~tasha~

Age: 124
6568 days old here
Total Posts: 47628
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Did u know tears can b sometime more special then smiles, coz smile can be given 4 everyone but tears are shed 4 only those v don’t want 2 loose.
Posted 04 Jun 2009

~tasha~

Age: 124
6568 days old here
Total Posts: 47628
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Location:
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cant find a reason why God gave you to me But thats not the question to be asked May be the question is how did God know that I needed a person like you
Posted 04 Jun 2009

~tasha~

Age: 124
6568 days old here
Total Posts: 47628
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Location:
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Life is pretty much unpredictable. I may not live long enough but I won’t miss out letting you know that life is worth living with someone like you around.
Posted 04 Jun 2009

~tasha~

Age: 124
6568 days old here
Total Posts: 47628
Points: 0

Location:
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Thank you for touching my life in ways you may never know. My riches do not lie in material wealth, but in having friend like you - a precious gift from God.
Posted 04 Jun 2009

~tasha~

Age: 124
6568 days old here
Total Posts: 47628
Points: 0

Location:
United Kingdom, United Kingdom
Luv Holds Heart,Heart holds feelings,feelings holds emotions,emotions holds tears,tears are held by eyes,eyes hold U,B’coz U hold frendship.
Posted 04 Jun 2009

~tasha~

Age: 124
6568 days old here
Total Posts: 47628
Points: 0

Location:
United Kingdom, United Kingdom
Friendship is a network tht needs: no recharge! no roaming! no validity! no activation! no signal problems! juz dont switchoff ur Heart.!
Posted 04 Jun 2009

~tasha~

Age: 124
6568 days old here
Total Posts: 47628
Points: 0

Location:
United Kingdom, United Kingdom
The one who takes your hand but touches your heart is a true Friend
Posted 04 Jun 2009

~tasha~

Age: 124
6568 days old here
Total Posts: 47628
Points: 0

Location:
United Kingdom, United Kingdom
Friendship is genuine when two friends can enjoy each others company without speaking a word to one another
Posted 04 Jun 2009

~tasha~

Age: 124
6568 days old here
Total Posts: 47628
Points: 0

Location:
United Kingdom, United Kingdom
Like flowers in God's garden we bloom
Quench our thirst with His love
Makes us sweet with His fragrant perfume
Showering down from above

Adorned with hues, colors unique
Images to aptly trace
Behold beauty, creation's mystique
Flowering human race

Fragile, soft petals blow in the breeze
Thrive within friendship's care
God sprinkles with kindness all He sees
Upon the blooms so fair

Grow together in harmony's voice
So all may nobly live
Let His grace make acceptance your choice
Teach us all to forgive

In time He will gather flowers sweet
Calling them home to stay
When life in His garden becomes complete
Become heavenly bouquets
Posted 04 Jun 2009

~tasha~

Age: 124
6568 days old here
Total Posts: 47628
Points: 0

Location:
United Kingdom, United Kingdom
thx u
Posted 04 Jun 2009

~tasha~

Age: 124
6568 days old here
Total Posts: 47628
Points: 0

Location:
United Kingdom, United Kingdom
Posted 04 Jun 2009

Topic: TiMe DoEs nOt

~tasha~

Age: 124
6568 days old here
Total Posts: 47628
Points: 0

Location:
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Posted 04 Jun 2009

~tasha~

Age: 124
6568 days old here
Total Posts: 47628
Points: 0

Location:
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Fairl_Girl said:

