Help - Duplicated Screen - Phoenix OS News, Q&A & Development

I just finished to install Phoenix on a old netbook Aspire ONe 2GB Ram and Intel Atom 1.33Ghz
It was a pain in the ass Remix OS stuck on Remix Logo (like 40 to reach it)
Now after 1hr i managed to install Phoenix
BUT THE SCREEN IS DUPLICATED WITH A LOT O HORIZONTAL LINES
How to solve that?

Get rid of your poor netbook, Remix Os works amazing on my SP3, but Phoenix Os crashes every 5 minute on my SP3
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PC not booting after Restart/Shutdown

I don't know the problem, but when I restart my PC or when I shutdown and then turn on, it won't boot up sometimes. It just start the booting animation and then the monitor turns off. I need to restart several times to boot to user selection. I tried turning off fast start-up but no help (I read somewhere that this may help). I have desktop PC.
Specs:
Windows 8 Pro 64bit
AMD Athlon 64 3200+ 2GHz
3GB RAM
NVIDIA GeForce 210 512MB
Is it your nvidia driver the last update was not working right on a lot of cards try an older driver see if that works
Sent from my Nexus 7 using XDA Premium HD app

Chromebook better than a PC?

Hi there.
I'm doing this thread to once & for all find the ultimate answers to my PC "issues".
Before i bought my Lenovo Yoga 8 laptop i was thinking of buying a Google Chromebook. Specs might not be as high-end as a Windows PC but it loads a lot faster (having no such apps or enough background process to load in the background), apps load a lot faster, updates come automatically (and no need to download/intall like a PC), straighforward OS and no complicated hundreds of settings to tinker with unlike a PC. And besides a Chromebook is virus and malware-free forever.
I also happen to come from a Macbook Air and i found my PC that slow. Downloading & installing apps takes a lot longer, opening or closing an app or browser or tasks also takes longer. But in the course i have made some research to improve the speed & performanc of my Windows laptop mainly:
1. Turned off bluetooth
2. Set Windows Update to automatic
3. Updated Windows Defender
4. Defrafgging my gard drive monthly
5. Choose Selective Startup (under msconfig) and made sure no apps are enabled under Startup, selected apps are running under Services, choose a higher number under Processors and maximum memory set to at least half of what my Lenovo is capable of (under Boot)
6. Set performance to High Performance. (And being plugged in the mains)
What else have i missed?
Also i noticed when i look at Task Manager there are background processes that i do not understand and i'm not sure whether to disable them or not although it shows 0% affecting the RAM, etc.
If i don't get satisfied with this "complicated" WIndows 8.1 OS i might as well sell it and get a Chromebook as i use most of their services anyway on my Android phone.
To put things into certain context you see the most "intensve" task i will be doing in my computer will be downloading torrents 10 tabs/files at a time (it could be an .mp3 album or a standard .mp4 HD movie), wireless printing hundreds of pages from an assignmnt or work project, transferring hi-quality files (Flac or .mkv) to my Android tablet or doing an "intermediate-level" photo editing of my photos for upload to Twitter, Facebook, etc. My computer stays at home 99.99% of the time and IS online 100% of the time.
What you think guys?
I am not exactly sure what you bought, cause I can't find any Lenovo Yoga 8 running windows 8.
If you find windows 8 slow, you either bought something very low end, or something broken inside.
And no, a chrome book is not better than a PC. A PC has this thing called "reliability", which the chrome book lacks when you no longer have an internet connection.
Unless you are ready to pay a hefty monthly subscription to some mobile operator for unlimited data connection (which isn't really unlimited, after around 4GB, your connection will be slowed down automatically in many cases), and are ready to face the consequences of not having said data connection service whereever you go.
Even if windows PCs are more "expensive", which they are not, you can find a much more powerful computing machine at the same price of a chrome book (haswel i3s are really cheap now), you know you can do anything you want, whenever you want, and not relay on your internet connection to do more than checking the time.
Sorry...
I have bought Lenovo Yoga 2 11-inch Windows PC.
The MacBook Air I had before my Lenovo one stayed at home 100% of the time and is connected to the web 100% of the time. My fibre broadband is at least 70MB downloads speeds. With this respect a Chromebook would be suitable for me.
