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November 7, 2005 at 2:54 pm #2179123
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November 8, 2005 at 1:26 pm #3135688
Some pointers to keep your computer running smoothly
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 4 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
Did you just buy yourself a new computer, or is your old one starting to show signs of its age? Now is a good time to get some good computer maintenance habits developed before you get yourself into trouble.Some pointers to keep your computer running smoothly:
Never turn your computer off with the power button until Windows has completely shut down.
The one exception to this rule is when your -
November 8, 2005 at 1:26 pm #3135687
WeetHet – CDRW – How to write a Bin/Cue CD image using Nero Burning Rom
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 4 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
Ever Need to burn a .CUE file to CD using NERO?? Well here’s how!WeetHet – CDRW – How to write a Bin/Cue CD image using Nero Burning Rom: “Nero Burning ROM of Ahead is versatile program and is even capable of burning so called BIN/CUE files.
BIN/CUE files (files that have a suffix .BIN and .CUE) are often found on the Internet and commonly created using CDRWIN by Golden Hawk. But it would -
November 8, 2005 at 1:26 pm #3135686
What causes Windows machines to freeze?
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 4 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
Possible Cause(s):
A computer, operating system, software program or driver may stop responding or cause other programs to stop responding due to several possible reasons
A conflict of software or hardware resources between two programs; lack of system resources (memory, hard drive space) or a bug in the software or drivers.Solution:
To recover from a program that has stopped responding:
Press -
November 8, 2005 at 1:26 pm #3135684
Microsoft Says Profit Rose 24% – New York Times
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 4 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
Microsoft Says Profit Rose 24% – New York Times: “Microsoft Says Profit Rose 24%By JOHN MARKOFF
Published: October 28, 2005
SAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 27 – Microsoft rode a wave of global strength in the personal computer market to report growth in profit and sales in the first quarter of its 2006 fiscal year, slightly exceeding analysts’ expectations.” -
November 8, 2005 at 1:26 pm #3135685
Better processor for gaming?
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 4 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
What is the better processor for gaming? – AMD or Pentium 4??? That is a question that was asked of me recently…..My opinion was that the AMD would perform better, but he should get a nice vid. card, and upgrade to at least a 1Gb or RAM.
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November 8, 2005 at 1:26 pm #3135682
IT Help Support: Better processor for gaming?
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 4 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
thanks for link… I handed it off to the inquiring party. That will definately come in handy!!thanks again!
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November 8, 2005 at 1:26 pm #3135683
Mobile Pipeline | Netgear Unveils Five-In-One MIMO Gateway
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 4 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
Sounds like a great new product… I know for a fact I would like to have one device to give me the range I now get from my 2 routers……Mobile Pipeline | Netgear Unveils Five-In-One MIMO Gateway: “Netgear Unveils Five-In-One MIMO Gateway
By Mobile Pipeline Staff Mobile Pipeline
WLAN equipment vendor Netgear said Tuesday that it has released a gateway based on Multiple Input,
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November 8, 2005 at 1:26 pm #3135680
Intel shipping Dual-Core Intel? Xeon? Processors | Technology News Daily
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 4 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
Would be nice for my company to get its hands on some of these…..Intel shipping Dual-Core Intel? Xeon? Processors | Technology News Daily: “Intel Corporation?s first dual-core, hyper-threaded processors for servers with four or more processors started shipping today. The processors deliver record levels of performance and are optimal for multi-threaded applications such as database, supply
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November 8, 2005 at 1:26 pm #3135681
InformationWeek > Microsoft Windows > Microsoft: Unauthorized Windows XP SP3 ‘Preview’ Bad News > October 17, 2005
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 4 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
I waited a good long time before I put SP2 on my machines….. the last thing I would do is go to a 3rd party sight and install a 3rd party “PREVIEW” …October 17, 2005: “Microsoft: Unauthorized Windows XP SP3 ‘Preview’ Bad News Oct. 17, 2005
The so-called service pack is a collection of updates that Microsoft has released since the debut of SP2 more than a year ago, and it’s
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November 8, 2005 at 1:26 pm #3135678
ORANGE VIRUS ALERT: Panda Software Offers a Free Tool to Eliminate the Trojan Mitglieder.FK: Financial News – Yahoo! Finance
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 4 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
WARNING !!! WARNING !!!ORANGE VIRUS ALERT: Panda Software Offers a Free Tool to Eliminate the Trojan Mitglieder.FK: Financial News – Yahoo! Finance: “ORANGE VIRUS ALERT: Panda Software Offers a Free Tool to Eliminate the Trojan Mitglieder.FK
Wednesday November 2, 3:55 pm ET
– Panda Software Has Made the Free PQREMOVE Utility Available to All Users to Effectively Detect and Eliminate -
November 8, 2005 at 1:26 pm #3135679
PCWorld.com – U3: Portable Programs on a USB Drive
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 4 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
This can come in handy when I go to client locations an need to run applications and not need to install them on the clients machine due to license issues……PCWorld.com – U3: Portable Programs on a USB Drive: “U3: Portable Programs on a USB Drive
New platform lets you run apps on any PC without leaving data on host machine.
Michael S. Lasky
From the December 2005 issue of PC World -
November 8, 2005 at 1:26 pm #3135677
Paul Thurrott’s SuperSite for Windows: Microsoft Windows Vista Build 5231 (Community Technical Preview 2) Review
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 4 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
Looks like a lot of new and exciting features are coming out in Windows Vista. Can’t wait to try this out !!!Paul Thurrott’s SuperSite for Windows: Microsoft Windows Vista Build 5231 (Community Technical Preview 2) Review: “Microsoft Windows Vista Build 5231 (Community Technical Preview 2) Review
After years of silence and doubts, Microsoft’s Windows Vista project is finally moving
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November 8, 2005 at 1:26 pm #3135676
Ever want to change the BORING XP login screen?
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 4 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
I have used this on my home machine, and it is easy to use, and you get a lot of login screens to choose from.LOGONLOADER This is a great little utility to take the pain and suffering from manually editing the LOGONUI.exe file yourself.
The author of the site recommends the following sites to get screens from:
THEMEXP.orgDeviantARTBelchfire.net -
November 8, 2005 at 1:26 pm #3135674
Common Web browser errors
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 4 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
404 Not Found
The browser could not find the specific document that you requested on the host computer. To resolve this error, check the Uniform Resource Locator (URL) syntax (some URLs are case sensitive). In addition, the page may have been removed, had its name changed, or have been moved to a new location.403 Forbidden/Access Denied
The Web site you requested requires special access -
November 8, 2005 at 1:26 pm #3135675
10 things you should do to every Windows PC
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 4 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
Something for the NEWBIES and even a few steps are in there for the “seasoned” professional.10 things you should do to every Windows PC: “Getting a new PC, whether it is at work or at home, is one of those ‘makes you smile’ moments. Just like the ‘6 Million Dollar Man’ we all want better, stronger, and faster. However, every new PC that crosses your path is in need of a few tweaks. This
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November 8, 2005 at 2:44 pm #3135606
Intel shipping Dual-Core Intel? Xeon? Processors | Technology News Daily
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 4 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
Would be nice for my company to get its hands on some of these…..Intel shipping Dual-Core Intel? Xeon? Processors | Technology News Daily: “Intel Corporation?s first dual-core, hyper-threaded processors for servers with four or more processors started shipping today. The processors deliver record levels of performance and are optimal for multi-threaded applications such as database, supply
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November 8, 2005 at 2:44 pm #3135605
Setting the Default Web Browser (FIX)
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 4 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
Ever set your default browser from Internet Explorer from Firefox, Opera, or any other 3rd party browser and have the setting not stick?The easy way …..
By default, IE checks whether it?s the default browser each time it starts. If you disabled this check, you can reenable it by performing these steps:
Start IE.From the Tools menu, select Internet Options.Click the Programs tab.Select the -
November 8, 2005 at 6:38 pm #3120515
Re: [the life of justin moore] Comment: “Suse Linux 10.0 Update”
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 4 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
If there were a stronger word the LOVE IT – I’d use it. I’ve used
various versions in various places for various things over the past 5 or
6 years and it keeps getting better and better. Good luck with it. Let
me know if I can be of assistance at all.Justin Moore
http://www.wantmoore.com
http://www.justinandbonnie.comIT-Helper wrote: -
November 8, 2005 at 10:40 pm #3120475
Intel shipping Dual-Core Intel? Xeon? Processors | Technology News Daily
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 4 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
Would be nice for my company to get its hands on some of these…..Intel shipping Dual-Core Intel? Xeon? Processors | Technology News Daily: “Intel Corporation?s first dual-core, hyper-threaded processors for servers with four or more processors started shipping today. The processors deliver record levels of performance and are optimal for multi-threaded applications such as database, supply
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November 9, 2005 at 2:41 am #3120417
Intel shipping Dual-Core Intel? Xeon? Processors | Technology News Daily
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 4 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
Would be nice for my company to get its hands on some of these…..Intel shipping Dual-Core Intel? Xeon? Processors | Technology News Daily: “Intel Corporation?s first dual-core, hyper-threaded processors for servers with four or more processors started shipping today. The processors deliver record levels of performance and are optimal for multi-threaded applications such as database, supply
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November 9, 2005 at 6:41 am #3120327
Intel shipping Dual-Core Intel? Xeon? Processors | Technology News Daily
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 4 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
Would be nice for my company to get its hands on some of these…..Intel shipping Dual-Core Intel? Xeon? Processors | Technology News Daily: “Intel Corporation?s first dual-core, hyper-threaded processors for servers with four or more processors started shipping today. The processors deliver record levels of performance and are optimal for multi-threaded applications such as database, supply
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November 9, 2005 at 10:45 am #3119089
Intel shipping Dual-Core Intel? Xeon? Processors | Technology News Daily
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 4 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
Would be nice for my company to get its hands on some of these…..Intel shipping Dual-Core Intel? Xeon? Processors | Technology News Daily: “Intel Corporation?s first dual-core, hyper-threaded processors for servers with four or more processors started shipping today. The processors deliver record levels of performance and are optimal for multi-threaded applications such as database, supply
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November 9, 2005 at 2:41 pm #3118988
Intel shipping Dual-Core Intel? Xeon? Processors | Technology News Daily
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 4 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
Would be nice for my company to get its hands on some of these…..Intel shipping Dual-Core Intel? Xeon? Processors | Technology News Daily: “Intel Corporation?s first dual-core, hyper-threaded processors for servers with four or more processors started shipping today. The processors deliver record levels of performance and are optimal for multi-threaded applications such as database, supply
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November 9, 2005 at 6:41 pm #3118907
Intel shipping Dual-Core Intel? Xeon? Processors | Technology News Daily
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 4 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
Would be nice for my company to get its hands on some of these…..Intel shipping Dual-Core Intel? Xeon? Processors | Technology News Daily: “Intel Corporation?s first dual-core, hyper-threaded processors for servers with four or more processors started shipping today. The processors deliver record levels of performance and are optimal for multi-threaded applications such as database, supply
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November 10, 2005 at 2:42 am #3118477
Intel shipping Dual-Core Intel? Xeon? Processors | Technology News Daily
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 4 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
Would be nice for my company to get its hands on some of these…..Intel shipping Dual-Core Intel? Xeon? Processors | Technology News Daily: “Intel Corporation?s first dual-core, hyper-threaded processors for servers with four or more processors started shipping today. The processors deliver record levels of performance and are optimal for multi-threaded applications such as database, supply
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November 10, 2005 at 6:43 am #3118348
Intel shipping Dual-Core Intel? Xeon? Processors | Technology News Daily
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 4 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
Would be nice for my company to get its hands on some of these…..Intel shipping Dual-Core Intel? Xeon? Processors | Technology News Daily: “Intel Corporation?s first dual-core, hyper-threaded processors for servers with four or more processors started shipping today. The processors deliver record levels of performance and are optimal for multi-threaded applications such as database, supply
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November 10, 2005 at 10:47 am #3118177
Intel shipping Dual-Core Intel? Xeon? Processors | Technology News Daily
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 4 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
Would be nice for my company to get its hands on some of these…..Intel shipping Dual-Core Intel? Xeon? Processors | Technology News Daily: “Intel Corporation?s first dual-core, hyper-threaded processors for servers with four or more processors started shipping today. The processors deliver record levels of performance and are optimal for multi-threaded applications such as database, supply chain management and financial services software. “
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November 10, 2005 at 10:47 am #3118176
IT Help Support: Re: [the life of justin moore] Comment: “Suse Linux 10.0 Update”
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 4 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
thanks for the reply.. I really hope to be able to dive right into SUSE. I will definately hit you up if I have any ?’s.thanks,
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November 10, 2005 at 10:47 am #3118174
Windows XP Profile Problem.
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 4 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
User has a Toshiba Satellite Pro M15 running Windows XP Pro…When the Windows login GUI loads the following message appears:
———————————————————————————————
USER ENVIRONMENT window appears with the message “Windows cannot load your user profile. But has logged you on with a default profile.”DETAIL: “System attempted to load or
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November 10, 2005 at 10:47 am #3118175
Dumb user ticket for the day.
