@ctrlaltdog@chitter.xyz hee, me neither! the things i can't actually replace are pretty small overall
i actually use wsl to rsync my home folder to an external drive, and it's not even close to big enough for me to worry about upgrading that any time soon
i know someone who actually clones their entire main hard drive to an external one so they can boot into a working windows version with their stuff if things go south on their main disk
@ctrlaltdog@chitter.xyz also, that event viewer filter is just a nice thing to have in general too. i occasionally check it, because sometime things break in subtle ways--and fixing them can do wonders for system stability
in fact, i don't have many things in my event viewer at all with that view (though i think that reset since my last OS update)
i bring this up because it can save a lot of headache if this ends up being the first place you look if something inexplicable starts happening
@ctrlaltdog@chitter.xyz my line of reasoning is
so i'm pretty sure a lot of these things would go away with another drive
@ctrlaltdog@chitter.xyz oofa. i guess the thing i'd do is to make a custom error and critical log message view in the event viewer (like the screenshot), and then wait for the next time something acts up to check it for hints
if that doesn't give anything useful, then, as much as i hate to suggest it, maybe back up your drives, and then try running your computer without the NVMe for a while to see if that's what's getting you ^^'
smash new character
@halcy gosh, that opening video destroyed me
i don't know what i was expecting, but it definitely wasn't THAT
also hahah, yeah. i loved sakurai's little anecdote
@ctrlaltdog@chitter.xyz that was...a good question actually
i know that gsmartcontrol can do it, but i don't actually see anything in CrystalDiskInfo
it seems like speedfan can do it though! (i was just talking about the extended test, but i imagine the in-depth analysis couldn't hurt either) http://www.almico.com/sfdownload.php
i think this data gets uploaded though, so i'm not sure how comfy you are with that idea
@ctrlaltdog@chitter.xyz hm, yeah, nothing really jumps out at me, though i also don't know what the lg service does ^^'
and a long POST huh? maybe some service that interacts with your hardware is doing A Bad? in fact, that actually points back to hard drive stuff a little. can you see if you can run a full SMART test on your drives? i feel like there might be something there that's being missed
that could also explain why a service caused that bluescreen--because if it fails to do I/O, that can happen
@ctrlaltdog@chitter.xyz (or better yet! autoruns in sysinternals! https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/sysinternals/downloads/autoruns)
@ctrlaltdog@chitter.xyz ah, sfc found things?
sometimes this actually happens normally because of updates--though the stuttering is something else entirely ^^'
does the event viewer have anything helpful in it? and does watching the resource monitor give any hints about what's causing the stuttering?
if you really want to dig into certain things, process explorer and procmon in sysinternals can also be handy
oh hi! i do computers, and sometimes draw stuff~ i like lo-fi things and cute aesthetics!
i also probably like you
(also, tagged #abdl ahead, soooo 🔞)