#ahci
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iyibilgisayar · 6 months ago
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MSI Anakartlarda “M.2 Genie Error” Hatası ve Çözümü
Bazı MSI anakart kullanıcıları, NVMe RAID yapılandırmasını etkinleştirmeye çalışırken “M.2 Genie Error” hatasıyla karşılaşabilir.
https://www.iyibilgisayar.com/m2-genie-error-hatasi-cozumu/
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pixleddisplay · 9 months ago
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Digi-clock display.
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dr-afsaeed · 1 year ago
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Journal Citation Reports JCR 2024
Journal Citation Reports JCR 2024 What will the new changes be in JCR 2024? JCR 2024 Release Date: July 2, 2024 Days Remaining for JCR 2024 Release What is JCR? What’s new in JCR 2024? What is JCR? Clarivate publishes journal citation reports once a year. It is accessible via the Web of Science Core Collection and has been connected with the Web of Science. Journal information, including…
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wiratomkinder · 1 year ago
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Re: the crowdstrike issue we did follow the official safeboot driver deletion fix and that just did not work for us + broke bcdedit somehow when we tried to leave safe mode (?!) so i feel like this was an example of needing either really well implemented idrac management (for doing the proper fix remotely/en masse) or disaster recovery plans (we just rolled everything back to last week via acronis and while it kind of feels like the nuclear option it all worked perfectly lol)
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nhaneh · 1 month ago
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so anyway I was installing Windows XP on an older laptop I have laying around last weekend to see if I could get it to run some older games that struggle on my modern PCs, and the install wouldn't work at first - gave me a blue screen and everything.
...and that bluescreen was probably one of the most helpful error messages I've seen in... I dunno, years?
See, blue screens typically give you an error code - 0x7b in this particular instance, or 123 in decimal. And the thing about error codes is... you can search for them on the internet.
So anyway it turns out that the problem was basically that the Windows XP installer is a bit too old to support the modern AHCI communication interface for speaking to SATA controllers; telling the BIOS to use the older ATA interface instead fixed the problem. And I cannot stress enough how getting an error code to be able to track down that that was the problem was just such a breath of fresh air next to this modern trend of error messages going like "Oh whoopsy something did a poopsy" that tell you absolutely nothing about what the problem is or why.
If I enter a completely non-existent domain address into pretty much any modern web browser today, I get an error message saying something like "Hmm. We can't find that site." and some vague allusions to how the problem might be due to my internet connection or an issue with a firewall.
If I take that same non-existent domain and toss it into nslookup, a command/utility to query your DNS directly, I get a much more explicit response: can't find [address]: Non-existent domain
Only one of these responses tells me what the actual issue is and gives me the information I need in order to do something about it.
I don't know when or why the tech sector all seem to have decided that error codes are scary and must be hidden away at all cost, but as far as decisions go, I think it's probably one of the dumbest one since that time when Microsoft decided to fundamentally undermine all notions of computer security on the Windows platform by making "Hide extensions for known file types" default to yes.
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power-chords · 10 months ago
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The question that finally began to coalesce in my mind, and which finally took on a coherent form like a star igniting at the center of a long-contracting stellar nebula, was this: Are Drinky Bird's oscillations regular enough to allow you to use them as the basis for a clock?
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The basic mechanism was invented in Germany in the mid-18th century but its incarnation as we know it comes later and such a toy seems to have been first described by the Soviet physicist Yakov Perelman, in the 1930s, who was also the author of the optimistically entitled Physics Can Be Fun and Mathematics Can Be Fun. He called the toy the "insatiable birdie" (and if anyone can tell me in the comments what Russian phrase can plausibly be translated as "insatiable birdie" I will die a happy man, or at least, less unhappy). Perelman said of the Insatiable Birdie, in Physics For Entertainment, "There is a Chinese toy which is a perpetual source of astonishment and delight. This is the 'insatiable birdie.' Put before a drinking bowl, the 'birdie' will dip its beak in the water and having 'drunk its fill,' swing back into its initial upright position."
[...]
The basic problem is that the period of Drinky Bird's oscillations is extremely sensitive to external conditions – the study cites ambient temperature and humidity (which affect the rate at which the head cools) the amount of water on the head (ditto) mechanical friction and even the force with which the Bird hits the lip of the bowl or cup containing water. The period of oscillations in general seems to stabilize, everything else being equal, to around 30-40 seconds but unlike a balance spring or pendulum, Drinky Bird is not a harmonic oscillator. The qualification for a harmonic oscillator is that when it is displaced from its neutral point, it experiences a restoring force proportional to the displacing force (the spring tension in a balance spring; gravity in a pendulum). 