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 4 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
Had a client at my job email me in all caps. She claimed that the CAPS LOCK key was not pressed while she was typing the message. She requested that I stop by the following day (today) to check it out for her.I pass by her desk this morning, she was not in as of yet, and what do I see????? The green glowing light of CAPS LOCK!!!! I turned it off, and I just got an email from her THANKING
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November 10, 2005 at 2:01 pm #3117756
Intel shipping Dual-Core Intel? Xeon? Processors | Technology News Daily
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 4 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
Would be nice for my company to get its hands on some of these…..Intel shipping Dual-Core Intel? Xeon? Processors | Technology News Daily: “Intel Corporation?s first dual-core, hyper-threaded processors for servers with four or more processors started shipping today. The processors deliver record levels of performance and are optimal for multi-threaded applications such as database, supply chain management and financial services software. “
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November 10, 2005 at 6:12 pm #3117684
Intel shipping Dual-Core Intel? Xeon? Processors | Technology News Daily
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 4 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
Would be nice for my company to get its hands on some of these…..Intel shipping Dual-Core Intel? Xeon? Processors | Technology News Daily: “Intel Corporation?s first dual-core, hyper-threaded processors for servers with four or more processors started shipping today. The processors deliver record levels of performance and are optimal for multi-threaded applications such as database, supply chain management and financial services software. “
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November 10, 2005 at 9:54 pm #3117624
Intel shipping Dual-Core Intel? Xeon? Processors | Technology News Daily
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 4 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
Would be nice for my company to get its hands on some of these…..Intel shipping Dual-Core Intel? Xeon? Processors | Technology News Daily: “Intel Corporation?s first dual-core, hyper-threaded processors for servers with four or more processors started shipping today. The processors deliver record levels of performance and are optimal for multi-threaded applications such as database, supply chain management and financial services software. “
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November 11, 2005 at 1:58 am #3117590
Intel shipping Dual-Core Intel? Xeon? Processors | Technology News Daily
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 4 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
Would be nice for my company to get its hands on some of these…..Intel shipping Dual-Core Intel? Xeon? Processors | Technology News Daily: “Intel Corporation?s first dual-core, hyper-threaded processors for servers with four or more processors started shipping today. The processors deliver record levels of performance and are optimal for multi-threaded applications such as database, supply chain management and financial services software. “
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November 11, 2005 at 5:58 am #3117503
Intel shipping Dual-Core Intel? Xeon? Processors | Technology News Daily
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 4 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
Would be nice for my company to get its hands on some of these…..Intel shipping Dual-Core Intel? Xeon? Processors | Technology News Daily: “Intel Corporation?s first dual-core, hyper-threaded processors for servers with four or more processors started shipping today. The processors deliver record levels of performance and are optimal for multi-threaded applications such as database, supply chain management and financial services software. “
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November 11, 2005 at 10:03 am #3119364
Intel shipping Dual-Core Intel? Xeon? Processors | Technology News Daily
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 4 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
Would be nice for my company to get its hands on some of these…..Intel shipping Dual-Core Intel? Xeon? Processors | Technology News Daily: “Intel Corporation?s first dual-core, hyper-threaded processors for servers with four or more processors started shipping today. The processors deliver record levels of performance and are optimal for multi-threaded applications such as database, supply
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November 11, 2005 at 10:03 am #3119365
Viruses Exploit Sony CD Copy-Protection – Yahoo! News
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 4 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
All I have to say is HA HA Ha to Sony!!!Viruses Exploit Sony CD Copy-Protection – Yahoo! News: “Viruses Exploit Sony CD Copy-Protection By MATTHEW FORDAHL, AP Technology Writer
2 hours, 41 minutes agoSAN JOSE, Calif. – A controversial copy-protection program that automatically installs when some Sony BMG audio CDs are played on personal computers is now being exploited by malicious
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November 11, 2005 at 5:57 pm #3119215
Intel shipping Dual-Core Intel? Xeon? Processors | Technology News Daily
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 4 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
Would be nice for my company to get its hands on some of these…..Intel shipping Dual-Core Intel? Xeon? Processors | Technology News Daily: “Intel Corporation?s first dual-core, hyper-threaded processors for servers with four or more processors started shipping today. The processors deliver record levels of performance and are optimal for multi-threaded applications such as database, supply
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November 11, 2005 at 9:50 pm #3118841
Intel shipping Dual-Core Intel? Xeon? Processors | Technology News Daily
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 4 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
Would be nice for my company to get its hands on some of these…..Intel shipping Dual-Core Intel? Xeon? Processors | Technology News Daily: “Intel Corporation?s first dual-core, hyper-threaded processors for servers with four or more processors started shipping today. The processors deliver record levels of performance and are optimal for multi-threaded applications such as database, supply
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November 12, 2005 at 1:58 am #3118814
Intel shipping Dual-Core Intel? Xeon? Processors | Technology News Daily
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 4 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
Would be nice for my company to get its hands on some of these…..Intel shipping Dual-Core Intel? Xeon? Processors | Technology News Daily: “Intel Corporation?s first dual-core, hyper-threaded processors for servers with four or more processors started shipping today. The processors deliver record levels of performance and are optimal for multi-threaded applications such as database, supply
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November 12, 2005 at 6:14 am #3118761
Intel shipping Dual-Core Intel? Xeon? Processors | Technology News Daily
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 4 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
Would be nice for my company to get its hands on some of these…..Intel shipping Dual-Core Intel? Xeon? Processors | Technology News Daily: “Intel Corporation?s first dual-core, hyper-threaded processors for servers with four or more processors started shipping today. The processors deliver record levels of performance and are optimal for multi-threaded applications such as database, supply
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November 12, 2005 at 9:56 am #3118721
Intel shipping Dual-Core Intel? Xeon? Processors | Technology News Daily
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 4 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
Would be nice for my company to get its hands on some of these…..Intel shipping Dual-Core Intel? Xeon? Processors | Technology News Daily: “Intel Corporation?s first dual-core, hyper-threaded processors for servers with four or more processors started shipping today. The processors deliver record levels of performance and are optimal for multi-threaded applications such as database, supply
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November 12, 2005 at 1:59 pm #3118670
Intel shipping Dual-Core Intel? Xeon? Processors | Technology News Daily
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 4 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
Would be nice for my company to get its hands on some of these…..Intel shipping Dual-Core Intel? Xeon? Processors | Technology News Daily: “Intel Corporation?s first dual-core, hyper-threaded processors for servers with four or more processors started shipping today. The processors deliver record levels of performance and are optimal for multi-threaded applications such as database, supply
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November 12, 2005 at 5:55 pm #3118633
Intel shipping Dual-Core Intel? Xeon? Processors | Technology News Daily
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 4 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
Would be nice for my company to get its hands on some of these…..Intel shipping Dual-Core Intel? Xeon? Processors | Technology News Daily: “Intel Corporation?s first dual-core, hyper-threaded processors for servers with four or more processors started shipping today. The processors deliver record levels of performance and are optimal for multi-threaded applications such as database, supply
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November 12, 2005 at 9:57 pm #3118591
Intel shipping Dual-Core Intel? Xeon? Processors | Technology News Daily
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 4 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
Would be nice for my company to get its hands on some of these…..Intel shipping Dual-Core Intel? Xeon? Processors | Technology News Daily: “Intel Corporation?s first dual-core, hyper-threaded processors for servers with four or more processors started shipping today. The processors deliver record levels of performance and are optimal for multi-threaded applications such as database, supply
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November 13, 2005 at 1:55 am #3118563
Intel shipping Dual-Core Intel? Xeon? Processors | Technology News Daily
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 4 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
Would be nice for my company to get its hands on some of these…..Intel shipping Dual-Core Intel? Xeon? Processors | Technology News Daily: “Intel Corporation?s first dual-core, hyper-threaded processors for servers with four or more processors started shipping today. The processors deliver record levels of performance and are optimal for multi-threaded applications such as database, supply
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November 13, 2005 at 9:56 am #3119857
Intel shipping Dual-Core Intel? Xeon? Processors | Technology News Daily
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 4 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
Would be nice for my company to get its hands on some of these…..Intel shipping Dual-Core Intel? Xeon? Processors | Technology News Daily: “Intel Corporation?s first dual-core, hyper-threaded processors for servers with four or more processors started shipping today. The processors deliver record levels of performance and are optimal for multi-threaded applications such as database, supply
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November 13, 2005 at 1:58 pm #3119797
Intel shipping Dual-Core Intel? Xeon? Processors | Technology News Daily
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 4 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
Would be nice for my company to get its hands on some of these…..Intel shipping Dual-Core Intel? Xeon? Processors | Technology News Daily: “Intel Corporation?s first dual-core, hyper-threaded processors for servers with four or more processors started shipping today. The processors deliver record levels of performance and are optimal for multi-threaded applications such as database, supply
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November 13, 2005 at 5:58 pm #3119747
Intel shipping Dual-Core Intel? Xeon? Processors | Technology News Daily
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 4 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
Would be nice for my company to get its hands on some of these…..Intel shipping Dual-Core Intel? Xeon? Processors | Technology News Daily: “Intel Corporation?s first dual-core, hyper-threaded processors for servers with four or more processors started shipping today. The processors deliver record levels of performance and are optimal for multi-threaded applications such as database, supply
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November 14, 2005 at 2:02 am #3119682
Intel shipping Dual-Core Intel? Xeon? Processors | Technology News Daily
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 4 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
Would be nice for my company to get its hands on some of these…..Intel shipping Dual-Core Intel? Xeon? Processors | Technology News Daily: “Intel Corporation?s first dual-core, hyper-threaded processors for servers with four or more processors started shipping today. The processors deliver record levels of performance and are optimal for multi-threaded applications such as database, supply
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November 14, 2005 at 5:58 am #3119576
The Next Generation of Wireless LAN Emerges with 802.11n
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 4 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
We soon may be able to surf the web at Over-the-Air (OTA) Estimates at 200+ Mbps with the IEEE WLAN Standard 802.11nSounds like fun !!!
Quadrupling Wi-Fi speeds with 802.11n: “by James M. Wilson (Aug. 9, 2004)
Foreword
The current 802.11a/b/g WLAN standards offer the convenience of wireless connections with adequate performance for most of today’s wireless networking applications,
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November 14, 2005 at 10:01 am #3119994
Intel shipping Dual-Core Intel? Xeon? Processors | Technology News Daily
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 4 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
Would be nice for my company to get its hands on some of these…..Intel shipping Dual-Core Intel? Xeon? Processors | Technology News Daily: “Intel Corporation?s first dual-core, hyper-threaded processors for servers with four or more processors started shipping today. The processors deliver record levels of performance and are optimal for multi-threaded applications such as database, supply
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November 14, 2005 at 10:01 am #3119991
KiXtart 2010 4.51 Released.
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 4 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
Featuring the all new pre-tokenization system for faster loading and smaller scripts and providing some level of intellectual property protection through obfuscation.Download here.
I am starting to learn it. Kixtart is used at my job a lot.
If anyone has any sources that I can look at, or has any samples that I can play with, it would be great!
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November 14, 2005 at 10:01 am #3119992
Playing an IPod on random computers…
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 4 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
A question emailed to me: “Can I just take my ipod and go to any random computer, plug it in USB and play the music off of it? It would be very nice to have that so I can have like a mobile collection of music playable anywhere. Is it possible, or does the other computer have to have the drivers for the IPod and/or ITunes -
November 14, 2005 at 10:01 am #3119993
VMware Player
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 4 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
What is VMware Player? – DOWLOAD HERE !VMware Player is free software that enables PC users to easily run any virtual machine on a Windows or Linux PC. VMware Player runs virtual machines created by VMware Workstation, GSX Server or ESX Server and also supports Microsoft virtual machines and Symantec LiveState Recovery disk formats.
I use VMWARE daily at work, in fact this post was created on a
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November 14, 2005 at 10:50 am #3119967
Intel shipping Dual-Core Intel? Xeon? Processors | Technology News Daily
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 4 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
Would be nice for my company to get its hands on some of these…..Intel shipping Dual-Core Intel? Xeon? Processors | Technology News Daily: “Intel Corporation?s first dual-core, hyper-threaded processors for servers with four or more processors started shipping today. The processors deliver record levels of performance and are optimal for multi-threaded applications such as database, supply
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November 14, 2005 at 12:45 pm #3119898
Intel shipping Dual-Core Intel? Xeon? Processors | Technology News Daily
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 4 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
Would be nice for my company to get its hands on some of these…..Intel shipping Dual-Core Intel? Xeon? Processors | Technology News Daily: “Intel Corporation?s first dual-core, hyper-threaded processors for servers with four or more processors started shipping today. The processors deliver record levels of performance and are optimal for multi-threaded applications such as database, supply
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November 14, 2005 at 4:43 pm #3118083
Intel shipping Dual-Core Intel? Xeon? Processors | Technology News Daily
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 4 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
Would be nice for my company to get its hands on some of these…..Intel shipping Dual-Core Intel? Xeon? Processors | Technology News Daily: “Intel Corporation?s first dual-core, hyper-threaded processors for servers with four or more processors started shipping today. The processors deliver record levels of performance and are optimal for multi-threaded applications such as database, supply
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November 14, 2005 at 8:45 pm #3118018
Intel shipping Dual-Core Intel? Xeon? Processors | Technology News Daily
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 4 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
Would be nice for my company to get its hands on some of these…..Intel shipping Dual-Core Intel? Xeon? Processors | Technology News Daily: “Intel Corporation?s first dual-core, hyper-threaded processors for servers with four or more processors started shipping today. The processors deliver record levels of performance and are optimal for multi-threaded applications such as database, supply
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November 15, 2005 at 12:42 am #3117972
Intel shipping Dual-Core Intel? Xeon? Processors | Technology News Daily
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 4 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
Would be nice for my company to get its hands on some of these…..Intel shipping Dual-Core Intel? Xeon? Processors | Technology News Daily: “Intel Corporation?s first dual-core, hyper-threaded processors for servers with four or more processors started shipping today. The processors deliver record levels of performance and are optimal for multi-threaded applications such as database, supply
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November 15, 2005 at 4:45 am #3117900
Intel shipping Dual-Core Intel? Xeon? Processors | Technology News Daily
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 4 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
Would be nice for my company to get its hands on some of these…..Intel shipping Dual-Core Intel? Xeon? Processors | Technology News Daily: “Intel Corporation?s first dual-core, hyper-threaded processors for servers with four or more processors started shipping today. The processors deliver record levels of performance and are optimal for multi-threaded applications such as database, supply
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November 15, 2005 at 8:50 am #3131363
Intel shipping Dual-Core Intel? Xeon? Processors | Technology News Daily
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 4 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
Would be nice for my company to get its hands on some of these…..Intel shipping Dual-Core Intel? Xeon? Processors | Technology News Daily: “Intel Corporation?s first dual-core, hyper-threaded processors for servers with four or more processors started shipping today. The processors deliver record levels of performance and are optimal for multi-threaded applications such as database, supply
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November 15, 2005 at 12:44 pm #3131252
Intel shipping Dual-Core Intel? Xeon? Processors | Technology News Daily
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 4 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
Would be nice for my company to get its hands on some of these…..Intel shipping Dual-Core Intel? Xeon? Processors | Technology News Daily: “Intel Corporation?s first dual-core, hyper-threaded processors for servers with four or more processors started shipping today. The processors deliver record levels of performance and are optimal for multi-threaded applications such as database, supply
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November 15, 2005 at 1:23 pm #3131224
Intel shipping Dual-Core Intel? Xeon? Processors | Technology News Daily
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 4 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
Would be nice for my company to get its hands on some of these…..Intel shipping Dual-Core Intel? Xeon? Processors | Technology News Daily: “Intel Corporation?s first dual-core, hyper-threaded processors for servers with four or more processors started shipping today. The processors deliver record levels of performance and are optimal for multi-threaded applications such as database, supply
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November 15, 2005 at 5:14 pm #3131164
Intel shipping Dual-Core Intel? Xeon? Processors | Technology News Daily
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 4 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
Would be nice for my company to get its hands on some of these…..Intel shipping Dual-Core Intel? Xeon? Processors | Technology News Daily: “Intel Corporation?s first dual-core, hyper-threaded processors for servers with four or more processors started shipping today. The processors deliver record levels of performance and are optimal for multi-threaded applications such as database, supply
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November 15, 2005 at 9:10 pm #3130769
Intel shipping Dual-Core Intel? Xeon? Processors | Technology News Daily
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 4 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
Would be nice for my company to get its hands on some of these…..Intel shipping Dual-Core Intel? Xeon? Processors | Technology News Daily: “Intel Corporation?s first dual-core, hyper-threaded processors for servers with four or more processors started shipping today. The processors deliver record levels of performance and are optimal for multi-threaded applications such as database, supply
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November 16, 2005 at 1:16 am #3130714
Intel shipping Dual-Core Intel? Xeon? Processors | Technology News Daily
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 4 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
Would be nice for my company to get its hands on some of these…..Intel shipping Dual-Core Intel? Xeon? Processors | Technology News Daily: “Intel Corporation?s first dual-core, hyper-threaded processors for servers with four or more processors started shipping today. The processors deliver record levels of performance and are optimal for multi-threaded applications such as database, supply
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November 16, 2005 at 5:21 am #3130646
Intel shipping Dual-Core Intel? Xeon? Processors | Technology News Daily
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 4 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
Would be nice for my company to get its hands on some of these…..Intel shipping Dual-Core Intel? Xeon? Processors | Technology News Daily: “Intel Corporation?s first dual-core, hyper-threaded processors for servers with four or more processors started shipping today. The processors deliver record levels of performance and are optimal for multi-threaded applications such as database, supply
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November 16, 2005 at 8:56 am #3130484
Intel shipping Dual-Core Intel? Xeon? Processors | Technology News Daily
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 4 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
Would be nice for my company to get its hands on some of these…..Intel shipping Dual-Core Intel? Xeon? Processors | Technology News Daily: “Intel Corporation?s first dual-core, hyper-threaded processors for servers with four or more processors started shipping today. The processors deliver record levels of performance and are optimal for multi-threaded applications such as database, supply
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November 16, 2005 at 12:56 pm #3131695
Intel shipping Dual-Core Intel? Xeon? Processors | Technology News Daily
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 4 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
Would be nice for my company to get its hands on some of these…..Intel shipping Dual-Core Intel? Xeon? Processors | Technology News Daily: “Intel Corporation?s first dual-core, hyper-threaded processors for servers with four or more processors started shipping today. The processors deliver record levels of performance and are optimal for multi-threaded applications such as database, supply
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November 16, 2005 at 4:55 pm #3131617
Intel shipping Dual-Core Intel? Xeon? Processors | Technology News Daily
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 4 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
Would be nice for my company to get its hands on some of these…..Intel shipping Dual-Core Intel? Xeon? Processors | Technology News Daily: “Intel Corporation?s first dual-core, hyper-threaded processors for servers with four or more processors started shipping today. The processors deliver record levels of performance and are optimal for multi-threaded applications such as database, supply
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November 16, 2005 at 8:52 pm #3131576
Intel shipping Dual-Core Intel? Xeon? Processors | Technology News Daily
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 4 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
Would be nice for my company to get its hands on some of these…..Intel shipping Dual-Core Intel? Xeon? Processors | Technology News Daily: “Intel Corporation?s first dual-core, hyper-threaded processors for servers with four or more processors started shipping today. The processors deliver record levels of performance and are optimal for multi-threaded applications such as database, supply
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November 17, 2005 at 12:53 am #3131531
Intel shipping Dual-Core Intel? Xeon? Processors | Technology News Daily
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 4 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
Would be nice for my company to get its hands on some of these…..Intel shipping Dual-Core Intel? Xeon? Processors | Technology News Daily: “Intel Corporation?s first dual-core, hyper-threaded processors for servers with four or more processors started shipping today. The processors deliver record levels of performance and are optimal for multi-threaded applications such as database, supply
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November 17, 2005 at 4:54 am #3131488
Intel shipping Dual-Core Intel? Xeon? Processors | Technology News Daily
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 4 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
Would be nice for my company to get its hands on some of these…..Intel shipping Dual-Core Intel? Xeon? Processors | Technology News Daily: “Intel Corporation?s first dual-core, hyper-threaded processors for servers with four or more processors started shipping today. The processors deliver record levels of performance and are optimal for multi-threaded applications such as database, supply
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November 17, 2005 at 8:57 am #3132005
Intel shipping Dual-Core Intel? Xeon? Processors | Technology News Daily
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 4 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
Would be nice for my company to get its hands on some of these…..Intel shipping Dual-Core Intel? Xeon? Processors | Technology News Daily: “Intel Corporation?s first dual-core, hyper-threaded processors for servers with four or more processors started shipping today. The processors deliver record levels of performance and are optimal for multi-threaded applications such as database, supply
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November 17, 2005 at 12:58 pm #3131848
Windows XP workgroup
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 4 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
Ok, here’s the setup.Laptop has XP SP1 (\\LAPTOP\C$)
Desktop has XP SP2 (\\DESKTOPC$)The desktop can map a drive to C$ on the laptop with no problems with authentication as the admin.
The laptop will NOT map the same drive to the desktop! It tries to default and gray out the login screen to \\DESKTOP\Guest (which the guest account on the desktop is
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November 17, 2005 at 4:58 pm #3132469
FireFox related question.
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 4 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
An email to me:In the past few days my Firefox asks me for a default user configuration when I view a video link to some site. I then have to reboot the computer to restore Firefox to be able to access the web.
_________________________________________________________________I suggested to open task manager and kill the FIREFOX.exe process, and then relaunch Firefox. It must have been a video
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November 18, 2005 at 1:45 pm #3130891
Top 5 Firewall Utilities
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 4 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
I have used in the past “Tiny Personal Firewall” and “ZoneAlarm”, at work we are installing “Sygate Personal Firewall” on all laptops.check out the article for download locations.
Top 5 Firewall Utilities: “Top 5 Firewall Utilities
Protect your PC from suspicious activity on your network or the Internet.
PCWorld.com Downloads Team” -
November 18, 2005 at 1:45 pm #3130892
Troubleshoot network problems with Windows XP’s Netsh.
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 4 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
Netsh is unique in that it interacts with other operating system components by using dynamic-link library (DLL) files. Each of these DLLs provides the Netsh command with an extensive set of features called a context, which essentially is a group of commands specific to a networking component. These contexts extend the functionality of the Netsh command by providing configuration and monitoring -
November 18, 2005 at 5:32 pm #3130824
Automate Defrag in Windows XP
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 4 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
Open the Task Scheduler, so click on the Start button and navigate to All Programs – Accessories – System Tools – Scheduled Tasks. The Scheduled Tasks dialog box appears. Left Click on Add Scheduled Task. Click the Next button on the Scheduled Task Wizard dialog box. Click the Browse button.On the next screen navigate to the C:\Windows\System32\defrag.exe file. -
November 22, 2005 at 9:54 am #3123622
Warning, Warning! New 0-day exploit affects fully patched 2k and XP systems!
