 512GB Solid State Hard Drive (256GBx2)(Raid 0) Slot Load Blu-ray BD-R, BD-RE / DVD + /-RW Drive with DVD + R double layer write Dual – 1GB ATI Radeon Mobility HD 5870 Dell™ Wireless 370 Bluetooth Internal mini-card T510110AU-Alienware M17X AlienFX® Illuminated Keyboard (English) Internal 10/100/1000 Gigabit Ethernet 240W Primary AC Adapter 17.0″ WUXGA 1920 x 1200 – Beyond HD (1200p) – RGB LED Integrated Stereo Sound 9-cell Primary Battery 3-Year Premier Service Girls with Alienware M17x R2 and iMac / Macbook Pro
I have a laptop that only has the capability for wireless B. If I buy a wireless G adapter like this one http://www.futureshop.ca/catalog/proddetail.asp?logon=&langid=EN&sku_id=0665000FS10076870&catid=
or this one http://www.futureshop.ca/catalog/proddetail.asp?logon=&langid=EN&sku_id=0665000FS10080888&catid=
will I be able to connect to wireless G networks and have the full 54mbs (I know its only half that but 25-27 mbs is better than 11(5-6mbs) and does anyone know what if tigerdirect sells laptop hard drives that are compatible with a IBM Thinkpad T40.
I purchased an external hard drive that allows pretty much any type of connection, from USB 2.0 to SATA/eSATA. However, my laptop only has USB 2.0 ports. I purchased a USB 2.0 to SATA/eSATA bridge adapter, but I’m not sure if using it would give me higher speeds or not. It doesn’t matter when I’m watching movies or listening to music, but I’d like to play some low-resource games and I’d like to max the speed out as much as possible. Is using the bridge adapter redundant, or will I see faster speeds from it?