Drinky Bird is, like the Atmos clock, a heat engine but in the Atmos clock the expansion and contraction of the gas-filled chamber that powers the clock is used to wind a mainspring, which drives the horizontal, very slow-beating balance (technically a torsion pendulum). You can use temperature changes to drive a wristwatch as well. In 2002 an American watchmaker and AHCI member named Stephen Phillips introduced his EWS – Eternal Winding System – in which temperature fluctuations affected a bimetallic strip, causing it to flex and keep the mainspring wound. Unfortunately the system has, so far, not found its way into a working watch.
However, what Drinky Bird lacks in natural frequency, it gains back in apparent longevity. Drinky Bird will not bob forever but it could do so for an almost absurdly long time under the right conditions. I should note here that Drinky Bird is not a perpetual motion machine – such devices are forbidden by the Second Law Of Thermodynamics. The ability of DB to bob is dependent on a temperature difference between the upper and lower part of the internal tubing and as long as there is an external temperature gradient that allows evaporation, and a supply of water, it will bob happily along.
One must imagine Drinky Bird happy.
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liend-ah · 5 months ago
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My telegram channel:
Important: posts in the channel are in Russian.
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dasha-aibo · 1 year ago
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Switched my main laptop to Linux
That was A LOT harder than on my cheap laptop that I used for work
It required disabling BitLocker and converting the disk system from RAID to AHCI
All while trying not to break the pre-existing Windows install
Feel mildly proud
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princess-pussy-cat-x · 1 year ago
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my cunny is ahcy n leaky cause cause im desperate slut
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grauer-diamant · 8 months ago
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Редраф персонажа альтернативной вселенной СВиК/AHCIS — Эрнальд(кровный сын глав. героев🙂)
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Второй арт эксперемент с акриловыми маркерами(неудачно как по мне)
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atplblog · 5 days ago
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Price: [price_with_discount] (as of [price_update_date] - Details) [ad_1] this adapter is compatible with the folllwing MacBook Models: (Note: requires macOS 10.13 High Sierra or later) ★ MacBook Pro: ✔ MacBook Pro (15-inch Retina display Mid 2015)Model ID: MacBookPro11,5 (2.5GHz, 2.8GHz) ✔ MacBook Pro (13-inch Retina display Early 2015)Model ID: MacBookPro12,1 (2.7GHz, 2.9GHz, 3.1GHz) ✔ MacBook Pro (15-inch Retina Display 2014)Model ID: MacBookPro11,3 (2.5GHz, 2.8GHz) ✔ MacBook Pro (15-inch Retina Display 2014)Model ID: MacBookPro11,2 (2.2GHz, 2.5GHz, 2.8GHz) ✔ MacBook Pro (13-inch Retina Display 2014)Model ID: MacBookPro11,1 (2.6GHz, 2.8GHz, 3.0GHz) ✔ MacBook Pro (15-inch Retina Display 2013)Model ID: MacBookPro11,3 (2.3GHz, 2.6GHz) ✔ MacBook Pro (15-inch Retina Display 2013))Model ID: MacBookPro11,2 (2.0GHz, 2.3GHz, 2.6GHz) ★ MacBook Air: ✔ MacBook Air (13-inch Mid 2017)Model ID: MacBookAir7,2 (1.8GHz i5, 2.2GHz i7) ✔ MacBook Air (11-inch Early 2015)Model ID: MacBookAir7,1 (1.6GHz i5, 2.2GHz i7) ✔ MacBook Air (13-inch Early 2014)Model ID: MacBookAir6,2 (1.4GHz, 1.7GHz) ✔ MacBook Air (11-inch Early 2014)Model ID: MacBookAir6,1 (1.4GHz, 1.7GHz) ✔ MacBook Air (13-inch Mid 2013)Model ID: MacBookAir6,2 (1.3GHz, 1.7GHz) ✔ MacBook Air (11-inch Mid 2013)Model ID: MacBookAir6,1 (1.3GHz, 1.7GHz) ★ Mac Pro: ✔ Mac Pro (December, 2013) Model ID: MacPro6,1 (2.7GHz 3.0GHz, 3.5GHz, 3.7GHz) ★We have professional R&D team, will continue to launch new products to meet customer needs and, thank you for your supporting! (1) Strict Quality Control (100% Tested): In order to provide buyers with a pleasant shopping experience, YATENG each item has been carefully inspected and properly packed before sending out. (2)We have professional after-sale service team, any questions or problems from buyers will be answered within 24 hours (Including holidays). ➤ This NVME SSD Convert Adapter is DIY kit for assembling a upgraded SSD replacement for MacBook with large capacity NVME SSD ➤ It is compatible with MacBook Air 11” A1465 & MacBook Air 13” A1466 (Mid 2013-2017), MacBook Pro (Retina) 13" A1502 & 15" A1398 (Late 2013 - Mid 2015), Mac Pro ME253 MD878 ➤ Require macOS 10.13 High Sierra or Later; DO NOT compatible with earlier than macOS 10.13 versions. Please use your original SSD to upgrades your macOS before installation ➤ Used to upgrade your storage capacity, perfect for tech enthusiasts, high-end gamers, 4K & 3D content designers ➤ Support M.2 NVME/AHCI SSD such as Samsung 960 EVO, Samsung 970 EVO/PRO, WD Black, Crucial P1, HP EX920, ADATA SX8200, Intel 600p series NVME SSD and so on [ad_2]
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jimmy-fun-fact · 23 days ago
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Fun Fact:
For some unknown reason, the PS4's internal hard drive is connected to the system over usb.