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 4 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
Zero-Day Exploit Targets IEExploit code for a critical flaw in fully patched versions of Microsoft Corp.’s Internet Explorer browser has been released on the Internet, putting millions of Web surfers at risk of computer hijack attacks.
Secunia Advisory
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November 22, 2005 at 9:54 am #3123620
Error Message: “Windows Cannot Load the Locally Stored Profile”
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 4 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
Straight from Microsoft Article ID-812339SYMPTOMS:
When you log on to Windows, it may take longer than you expect. When you use CTRL-ALT-DELETE to log out, you may receive the following error message:“Windows cannot load the locally stored profile: Insufficient security rights or a corrupted local file. Windows has logged you in with a temporary profile any setting you make will not be
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November 22, 2005 at 9:54 am #3123621
Some good FTP programs.
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 4 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
WinSCP 3.7.6 FileZillaSmartFTP
Flashfxp – This one has my vote.BulletProofFTP -
November 22, 2005 at 5:45 pm #3121741
Automate Defrag in Windows XP
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 4 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
Open the Task Scheduler, so click on the Start button and navigate to All Programs – Accessories – System Tools – Scheduled Tasks. The Scheduled Tasks dialog box appears. Left Click on Add Scheduled Task. Click the Next button on the Scheduled Task Wizard dialog box. Click the Browse button.On the next screen navigate to the C:\Windows\System32\defrag.exe file.-
December 30, 2005 at 3:41 pm #3082119
by chaneyje · about 18 years, 2 months ago
In reply to Automate Defrag in Windows XP
This is the basic way, I’ve been searching for a way to accomplish this via command line with the advanced “stop when computer is not idle” option. Any ideas?
schtasks /create /tn “Defrag” /tr c:\windows\system32\defrag.exe /sc onidle /i 30
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November 23, 2005 at 9:29 am #3114064
ORANGE VIRUS ALERT: Panda Software Warns: Sober on the Attack Again, Infecting Computers Worldwide: Financial News – Yahoo! Finance
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 4 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
Another variant of the SOBER email worm is on the loose, scan your machine !!!ORANGE VIRUS ALERT: Panda Software Warns: Sober on the Attack Again, Infecting Computers Worldwide: Financial News – Yahoo! Finance: “ORANGE VIRUS ALERT: Panda Software Warns: Sober on the Attack Again, Infecting Computers Worldwide
Tuesday November 22, 1:01 pm ET
The New Variant of This Email Worm Uses Social -
November 23, 2005 at 1:24 pm #3113985
Windows XP Creativity Fun Pack PowerToys Wallpaper Changer
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 4 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
A useless but fun powertoy for your machine, if you have lotsa pics on your machine, then you can use them all as wallpaper. Pretty cool, I have it at work.Overview
Make your computer desktop more dynamic, interactive, useful, and fun. The Wallpaper Changer PowerToy allows your desktop wallpaper to change automatically. It also lets you choose which images to display. Select the folder of-
December 1, 2005 at 3:37 pm #3129416
Windows XP Creativity Fun Pack PowerToys Wallpaper Changer
by scorpnz · about 18 years, 3 months ago
In reply to Windows XP Creativity Fun Pack PowerToys Wallpaper Changer
Insert comment text here As wallpaper managers go imo it’s hard to beat http://www.webshots.com ,you have a choice of heaps of photo’s apart from the few that come with the software and if you choose to pay the small fee unlimited downloads or stick with the free and download 5 per day or display your own photo’s
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November 28, 2005 at 1:25 pm #3122139
My Client Computer Setup Checklist.
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 3 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
Below is a checklist that I use when I set up clients computers… Anyone else out there that has a “checklist” that you follow when you “build” a clients machine?Install Windows XPFormat using NTFS file system. Activate Windows XP Clean and Organize DesktopAutoArrange Icons By TypeEnable “Align to Grid” Download
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November 28, 2005 at 1:25 pm #3122140
HELP please. Unable to connect to Paypal. “Connection Refused” error.
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 3 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
Users PC will not allow him to get on Paypal from either Firefox or Internet Explorer. Using XP HomeUser has:
Unistalled Norton Turned off the XP firewall Ran Spybot Ran Adaware Did a DNS flush Cleared cache and cookies verified I could go to sites that use encryption.****************************************************************Solution:
User had a virus that edited his HOST file in
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November 28, 2005 at 1:25 pm #3122141
CHKDSK showing imminent hardrive failure.
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 3 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
______________________________________________
The type of the file system is NTFS.WARNING! F parameter not specified.
Running CHKDSK in read-only mode.CHKDSK is verifying files (stage 1 of 3)…
File verification completed.CHKDSK is verifying indexes (stage 2 of 3)…
Index verification completed.CHKDSK is verifying security descriptors (stage 3 of 3)…
Security descriptor verification -
November 29, 2005 at 3:06 pm #3123271
A phishing scam out there imitating PAYPAL… if y…
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 3 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
A phishing scam out there imitating PAYPAL… if you get this email DO NOT give out any information!!!!Forward it imediately w/ full header to support@paypal.com
*******************************************************************************************************
Security Center Advisory!
We recently noticed one or more attempts to log in to your PayPal account from a foreign IP address
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November 30, 2005 at 11:08 am #3127484
BEWARE !! PayPal PHISHING scam.
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 3 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
A phishing scam out there imitating PAYPAL… if you get this email DO NOT give out any information!!!!Forward it imediately w/ full header to support@paypal.com
*******************************************************************************************************
Security Center Advisory!
We recently noticed one or more attempts to log in to your PayPal account from a foreign IP address
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November 30, 2005 at 11:08 am #3127483
Remotely Enable Remote Desktop.
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 3 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
Remote Desktop is a nice feature of Windows XP that lets you remotely log on to and work at a machine as if you were seated at the local console.This can be a lifesaver for fixing problems on machines at remote sites, but what if you forgot to enable the feature before you left the client site?
To remotely enable this feature:
- Run REGEDIT on your XP workstation or on your Windows 2000/2003 Server.
- Click on File, then choose “Connect Network Registry”.
- In the Select Computer search box type the computer name in the dialog box.
- In the remote machine’s registry browse to the following key: “HKLM\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Control\Terminal Server”
- Under the Terminal Server key find the value named fDenyTSConnection (REG_DWORD). Change the value data from 1 (Remote Desktop disabled) to 0 (Remote Desktop enabled).
- Close Regedit.
- Reboot the remote machine for the change to take effect. Do this by opening a command prompt and typing the following command: Shutdown -m \\{machinename} -r
- After the remote machine reboots, Remote Desktop will be enabled on it.
- Test this from your workstation, open Start -> All Programs -> Accessories -> Communications -> Remote Desktop Connection.
- You can also type mstsc in the Run command.
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December 1, 2005 at 9:47 am #3128933
Remotely Enable Remote Desktop.
by straylor · about 18 years, 3 months ago
In reply to Remotely Enable Remote Desktop.
This, I believe, will only work on a Microsoft network,and only if you have Admin rights. Otherwise anyone sniffing for Comp name can get on any machine…….
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December 1, 2005 at 10:29 am #3128884
Remotely Enable Remote Desktop.
by straylor · about 18 years, 3 months ago
In reply to Remotely Enable Remote Desktop.
This, I believe, will only work on a Microsoft network,and only if you have Admin rights. Otherwise anyone sniffing for Comp name can get on any machine…….
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December 2, 2005 at 8:12 am #3129161
What is a Windows Profile?
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 3 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
A Windows profile consists of customized settings for an individual user:
- Background colors
- Screen saver
- Desktop shortcuts
- Recently used document links
- Software settings (Internet Explorer, MS Office, etc.)
- Start menu locations
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Desktop settings – screen colors, wallpaper, screen saver -
Persistent network and printer connections
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Mouse settings and cursor settings
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Recently edited documents.
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Start-up programs, shortcuts, and personal groups
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Settings for Windows applications – Notepad, Paint, Windows Explorer, Calculator, Clock, and more. -
Start menu settings – Programs that can be selected from the start menu.
———————————————————————————————
The user profile settings are saved on disk. They are loaded when the user logs on:
- Local profile – Stored in the C:\Documents and Settings\username folder. The profiles file is NTUSER.DAT in the directory called by the user’s name.
- A mandatory profile which discards any changes the user makes to their profile at logoff time, can be implemented by modifying the name of the user profile file from NTUSER.DAT to NTUSER.MAN.
- The ntuser.ini file is used to set up the user roaming profile components that are not copied to the server.
- The ntuser.dat.LOG file is used for NTUSER.DAT file recovery in the case of an error.
- Additional folders in the C:\Documents and Settings\username folder are:
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Application Data – Refers to data used by application programs that the user may modify when they change a setting in the application. -
Cookies
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Desktop – Refers to desktop and briefcase shortcuts. -
Favorites – Application favorites such as web site favorites on IE and favorite programs. -
Local Settings – Settings used by common applications such as IE. -
My Documents
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NetHood – Network servers or shared network folder shortcuts. -
PrintHood
– Network printers. -
Recent – Shortcuts to documents recently used. -
SendTo
– Shortcuts to places where files are copied. -
Start Menu – The user’s start menu and shortcuts. -
Templates – Application templates.
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December 2, 2005 at 12:18 pm #3127054
Random XP Tweaks.
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 3 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
Run command prompt utilities as a shortcut. Have you ever tried to create a shortcut to ‘NETSTAT’ or any of the other useful command prompt utilities; but the command prompt window with your data opens and closes in a flash. Here’s a tip that will allow you to create working shortcuts on your desktop for any command. We will use the NETSTAT utility as an example: Right click an empty area of -
December 5, 2005 at 12:17 pm #3128134
Troubleshooting RDP Client Connection Problems
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 3 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
Microsoft’s “Remote Desktop Connection” is a great little utility, but as everyone knows it will crap out on you some reason. Below is an article straight from MS that outlines some of the reasons, and “solutions” to get Remote Desktop back up and running.
SUMMARY This article summarizes the various causes for Terminal Server Client connection failures. MORE INFORMATION The Terminal Server Client -
December 6, 2005 at 8:45 am #3126760
Computer warnings
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 3 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
I had Google Desktop Search on my home PC, and it works great, but as per the article, it is not really a good idea on machins with a lot of users.Computer warnings: “Google Desktop Search, e-mail frauds prompt warnings
Information Technology Services (ITS) is issuing security advisories warning about a new Google search and about bogus e-mails claiming to be from reputable financial -
December 7, 2005 at 5:13 pm #3130098
nLite
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 3 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
What a great utility… I just got my hands on it a couple of days ago, and it seems GREAT !!!! I am attempting to use it to create a “build” CD for my job, and a “build” CD for personal clients.************************************************************************************
nLite – Windows Installation Customizer
Have you ever wanted to remove some Windows components like Media Player, -
December 9, 2005 at 11:39 am #3130162
How to remove Windows XP Service Pack 2 from your computer
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 3 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
Service Pack 2 has been out for a while, but that doesn’t mean that it’s perfect. If you ever need to uninstall SP2, heres how. -
December 9, 2005 at 11:39 am #3130163
Want to preview your edited WINNTBBU.DLL file?
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 3 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
For those of us that edit the WINNTBBU.DLL file to change the Windows setup billboard screens, this utility created by JCARLE
to preview your work.As an FYI –
ALL UTILITIES REQUIRE THE MICROSOFT .NET FRAMEWORK TO BE INSTALLED
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December 9, 2005 at 11:39 am #3130161
Image file types
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 3 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
Found this great article on IMAGE FILE TYPES.. more than anything else, it educated me on the differences in the file types.Image File Guide
I get questions about image formats all the time, so if you don’t know your JPEGs from your GIFs, this is for you. First, a little background on file compression. There are basically two ways of
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December 12, 2005 at 10:03 am #3197156
Windows OneCare Live – Overview
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 3 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
If this works half as well as MS claims, this can come in handy for people that have no clue/desire to upkeep their PC’s……Windows OneCare Live – Overview: “Windows OneCare Live
Are you tired of spending time trying to protect and maintain your computer? Are you worried that you?re still not doing everything you should to keep it safe and running at optimal performance? If your answer is -
December 15, 2005 at 12:02 pm #3126013
Some great tech support forums.
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 3 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
I am a member of all of these forums, and I have used them to solve some of the problems that I have come across at work, and for clients.Computer Repair ForumCyberTechHelpExtreme Tech SupportMCSEWorld forumsNeoWinVirtual DrWindows XP Technical Support for Home UsersThese forums are great, check’em out!
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December 19, 2005 at 6:15 am #3124144
2 free virus stoppers worth using
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 3 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
2 Free Virus Stoppers Worth Using……By Rob Pegoraro
The Washington Post
Getting a Web browser, e-mail program or photo organizer as free software on a computer is routine, but an anti-virus utility for Windows, the target of tens of thousands of viruses and worms? That seems the kind of thing for which you’d want to pay.
But you don’t have to. For several years, two Czech software
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December 20, 2005 at 9:53 am #3125036
Windows In Your Pocket
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 3 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
Windows In Your PocketIntroduction
All it takes is a minor error in the Windows Registry or a virus infection, and your operating system can become unbootable. But with a properly configured USB flash drive on hand, you’ll always have a compatible replacement no further away than your pocket or keychain. In addition, the flash drive can also provide a secure browser and virus scanner, and lets you take your favorite DVD burning and Office software with you wherever you may go.
**********************************************************************************
I have used Bart Pe for a long time now at work, but I have always used CD’s….. which of course can be a pain in the ass especially if you add new plugins, drivers, etc. Using a USB drive works out so much better. This is gonna save me some time and get me some recognition at work.
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December 28, 2005 at 1:54 pm #3083137
Computer “tune-ups”
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 2 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
Below is a list of what I do for clients as a computer “tune-up”. I usally charge about $100 to do the basics, but if more is found, I add $50/hour.=============================================================
Scandisk /fDefragUpdate and patch Windows/Office
Virus/spyware cleanUpdate/patch softwareSet firewallRan a complete set of HW diagnositcsClean up start-up (Registry, and Start -
January 3, 2006 at 11:59 am #3094500
Need To Remove Invalid Listings from Add/Remove Programs Applet.
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 2 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
Regsitry Method:
BACK UP YOUR REGISTRY FIRST !!!!!!!
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Select Start > Run
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In the Open: line type regedit and press Enter.
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Browse to HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Uninstall
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The Add/Remove Programs list is located in the list beneath the Uninstall folder.
- Locate the key for the program that has been uninstalled, right click the key and click Delete.
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BE VERY VERY VERY careful as to what you delete, there is no going back if you delete the wrong key !!!!!!!!
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January 3, 2006 at 11:59 am #3094499
TweakMP Powertoy for Windows XP
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 2 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
This XP plug-in brings useful Windows Media Player settings to the forefront. Use it to adjust queuing in the media library, automatically level the volume for burning CDs, and make the most of full screen animations…and more.
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January 4, 2006 at 10:09 am #3096113
Hide Users from the Welcome Screen (XP Home)
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 2 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
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Start/Run/Regedit
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Navigate to “HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows NT\CurrentVersion\Winlogon\SpecialAccounts\UserList”
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Add the username you wish to hide as a DWORD value. Set the value to 0 (zero). This will prevent the user from showing up on the Welcome screen. Press CTRL-ALT-DEL twice at the Welcome screen to get the classic logon, to be able to logon to the account you’ve hidden.
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Adding a username and setting the value to 1 will cause that user, such as Administrator, to show up on the Welcome screen as well.
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January 4, 2006 at 5:53 pm #3095952
Best way to scan for Spyware, etc, etc
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 2 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
I have found that when scanning for SPYWARE, etc., etc. I have usually booted the machine up in safe mode, and then run the scan. Recently at work I have been putting the path to the executable (Spybot, Adaware, MS Antispyware) into the RUNONCE key in the registry.HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\RunOnce
In doing this the application will run before EXPLORER.exe and anything else in the STARTUP, or even in the RUN key will execute.
The applications will not get a nice clean sweep of the machine….
works great !!!!
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January 6, 2006 at 12:55 pm #3096481
Building a new Remote Access Server at work.
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 2 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
This will be my first server build… kinda exciting…Compaq Proliant series server with Server 2K3 SP1, I have to install the RSA ACE/Agent for Windows, install the Digicard…
I am breaking my server building cherry !!!!
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January 10, 2006 at 12:43 pm #3078869
Create an e-annoyance, go to jail | Perspectives | CNET News.com
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 2 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
All I have to say is HA HA HA HA, LOL LOL LOL, This has to be the biggest pile o’shit I have heard in a while. Is this all about not wanting to hurt someone’s feelings???Create an e-annoyance, go to jail | Perspectives | CNET News.com: “Perspective: Create an e-annoyance, go to jail
By Declan McCullaghPublished: January 9, 2006, 4:00 AM PST “
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January 10, 2006 at 12:43 pm #3078870
How to Install Active Directory on Windows 2003
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 2 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
I just got another old computer a client did not want (PII, Dell GX1, 384Mb RAM), good enough for my home domain that I want to build. This article really seems like it is going to help me through.How to Install Active Directory on Windows 2003: “How do I install Active Directory on my Windows Server 2003 server?
First make sure you read and understand Active Directory Installation Requirements. If you don’t comply with all the requirements of that article you will not be able to set up your AD (for example: you don’t have a NIC or you’re using a computer that’s not connected to a LAN).”
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January 10, 2006 at 12:43 pm #3078868
3G wireless speeds fail to match claims – Computerworld
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 2 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
I am not really to surprised at this… hopefully the speed will catch up to the claim…3G wireless speeds fail to match claims – Computerworld: “3G wireless speeds fail to match claims
News Story by Bob Brewin
APRIL 09, 2001 (COMPUTERWORLD) – Don’t count on actually obtaining the maximum advertised speed from much-ballyhooed advanced mobile wireless networks when they’re rolled out later this year.”