~tasha~ said:

nice one

THXXXX


welcm
Posted 04 Jun 2009

~tasha~

Age: 124
6568 days old here
Total Posts: 47628
Points: 0

Location:
United Kingdom, United Kingdom
bread
Posted 04 Jun 2009

~tasha~

Age: 124
6568 days old here
Total Posts: 47628
Points: 0

Location:
United Kingdom, United Kingdom
converting file
Posted 04 Jun 2009

~tasha~

Age: 124
6568 days old here
Total Posts: 47628
Points: 0

Location:
United Kingdom, United Kingdom
m online
Posted 04 Jun 2009

Topic: ---watches---

~tasha~

Age: 124
6568 days old here
Total Posts: 47628
Points: 0

Location:
United Kingdom, United Kingdom
thankuuu
Posted 04 Jun 2009

~tasha~

Age: 124
6568 days old here
Total Posts: 47628
Points: 0

Location:
United Kingdom, United Kingdom
Fairl_Girl said:

~tasha~ said:

beautifull

THXX


welcum
Posted 04 Jun 2009

~tasha~

Age: 124
6568 days old here
Total Posts: 47628
Points: 0

Location:
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wishing u mishing me
Posted 03 Jun 2009

~tasha~

Age: 124
6568 days old here
Total Posts: 47628
Points: 0

Location:
United Kingdom, United Kingdom
anywhere of ur choice
Posted 03 Jun 2009

~tasha~

Age: 124
6568 days old here
Total Posts: 47628
Points: 0

Location:
United Kingdom, United Kingdom
da

u r missing me
Posted 03 Jun 2009

~tasha~

Age: 124
6568 days old here
Total Posts: 47628
Points: 0

Location:
United Kingdom, United Kingdom
wt abt now?
Posted 03 Jun 2009

~tasha~

Age: 124
6568 days old here
Total Posts: 47628
Points: 0

Location:
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hi
Posted 03 Jun 2009

~tasha~

Age: 124
6568 days old here
Total Posts: 47628
Points: 0

Location:
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posting
Posted 03 Jun 2009

~tasha~

Age: 124
6568 days old here
Total Posts: 47628
Points: 0

Location:
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tasha
Posted 03 Jun 2009

~tasha~

Age: 124
6568 days old here
Total Posts: 47628
Points: 0

Location:
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pancake
Posted 03 Jun 2009

~tasha~

Age: 124
6568 days old here
Total Posts: 47628
Points: 0

Location:
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Extreme Hard Drive Repair

There are some rather odd hard drive repair suggestions floating around the Internet. Enough people claim that they work that they're worth a look in dire circumstances. If your drive seems to have a mechanical problem or simply a problem you haven't been able to solve, and you're unwilling or unable to get professional data recovery, you might have one last ditch shot at retrieving your data.

Before you try any of these techniques, make sure you're ready to immediately recover your data. The easiest way is to have the connections ready to reconnect the dead drive to a computer with either a DVD burner or a large flash drive to move your critical files to. Also, please remember that these methods may not work and may even cause additional damage to your hard drive. If you have any questions about what you're doing, it's probably best to have a professional look at your hard drive for you.

Sometimes the mechanical parts within a hard drive can get bound up or jammed. A sharp physical shock might free things up long enough to get your data. Keep in mind this is the exact opposite of how you should normally treat a hard drive, so this is really a last resort. First, try whacking the side of the drive with the handle of a screwdriver or a small mallet. If that doesn't help, try the drop method: Hold the drive about 6 inches (15.2 centimeters) above a hard surface and let it fall (make sure the metal chassis is the part it lands on). You might have luck with successive drops from slightly higher up.

The most unusual method of hard drive repair requires you to freeze the drive. The cold temperature shrinks certain metal parts and can free up jams or binds. Put the drive in a sealed plastic bag and then put it in the freezer. Reports vary from a minimum of two hours to 24. If you have nothing else to lose, it's worth a try.

