Monday, January 4, 2010

Power outages...

Hey folks! Been a long time, my apologies as the holiday season is always unpredictable so it's impossible for me to ever tell where I will be at any given time. However, now that the holidays are over, I have a couple quick thoughts to put down.

The first being power outages...sadly power outages are not your friend when it comes to electronics. Though it might be nice to get them because it "makes" you forget technology for a period of time (assuming you don't have a smart phone of course), it can cause havoc to your computer and any electronics you may have. The minimum preventive measure you should take is to use a surge protector and in my opinion, the best protection is to have a UPS (Uninterruptible Power Supply). There are some great ones out there but my recommendation is CyberPower; a great power supply without forking over a ton of money for "other" brand name power supplies. Also, be sure to "size" your power requirements properly so that your UPS can handle the load of your electronics. If you have one computer or more, you can check out how much power you are using here. Other electronics will tell you their usage and I would choose the MAX the manual says you would use. Add it all up and you will be good to go with the right sized UPS.

The reason I even brought up power outages on this post is because I had a client recently who suffered from a power outage and when their computer was powered back up, the machine was stuck at boot stating it had a hard drive read error. Just so you folks know, this can mean several things.

During the power outage you could have run into...
  1. A hard drive crash caused your hard drive to die which is possible
  2. A Windows file was corrupted (assuming you have windows)
  3. Your BIOS settings were reset and your boot order was changed
Usually, the last point is what happens the most and this is what I ran into last week. This is easy enough to resolve by checking your boot priority order in your BIOS settings by accessing the setup screen during boot (I have seen computers accessed by either pressing the "DEL" or "F12" keys but you will have to check your computer manual to be sure what your motherboard requires. Make sure the boot order has the local hard drive with the Operating System setup to boot first unless you want to boot a cd or floppy in the future in which case add those in the order accordingly. That's it for now!

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