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January 10, 2006 at 4:34 pm #3078778
Hot Product News
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 2 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
I don’t game on the computer, but this mouse sounds like it was designed with you guys in mind!!!!Hot Product News: “The Fatal1ty 2020 Mouse
Ultra High Performance Mouse Sets New Standard with 2400cpi Laser EngineCreative Introduced The Fatal1ty 2020 Mouse – The Gaming Mouse Co-Developed For Competitive Gaming With Cyberathlete Professional League Champion Johnathan ‘Fatal1ty’ Wendel”
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January 10, 2006 at 4:34 pm #3078777
Some Handy Keyboard Shortcuts
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 2 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
These can come in handy.. i use most of these at work.PC911 – Friendly Computer Help In Plain English: “Handy Keyboard Shortcuts
Windows offers a lot of useful and convenient keyboard shortcuts. If your keyboard has a Windows key, there are even more.
Windows key + R Run
Windows key + M Minimize All
Windows key + Shift+M Undo Minimize All
Windows key + F1 Windows Help
Windows key + E Explorer
Windows key + F Find Folder or Files
Windows key + Tab Cycle through Taskbar Buttons
Windows key + Pause/Break System Properties
Ctrl+X Cut selected item
Ctrl+C Copy selected item
Ctrl+V Paste
Ctrl+Z Undo the last operation
Shift+F10 Pops up the shortcut menu, just like right-clicking
Ctrl+Esc Pops up the Start Menu
Ctrl+A Select all items
Ctrl+F Find
Alt+Tab Switch between applications
Alt+Tab+Shift Switch backward between applications
Alt+Esc Switch open windows
Alt+Enter Open properties for selected item
Shift+Delete Delete selected item without placing it in the Recycle Bin
F1 View Help for a selected dialog box
F2 Rename the selected item
F3 Opens the Find Command in your current folder
F4 Drop the ‘folder selection menu’ in Explorer
F5 Refreshes the contents of the current folder
Alt+F4 Quit a program
Backspace Go up one directory (Explorer), go to previous page (Internet Explorer)”
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January 18, 2006 at 1:20 pm #3098303
How to troubleshoot home networking in Windows XP
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 2 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
Microsoft’s troubleshooting tips for home networking.How to troubleshoot home networking in Windows XP: “How to troubleshoot home networking in Windows XP”
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January 18, 2006 at 1:20 pm #3098302
How to Troubleshoot Issues with Reading CD, CD-R, CD-RW, and DVD Discs
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 2 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
Having problems with your CD, DVD ??? check this out …How to Troubleshoot Issues with Reading CD, CD-R, CD-RW, and DVD Discs: “How to Troubleshoot Issues with Reading CD, CD-R, CD-RW, and DVD Discs”
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January 21, 2006 at 1:15 pm #3098810
IPCONFIG – IP configuration
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 2 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
ipconfig – IP configuration: “IPCONFIGIP Configuration:
Syntax
IPCONFIG /all – Display full configuration information.
IPCONFIG /release [adapter] – Release the IP address for the specified adapter.
IPCONFIG /renew [adapter] – Renew the IP address for the specified adapter.
IPCONFIG /flushdns – Purge the DNS Resolver cache.
IPCONFIG /registerdns – Refresh all DHCP leases and re-register DNS names.
IPCONFIG /displaydns – Display the contents of the DNS Resolver Cache.
IPCONFIG /showclassid adapter – Display all the DHCP class IDs allowed for adapter.
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January 26, 2006 at 7:59 am #3109775
Desktop Pipeline | New Kama Sutra Worms Corrupts Microsoft Documents
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 1 month ago
In reply to IT Help Support
This one sounds like a pain in the ass…..Desktop Pipeline | New Kama Sutra Worms Corrupts Microsoft Documents: “January 20, 2006
New Kama Sutra Worms Corrupts Microsoft Documents
A new worm that already accounts for 1 in every 15 pieces of malicious code corrupts data files created by several productivity apps.
By Gregg Keizer”
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January 26, 2006 at 12:01 pm #3094191
A Techie’s Trusty Seven
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 1 month ago
In reply to IT Help Support
Gonna have to try some of these.A Techie’s Trusty Seven: “A Techie’s Trusty Seven
January 25, 2006
By Sonny DisciniOver the years, I?ve found myself on the front lines of incident response, attack detection, bot enumeration and various other adventures in network security. Along the way, there have been times where various types of information or functionality were needed immediately. Through the pains of learning what works when you?re in a pinch, I bring you the list of six tools, plus one, that every security practitioner should have.”
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January 26, 2006 at 4:23 pm #3094045
Technology Glossary.
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 1 month ago
In reply to IT Help Support
10BaseT The most common network cabling method for Ethernet, which handles traffic at a speed of 10Mbps. 10BaseT uses a pair of unshielded twisted conductors to connect between a network interface card (NIC) and an Ethernet hub. 10Base2 (thin Ethernet, or thinnet) uses coaxial cable connections between computers and doesn’t require a hub. 100BaseT is a newer medium that supports up to 100Mbps. See Ethernet, hub, and NIC.accelerator key A key combination that provides access to a menu choice, macro, or other function of the application instead of selection with the mouse, usually combining Alt+key. Sometimes called a shortcut key, but shortcut keys usually consist of Ctrl+key combinations.
Access Control List (ACL) Part of Windows NT’s security description that controls access to a Windows NT object, such as a file. The owner of an object can change access control entries in the list to grant or revoke permissions (access rights) for the object.
access token A Windows NT object that identifies a logged-on (authenticated) user. The access token contains the user’s security ID (SID), the groups to which the user belongs, and other security information. See SID.
activation An ActiveX and OLE term meaning to place an object in a running state, which includes binding the object, or to invoke a method of the object. See also binding.
active In Windows, the currently running application or the window to which user input is directed; the window with the focus. See also focus.
ActiveX A family of Microsoft object technologies, formerly called OLE, based on the Common Object Model (COM), serving as one of the foundation of Microsoft’s Internet products. See COM and DCOM.
ActiveX control An insertable COM object (component) that usually provides user interface components and can fire events. ActiveX controls are lightweight versions of OLE Controls (.OCXs)
address The numerical value, usually in hexadecimal format, of a particular location in your computer’s RAM.
address space Memory allocated to an application by the operating system. See virtual address space.
aggregate object An ActiveX and OLE term that refers to an object class that contains one or more member objects of another class.
alert In Windows NT, a message sent between two simultaneously executing threads that results in an asynchronous procedure call (APC) executed by the receiving thread. Also means a message indicating abnormal operation of a Windows NT process.
ANSI An abbreviation for the American National Standards Institute. In the Windows context, ANSI refers to the ANSI character set. Windows 95 and Windows NT include both ANSI (suffix A) and Unicode (suffix W) versions of Windows API functions. See ASCII and Unicode.
API An abbreviation for application program interface. Generically, a method by which a program can obtain access to or modify the operating system. See also DLL.
applet A Windows application that’s supplied as a component of another Windows application, rather than as a retail product. The Notepad and Wordpad applications supplied with Windows NT are examples of applets.
application The software product that results from the creation of a program, often used as a synonym for the programming (source) code that creates it. Applications are distinguished by the environment for which they’re designed (for example, Windows, DOS, Macintosh, UNIX) and their purpose. Windows applications carry the executable file extension, .EXE.
application Close button The small, square button with an [ts] caption at the extreme right of the title bar of an application running in Windows NT and Windows 95. Clicking the application Close button closes the running application.
application Control-menu box The small, square button with a miniature application icon at the extreme left of the title bar of an application window. Clicking the application Control-menu box displays the application Control menu. Double-clicking the application Control-menu box closes the application.
ASCII Abbreviation for American Standard Code for Information Interchange. A set of standard numerical values for printable, control, and special characters used by PCs and most other computers. Other commonly used codes for character sets are ANSI (used by Windows 3.1+), Unicode (used by Windows 95 and Windows NT), and EBCDIC (Extended Binary-Coded Decimal Interchange Code, used by IBM for mainframe computers). See Unicode.
asymmetric multiprocessing A multiprocessing technique in which individual processors are dedicated to particular tasks, such as running the operating system or performing user requests. See SMP.
asynchronous A process that can occur at any time, regardless of the status of the operating system or applications that are running. An example is Windows NT’s asynchronous procedure call (APC).
asynchronous I/O Input/output operations in which an application issues an I/O request to a device, and then continues operation while the device transfers data. Asynchronous I/O greatly speeds fixed-disk file operations. See synchronous I/O.
auditing Windows NT’s capability to record and report security-related events, such as accessing, creating, or deleting files.
authentication The process of verifying (validating) a user’s logon ID and password, usually used to provide access to network resources.
Automation An ActiveX (OLE) term that refers to a means of manipulating another application’s objects by the use of a programming language, most commonly Visual Basic for Applications (VBA).
Automation controller An ActiveX-compliant Windows application with an application programming (macro) language, such as VBA, that can reference and manipulate objects exposed by ActiveX components and Automation servers. Automation controller replaces the term OLE Automation client.
Automation server Technically, any OLE 2-compliant Windows application that supports OLE Automation operations by exposing a set of objects for manipulation by OLE Automation client applications. In ActiveX terminology, ActiveX components are Automation servers.
autoplay A feature of Windows 95’s and Windows NT 4.0’s CD-ROM file system (CDFS) that automatically executes a program on the CD-ROM when inserted into the CD-ROM drive.
back up To create a file (backup file) that duplicates data stored in one or more files on a client or server computer.
background In multitasking computer operations, a running application or process that isn’t visible on-screen and isn’t receiving user-generated input.
batch A group of statements processed as an entity. Execution of DOS batch files (such as AUTOEXEC.BAT) and SQL statements are examples of a batch process.
BDC An abbreviation for Backup Domain Controller, a Windows NT server that provides an alternative source of authentication for network users. Account and group information from a Primary Domain Controller (PDC) is replicated periodically to each BDC in the domain. See PDC.
binary file A file whose content doesn’t consist of lines of text. Executable (.EXE), dynamic link library (.DLL), and most database files are stored in binary format.
binding In ActiveX and OLE, a term for the act of connecting a component (server object) to a controller (OLE client).
bit The smallest piece of information processed by a computer. A bit, derived from the contraction of BInary digiT (or Binary digIT) has two states-on (1) or off (0). Eight bits make up a byte; 16 bits combined is called a word.
bitmap The representation of a screen or printed image, usually graphic, as a series of bytes.
bitwise A process that evaluates each bit of a combination, such as a byte or word, rather than process the combination as a single element. Logical operations and masks use bitwise procedures.
blitting The process of using the BitBlt() function of Windows’ Gdi32.exe to modify a bitmap using bit block transfer.
Boolean A type of arithmetic in which all digits are bits-that is, the numbers may have only two states: on (true or 1) or off (false or 0). Widely used in set theory and computer programming, Boolean, named after mathematician George Boole, also is used to describe a data type that may have only two states: true or false.
break To cause an interruption in program operation. Ctrl+C is the standard DOS break-key combination but seldom halts operation of a Windows application. Esc is more commonly used in Windows to cause an operation to terminate before completion.
BRI An abbreviation for Basic Rate Interface, the standard ISDN service for business and residential Internet connections. BRI has two 56kbps B (bearer) channels and one 16kbps D (data) channel, providing a maximum bandwidth of 112kbps. See ISDN and PRI.
bridge An active network device used to divide a network into mutually isolated segments while maintaining the whole as a single network. Bridges operate at the data-link layer of the OSI Reference Model. See OSI.
buffer An area in memory of a designated size (number of bytes or characters) reserved, typically, to hold a portion of a file or the value of a variable.
business rules A set of rules for entering data in a database that are specific to an enterprise’s methods of conducting its operations. Business rules are in addition to rules for maintaining the domain and referential integrity of tables in a database. Business rules most commonly are implemented in a three-tier client/server database environment. See three-tier.
cache A block of memory reserved for temporary storage. Caches usually store data from disk files in memory to make access to the data faster. By default, Windows NT caches all disk read and write operations.
cache manager A component of Windows NT’s I/O system that uses the virtual memory (VM) manager to create temporary storage in the paging file to speed disk I/O operations. See VM.
caret The term used by Windows to indicate the cursor used when editing a text field, usually shaped as an I-beam. The caret, also called the insertion point, can be positioned independently of the mouse pointer.
CDFS The 32-bit CD-ROM file system shared by Windows NT and Windows 95.
channel A dedicated communication connection between a transmitting and receiving device. Channel is also used to identify an I/O port in mini- and mainframe computers.
CISC Complex instruction set computer, a microprocessor whose internal instructions often involve many individual execution steps and thus many clock cycles. The Intel 80×86 processors are the most common CISC devices. See RISC.
class identifier See CLSID.
client The device or application that receives data from or manipulates a server device or application. The data may be in the form of a file received from a network file server, or an object created from an ActiveX component or OLE server. See Automation controller.
CLSID An identification tag that’s associated with an ActiveX or OLE 2.0 object created by a specific component or server. CLSID values appear in the Registry and must be unique for each type of object that the server can create. See Registry.
clustering A server architecture that emulates multiprocessing by interconnecting two or more individual computers in order to share the application processing load. Microsoft’s future clustering technology for Windows NT now carries the code name Wolfpack. A number of third parties offer proprietary clustering hardware and software for Windows NT Server 4.0.
collection A group of objects of the same class that are contained within another object. Collections are named as the plural of their object class.
COM An acronym for Component Object Model, the name of Microsoft’s design strategy to implement OLE 2+ and ActiveX. Distributed COM (DCOM) allows networked and cross-platform implementation of ActiveX and OLE 2+ operations and Automation. See Automation and DCOM.
common dialogs A standardized set of dialog boxes common to Windows 95 and Windows NT 4.0. Common dialogs include File Open, File Save, Print, and Printer Setup.
Component Object Model See COM.
compound document A document that contains OLE objects created by an application other than the application that originally created or is managing the document.
concurrency The condition when more than one user has access to a specific set of records or files at the same time. Concurrency is also used to describe a database management system’s capability to handle simultaneous queries against a single set of tables.
concurrent application An application capable of simultaneous execution in multiple address spaces. Windows NT uses threads of execution to support concurrent applications.
console A character-based interface to an operating system. Windows NT uses the Command Prompt tool as the console.
container An object or application that can create or manipulate compound documents. For example, Internet Explorer is a container for ActiveX objects.
context switching The process of saving an executing thread or process and transferring control to another thread or process. Windows NT 4.0’s context switching, one of the major bottlenecks in COM operations, is substantially faster than in Window NT 3.x.
control A synonym for a visible dialog or window object, such as include labels, text boxes, lists, combo lists, option buttons, and command buttons.
Control-menu box See application Control-menu box and document Control-menu box.
control object In Windows NT, objects that control system tasks, such as asynchronous and deferred procedure calls.
custom control A control object not native to the application, such as an ActiveX control or a Visual Basic Extension control (VBX).
data definition The process of describing databases and database objects such as tables, indexes, views, procedures, rules, default values, triggers, and other characteristics.
data dictionary The result of the data definition process. Also used to describe a set of database system tables that contain the data definitions of database objects.
data integrity The maintenance of rules that prevent inadvertent or intentional modifications to the content of a database that would be deleterious to its accuracy or reliability. See domain integrity and referential integrity.
database A set of related data tables and other database objects, such as a data dictionary, which are organized as a group.
database administrator The individual responsible for the administrative functions of client-server databases. The database administrator (DBA) has privileges (permissions) for all commands that may be executed by the RDBMS and is ordinarily responsible for maintaining system security, including access by users to the RDBMS itself and performing backup and restoration functions.
database device A file in which databases and related information, such as transaction logs, are stored. Database devices usually have physical names, such as a file name (Master.dat), and a logical name, such as master.
database owner The user who originally created a database. The database owner has control over all the objects in the database but may delegate control to other users. The database owner is identified by the prefix dbo in SQL Server.
DCOM An acronym for Distributed Common Object Model that allows communication and manipulation of objects over a network connection. Windows NT 4.0 is the first Microsoft operating system to support DCOM (formerly called NetworkOLE). See COM.
DDE An abbreviation for dynamic data exchange, an early Interprocess Communication (IPC) method used by Windows and OS/2 to transfer data between different applications. Automation (formerly OLE Automation) provides a more robust IPC method.
deadlock A condition that occurs when two users with a lock on one data item attempt to lock the other’s data item. Most RDBMSs detect this condition, prevent its occurrence, and advise both users of the deadlock situation.
default A value assigned or an option chosen when no value is specified by the user or assigned by a program statement.
demand lock Precludes more shared locks from being set on a data resource. Successive requests for shared locks must wait for the demand lock to be cleared.
device A computer system component that can send or receive data, such as a keyboard, display, printer, disk drive, or modem. Windows NT uses device drivers to create device objects that connect applications to devices.
DHCP Abbreviation for Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol, an Internet standard protocol that allows IP addresses to be pooled and assigned as needed to clients. Windows NT 4.0 includes DHCP Manager, a graphical DHCP configuration tool. See IP and IP address.
dialog A popup modal child window, also called a dialog box, that requests information from the user. Dialogs include message boxes, input boxes, and user-defined dialogs for activities such as choosing files to open.
DIB An acronym for device-independent bitmap, a Windows-specific bitmap format designed to display graphic information. DIB files take the extension .DIB and use a format similar to the .BMP format.
directory list An element of a file-selection dialog that selectively lists the subfolders of the designated folder of a specified logical drive.
dispatcher A Windows NT operating system component that schedules the execution of application threads.
distributed database A database, usually of the client/server type, that’s located on more than one database server, often at widely separated locations. Synchronization of data contained in distributed databases is most commonly accomplished by the two-phase commit or replication methods. See replication and two-phase commit.
disk mirroring Creating on two or more physical disk drives exact duplicates of a disk volume to make files accessible in case of failure of one drive of the mirror set. See RAID.
disk striping Distributing the data for a single logical disk volume across two or more physical disk drives. Simple disk striping (RAID 0) provides faster I/O operation. Disk striping with parity (RAID 5) provides faster I/O and protection from failure of a physical disk in a stripe set. See RAID.
