The RM-109U also controls the HD(R) Fox T2 but has a few seldom-used buttons missing and only controls the HDR and TV using the MDB1.3_01 code library.
I know as I picked up a 1GB DTR-1010 for £15 from a charity shop on Saturday just for the HDD, reasoning that as the remote was spotless it...
If this is correct then this eBay seller has just one genuine RM-F04 left at £27.50 delivered: dcsalesint
I can confirm that these are genuine Humax remotes sealed in a bag.
Had a Sandisk USB drive do that when providing a bit of NAS on a TP-Link C8 router being used as a WAP.
Apparently it happens it when the controller detects a file system error and puts the card into RO mode to protect the contents. Can't remember what FS - it handles FAT32, exFat, NTFS or HFS+...
Back in the early '80s I was involved in buying their ATE kit and they always carefully pronounced it 'Wayne Care" [Edit: I've now added the vital missing 'e'.]
I've always suspected someone with a good knowledge of English played a trick on Taiwanese LED manufacturer Kingbright when suggesting...
I indirectly know a Richard Head, and someone I used to know called their son Wayne in complete innocence when the family name was King. He died not of embarassment but on a motorcycle in his early 20s before I knew the family.
Back in the 70-80s when I was designing security alarm kit we'd often get support calls asking why one of our control panels was making a loud chirp every 30 seconds or so.
I'll leave it to the reader to figure out what the true culprit was in every case.
Yes, I realised it was a merging artefact - the 'two' letter Ls aren't parallel for a start. My point was that there's part of the brain that can spot errors like this when you're not consciously looking for them.
On the subject of seeing spelling errors on things you're not reading a few posts back, I spotted this while looking up something on a local trading estate.
My first thought was the BBC had done one of their periodic changes of CRID for the news. But it was marked to record in the schedule and future ones were also marked too so I just took it as one of those things that happen. The lack of any warning about the non-recording was odd.
The BBC early evening news of Friday 8th - during Wimbledon - was scheduled for recording here but there was no trace of it. Nothing in the activity log and no warning of a failed recordiing. The following local news was recorded OK.
What model? The original 500GB ones and presumably the 1TB ones too were Seagate Pipeline.
[Edit] Suprised BH didn't jump in there and point out it had been there in the SMART screenshot posted earlier, where it's shown as a WD5000AVDS.
The RM-109U also controls the HD(R) Fox T2 but has a few seldom-used buttons missing and only controls the HDR and TV using the MDB1.3_01 code library.
I know as I picked up a 1GB DTR-1010 for £15 from a charity shop on Saturday just for the HDD, reasoning that as the remote was spotless it...
If this is correct then this eBay seller has just one genuine RM-F04 left at £27.50 delivered: dcsalesint
I can confirm that these are genuine Humax remotes sealed in a bag.
Had a Sandisk USB drive do that when providing a bit of NAS on a TP-Link C8 router being used as a WAP.
Apparently it happens it when the controller detects a file system error and puts the card into RO mode to protect the contents. Can't remember what FS - it handles FAT32, exFat, NTFS or HFS+...
Back in the early '80s I was involved in buying their ATE kit and they always carefully pronounced it 'Wayne Care" [Edit: I've now added the vital missing 'e'.]
I've always suspected someone with a good knowledge of English played a trick on Taiwanese LED manufacturer Kingbright when suggesting...
I indirectly know a Richard Head, and someone I used to know called their son Wayne in complete innocence when the family name was King. He died not of embarassment but on a motorcycle in his early 20s before I knew the family.
Back in the 70-80s when I was designing security alarm kit we'd often get support calls asking why one of our control panels was making a loud chirp every 30 seconds or so.
I'll leave it to the reader to figure out what the true culprit was in every case.
Yes, I realised it was a merging artefact - the 'two' letter Ls aren't parallel for a start. My point was that there's part of the brain that can spot errors like this when you're not consciously looking for them.
On the subject of seeing spelling errors on things you're not reading a few posts back, I spotted this while looking up something on a local trading estate.
My first thought was the BBC had done one of their periodic changes of CRID for the news. But it was marked to record in the schedule and future ones were also marked too so I just took it as one of those things that happen. The lack of any warning about the non-recording was odd.
The BBC early evening news of Friday 8th - during Wimbledon - was scheduled for recording here but there was no trace of it. Nothing in the activity log and no warning of a failed recordiing. The following local news was recorded OK.
What model? The original 500GB ones and presumably the 1TB ones too were Seagate Pipeline.
[Edit] Suprised BH didn't jump in there and point out it had been there in the SMART screenshot posted earlier, where it's shown as a WD5000AVDS.
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