The PC I bought isn't low-end by any means. It is of the higher mid-range ones based on the specs itself. As I said I have done my own research, looked at Youtube videos on tip & tricks. The 8.1 update itself took me almost 5 hours even with that good specs. After that it is still slow. You can set up a Chromebook in 5-ish minutes, takes under 10 seconds to boot up from no power or sleep and apps start almost instantly. Because of probably all these background processes going on in Windows 8.1 it is still slow. Have shut and stopped some of them but still no significant change.
WIndows 8.1 isn't the lightweight, smooth OS I was hoping for. It is still "complicated" compared to a Mac and a Chromebook. Having it owned and used for 4 weeks I think that was enough for me to realise that perhaps....maybe next time.
Your PC is VERY low end. It has a Celeron/Pentium processor which is basically a higher clocked intel atom.
Upper mid range is core i3, not celeron my friend.
A MacBook has a core i5 processor, among other things, like a SSD for storage.
You traded a lot of mobility in the yoga for lower specs. This is why you paid so much. You can easily get a haswel i5 for this money, which is almost 10 times faster than this. You didn't research properly, I am affraid. This ain't no notebook for keeping around the house. this is a mobility oriented product.
Well, anyway i have returned the Yoga 2 back to the store and got myself an Acer C720 Chromebook. First impressions? Positive. Solid keyboard (could do with a backlit one), good sounding speakers, solid build quality and that's it so far. It's barely 24 hours so its too early to say as i haven't tried it that much yet.
IMO the best thing to improve general "feel" of a computer, especially things like how fast applications start up, is get an SSD. I don't what your Yoga had, but if it was one of the ones with the 5,400 rpm drives, it'll be slow.
If all you need is Chrome, then a Chromebook has the advantage being cheaper. Whilst a 10 second boot that Google claim for Chromebooks is quick, I wouldn't call Windows PCs slow, so long as you don't cripple them with a slow hard disk. My low end Asus T100 boots in 12 seconds (my Android Nexus 7 2013 takes 30 seconds). I don't see why web apps would load slower or things take longer to download on Chrome under Windows, than on a Chromebook - has this been tested (on equivalent hardware and network)?
"updates come automatically (and no need to download/intall like a PC)"
But you still have to download them on a Chromebook, and it happens automatically on Windows...
Never had a virus on Windows, and virus checking is built in and in the background now. There is more of a risk, but then it's like saying you're better off with a £10 dumb phone, because it's impossible to get a virus on it
Chromebook has everything you need? Then well, go ahead. Cause it is cheap and maybe simple to use.
Just make sure one day if you come up with something that you want to do but can be done only on a real computer (like using certain software or playing certain games), you can't. At the end of the day, you pay for what you get.
Sent from my Nexus 5 using Tapatalk
A Chromebook and a PC serve different purposes. A Chromebook is like a motorcycle, lightweight, efficient and it will get you to from point A to B on the internet. A PC is like a truck,it can do a lot more but needs a bit more hardware to run on. If you can get by with a Chromebook do ahead. But I want full desktop programs, hardware driver support, etc. Thats why I got a Toshiba Encore tablet that runs 8.1. Windows still feels kind of weird on a tablet, but having a full desktop OS in a device that portable is awesome and those Bay Trail Atoms are a hell of a lot better than previous Atoms.
The Lenovo Yoga laptop i got is a quad-core Haswell-powered computer. Yet, it took me 4 hours to update it to 8.1 whilst my Chromebook took 4 minutes (even less) to set-up. My quad-core Yoga took 30 seconds (or less) to startup whilst my Chromebook took 7-8 seconds maximum.
Since having an Android phone and tablet for the past 4-5 years i feel i am tied up to Google and its various services. I can still avail and enjoy some of the MS services like OneCloud and OneOffice via its web app versions so for me that's still ok.
Gino76ph said:
The Lenovo Yoga laptop i got is a quad-core Haswell-powered computer. Yet, it took me 4 hours to update it to 8.1 whilst my Chromebook took 4 minutes (even less) to set-up. My quad-core Yoga took 30 seconds (or less) to startup whilst my Chromebook took 7-8 seconds maximum.
Since having an Android phone and tablet for the past 4-5 years i feel i am tied up to Google and its various services. I can still avail and enjoy some of the MS services like OneCloud and OneOffice via its web app versions so for me that's still ok.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Your yoga wasn't a haswell...
According to Lenovo it was.