DLC An abbreviation for Data Link Control, a Windows NT protocol used to communicate with mainframes and networked laser printers.
DLL An abbreviation for dynamic link library, a file containing a collection of Windows functions designed to perform a specific class of operations. Most DLLs carry the .DLL extension, but some Windows DLLs, such as Gdi32.exe, use the .EXE extension. Functions within DLLs are called (invoked) by applications as necessary to perform the desired operation.
document A programming object containing information that originates with the user of the application, rather than created by the application itself. The data for documents usually is stored in disk files.
document Control-menu box The small, square button at the upper left of the menu bar of an application that uses the multiple document interface (MDI). Clicking the document Control-menu box displays the document Control menu. Double-clicking the document Control-menu box closes the document (but not the application).
domain In Windows NT, a group of workstations and servers that share a common Security Accounts Manager (SAM) database and allow a user to log on to any resource in the domain with a single user ID and password.
domain integrity The process of assuring that values added to fields of a table comply with a set of rules for reasonableness and other constraints. See business rules and three-tier.
dynamic data exchange See DDE.
dynamic link library See DLL.
environment A combination of the computer hardware, operating system, and user interface. A complete statement of an environment follows: a Pentium PCI-bus computer with 64M of RAM, a Wide and Fast SCSI host adapter, SVGA display adapter, sound card, and two-button mouse, using the Windows NT Server 4.0 operating system.
environmental subsystem In Windows NT, the four sets of APIs that support Win32, MS-DOS, POSIX, and OS/2 applications.
Ethernet A networking medium that was developed at the Xerox Palo Alto Research Center (PARC) in the 1970s; was improved by Xerox, Intel, and Digital; and is now the most popular cabling method for LANs. The IEEE 802.3 specification for Ethernet is the most common implementation.
event Most commonly, the occurrence of an action taken by the user, such as right-clicking the mouse, that’s recognized by the operating system and passed to the foreground application. Windows NT and its server applications generate events, such as problem reports, without user intervention.
event-driven The property of an operating system or environment, such as Windows, that implies the existence of an idle loop. When an event occurs, the idle loop is exited and event-handler code, specific to the event, is executed. After the event handler has completed its operation, execution returns to the idle loop, awaiting the next event.
exception An error, such as division by zero, detected by hardware or by the operating system. Fatal exceptions halt execution of an application and, in a few circumstances, kill the operating system.
executable Code, usually in the form of a disk file, that can be run by the operating system in use to perform a particular set of functions. Executable files in Windows carry the extension .EXE and may obtain assistance from dynamic link libraries (DLLs) in performing their tasks.
executive In Windows NT, the components of the operating system that run in the kernel (ring 0) and handle interprocess communication, interrupt requests, and object security. Graphics operations have been moved from user mode to kernel mode in Windows NT 4.0 to speed performance. See kernel mode and user mode.
failover A fault-tolerant clustering architecture in which two servers share a common set of fault-tolerant fixed disk drives. In the event of failure of one of the servers, the other transparently assumes all server processing operations. See clustering and fault tolerance.
FAT An acronym for file allocation table, the disk file system used by MS-DOS, Windows 95, and (optionally) Windows NT. Windows NT is compatible with the 16-bit FAT system, but not the optional 32-bit FAT (FAT32) for Windows 95 that Microsoft announced in mid-1996. See HPFS and NTFS.
fault tolerance A computer system’s capability to maintain operability, despite failure of a major hardware component such as a power supply, microprocessor, or fixed-disk drive. Fault tolerance requires redundant hardware and modifications to the operating system. Windows NT Server includes fault tolerance for a failed disk drive by disk mirroring (RAID 1) or disk striping with parity (RAID 5). Clustering provides fault tolerance for individual computers. See clustering and RAID.
fiber A lightweight thread, introduced in Windows NT 4.0, that makes it easier for developers to optimize scheduling within multithreaded applications. See thread.
focus A Windows term indicating the currently selected application, or one of its windows, to which all user-generated input (keyboard and mouse operations) is directed. The title bar of a window with the focus is colored blue for the default Windows color scheme.
foreground In multitasking operations, the application or procedure that’s visible and to which user-generated input is directed. In Windows, the application that has the focus is in the foreground.
front end When used with database management systems, an application, a window, or a set of windows by which the user may access and view database records, as well as add to or edit them.
function A subprogram called from within an expression in which a value is computed and returned to the program that called it through its name. Functions are classified as internal to the application language when their names are keywords.
gateway A hardware device or software program used to translate between incompatible protocols. A gateway can function at any one layer of the OSI Reference Model or at several layers simultaneously. For example, a gateway is used to translate between mail systems, such as SNMP and MHS. (Internet terminology uses the term gateway in place of router.)
global Pertaining to an entire entity, such as a Windows NT domain or a collection of trusted/trusting domains. Windows NT distinguishes global groups from local groups; local groups have permissions only for objects on the server in which the local group exists.
group A collection of network or database users with common permissions for particular objects, such as shared files or database tables. See also permissions.
HAL An acronym for hardware abstraction layer, a Windows NT DLL that links specific computer hardware implementations with the Windows NT kernel. Windows NT 4.0 includes HALs for 80×86, Alpha, MIPS, and PowerPC hardware platforms.
handle An unsigned long (32-bit) integer assigned by Windows NT or Windows 95 to uniquely identify an instance (occurrence) of an object, such as a file or a window.
host Any computer on a network using the Internet Protocol (IP). See IP and IP address.
HPFS An abbreviation for the High-Performance File System used by OS/2 and (optionally) Windows NT 3.x. Windows NT 4.0 doesn’t support HPFS but can connect via a network to files on HPFS volumes of Windows NT 3.x PCs.
HTML An abbreviation for HyperText Markup Language, a variant of SGML (Standardized General Markup Language), a page-description language for creating files that can be formatted and displayed by World Wide Web browsers.
hub A concentrator that joins multiple clients by means of a single link to the rest of the LAN. A hub has several ports to which clients are connected directly, and one or more ports that can be used to connect the hub to the backbone or to other active network components. A hub functions as a multiport repeater; signals received on any port are immediately retransmitted to all other ports of the hub. Hubs function at the physical layer of the OSI Reference Model.
icon A 32-by-32-pixel graphic image used to identify the application in the Explorer window and in other locations in the application chosen by the programmer (such as the Help About dialog). Windows NT 4.0 and Windows 95 also use 16-by-16-pixel small icons to identify the application in the title bar and elsewhere where small icons are specified.
idle In Windows, the condition or state in which both Windows and the application have processed all pending messages in the queue from user- or hardware-initiated events and is waiting for the next event to occur. In Windows NT multiprocessing, one idle thread exists for each processor.
impersonation In Windows NT, the capability of a thread in one process to assume the security identity of another process. Impersonation is employed by a named pipe to acquire and use the security ID of the service requester.
index For arrays and collections, the position of the particular element with respect to others, usually beginning with 0 (arrays) or 1 (collections) as the first element. When used with database files or tables, index refers to a lookup table, usually in the form of a file or component of a file, that relates the value of a field in the indexed file to its record or page number and location in the page (if pages are used).
initialize In programming, setting all variables to their default values and resetting the point of execution to the first executable line of code.
in-place activation The capability to activate an object (launch another application) and have the container application take on the capabilities of the other application. The primary feature of in-place activation (also called in-situ activation) is that the other application’s menu choices merge with or replace the container application’s menu choices in the active window.
in-process A term applied to Automation servers, also called Automation DLLs, that operate within the same process space (memory allocation) of the Automation controller manipulating the server. In-process servers commonly are called InProc servers. See out-of-process.
installable file system In Windows NT, the capability to load a file system (such as NTFS, CDFS, FAT, or HPFS) dynamically, depending on the format of the file to be opened.
instance A term used by Windows to describe the temporal existence of a loaded application or one or more of its windows.
instantiate The process of creating an instance of an object in memory.
interface A noun describing a connection between two dissimilar devices or COM objects, such as Automation clients and servers. A common phrase is user interface, meaning the “connection” between the display-keyboard combination and the user. Use of interface as a verb is jargon.
interrupt An asynchronous message, usually issued by an I/O device, requesting the service of an operating system’s or device driver’s interrupt handler.
intranet A private network that uses Internet protocols and common Internet applications (such as Web browsers) to emulate the public Internet. Intranets on LANs and high-speed WANs provide increased privacy and improved performance compared with today’s Internet.
invocation path The route through which an object or routine is invoked. If the routine is deeply nested, the path may be quite circuitous.
invoke To cause execution of a block of code, particularly a procedure or subprocedure. Invoke also is used to indicate application of a method to an object.
I/O manager A component of the Windows NT executive that handles all input/output (I/O) requests.
IP An abbreviation for Internet Protocol, the basic network transmission protocol of the Internet.
IP address The 32-bit hexadecimal address of a host, gateway, or router on an IP network. For convenience, IP addresses are specified as the decimal value of the four address bytes, separated by periods, as in 124.33.15.1. Addresses are classified as types A, B, and C, depending on the subnet mask applied. See subnet mask.
IPX/SPX Abbreviation for Internetwork Packet Exchange/Sequenced Packet Exchange, the transport protocol of Novell NetWare, supported by Windows NT’s NWLink service. See NWLink.
ISDN An abbreviation for Integrated Services Digital Network, a switched telephone service that provides mid-band digital communication capabilities used for Internet connections and for remote access to LANs, as well as voice communication. Windows NT 4.0 has built-in support for ISDN modems, more properly called network terminators. See BRI and PRI.
item The name given to one of the elements contained in a list box or drop-down list, or the list component of a combo box.
kernel mode The mode in which the Windows NT system runs, providing the operating system with access to system memory and other hardware devices.
key A collection of one or more Registry values (properties) that relate to a single object.
key or key field In relational database tables, a field that identifies a record by its value. Tables are usually indexed on key fields. For a field to be a key field, each data item in the field must possess a unique value.
LAN An acronym for local area network. A LAN is a system comprising multiple computers that are physically interconnected through network adapter cards and cabling.
launch To start a Windows application.
library A collection of functions, compiled as a group and accessible to applications by calling the function name, together with any required arguments. DLLs are one type of library; those used by compilers to provide built-in functions are another type.
linked object A source document in a compound document that’s included by reference to a file that contains the object’s data, rather than by embedding the source document in the compound document.
livelock A request for an exclusive lock on a file or data item that’s repeatedly denied because of shared locks imposed by other users.
local area network See LAN.
locale The environment for an operating system or application, usually based on a specific language or a dialect of a language. Windows NT uses the National Language Support (NLS) API to provide localization.
lock In databases, a restriction of access to a table, portion of a table, or data item imposed to maintain data integrity of a database. Locks may be shared (more than one user can access the locked element or elements) or exclusive (the user with the exclusive lock prevents other users from creating simultaneous shared or exclusive locks on the element or elements).
logical The manifestation of physical devices in software, including operating systems. For example, a logical disk drive may consist of a part of the space on a single disk drive or, using Windows NT’s capability of spanning drives, space on multiple disk drives.
logon The process by which Windows NT detects an attempt of a user to gain access to the operating system. Successful completion of the logon process authenticates the user.
LRPC An abbreviation for lightweight remote procedure call used for communication between ActiveX controllers (OLE clients) and ActiveX components (OLE servers) residing on a single computer. See remote procedure call (RPC).
MAC An acronym for Media Access Control, the globally unique hardware address of an Ethernet network interface card.
machine language Program code in the form of instructions that have meaning to and can be acted on by the computer hardware and operating system used. Object files compiled from source code are in machine language, as are executable files that consist of object files linked with library files. Windows NT is individually compiled for the machine language of each platform that uses a different processor.
map To translate a physical memory address to a virtual memory (VM) address, or vice versa. See VM.
MAPI Acronym for the Windows Messaging API originally created by Microsoft for use with Microsoft Mail, which implements Simple MAPI. Microsoft Exchange Client and Server implements MAPI 1.0 (also called Extended MAPI).
metafile A type of graphics file, used by Windows and other applications, that stores the objects displayed in the form of mathematical descriptions of lines and surfaces. Windows NT 4.0 supports enhanced metafiles (EMF) for improved printing performance.
method One of the characteristics of an object and a classification of keywords in VBA. Methods are the procedures that apply to an object. Methods that are applicable to a class of objects are inherited by other objects of the same class and may be modified to suit the requirements of the object.
MIB An acronym for Management Information Base, a set of attributes for active network components, including servers, used by SNMP. Windows NT provides MIBs for server shares, sessions, and users, plus DHCP and WINS data. See SNMP.
mini-server An applet with OLE server capabilities that you can’t run as a stand-alone application. Microsoft Graph is an example of a mini-server (despite the size of its executable file).
mirroring See disk mirroring.
MISF An abbreviation for Microsoft Internet Security Framework, a set of high-level security services that rely on CryptoAPI 2.0 functions to provide certificate- and password-based authentication. MISF also incorporates secure channel communication using SSL (Secure Sockets Layer) 2.0 and 3.0, plus PCT (Personal Communications Technology), SET (Secure Electronic Transactions) for credit-card purchases, and the Microsoft Certificate Server for issuing authentication certificates.
modal A dialog that must be closed before the user can take further action.
modeless A window or dialog that the user may close or minimize without taking any other action-the opposite of modal.
multiprocessing The capability of a computer with two or more CPUs to allocate tasks (threads) to a specific CPU. See SMP.
multitasking The capability of a computer with a single CPU to simulate the processing of more than one task at a time. Multitasking is effective when one (or more) of the applications spends most of its time in an idle state, waiting for a user-initiated event such as a keystroke or mouse click.
multithreaded An application that contains more than one thread of execution; a task or set of tasks that executes semi-independently of other task(s).
multiuser Concurrent use of a single computer by more than one user, usually through the use of remote terminals. UNIX is inherently a multiuser operating system. Multiuser is often used as a term to describe an application that allows multiple users to view and update a single shared file, such as a Microsoft Access .MDB file.
named pipes A method of interprocess communication, originally developed for OS/2, that provides a secure channel for network communication.
NBF An abbreviation for NetBEUI Frame, the transport packet structure used by NetBEUI.
NCBS An abbreviation for Network Control Block Session, a NetBIOS connection using the NetBEUI Frame protocol. Clients issue an NCB CALL and the destination server returns an NCB LISTEN to establish the session.
NDIS An acronym for Microsoft’s Network Driver Interface Specification for writing device drivers for network interface cards (NICs) that work with Windows 3.x, Windows 95, and Windows NT.
NetBEUI An acronym for NetBIOS Extended User Interface, the transport protocol of Microsoft Networking. NetBEUI isn’t a routable network, so its popularity is declining in comparison with TCP/IP.
NetBIOS An acronym for Network Basic Input/Output System, the original network API for MS-DOS and the foundation for NetBEUI.
NFS An abbreviation for Network File System, a file format and set of drivers created by Sun Microsystems Incorporated that allows DOS/Windows and UNIX applications to share files on disk drives running under UNIX. NFS relies on remote procedure calls (RPCs) for communication between clients and servers.
NIC An acronym for network interface card, a plug-in adapter card that provides the physical connection to the network. The most common NICs support 10BaseT network media; 100BaseT NICs, which are 10 times faster, are gaining acceptance in Windows NT networks.
NT An abbreviation for New Technology used by Windows NT. Windows NT is a registered trademark of Microsoft Corporation, so the full name of the operating system, Windows NT, is used in this book.
NTFS An abbreviation for New Technology File System, Windows NT’s replacement for the DOS FAT (File Allocation Table) and OS/2’s HPFS (High-Performance File System). NTFS offers many advantages over other file systems, including improved security and the ability to reconstruct files in the event of hardware failures. Windows 3.1+ and Windows 95 can access files stored on NTFS volumes via a network connection but can’t open NTFS files directly.
NWLink Microsoft’s implementation of the Novell NetWare IPX/SPX protocol for Windows NT Server and Workstation. See IPX/SPX.
object In programming, an element that combines data (properties) and behavior (methods) in a single container of code. Objects inherit their properties and methods from the classes above them in the hierarchy and can modify the properties and methods to suit their own purposes.
object code Code in machine-readable form that can be executed by your computer’s CPU and operating system, usually linked with libraries to create an executable file.
object library A file with the extension .OLB that contains information on the objects, properties, and methods exposed by an .EXE or .DLL file of the same file name that supports Automation.
object manager A Windows NT executive component that manages operating system resources. In Windows NT, all system resources are objects.
object permissions Permissions granted by the network administrator for users to access shared Windows NT objects. Object permissions also may be granted to users through group membership.
ODBC An abbreviation for the Microsoft Open Database Connectivity API, a set of functions that provide access to client-server RDBMSs, desktop database files, text files, and Excel worksheet files through ODBC drivers. Windows NT 4.0 and Windows 95 use 32-bit ODBC 2.5. ODBC most commonly is used to connect to client/server databases, such as Microsoft SQL Server.
OLE Automation See Automation.
OLE Control See ActiveX control.
OLE DLL A synonym for an in-process Automation server implemented as a Windows DLL. See in-process.
OpenDoc A standard proposed by Apple Computer, Borland International, Lotus Development, Novell, and other Microsoft competitors to supplant or replace COM, DCOM, and OLE.
option button A synonym for radio button, the original terminology in the CUA specification. Option buttons are circular control objects whose center is filled when selected. If grouped, only one option button of a group may be selected.
OSI Abbreviation for Open System Interconnection, the model for standard levels of networking functions and the services performed at each level. The seven-level OSI standard is defined by the International Standards Organization (ISO).
out-of-process An (OLE) Automation server in the form of an executable (.EXE) file that operates in its own process space (memory allocation) and uses LRPCs (lightweight remote procedure calls) to communicate with the Automation client. The term OutOfProc often is used as shorthand for out-of-process.
page A block of contiguous virtual memory (VM) addresses that Windows NT moves between physical RAM and a disk (paging) file as needed to support network operations and applications. Paging is used when physical RAM can’t store the required data. See VM.
page fault An event that occurs when a thread refers to an invalid (out-of-date) VM page. The VM manager must refresh the page from the page file. See VM.
paged pool System memory that can be paged to Windows NT’s Pagefile.sys paging file. The non-paged pool (approximately 4M for Windows NT 4.0) must reside in RAM and can’t be paged to disk.
parameter The equivalent of an argument but associated with the procedure that receives the value of an argument from the calling function. The terms parameter and argument, however, are often used interchangeably.