There are some even more extreme forms of hard drive repair, but they can only be accomplished by professionals. Some of these techniques can recover data from drives that have been burned and melted in fires or damaged by water. Even drives that were submerged in floods can have recoverable data on them. The methods involve recovering the platters and using new mechanical parts to read whatever magnetic data is still on them. This absolutely has to be done in a clean room, so there's really no way to do it in your own home. It's expensive, but if you absolutely need that information, it may be worth it to you.
Posted 02 Jun 2009

~tasha~

Age: 124
6568 days old here
Total Posts: 47628
Points: 0

Location:
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Hard Drive Lifespan
Some computer experts suggest that hard drives tend to fail either shortly after they're installed or after several years of wear and tear. The expected lifespan of a drive can vary greatly, depending on the drive and how it is used, not to mention if it's subjected to rough treatment. The average seems to be three to five years. However, don't get complacent if your drive is only a year or two old -- it isn't a hard rule, and plenty of drives fail unexpectedly. Keep your back-ups current.
Posted 02 Jun 2009

~tasha~

Age: 124
6568 days old here
Total Posts: 47628
Points: 0

Location:
United Kingdom, United Kingdom
Hard Drive Repair

If you've determined that your drive has a mechanical problem, you may have some difficulties to overcome. The drive might be fixable and your data recoverable, but it might require a professional repair, which can cost hundreds or even thousands of dollars. The main reason for this is that work on the internals of a hard drive have to be done in a "clean room" environment. Any piece of dust on the platters can ruin the drive.

You could attempt a mechanical repair on your own, but you'll need to find exact replacement parts from the exact model and version of the drive. This can be a huge challenge all by itself (even for professional data recovery experts). You might be able to replace a dead circuit board yourself, but spindle motors and read/write actuators are very difficult to deal with. Also note that opening your hard drive's case will void its warranty. If you do decide to go this route, remember to never touch the platters themselves. The oils from your fingertips are enough to ruin the drive.

A problem with a corrupt file structure or disk index is solved with special software. There are some utilities, such as fdisk, built into most operating systems that can be used for this purpose, but you have to be very careful. Changing the partitions in the drive or formatting it might solve the problem, but you'll lose all your data. Another option is to use a specialized recovery utility such as Disk Warrior to repair the problem while keeping as much of your data as possible. Some corrupted files may not be recoverable.
Posted 02 Jun 2009

~tasha~

Age: 124
6568 days old here
Total Posts: 47628
Points: 0

Location:
United Kingdom, United Kingdom
Troubleshooting a Dead Drive

When your drive seems to have given up the ghost, there are some steps you can take to determine where the problem lies. If your computer is running Windows, the first thing you should do is reboot the computer and go into the basic input/output system (BIOS). Usually you do this by pressing the Delete key during the boot-up sequence -- watch for on-screen prompts. BIOS has a utility that autodetects drives. Run this and see if the drive shows up. If it doesn't, there may be a problem with the connections between the drive and the motherboard. Check all those connections.

If the drive does show up, then you can run some more diagnostic tests. You'll need another functional computer to accomplish most of these, unless you've planned ahead. Find the model number and manufacturer of your hard drive. Go to the manufacturer's Web site and look for the company's proprietary diagnostic software. You'll have to download and then burn it to a CD-ROM or save it to a floppy disk, depending on what the "dead" computer is equipped with. Boot the dead computer from the diagnostic disk and run it. The diagnostics should give you some indication of what the problem is, although sometimes it will find no problems, even though the drive is still not working.

You can also create a bootable virus scan disk and scan the dead drive for any viruses that might be causing the problem. If your computer is infected, you may be able to use the virus scan disk to repair the problem as well.

If all has gone well, at this point you should have a rough diagnosis. You might not know exactly what's wrong, but at least you've ruled some things out and narrowed it down. But what if none of those troubleshooting steps worked? Try connecting the drive to another computer, one that you know works. This will let you know if the problem is really with the drive itself.

Also, open your computer's case and listen closely to the drive when you boot up the computer. Is it totally silent? That means the platters aren't "spinning up," indicating a serious mechanical problem. Does it make any of the warning sounds we mentioned earlier? Remember, these are also a sign of mechanical failure. If it sounds perfectly normal (generally, a steady hiss as the platters spin and internal cooling fans activate -- although different drives make different sounds), then the problem is probably not mechanical.
Posted 02 Jun 2009