Windows 8/8.1/10 doesn't work with Switchable Graphics. Sign the petition!

Since Windows 8, First generation Intel users were unable to update our graphics drivers because they lead to bootloops, BSODs, screen/brightness glitches etc. Almost every 2010-2012+ Hewlett Packard user (and some MSi, Vaio and Toshiba Sattelites) is having this issue. Now that Windows 10 is released the situation still remains the same.
The problems:
BSOD while installing the drivers provided in Windows Update. When the OS installs the new driver, the screen starts flickering and then shows a Blue Screen of Death. After that, the PC never boots again (see below). Since W10 these updates are forced to auto-install everytime, so it's almost imposible to stop the laptop to get into that state.
Bootloop - Blackscreen after Windows bootlogo. After the BSOD, the laptop restarts itself after 5 seconds, and it never boots again. In some cases it leads to a blackscreen and then bang! BSOD again. In others, it just stays in a blackscreen with sound and the ability to control brightness and core functions like Wi-Fi network and Sound. In other words, the laptop works, but the screen doesn't.
After another "update" the laptop boots in Intel Mode only. Seems like the "workaround" for the problem by AMD/Microsoft was to disable AMD cards and force the device to run in Power Saving mode (Intel Card). If you force an app or game to run in AMD mode, it will lead to a blackscreen with sound and the only way to revert that is by rebooting the laptop.
Some apps still use Intel Graphics, even if they were forced to run ATI ones. This can be checked with DXDiag.exe, which displays Intel info in Video Graphics, even if the program was forced to use ATI. TL: DR: Apps don't recognize the ATI card.
HDMI Output doesn't work. Since ATI cards doesn't work, so does the HDMI output. There's no audio/vido in the external multimedia device.
Here's a link for the problem and all those affected users in Microsoft Community. A Microsoft Representative answered the first two pages, then dissapeared. Right now there're almost 40 pages about people claiming at least one response or a guarantee to get this fixed. This is not Windows XP, we still have more than 10 years of support.
I can't work because Microsoft and AMD don't support me, they don't support a one-year-old technology. I'm a Video Designer/Editor, I can't work with a power saving GPU. I (we) didn't bought a $700 laptop for a performance of a $250 one.
Thanks for your time reading this, feel free to sign the petition or report this thread as spam. Remember that you only need to do a few clics to sign it and no account it's required. Again, thanks for helping us.
Link to change.org petition:*https://www.change.org/p/microsoft-advanced-micro-devices-amd-fix-hybrid-switchable-graphics-for-first-generation-intel-laptops

binize android 9.1 7 inch 2G RAM+32G ROM

Hi I have a problem with my device that keeps reboot system ?
I have not found a solution to this problem I need help Please
YT9218HD / YT9260- VER0.2
We just installed one of these today and It wouldn't show the keyboard.
I also have one of the similar screens thats a 1x16 from podofo and it runs faster. https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B08GKBQ1X5/ref=ppx_yo_dt_b_asin_title_o03_s03?ie=UTF8&psc=1
Cheaper too. I spent 92 on it vs the 140. Android 10 vs the 9. I'm really considering returning it and grabbing another one of the other.

STABLE ROM NOTE 4 TRITE SAMY 910F

hi all
im runnimg aisp its a bit slow, and battery runs out fter the fone powered off a few days later, its not the battery. i use a task manager to kill all running apps before pressing shutdown key and then the power off icon.
the version is aicp trite 10 qq2a 200305 303 20200409 010801
whats the best way to find latest version if there is one and is it completely stable
is anyone running a custom rom where all the major stuff.. camera wifi bletooth nfc etc works faultlessly and fast, which behaves like a modern fone so recent apps run and the way of operating the fones are similar
is the note 4 pretty much unsuported now.. shame i prefer it to mi note19t whici i have

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