PDC An abbreviation for Primary Domain Controller, the Windows NT server in a domain that’s responsible for maintaining user and group accounts for a domain. Primary and Backup Domain Controllers authenticate domain users during the logon process. See BDC and logon.
permissions Authority given by the system administrator, database administrator, or database owner to perform operations over a network or on data objects in a database.
persistent object An object that’s stored in the form of a file or an element of a file, rather than only in memory.
port A connection to an external hardware device, such as a modem (serial port) or a printer (printer). In Windows NT, a communications channel object for local procedure calls.
PPP An abbreviation for Point-to-Point Protocol, the most common Internet protocol for connection to TCP/IP networks via conventional and ISDN modems. See SLIP.
PPTP An abbreviation for Point-to-Point Tunneling Protocol, a Microsoft-sponsored protocol, included with Windows NT 4.0, that uses encryption to assure privacy of communication over the Internet. See VPN.
preemptive multitasking The multitasking process used by Windows NT and Windows 95 in which the operating system assures that all active threads have the opportunity to execute. Preemptive multitasking prevents a single thread from monopolizing a processor.
PRI An abbreviation for Primary Rate Interface, an ISDN service for high-speed communication. PRI has 23 64kbps B (bearer) channels and one 64kbps D (data) channel, which may be used as independent channels or bonded to provide bandwidths higher than 64kbps. See ISDN and BRI.
primary key The column or columns of a table whose individual or combined values (in the case of a composite primary key) uniquely identify a row in a table.
property One of the two principal characteristics of objects (the other is methods). Properties define the manifestation of the object-for example, its appearance. Properties may be defined for an object or for the class of objects to which the particular object belongs, in which case they are said to be inherited.
property sheet A dialog used to set the value(s) of properties of an object, such as an ActiveX control or an operating system component. As an example, Control Panel’s Network tool is a property sheet. The tabbed elements of a property sheet are called property pages.
protected subsystem A process that operates in a block of virtual memory that’s not shared with other processes. Windows NT’s protected subsystems prevent an errant process from killing the entire operating system.
protocol A description of the method by which networked computers communicate. Windows NT allows the simultaneous use of multiple network protocols, including TCP/IP, NetBEUI, and IPX/SPX.
protocol stack Network protocol software that implements a specific protocol, such as TCP/IP.
query A request to retrieve data from a database with the SQL SELECT instruction or to manipulate data stored in tables.
RAID An acronym for redundant array of inexpensive disks, a method of connecting multiple disk drives to a single controller card to achieve faster data throughput, data storage redundancy for fault tolerance, or both. See disk mirroring, disk striping, and fault tolerance.
raising exceptions A process by which the operating system transfers control to a block of software (exception handler) when an error or unexpected condition occurs. Windows NT’s exception handler adds items to the event log.
RDBMS An abbreviation for relational database management system. An RDBMS is an application that can create, organize, and edit databases; display data through user-selected views; and, in some cases, print formatted reports.
record In database applications, a single element of a relational database table that contains each field defined for the table. A record is the logical equivalent of the row of a spreadsheet.
redirector Software that intercepts requests for remotely provided services, such as files in server shares, and sends the request to the appropriate computer on the network.
referential integrity Rules governing the relationships between primary keys and foreign keys of tables within a relational database that determine data consistency. Referential integrity requires that the value of every foreign key in every table be matched by the value of a primary key in another table.
Registry A database that contains information required for the operation of Windows NT and Windows 95, plus applications installed under Windows NT and Windows 95. The Windows Registry takes the place of Windows 3.1+’s REG.DAT, WIN.INI, and SYSTEM.INI files, plus PROFILE.INI files installed by Windows 3.1 applications. The Registry also includes user information, such as user IDs, encrypted passwords, and permissions. Windows NT and Windows 95 include RegEdit.exe for editing the Registry. The Windows NT and Windows 95 Registries differ in structure, and thus are incompatible.
relational database See RDBMS.
Remote Automation Object An out-of-process (OLE) Automation server, usually called an RAO, that resides on a server and is accessible to RAO-compliant applications that connect to the server. RAOs comprise the middle tier of three-tier client/server database applications. See business rules and three-tier.
remote procedure call (RPC) An interprocess communication method that allows an application to run specific parts of the application on more than one computer in a distributed computing environment. Windows NT 4.0’s DCOM uses RPCs for network communication between COM objects.
replication The process of duplicating server shares and database objects (usually tables) in more than one location, including a method of periodically rationalizing (synchronizing) updates to the objects. Database replication is an alternative to the two-phase commit process. Microsoft SQL Server 6+ supports replication of databases across multiple Windows NT servers. Updating Windows NT Backup Domain Controllers (BDCs) from a Primary Domain Controller (PDC) occurs by replication of the Security Accounts Manger (SAM) database.
RISC An acronym for Reduced Instruction Set Computer, a processor that uses a simplified set of internal operating instructions to speed execution. RISC processors supported by Windows NT 4.0 are Alpha, MIPS, and PowerPC. See CISC.
rollback A term used in transaction processing that cancels a proposed transaction which modifies one or more tables and undoes changes, if any, made by the transaction before a COMMIT or COMMIT TRANSACTION SQL statement.
router An active network component that connects one network to another network. Routers operate at the network layer of the OSI and work with packets that include logical addressing information.
routine A synonym for procedure.
SAM An acronym for Security Accounts Manager, a Windows NT subsystem that maintains a database of user account names and passwords for authentication.
scalable The property of a multiprocessing computer that defines the extent to which addition of more processors increases aggregate computing capability. Windows NT Server 4.0 is generally considered to be scalable to eight Intel processors.
server A computer on a LAN that provides services or resources to client computers by sharing its resources. Servers may be dedicated, in which case they share their resources but don’t use them themselves, except in performing administrative tasks. Servers in client/server databases are ordinarily dedicated to making database resources available to client computers. Servers may also be used to run applications for users, in which case the server is called an application server. Peer-to-peer or workgroup servers, such as servers created by using PCs running Windows NT Workstation to share disk folders, are another class of server.
shared application memory Memory that’s allocated between processes involved in a lightweight remote procedure call (LRPC). See also LRPC.
shortcut key A key combination that provides access to a menu choice, macro, or other function of the application in lieu of selection with the mouse.
SID An acronym for security ID, a numeric value that identifies a logged-on user who has been authenticated by Windows NT or a user group.
SLIP An abbreviation for Serial Line Interface Protocol, the first common method of connecting via a modem to TCP/IP networks, now less widely used. See PPP.
SMB An abbreviation for Server Message Block, a networking protocol used by NetBEUI to implement Microsoft Networking.
SMP An abbreviation for symmetric multiprocessing, implemented in Windows NT, which distributes tasks among CPUs using a load-sharing methodology. Applications must be multithreaded to take advantage of SMP. See asymmetric multiprocessing.
SNMP An abbreviation for Simple Network Management Protocol, an Internet standard that defines methods for remotely managing active network components such as hubs, routers, and bridges.
source code The readable form of code that you create in a high-level programming language. Source code is converted to machine-language object code by a compiler or interpreter.
source document A term used by OLE 1.0 to refer to a compound object in a container document.
SQL An acronym, pronounced either as “sequel” or “seekel,” for Structured Query Language, a language developed by IBM Corporation for processing data contained in mainframe computer databases. (Sequel is the name of a language, similar to SQL, developed by IBM but no longer in use.) SQL has now been institutionalized by the creation of an ANSI standard for the language.
stack See protocol stack.
stored procedure A set of SQL statements (and with those RDBMSs that support them, flow-control statements) that are stored under a procedure name so that the statements can be executed as a group by the database server. Some RDBMSs, such as Microsoft and Sybase SQL Server, precompile stored procedures so that they execute more rapidly. Jet 3.0’s Remote Data Object is optimized for use with stored procedures.
stripe set See disk striping and fault tolerance.
Structured Query Language See SQL.
subnet mask A local bit mask (set of flags) that specifies which bits of the IP address specify a particular IP network or a host within a subnetwork. An IP address of 128.66.12.1 with a subnet mask of 255.255.255.0 specifies host 1 on subnet 128.66.12.0. The subnet mask determines the maximum number of hosts on a subnetwork.
synchronous I/O An input/output method in which the process that issues an I/O request waits for the requested process to complete before returning control to the application or operating system. See asynchronous I/O.
system administrator The individual(s) responsible for the administrative functions for all applications on a LAN or users of a UNIX cluster or network, usually including supervision of all databases on servers attached to the LAN. If the system administrator’s (SA’s) responsibility is limited to databases, the term database administrator (DBA) is ordinarily assigned.
system databases Databases that control access to databases on a server or across a LAN. Microsoft SQL Server has three system databases: the master database, which controls user databases; tempdb, which holds temporary tables; and model, which is used as the skeleton to create new user databases. Any database that’s not a user database is a system database.
T-1 The most common moderate-speed telecommunications connection between LANs to create a WAN. Dedicated T-1 lines provide 1.544mbps of bandwidth. T-1 lines also are the most common method of connecting servers to the Internet.
table A database object consisting of a collection of rows (records) divided into columns (fields) that contain data or null values. A table is treated as a database object.
TCP/IP Abbreviation for Transport Control Protocol/Internet Protocol, the networking protocol of the Internet, UNIX networks, and the preferred protocol for Windows NT networks. TCP/IP is a routable network that supports subnetworks. See IP.
TDI An abbreviation for Transport Driver Interface, used by Windows NT to implement multiple network protocols by using various network interface cards.
thread A part of a process, such as an executing application, that can run as an object or an entity. Threads of execution are basis of Windows NT’s symmetrical multiprocessing capability. See multiprocessing and SMP.
three-tier The architecture of a database application, usually involving a client-server RDBMS, where the front-end application is separated from the back-end RDBMS by a middle tier application. The middle tier usually is implemented as a remote Automation server, which implements the database connection, enforces business rules, and handles transfer of data to and from databases of the RDBMS. See business rules and Remote Automation Object.
time stamp The date and time data attributes applied to a disk file when created or edited. Time stamp is a database type for SQL Server and the ODBC API.
toggle A property of an object, such as a check box, that alternates its state when repeatedly clicked with the mouse or activated by a shortcut key combination.
Token Ring A network medium developed by IBM in which each computer in the ring passes a token, which carries network messages, to the adjacent computer. Token Ring provides each computer on the ring with guaranteed capability to transmit at regular intervals; Ethernet doesn’t provide such a guarantee. Token Ring is specified by the IEEE-802.5 standard. See Ethernet.
transaction A group of processing steps that are treated as a single activity to perform a desired result. A transaction might entail all the steps necessary to modify the values in or add records to each table involved when a new invoice is created. RDBMSs that are capable of transaction processing usually include the capability to cancel the transaction by a rollback instruction or to cause it to become a permanent part of the tables with the COMMIT or COMMIT TRANSACTION statement.
Transact-SQL A superset of ANSI SQL used by Microsoft and Sybase SQL Server. Transact-SQL includes flow-control instructions, and the capability to define and use stored procedures that include conditional execution and looping.
trap Windows NT’s method of intercepting an event (such as an interrupt request or an unexpected result) that occurs during execution of a thread.
trigger A stored procedure that occurs when a user executes an instruction that may affect the referential integrity of a database. Triggers usually occur before the execution of an INSERT, DELETE, or UPDATE statement so that the effect of the statement on referential integrity can be examined by a stored procedure before execution. See also stored procedure.
trust In Windows NT domain terminology, a relationship between domain controllers in which users who are members of the trusted domain can access services on another trusting domain without the need to log on to the trusting domain.
two-phase commit A process applicable to updates to multiple (distributed) databases that prevents a transaction from completing until all the distributed databases acknowledge that the transaction can be completed. The replication process has supplanted two-phase commit in most of today’s distributed client/server RDBMSs. See replication.
UNC An abbreviation for Unified Naming Convention, the method of identifying the location of files on a remote server. UNC names begin with \\. Windows NT and Windows 95 support UNC; 32-bit Windows applications must support UNC to qualify for application of Microsoft’s “Designed for Windows NT” logo. All Microsoft Office 95 and later applications support UNC.
Unicode A replacement for the 7-bit or 8-bit ASCII and ANSI representations of characters with a 16-bit model that allows a wider variety of characters to be used. Unicode is especially useful for representing the written characters of Asian languages. Windows NT and Windows 95 support Unicode.
uniform data transfer (UDT) The interprocess communication (IPC) method used by OLE 2+. OLE 1.0 uses DDE for IPC.
unique index An index in which no two key fields or combinations of key fields on which the index is created may have the same value.
UNIX Registered trademark of a multiuser operating system, now administered by the Open Systems Foundation (OSF). Extensions and modifications of UNIX include DEC Ultrix, SCO UNIX, IBM AIX, and similar products.
UPS An abbreviation for uninterruptible power supply, a device used to power a computer in the event of a primary power outage.
user mode The processor mode used by Windows NT to run applications launched by users. Threads running in user mode are restricted to calling system services. See kernel mode.
UTP An abbreviation for unshielded twisted pair, the type of cabling used to implement 10BaseT and 100BaseT network media.
VBA An abbreviation for Visual Basic for Applications, the official name of which is “Visual Basic, Applications Edition.” VBA is Microsoft’s common application programming (macro) language for Access, Excel, Project, and the Visual Basic programming environment.
VDM Abbreviation for virtual DOS machine, a Windows NT protected subsystem for running DOS applications in a console window.
virtual address space The range of unique virtual memory addresses allocated to the threads of a single Windows NT process. See VM.
view The method by which the data is presented for review by the user, usually on the computer display. Views can be created from subsets of columns from one or more tables by implementing the SQL CREATE VIEW instruction.
Visual Basic for Applications See VBA.
VM Abbreviation for virtual memory, a method of mapping a combination of RAM and images of RAM stored in a paging file to provide an address space larger than that available from the RAM installed in the computer.
VM manager The Windows NT executive service that loads memory images stored in a paging file on demand, as well as saves memory images in the paging file when no longer needed by a thread.
VPN An abbreviation for Virtual Private Network, a means of establishing secure communication channels on the Internet using various forms of encryption. See PPTP.
WAN An acronym for wide area network. A WAN is a system for connecting multiple computers in different geographical locations by switched telephone network or leased data lines; by optical or other long-distance cabling; or by infrared, radio, or satellite links.
WDM An abbreviation of Windows Driver Model, a 32-bit architecture for creating device drivers that run under both Windows NT and Windows 95. Microsoft hadn’t issued the WDM specification when Windows NT 4.0 was released.
Win32 An API for running 32-bit Windows applications under Windows NT and Windows 95. The Win32 APIs of Windows NT and Windows 95 vary. To use Microsoft’s “Designed for Windows NT” logo, applications must run under Windows NT 4.0 and Windows 95.
Win32S A subset of the Win32 API designed to add limited 32-bit capabilities to Windows 3.1+. Very few applications have been written to the Win32S API, which appears to have become obsolete.
WINS An acronym for Windows Internet Naming Service, a proprietary Microsoft application that maps easily remembered Windows machine names to the corresponding IP addresses.
Winsock An abbreviation for Windows Sockets, a networking API for implementing Windows applications that use TCP/IP, such as FTP and Telnet.
working set The set of active virtual memory pages
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January 26, 2006 at 4:23 pm #3094046
Computer Terminology
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 1 month ago
In reply to IT Help Support
access time – The performance of a hard drive or other storage device – how long it takes to locate a file.
active program or window – The application or window at the front (foreground) on the monitor.
alert (alert box) – a message that appears on screen, usually to tell you something went wrong.
alias – an icon that points to a file, folder or application (System 7).
apple menu – on the left side of the screen header. System 6 = desk accessories System 7 = up to 50 items.
application – a program in which you do your work.
application menu – on the right side of the screen header. Lists running applications.
ASCII (pronounced ask-key ) – American Standard Code for Information Interchange. a commonly used data format for exchanging information between computers or programs.
background – part of the multitasking capability. A program can run and perform tasks in the background while another program is being used in the foreground.
bit – the smallest piece of information used by the computer. Derived from “binary digit”. In computer language, either a one (1) or a zero (0).
backup – a copy of a file or disk you make for archiving purposes.
boot – to start up a computer.
bug – a programming error that causes a program to behave in an unexpected way.
bus – an electronic pathway through which data is transmitted between components in a computer.
byte – a piece of computer information made up of eight bits.
card – a printed circuit board that adds some feature to a computer.
cartridge drive – a storage device, like a hard drive, in which the medium is a cartridge that can be removed.
CD-ROM – an acronym for Compact Disc Read-Only Memory.
Chooser – A desk accessory used to select a printer, or other external device, or to log onto a network.
Clipboard – A portion of memory where the Mac temporarily stores information. Called a Copy Buffer in many PC applications because it is used to hold information which is to be moved, as in word processing where text is “cut” and then “pasted”.
Clock Rate (MHz) – The instruction processing speed of a computer measured in millions of cycles per second (i.e., 200 MHz).
command – the act of giving an instruction to your Mac either by menu choice or keystroke.
command (apple) key – a modifier key, the Command key used in conjunction with another keystroke to active some function on the Mac.
compiler – a program the converts programming code into a form that can be used by a computer.
compression – a technique that reduces the size of a saved file by elimination or encoding redundancies (i.e., JPEG, MPEG, LZW, etc.)
control key – seldom used modifier key on the Mac.
control panel – a program that allows you to change settings in a program or change the way a Mac looks and/or behaves.