You could probably tell this by looking at the board, but you could also check this using PS4 Linux.
While booted into Linux you can open a terminal and type the command lspci the result should look something like this:
[noob404@winesapos ~]$ lspci 00:00.0 Host bridge: Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. [AMD] Liverpool Processor Root Complex 00:00.2 IOMMU: Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. [AMD] Liverpool I/O Memory Management Unit 00:01.0 VGA compatible controller: Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. [AMD/ATI] Starsha2 [Kingston/Clayton] 00:01.1 Audio device: Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. [AMD/ATI] Liverpool HDMI/DP Audio Controller 00:02.0 Host bridge: Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. [AMD] Liverpool UMI PCIe Dummy Host Bridge 00:14.0 System peripheral: Sony Corporation Belize ACPI 00:14.1 System peripheral: Sony Corporation Belize Ethernet Controller 00:14.2 System peripheral: Sony Corporation Belize SATA AHCI Controller 00:14.3 System peripheral: Sony Corporation Belize SD/MMC Host Controller 00:14.4 System peripheral: Sony Corporation Belize PCI Express Glue and Miscellaneous Devices 00:14.5 System peripheral: Sony Corporation Belize DMA Controller 00:14.6 System peripheral: Sony Corporation Belize Memory (DDR3/SPM) 00:14.7 System peripheral: Sony Corporation Belize USB 3.0 xHCI Host Controller 00:18.0 Host bridge: Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. [AMD] Liverpool Processor HT configuration 00:18.1 Host bridge: Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. [AMD] Liverpool Processor Address Maps 00:18.2 Host bridge: Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. [AMD] Liverpool Processor DRAM configuration 00:18.3 Host bridge: Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. [AMD] Liverpool Processor Misc configuration 00:18.4 Host bridge: Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. [AMD] Liverpool Processor PM configuration 00:18.5 Host bridge: Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. [AMD] Liverpool Processor NB Performance Monitor 00:18.6 Host bridge: Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. [AMD] Liverpool Processor SPLL Configuration
Your results may vary, depending on the how you set up PS4 Linux and which specific PS4 model you have. What we're interested in here are the devices are 00:14:2, and 00:14:7, The SATA AHCI Controller, and the USB 3.0 xHCI Host Controller (once again, your addresses may vary). Keep note of those addresses.
Now you can type in ls -l /sys/block to find where your system's storage devices are attached. Here are my results:
[noob404@winesapos ~]$ ls -la /sys/block total 0 drwxr-xr-x 2 root root 0 Jan 18 2022 . dr-xr-xr-x 11 root root 0 Dec 31 1969 .. lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 0 Jun 26 23:56 dm-0 -> ../devices/virtual/block/dm-0 lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 0 Jun 26 23:53 loop0 -> ../devices/virtual/block/loop0 lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 0 Jun 26 23:53 loop1 -> ../devices/virtual/block/loop1 lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 0 Jun 26 23:53 loop2 -> ../devices/virtual/block/loop2 lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 0 Jun 26 23:53 loop3 -> ../devices/virtual/block/loop3 lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 0 Jun 26 23:53 loop4 -> ../devices/virtual/block/loop4 lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 0 Jun 26 23:53 loop5 -> ../devices/virtual/block/loop5 lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 0 Jun 26 23:53 loop6 -> ../devices/virtual/block/loop6 lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 0 Jun 26 23:53 loop7 -> ../devices/virtual/block/loop7 lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 0 Jun 26 23:56 ram0 -> ../devices/virtual/block/ram0 lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 0 Jan 18 2022 sda -> ../devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:14.7/ata1/host0/target0:0:0/0:0:0:0/block/sda lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 0 Jun 26 23:56 sr0 -> ../devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:14.2/ata2/host1/target1:0:0/1:0:0:0/block/sr0
If you look at the bottom of the list, you'll find a file titled "sda", this is usually your hard drive. Some PS4 Linux distributions don't support the internal hard drive, and in that case sda may be your USB drive instead. You also see here a file titled "sr0", this is your PS4's Blu-ray drive. You may note that the path shown for the hard drive includes a 00:14.7, this indicates that the hard drive is attached to the PS4's USB controller, which is a really weird thing to do. Especially considering the Blu-ray drive is attached to 00:14.2, the SATA AHCI Controller.
