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Look - don't Listen - Software or Hardware?!
When I first read
an article called “Look Don’t Listen”, I thought that it was too
obvious, and just basic common sense, that everyone knows. However,
when I put it into practice, I found that it is a real skill which
has to be learned and applied.
Observing what is really there, observing what is obvious and
not taking anything for granted or making any assumptions,
will save you time and can prevent costly errors. If you are an
IT Administrator you might have experienced what I mean, while trying
to help one of your users.
To
give you a better idea of what I am talking about and which way
this article is heading, allow me to tell you a story, a real instance,
which happened a few weeks ago.
I
got a call from one of our clients who had a problem with a printer.
The printer wouldn’t print anymore and the user came up with the
idea of reformatting the hard drive and re-installing Windows and
all other applications (probably nothing you would consider). As
I needed to see them anyway I got them to wait “fixing the problem”
until my arrival.
As
I had adapted for life this little sentence “Look Don’t Listen”,
I just started to look. Is the computer turned on? – OK. Is the
printer turned on? - OK. Is paper in the printer? - OK. It almost
sounds too easy, as the next step already showed the problem and
was fixed within a second. You may not believe this, but it really
happened. Is the printer connected to the PC? – NO!!
The printer was not connected to the PC. That was all that was wrong
and after plugging the printers USB connection into the USB port
of the PC, printing was no longer a problem. For the user and the
other staff around it looked like a miracle and nobody could believe
that the printer was not connected to the PC. But nobody had checked
that before, you see what I mean?
Look Don’t Listen! Observe the obvious. Like a pilot, you
could write yourself a checklist, which you can follow in order
to locate and handle any problem or situation. Start with the obvious.
Has the PC got power? Is the PC switched on? Things like that take
only seconds and can save you hours.
Unfortunately when it comes to fixing a computer hardware problem
most tasks are not as obvious. You can’t look into a memory chip
or you can’t look into a graphics card or the processor. Those inabilities
of the human perceptions can make these tasks more difficult and
will lead, at least in many cases, to assumptions and actions of
trial and error. Take the RAM out and replace it. If it works fine,
great, if not try something else. This approach is very time consuming
and may not find all of the PCs problems in one go.
It
would be great if we could
get a special type of glasses, which allowed you to look into the
computer's hardware - if only they existed! To get an aid which
enables you to see and find exactly what is wrong with the machine.
Something like 'X-Ray specs' for PC hardware would probably be of
help.
Luckily for
us though, there is help of this kind available and I wouldn’t want
to be without it anymore. The “glasses” and X-Ray for fixing your
computer or even to validate a new build as fully functional is
called “Micro-Scope”.
As the name already implies it provides you with in-depth information
about your computers hardware. MicroScope or its bigger brother
Universal Toolkit, have been developed to do exactly that
for you – to help you to look into your hardware and end the guessing
game. Do yourself a favour – Look Don’t Listen! Use the Toolkit
and start saving your valuable time and money.
Karlheinz
Schneider
The Virtual Workforce Company Ltd.
www.thevirtualworkforce.co.uk
Software or Hardware?
When faced with a computer problem, the first thing to determine
is whether we actually need to solve the problem, or just get the
system going again. This may sound like a cop-out, but the
fact is many times the best handling for a computer failure is just
to reboot and forget about it.
For instance, many soft errors are caused by cosmic rays.
These are completely random, and that same exact error will probably
never occur again. Trying to pinpoint the error is fruitless,
because the memory will test 'good'. The best course of action
is to reboot and get on with the show. Of course there are
such things as intermittent errors, so if it happens repeatedly
you will want to track down the source of it.
Once you've decided that there really is a problem, you've reached
a fork in the road. Is it a hardware problem or a software
problem? If you knew exactly what was causing the problem
this would be an easy question to answer, but usually at this stage
you won't know. However, you must decide what to pursue
first, and if you guess wrong the result at best will be a lot of
wasted time.
This is where a good diagnostic program like
Micro-Scope really comes into its own. In just a couple
of minutes you can test all of the major hardware components and
either narrow the problem down to one of them for further testing,
or eliminate hardware as the source of the problem. If you
have eliminated hardware as the cause, then the problem must be
software. Elementary, my Dear Watson!
One thing to be aware of when running a diagnostic program is that
most of them are loaded under either the DOS or Windows operating
system. As you will see in Volume 3, these operating systems
are designed to handle all sorts of hardware management details
in the background so that the user and the application do not have
to deal with them directly. This is normally very convenient,
but not exactly what you want when trying to test the hardware.
And if the problem lies with the operating system itself, one of
these diagnostics may have a very difficult time sorting out whether
it's really a hardware or software problem, if indeed the diagnostic
will run at all.
The answer to eliminating interference from the operating system
is to use a diagnostic that is Operating System Independent.
Such a diagnostic actually has its own operating system just to
run the diagnostic, and this operating system will be designed to
give the user and the diagnostic application direct access to the
hardware, rather than trying to shield them from it.
To
load an OS-independent diagnostic, you will need to turn off the
system, put the diagnostic CD/diskette in the CD/floppy drive, and
then turn the system back on. It will boot up with the diagnostic's
OS in charge rather than DOS or Windows.
By the way, there is one pattern that is usually hardware-related,
and that is a system that boots up just fine in the morning and
works for a few minutes before crashing. Then it must be turned
off for a while before it can boot up and run for a few more minutes.
The problem here is probably heat, and the most likely culprit is
a failing CPU fan. If the fan checks OK then make sure the
vents are not blocked, either from something next to the cabinet
or internally from dust.
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this information is correct, we do not guarantee it for accuracy,
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Inc. shall not be liable for damages of any kind in connection with
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