CPU – the Central Processing Unit. The processing chip that is the “brains” of a computer.
crash – a system malfunction in which the computer stops working and has to be restarted.
cursor – The pointer, usually arrow or cross shaped, which is controlled by the mouse.
daisy chaining – the act of stringing devices together in a series (such as SCSI).
database – an electronic list of information that can be sorted and/or searched.
data – (the plural of datum) information processed by a computer.
defragment – (also – optimize) to concatenate fragments of data into contiguous blocks in memory or on a hard drive.
desktop – 1. the finder. 2. the shaded or colored backdrop of the screen.
desktop file – an invisible file in which the Finder stores a database of information about files and icons.
dialog box – an on-screen message box that appears when the Mac requires additional information before completing a command.
digitize – to convert linear, or analog, data into digital data which can be used by the computer.
disk – a spinning platter made of magnetic or optically etched material on which data can be stored.
disk drive – the machinery that writes the data from a disk and/or writes data to a disk.
disk window – the window that displays the contents or directory of a disk.
document – a file you create, as opposed to the application which created it.
DOS – acronym for Disk Operating System – used in IBM PCs.
DPI – acronym for Dots Per Inch – a gauge of visual clarity on the printed page or on the computer screen.
download – to transfer data from one computer to another. (If you are on the receiving end, you are downloading. If you are on the sending end, you are uploading ).
drag – to move the mouse while its button is being depressed.
drag and drop – a feature on the Mac which allows one to drag the icon for a document on top of the icon for an application, thereby launching the application and opening the document.
driver – a file on a computer which tells it how to communicate with an add-on piece of equipment (like a printer).
Ethernet – a protocol for fast communication and file transfer across a network.
expansion slot – a connector inside the computer which allows one to plug in a printed circuit board that provides new or enhanced features.
extension – a startup program that runs when you start the Mac and then enhances its function.
fibre channel – as applied to data storage and network topology – link to FC Glossary.
file – the generic word for an application, document, control panel or other computer data.
finder – The cornerstone or home-base application in the Mac environment. The finder regulates the file management functions of the Mac (copying, renaming, deleting…)
floppy – a 3.5 inch square rigid disk which holds data. (so named for the earlier 5.25 and 8 inch disks that were flexible).
folder – an electronic subdirectory which contains files.
font – a typeface that contains the characters of an alphabet or some other letterforms.
footprint – The surface area of a desk or table which is occupied by a piece of equipment.
fragmentation – The breaking up of a file into many separate locations in memory or on a disk.
freeze – a system error which causes the cursor to lock in place.
get info – a Finder File menu command that presents an information window for a selected file icon.
gig – a gigabyte = 1024 megabytes.
hard drive – a large capacity storage device made of multiple disks housed in a rigid case.
head crash – a hard disk crash caused by the heads coming in contact with the spinning disk(s).
high density disk – a 1.4 MB floppy disk.
highlight – to select by clicking once on an icon or by highlighting text in a document.
icon – a graphic symbol for an application, file or folder.
initialize – to format a disk for use in the computer; creates a new directory and arranges the tracks for the recording of data.
insertion point – in word processing, the short flashing marker which indicates where your next typing will begin.
installer – software used to install a program on your hard drive.
interrupt button – a tool used by programmers to enter the debugging mode. The button is usually next to the reset button.
K – short for kilobyte.
keyboard shortcut – a combination of keystrokes that performs some function otherwise found in a pulldown menu.
kilobyte – 1024 bytes.
landscape – in printing from a computer, to print sideways on the page.
launch – start an application.
Measurements (summary) –
*a bit = one binary digit (1 or 0) *”bit” is derived from the contraction b’it (binary digit) -> 8 bits = one byte
*1024 bytes = one kilobyte
*K = kilobyte
*Kb = kilobit
*MB = megabyte
*Mb = megabit
*MB/s = megabytes per second
*Mb/s = megabits per second
*bps = bits per second
i.e., 155 Mb/s = 19.38 MB/s
MB – short for megabyte.
megabyte – 1024 kilobytes.
memory – the temporary holding area where data is stored while it is being used or changed; the amount of RAM a computer has installed.
menu – a list of program commands listed by topic.
menu bar – the horizontal bar across the top of the Mac?s screen that lists the menus.
multi finder – a component of System 6 that allows the Mac to multi task.
multi tasking – running more than one application in memory at the same time.
nanosecond – one billionth of a second. ( or, the time between the theatrical release of a Dudley Moore film and the moment it begins to play on airplanes).
native mode – using the computers original operating system; most commonly used when talking about the PowerPC can run software written for either the 80×0 systems, or the PowerPC?s RISC code.
NuBus – expansion slots on the Mac which accept intelligent, self-configuring boards. NuBus is a different bus achitecture than the newer PCI bus and the boards are not interchangable.
operating system – the system software that controls the computer.
optical disk – a high-capacity storage medium that is read by a laser light.
palette – a small floating window that contains tools used in a given application.
partition – a subdivision of a hard drives surface that is defined and used as a separate drive.
paste – to insert text, or other material, from the clipboard or copy buffer.
PC – acronym for personal computer, commonly used to refer to an IBM or IBM clone computer which uses DOS.
PCI – acronym for Peripheral Component Interchange – the newer, faster bus achitecture.
peripheral – an add-on component to your computer.
point – (1/72″) 12 points = one pica in printing.
pop-up menu – any menu that does not appear at the top of the screen in the menu bar. (may pop up or down)
port – a connection socket, or jack on the Mac.
Power PC – a processing chip designed by Apple, IBM and Motorola (RISC based).
Power Mac – a family of Macs built around the PowerPC chip.
print spooler – a program that stores documents to be printed on the hard drive, thereby freeing the memory up and allowing other functions to be performed while printing goes on in the background.
QuickTime – the Apple system extension that gives one the ability to compress, edit and play animation, movies and sound on the Mac.
RAM – acronym for Random-Access Memory.
reset switch – a switch on the Mac that restarts the computer in the event of a crash or freeze.
resize box – the small square at the lower right corner of a window which, when dragged, resizes the window.
RISC – acronym for Reduced Instruction Set Computing; the smaller set of commands used by the PowerPC and Power Mac.
ROM – acronym for Read Only Memory; memory that can only be read from and not written to.
root directory – the main hard drive window.
save – to write a file onto a disk.
save as – (a File menu item) to save a previously saved file in a new location and/or with a new name.
scroll – to shift the contents of a window to bring hidden items into view.
scroll bar – a bar at the bottom or right side of a window that contains the scroll box and allows scrolling.
scroll box – the box in a scroll bar that is used to navigate through a window.
SCSI – acronym for Small Computer System Interface.
SCSI address – a number between zero and seven that must be unique to each device in a SCSI chain. Fast and Wide SCSI devices will allow up to 15 SCSI Ids (hexidecimal); however, the length restriction (3 meters) is such that it is virtually impossible to link 15 devices together.
SCSI port – a 25 pin connector on the back of a Mac (native SCSI port); used to connect SCSI devices to the CPU. Some SCSI cards (like the ATTO) have a 68 pin connector.
SCSI terminator – a device placed at the end of a SCSI chain to complete the circuit. (some SCSI devices are self-terminating, or have active termination and do not require this plug).
serial port – a port that allows data to be transmitted in a series (one after the other), such as the printer and modem ports on a Mac.
server – a central computer dedicated to sending and receiving data from other computers (on a network).
shut down – the command from the Special menu that shuts down the Mac safely.
software – files on disk that contain instructions for a computer.
spreadsheet – a program designed to look like an electronic ledger.
start up disk – the disk containing system software and is designated to be used to start the computer.
surge suppressor – a power strip that has circuits designed to reduce the effects of surge in electrical power. (not the same as a UPS)
System file – a file in the System folder that allows your Mac to start and run.
System folder – an all-important folder that contains at least the System file and the Finder.
32 bit addressing – a feature that allows the Mac to recognize and use more than 8MB of memory.
title bar – the horizontal bar at the top of a window which has the name of the file or folder it represents.
upload – to send a file from one computer to another through a network.
Uninterruptible Power Source (UPS)- a constantly charging battery pack which powers the computer. A UPS should have enough charge to power your computer for several minutes in the event of a total power failure, giving you time to save your work and safely shut down.
UPS – acronym for Uninterruptible Power Source.
vaporware – “software” advertised, and sometimes sold, that does not yet exist in a releasable for.
virtual memory – using part of your hard drive as though it were “RAM”.
WORM – acronym for Write Once-Read Many; an optical disk that can only be written to once (like a CD-ROM).
zoom box – a small square in the upper right corner of a window which, when clicked, will expand the window to fill the whole screen.
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January 26, 2006 at 4:23 pm #3094044
Computer Acronyms
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 1 month ago
In reply to IT Help Support
Thanks techterms.orgComputer Term Acronym
AGP
Accelerated Graphics Port
AIFF
Audio Interchange File Format
AIX
Advanced Interactive Executive
ANSI
American National Standards Institute
API
Application Program Interface
ASCII
American Standard Code for Information Interchange
ASP
Active Server Page or Application Service Provider
ATA
Advanced Technology Attachment
ATM
Asynchronous Transfer Mode
BIOS
Basic Input/Output System
BMP
Bitmap
CAD
Computer-Aided Design
CD
Compact Disc
CD-R
Compact Disc Recordable
CD-ROM
Compact Disc Read-Only Memory
CD-RW
Compact Disc Re-Writable
CDMA
Code Division Multiple Access
CGI
Common Gateway Interface
CISC
Complex Instruction Set Computing
CMOS
Complementary Metal Oxide Semiconductor
CMYK
Cyan Magenta Yellow Black
CPA
Cost Per Action
CPC
Cost Per Click
CPL
Cost Per Lead
CPM
Cost Per 1,000 Impressions
CPU
Central Processing Unit
CRM
Customer Relationship Management
CRT
Cathode Ray Tube
CSS
Cascading Style Sheet
CTP
Composite Theoretical Performance
CTR
Click-Through Rate
DBMS
Database Management System
DDR
Double Data Rate
DDR2
Double Data Rate 2
DHCP
Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol
DIMM
Dual In-Line Memory Module
DLL
Dynamic Link Library
DNS
Domain Name System
DRM
Digital Rights Management
DTD
Document Type Definition
DV
Digital Video
DVD
Digital Versatile Disc
DVD+R
Digital Versatile Disc Recordable
DVD+RW
Digital Versatile Disk Rewritable
DVD-R
Digital Versatile Disc Recordable
DVD-RAM
Digital Versatile Disc Random Access Memory
DVD-RW
Digital Versatile Disk Rewritable
DVI
Digital Video Interface
DVR
Digital Video Recorder
EPS
Encapsulated PostScript
EUP
Enterprise Unified Process
FAQ
Frequently Asked Questions
FiOS
Fiber Optic Service
FPU
Floating Point Unit
FSB
Frontside Bus
FTP
File Transfer Protocol
GIF
Graphics Interchange Format
GIGO
Garbage In, Garbage Out
GIS
Geographic Information Systems
GPS
Global Positioning System
GPU
Graphics Processing Unit
GUI
Graphical User Interface
HDTV
High Definition Televsion
HDV
High-Definition Video
HFS
Hierarchical File System
HTML
Hyper-Text Markup Language
HTTP
HyperText Transfer Protocol
I/O
Input/Output
ICF
Internet Connection Firewall
ICS
Internet Connection Sharing
IDE
Integrated Device Electronics
IEEE
Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers
IM
Instant Message
IMAP
Internet Message Access Protocol
InterNIC
Internet Network Information Center
IP
Internet Protocol
IPX
Internetwork Packet Exchange
IRC
Internet Relay Chat
IRQ
Interrupt Request
ISA
Industry Standard Architecture
ISDN
Integrated Services Digital Network
ISO
International Organization for Standardization
ISP
Internet Service Provider
IT
Information Technology
IVR
Interactive Voice Response
JPEG
Joint Photographic Experts Group
JSP
Java Server Page
Kbps
Kilobits Per Second
LAN
Local Area Network
LCD
Liquid Crystal Display
LDAP
Lightweight Directory Access Protocol
MAC Address
Media Access Control Address
Mbps
Megabits Per Second
MCA
Micro Channel Architecture
MIDI
Musical Instrument Digital Interface
MIPS
Million Instructions Per Second
MP3
MPEG-1 Audio Layer-3
MPEG
Moving Picture Experts Group
NAT
Network Address Translation
NetBIOS
Network Basic Input/Output System
NIC
Network Interface Card
NNTP
Network News Transfer Protocol
NOC
Network Operations Center
NTFS
New Technology File System
OCR
Optical Character Recognition
ODBC
Open Database Connectivity
OEM
Original Equipment Manufacturer
OLAP
Online Analytical Processing
OLE
Object Linking and Embedding
OSPF
Open Shortest Path First
P2P
Peer To Peer
PCB
Printed Circuit Board
PCI
Peripheral Component Interconnect
PCMCIA
Personal Computer Memory Card International Association
PDA
Personal Digital Assistant
PDF
Portable Document Format
PHP
Hypertext Preprocessor
PIM
Personal Information Manager
PNG
Portable Network Graphic
PPC
Pay Per Click
PPGA
Plastic Pin Grid Array
PPP
Point to Point Protocol
PRAM
Parameter Random Access Memory
RAID
Redundant Array of Independent Disks
RDRAM
Rambus Dynamic Random Access Memory
RGB
Red Green Blue
RISC
Reduced Instruction Set Computing
ROM
Read-Only Memory
RSS
RDF Site Summary
RTF
Rich Text Fomat
RUP
Rational Unified Process
SATA
Serial Advanced Technology Attachment
SCSI
Small Computer System Interface
SD
Secure Digital
SDRAM
Synchronous Dynamic Random Access Memory
SEO
Search Engine Optimization
SIMM
Single In-Line Memory Module
SMART
Self-Monitoring Analysis And Reporting Technology
SMS
Short Message Service
SMTP
Simple Mail Transfer Protocol
SOAP
Simple Object Access Protocol
SQL
Structured Query Language
sRGB
Standard Red Green Blue
SSL
Secure Sockets Layer
TCP/IP
Transmission Control Protocol/Internet Protocol
TFT
Thin-Film Transistor
TIFF
Tagged Image File Format
TTL
Time To Live
TWAIN
Toolkit Without An Informative Name
UDP
User Datagram Protocol
UML
Unified Modeling Language
UNC
Universal Naming Convention
URL
Uniform Resource Locator
USB
Universal Serial Bus
VCI
Virtual Channel Identifier
VFAT
Virtual File Allocation Table
VGA
Video Graphics Array
VLB
VESA Local Bus
VoIP
Voice Over Internet Protocol
VPI
Virtual Path Identifier
VPN
Virtual Private Network
VRAM
Video Random Access Memory
VRML
Virtual Reality Modeling Language
WAIS
Wide Area Information Server
WAN
Wide Area Network
WEP
Wired Equivalent Privacy
Wi-Fi
Wireless Fidelity
WPA
Wi-Fi Protected Access
WWW
World Wide Web
XHTML
Extensible Hypertext Markup Language
XML
Extensible Markup Language
Y2K
Year 2000
ZIF
Zero Insertion Force
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January 31, 2006 at 12:11 pm #3134725
Beginners Guides: Diagnosing Bad Hard Drives – PCStats.com
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 1 month ago
In reply to IT Help Support
Beginners Guides: Diagnosing Bad Hard Drives – PCStats.com: “Warning signs to watch forWhile you may be able to repair software errors caused by bad sectors, and in some cases you may be able to repair the bad sectors themselves, if your drive has begun to fail mechanically nothing will stop the process.
The catch then is to detect the imminent failure of your drives before they give out on you and data is lost. Let’s look at some common warning signs of impending hard drive failure:
* Frequent but irregular crashes, especially while booting up Windows.
* Frequent and cryptic error messages while performing typical activities like moving files.
* Folder and file names that have been scrambled and changed.
* Disappearing files and folders.
* Really loo….ong waits to access folders and files.
* Hard disk is silent for a long period after you request data by opening a file or folder.
* Garbled output from open files or printing.
* Hard drive grinds away constantly because of noisy bearings.Any of the above signs mean you should check your drive using one of the utilities we detail below as soon as possible.
Sound can be an excellent indicator of disk trouble. If you previously didn’t hear a peep from your hard drive, but now you do… Check it. If it seems much louder than usual, or makes occasional clicks or grinding sounds… Check it ASAP and be prepared to backup your data and replace the drive.
If your drive is making regular clicking or grinding sounds, chances are you have a mechanical failure within the drive. Turn off your PC as soon as possible, as this kind of problem can quickly snowball into a huge headache that is way beyond the scope of a pair of Aspirin. The longer the drive is powered on, the more damage you may be doing to your data.”
