I'm trying to install a MioNet program on my computer to gain access to someone else's external hard drive. I have a 64-bit operating system (Vista) and the application isn't running with this system. When searching the troubleshooting section I get this message:
7/1/2008 7:11:43 PM
7/1/2008 8:26:17 PM
7/1/2008 9:01:03 PM
I understand that - I suppose I should have specified. I wanted to know if there was any way around this?
7/1/2008 11:15:00 PM
noare you trying to hack into someones hard drive? that sure is what it's sounding like...]
7/1/2008 11:19:00 PM
7/1/2008 11:50:45 PM
7/2/2008 12:05:18 AM
A friend of mine just got the hard drive and he has a lot of MMA fight videos that he wants to be able to share with me. When we tried to connect it said that it didn't support my system - I just assumed there would be some way to get around it not supporting the 64-bit (like some kind of dummy program to make it think I was using a 32-bit system.) Perhaps there isn't.
7/2/2008 1:56:23 PM
there is.they told you EXACTLY what to do in the faq you posted.if you can't figure this out, why are you using a 64-bit OS?
7/2/2008 3:42:27 PM
^^do you not know how to use google?
7/2/2008 6:54:47 PM
When i follow those instructions it still doesn't work. I'm looking for someone who has had experience doing this or knows how to - not how to read directions. Thanks.
7/5/2008 1:17:31 AM
usually there are reasons behind why applications are incompatible with certain architectures.it's not like the developers went "HEY LETS JUST TELL EVERYONE IT WONT WORK ON X64 LOLL"they even were nice enough to tell you what you could try to maybe get it working.install x86 java and try it. it sounds like you're not doing that.learn to read and maybe people won't troll you.
7/5/2008 2:21:08 AM
net use
7/5/2008 10:41:03 AM
^don't listen to this guy, he still uses batch scriptsj/k you still my boo nic
7/5/2008 3:56:09 PM