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404louisenotfound · 2 months ago
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XP Didn’t Want to Work, So Now We’re Doing Linux Instead
Recently one of my closest friends gave me an old PC, with really old hardware from 2006 and a dodgy install of windows 11. I immediately hoped this could be the base for my dream project of having a retro pc build with windows XP on it (my favourite operating system). I went into this thinking Windows XP would just install but there was one issue, the PC had been modified to include SATA ports which XP does not like. So, after a full day of troubleshooting, I’m pausing the XP project and moving on to something more productive.
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Before I give up and move onto a Linux based project, I am writing this post in honour of my 15+ attempts to get this to work. 
The XP Installation Saga (What Didn’t Work)
1️. Slipstreaming SATA/AHCI Drivers via nLite
Since XP doesn’t natively support AHCI mode on modern(ish) hardware, I needed to manually integrate Intel’s storage drivers into my installation ISO. I tried:
iastor.inf (Intel RAID/AHCI standard driver)
iastor6.inf (a version supposedly matched to my PCI ID: VEN_8086&DEV_2923)
iaahci.inf (AHCI-specific variant)
XP setup still refused to detect the drive, meaning it wasn’t loading the driver properly.
2️.  BIOS Settings Tweaks (IDE, AHCI, RAID)
Tried multiple BIOS configurations:
IDE Mode → XP detected the drive, but IDE mode removes AHCI benefits like faster performance and hot-swapping.
RAID Mode → XP ignored everything like it wasn’t even trying.
AHCI Mode → XP wouldn't install because it couldn’t see the drive at all.
None of these worked with XP’s native drivers, so the only option was to force driver integration.
3. Testing XP Integral Edition & Different Builds
XP Integral Edition booted fine, but then hit me with a missing EULA error, preventing installation from continuing.
WinSetupFromUSB instead of Rufus helped with booting, but still didn't solve the missing drivers problem.
Tried XP SP3 SATA Edition, it didn’t like that one either.
4.  DriverPacks & Manual TXTSETUP.SIF Edits
I also tried using DriverPacks MassStorage to inject multiple SATA drivers, including iastor6.sys.
The driver was included and matched my PCI hardware ID, but XP setup still refused to detect the drive.
Edited TXTSETUP.SIF manually to force driver loading… still nothing.
It got so bad that Copilot started giving me a pep talk
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Anyway… Moving on…
After slipstreaming drivers multiple ways, tweaking BIOS settings, rebuilding ISOs, and testing different installation methods, I came to a realization: XP does not want to install on this system without a ridiculous amount of extra work, and I was hoping for a project that would be a bit quicker. 
Pivoting to Linux (And Actually Making Progress)
Instead of continuing to wrestle with XP, I’m switching goals and I've installed Debian on the machine instead. This will let me:
Set up a local server to host personal web apps.
Experiment with cybersecurity tools and networking utilities
Share files easily between my devices
This makes way more sense for my current goals, and Linux installed so easily without requiring me to fight with 20-year-old drivers.
I’m putting XP on pause, but I’m keeping notes so I can come back to it later when I have more time for an unnecessarily stubborn project. If I do it again, I'm going to try it in a self hosted virtual machine and hopefully save myself some drama.
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moleculardepot · 2 months ago
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AHCY Active human
AHCY Active human Catalog number: B2023869 Lot number: Batch Dependent Expiration Date: Batch dependent Amount: 50 ug Molecular Weight or Concentration: 73 kDa Supplied as: Solution Applications: a molecular tool for various biochemical applications Storage: −70°C Keywords: Adenosylhomocysteinase, AdoHcyase, CuBP, S-Adenosyl-L-homocysteine hydrolase, SAHH Grade: Biotechnology grade. All products…
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naturecoaster · 2 months ago
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Beat the heat and dive into summer fun at IC’s Frozen Pool Party on Saturday, June 7,2025, at AdventHealth Center Ice, Florida’s favorite place to chill! The party is hosted by IC the Yeti, the beloved mascot of AHCI, and promises to turn the rink into a splash-tastic celebration for the whole family! Party Highlights Include:• Skating to your favorite summer hits• Family-friendly games & challenges• Special photo ops with IC the Yeti• Raffle prizes & surprise giveaways• Frozen pool party decorations for a picture-perfect night Don’t forget your best beachwear-inspired skating outfit—just make sure it’s safe for the ice! Admission includes skate rental, and tickets can be purchased online for $22.00 (at the link below) or at the door for $25.00. Pre-register here: IC’s Frozen Pool Party Read the full article
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weeniepeeniejr · 2 months ago
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ha d ahci da afsachi dadachi adahid ci adhaici aidahci aihdia adahci ahdiachi adahic ahdiajic
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