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February 2, 2006 at 2:14 pm #3108036
Unix commands reference card
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 1 month ago
In reply to IT Help Support
Unix commands reference card: “Unix commands reference card”
Environment Control
Command Description
cd d Change to directory d
mkdir d Create new directory d
rmdir d Remove directory d
mv f1 [f2...] d Move file f to directory d
mv d1 d2 Rename directory d1 as d2
passwd Change password
alias name1 name2 Create command alias (csh/tcsh)
alias name1="name2" Create command alias (ksh/bash)
unalias name1[na2...] Remove command alias na
ssh nd Login securely to remote node
exit End terminal session
setenv name v Set env var to value v (csh/tcsh)
export name="v" set environment variable to value v (ksh/bash)
Output, Communication, & Help
Command Description
lpr -P printer f
or
lp -d printer f Output file f to line printer
script [f] Save terminal session to f
exit Stop saving terminal session
mailx username Send mail to user
man name Unix manual entry for name
Process Control
Command Description
CTRL/c * Interrupt processes
CTRL/s * Stop screen scrolling
CTRL/q * Resume screen output
sleep n Sleep for n seconds
jobs Print list of jobs
kill % Kill job n
ps Print process status stats
kill -9 n Remove process n
CTRL/z * Suspend current process
stop %n Suspend background job n
cmmd& Run cmmd in background
bg [%n] Resume background job n
fg [%n] Resume foreground job n
exit Exit from shell
Environment Status
Command Description
ls [d] [f...] List files in directory
ls -1 [f...] List files in detail
alias [name] Display command aliases
printenv [name] Print environment values
quota Display disk quota
date Print date & time
who List logged in users
whoami Display current user
finger [username] Output user information
chfn Change finger information
pwd Print working directory
history Display recent commands
! n Submit recent command n
File Manipulation
Command Description
vi [f] Vi fullscreen editor
emacs [f] Emacs fullscreen editor
ed [f] Text editor
wc f Line, word, & char count
cat f List contents of file
more f List file contents by screen
cat f1 f2 >f3 Concatenates f1 & f2 into f3
chmod mode f Change protection mode of f
cmp f1 f2 Compare two files
cp f1 f2 Copy file f1 into f2
sort f Alphabetically sort f
split [-n] f Split f into n-line pieces
mv f1 f2 Rename file f1 as f2
rm f Delete (remove) file f
grep 'ptn' f Outputs lines that match ptn
diff f1 f2 Lists file differences
head f Output beginning of f
tail f Output end of f
Compiler
Command Description
cc [-o f1] f2 C compiler
lint f Check C code for errors
f77 [-o f1] f2 Fortran77 compiler
pc [-o f1] f2 Pascal compiler
Working with NFS files
Files saved on the UITS central Unix computers Steel, the Parallel PC cluster, Solar/Lunar, and the Research SP are stored on the Network File Server (NFS). That means that your files are really on one disk, in directories named for the central Unix hosts on which you have accounts.
No matter which of these computers you are logged into, you can get to your files on any of the others. Here are the commands to use to get to any system directory from any other system:
cd /N/u/username/PPPC/
cd /N/u/username/Cobalt/
cd /N/u/username/Solar/
cd /N/u/username/Steel/
cd /n/u/username/SP/Be sure you use the capitalization just as you see above, and substitute your own username for “username“.
For example, if Jessica Rabbit is logged into her account on Steel, and wants to get a file on her SP account, she would enter:
cd /N/u/jrabbit/SP/
Now when she lists her files, she’ll see her SP files, even though she’s actually logged into Steel.
You can use the ordinary Unix commands to move files, copy files, or make symbolic links between files. For example, if Jessica Rabbit wanted to move “file1” from her Steel directory to her SP directory, she would enter:
mv -i /N/u/jrabbit/Steel/file1 /N/u/jrabbit/SP/
This shared file system means that you can access, for example, your SP files even when you are logged into Steel, and vice versa. However, if you are logged into the SP, you can only use the software installed on SP — only users’ directories are linked together, not system directories.
Abbreviations used in this document
CTRL/x hold down control key and press x
d directory
env environment
f filename
n number
nd computer node
prtr printer
ptn pattern
var variable
[y/n] yes or no
[] optional arg
... list -
February 6, 2006 at 3:04 pm #3093516
Types of Spyware Installations
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 1 month ago
In reply to IT Help Support
Drive-by Download ? A program that is automatically downloaded to a user’s computer, often without the user’s consent or knowledge. Unlike a pop-up download, which asks for the user’s permission (albeit in a calculated or devious manner), a drive-by download is invisible. It can start automatically when someone visits a Web site or views an HTML email message. Frequently, a drive-by download is installed along with other applications.
Commercial Product Installation Bundling ? When commercial or shareware programs are downloaded, a user can get more than just the programs, like lots of additional spyware.
Misrepresentation of Intention ? A product that promises to block ads, might actually deliver them.
Misrepresentation of Source ? A product might claim to be from a well-known, trustworthy company. Spyware can display a Web page that resembles, for example, a Microsoft product installation page, when it is not a Microsoft product at all.
Silent Download and Execution of Arbitrary Cod
e ? This occurs when an installed program enables other programs to download and install without the user’s consent or knowledge. Those other programs are usually spyware or adware.
Commercial Spyware, Keyloggers and RATs ? Commercial spyware products, such as ISpyNow, are small enough to be attached to an email. Commercial spyware products can be quite stealthy.
NETObserve Keylogger ? logs Internet conversation, window activity, application activity, clipboard activity, printing, keystrokes, Web site activity, and captures screen shots via Webcam.
STARR ? this application does not show up as an icon, but appears in the Windows system tray, appear in Windows Programs, show up in the Windows task list, slow down the operation of the computer it is recording, and cannot be uninstalled without a pre-specified password.
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February 6, 2006 at 3:04 pm #3093515
Signs of Spyware Infection
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 1 month ago
In reply to IT Help Support
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The Web browser home page is set to an undesirable Web site and it cannot be changed.
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Problems with pop-up advertisements both online and offline.
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The computer is running slower then normal, and the connection to the Internet is not as fast as it used to be.
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There is abnormal network activity on the modem or broadband connection device (cable or DSL modem).
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Favorite search engines are redirected to a non-familiar search engine or unrelated Web site.
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Items that the user did not add begin showing up in the Favorites list or Start-up menu.
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February 6, 2006 at 3:04 pm #3093514
How to avoid spyware.
by lorenr13 · about 18 years, 1 month ago
In reply to IT Help Support
Click Responsibly! ? Before spyware can be installed on a computer, the user usually has to click on something. Make this a rule: Don’t click anywhere unless you know it’s safe.
Avoid Popup Ads or Dialogs ? People who create deceptive software use pop-up ads and dialogs to trick people into loading their software. For example, you open your browser and up pops a dialog box. It asks if you want to download software, “Click Yes or No.” Don’t do it! Do not click EITHER Yes or No. It’s unlikely that clicking “No” might not make the pop-up go away. It more likely that you’ll help download spyware to your computer.Here’s what to do. Try to close the Web page or dialog by clicking the “X” in the top right corner of the window. If that does not close the window that asked you to download something, close your browser. Restarting a browser to continue using the Internet is better than allowing your computer to be attacked by spyware.
Avoid Unsolicited Email “Spam!” ? Always delete unsolicited email. Never open them. Unsolicited email is also called spam. It can use Internet Explorer or your email client to push spyware onto your computer. Get rid of unsolicited email without reading it when you can; turn off the preview pane to delete messages without opening them. Learn how to use any Junk email filters offered by your email provider.
Free Software Download
s ? Don’t install anything without knowing exactly what it is. Your computer can become the target of spyware when you download internet data, such as utilities, games, toolbars, media players, or other software. Be careful about installing software directly from Web sites. Read all disclosures, including license agreements and privacy statements. Read the end-user license agreement (EULA) carefully, as some EULAs will actually tell you that if you install the program in question, you’ve also decided to install some spyware with the software. Check independent sources as well, as some EULAs won’t tell you about spyware.
Watch out for Internet Cookies ? While they may not be the worst form of spyware, information gathered via cookies can sometimes be matched with information gathered elsewhere to provide surprisingly detailed profiles of you and your browsing habits. Learn to use the options in your browser that allow you to clear the cache and off-line files. That’s where cookies linger. Remember, though, if you dump the cookies, you can no longer rely on your computer to automatically log you into Web sites. You’ll have to have passwords handy, so gather that information before you start removing those and all the other cookies that have landed on your computer as a result of your Internet usage.
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February 23, 2006 at 7:35 am #3100620
Partition Types
by lorenr13 · about 18 years ago
In reply to IT Help Support
Primary Partition – A partition that is used to start an operating system, although you can use primary partitions that don’t contain the operating system.
- There can be up to a maximum of four primary partitions on a single basic disk.
- The Primary partitions do not have to come before Extended partitions as shown on Disk 0.
Extended Partition – A partition that can be sub-divided into logical drives. Look at the color coded key at the bottom of Fig. 01 and you’ll see that Extended partitions are denoted by the dark green color.- An extended partition is not formatted or assigned a drive letter.
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It’s essentially a container for logical drives that are formatted and assigned drive letters.
Logical Drive – A logical drive is created within an extended partition.- An “unlimited” number of logical drives may be created in an extended partition, formatted and assigned drive letters.
- More Logical drives could be created in the Free Space until you either ran out of drive letters or the Free Space was exhausted.
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February 23, 2006 at 7:35 am #3100619
Stop Error Messages
by lorenr13 · about 18 years ago
In reply to IT Help Support
Stop 0x0000000A or IRQL_NOT_LESS_OR_EQUAL – The Stop 0xA message indicates that a kernel-mode process or driver attempted to access a memory location to which it did not have permission, or at a kernel interrupt request level (IRQL) that was too high. A kernel-mode process can access only other processes that have an IRQL lower than, or equal to, its own. This Stop message is typically due to faulty or incompatible hardware or software.
Stop 0x0000001E or KMODE_EXCEPTION_NOT_HANDLED – The Stop 0x1E message indicates that the Windows XP Professional kernel detected an illegal or unknown processor instruction. The problems that cause Stop 0x1E messages share similarities with those that generate Stop 0xA errors in that they can be due to invalid memory and access violations. This default Windows XP Professional error handler typically intercepts these problems if error-handling routines are not present in the code itself.
Stop 0x00000024 or NTFS_FILE_SYSTEM – The Stop 0x24 message indicates that a problem occurred within Ntfs.sys, the driver file that allows the system to read and write to NTFS file system drives. A similar Stop message, 0x23, exists for the file allocation table (FAT16 or FAT32) file systems.
Stop 0x0000002E or DATA_BUS_ERROR – The Stop 0x2E message indicates a system memory parity error. The cause is typically failed or defective RAM (including motherboard, Level 2 cache, or video memory), incompatible or mismatched memory hardware, or when a device driver attempts to access an address in the 0x8xxxxxxx range that does not exist (does not map to a physical address). A Stop 0x2E message can also indicate hard disk damage caused by viruses or other problems.
Stop 0x0000003F or NO_MORE_SYSTEM_PTES – The Stop 0x3F message indicates one or more of the following problems:- The system Page Table Entries (PTEs) are depleted or fragmented due to the system performing a large number of input/output (I/O) actions.
- A faulty device driver is not managing memory properly.
- An application, such as a backup program, is improperly allocating large amounts of kernel memory.
Stop 0x00000050 or PAGE_FAULT_IN_NONPAGED_AREA – The Stop 0x50 message indicates that requested data was not in memory. The system generates an exception error when using a reference to an invalid system memory address. Defective memory (including main memory, L2 RAM cache, video RAM) or incompatible software (including remote control and antivirus software) might cause Stop 0x50 messages.
Stop 0x00000077 or KERNEL_STACK_INPAGE_ERROR – The Stop 0x77 message indicates that a page of kernel data requested from the paging (virtual memory) file could not be found or read into memory. This Stop message can also indicate disk hardware failure, disk data corruption, or possible virus infection.
Stop 0x00000079 or MISMATCHED_HAL – The Stop 0x79 message indicates that the hardware abstraction layer (HAL) and the kernel type for the computer do not match. This error most often occurs when ACPI firmware settings are changed. For example, you might install Windows XP Professional on an x86-based computer with the firmware ACPI enable option enabled and later decide to disable it. This error can also result when mismatched single and multi-processor configuration files are copied to the system.
Stop 0x0000007A or KERNEL_DATA_INPAGE_ERROR – The Stop 0x7A message indicates that a page of kernel data was not found in the paging (virtual memory) file and could not be read into memory. This might be due to incompatible disk or controller drivers, firmware, or hardware.
Stop 0x0000007B or INACCESSIBLE_BOOT_DEVICE – The Stop 0x7B message indicates that Windows XP Professional has lost access to the system partition or boot volume during the startup process. Installing incorrect device drivers when installing or upgrading storage adapter hardware typically causes stop 0x7B errors. Stop 0x7B errors could also indicate possible virus infection.
Stop 0x0000007F or UNEXPECTED_KERNEL_MODE_TRAP – The Stop 0x7F message indicates that one of three types of problems occurred in kernel-mode:- A condition that the kernel is not allowed to have or intercept (also known as a bound trap).
- Software problems.
- Hardware failures.
Stop 0x0000009F or DRIVER_POWER_STATE_FAILURE – The Stop 0x9F message indicates that a driver is in an inconsistent or invalid power state.
Stop 0xBE or ATTEMPTED_WRITE_TO_READONLY_MEMORY – The Stop 0xBE message indicates that a driver attempted to write to read-only memory.
Stop 0xC2 or BAD_POOL_CALLER – The Stop 0xC2 message indicates that a kernel-mode process or driver incorrectly attempted to perform memory operations in the following ways:- By allocating a memory pool size of zero bytes.
- By allocating a memory pool that does not exist.
- By attempting to free a memory pool that is already free.
- By allocating or freeing a memory pool at an IRQL that was too high.
This Stop message is typically due to a faulty driver or software.
Stop 0x000000CE or DRIVER_UNLOADED_WITHOUT_CANCELLING_PENDING_OPERATIONS – This Stop message indicates that a driver failed to cancel pending operations before exiting.
Stop 0x000000D1 or DRIVER_IRQL_NOT_LESS_OR_EQUAL – The Stop 0xD1 message indicates that the system attempted to access pageable memory using a kernel process IRQL that was too high. Drivers that have used improper addresses typically cause this error.
Stop 0x000000D8 or DRIVER_USED_EXCESSIVE_PTES – The Stop 0xD8 message typically occurs if your computer runs out of page table entries (PTEs) due to a driver that requests large amounts of kernel memory.
Stop 0x000000EA or THREAD_STUCK_IN_DEVICE_DRIVER – A device driver problem is causing the system to pause indefinitely. Typically, this problem is caused by a display driver waiting for the video hardware to enter an idle state. This might indicate a hardware problem with the video adapter or a faulty video driver.
Stop 0x000000ED or UNMOUNTABLE_BOOT_VOLUME – The kernel mode I/O subsystem attempted to mount the boot volume and it failed. This error might also occur during an upgrade to Windows XP Professional on systems that use higher throughput ATA disks or controllers with incorrect cabling. In some cases, your system might appear to work normally after you restart.
Stop 0x000000F2 or HARDWARE_INTERRUPT_STORM – The Stop 0xF2 message occurs if the kernel detects an interrupt storm. An interrupt storm occurs when a level-interrupt-triggered device fails to release an interrupt request (IRQ). This can result from the following causes:- A device fails to respond to an interrupt release signal sent from a driver.
- An incorrectly written device driver fails to send an interrupt release request to a device. The driver fails to determine that the interrupt was hardware initiated.
- An incorrectly written device driver claims an interrupt request meant for a different device. This occurs only for multiple devices sharing an IRQ.
- The edge level control register is set incorrectly by system firmware.
- Edge level and level-interrupt-triggered devices are incorrectly assigned the same IRQ (for example, a serial port and a Peripheral Component Interconnect (PCI) SCSI controller).
Stop 0xC000021A or STATUS_SYSTEM_PROCESS_TERMINATED – The Stop 0xC000021A message occurs when Windows XP Professional switches into kernel mode and a user-mode subsystem, such as Winlogon or the Client Server Runtime Subsystem (CSRSS), is compromised and security can no longer be guaranteed. Because Windows XP Professional cannot run without Winlogon or CSRSS, this is one of the few situations where the failure of a user-mode service can cause the system to stop responding. You cannot use the kernel debugger in this situation because the error occurred in a user-mode process.A Stop 0xC000021A message can also occur when the computer is restarted after a system administrator has modified permissions in such a way that the SYSTEM account no longer has adequate permissions to access system files and folders.
Stop 0xC0000221 or STATUS_IMAGE_CHECKSUM_MISMATCH – This Stop message indicates driver, system file, or disk corruption problems (such as a damaged paging file). Faulty memory hardware can also cause this Stop message to appear.
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February 24, 2006 at 7:36 am #3102119
Foxit Reader for Windows
by lorenr13 · about 18 years ago
In reply to IT Help Support
Found a great, Free, and FAST PDF reader….Downloaded it and it works great……
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March 10, 2006 at 11:33 am #3266759
Registry data types
by lorenr13 · about 18 years ago
In reply to IT Help Support
Registry data types.-
REG_BINARY
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binary
data is stored as a string of hex pairs where each pair give a range of 0 to 255.
REG_BINARY
can be any length. In WinNT,
REG_BINARY
entries are rare. Most of the entries that are used in binary format are limited to 32 bits and then are used as REG_DWORD entries. If a REG_DWORD entry were mistakenly entered as a
REG_BINARY
entry, it would still work without a problem.
REG_BINARY
entries simply have the flexibility to be longer as well as possibly contain raw data such as encrypted passwords.
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REG_DWORD
- indicates that the data data stored in a
double word
, a four-byte number (32-bits).
Words
can range in value from 0 – 4GB. Always displayed as 4 bytes. Device drivers and services parameters are often of this type and can be viewed in binary, hex, or decimal using the Registry editor.
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REG_EXPAND_SZ
- indicates an
expandable string
which really is a variable. For example, %SystemRoot%\SYSTEM32\config is an expandable string that is replaced when the real value when the string is called by an application.
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REG_LINK
- The value points to another key or value. Three of the six Registry root keys, HKEY_CURRENT_USER, HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT and HKEY_CURRENT_CONFIG are links to subkeys within the three non-link root keys, HKEY_USERS, HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE, and HKEY_DYN_DATA.
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May 22, 2006 at 2:23 pm #3147868
Common FTP Commands
by lorenr13 · about 17 years, 10 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
? to request help or information about the FTP commands ascii to set the mode of file transfer to ASCII
(this is the default and transmits seven bits per character)binary to set the mode of file transfer to binary
(the binary mode transmits all eight bits per byte and thus provides less chance of a transmission error and must be used to transmit files other than ASCII files)bye to exit the FTP environment (same as quit) cd to change directory on the remote machine close to terminate a connection with another computer close brubeck closes the current FTP connection with brubeck,
but still leaves you within the FTP environment.delete to delete (remove) a file in the current remote directory (same as rm in UNIX) get to copy one file from the remote machine to the local machine get ABC DEF copies file ABC in the current remote directory to (or on top of) a file named DEF in your current local directory. get ABC copies file ABC in the current remote directory to (or on top of) a file with the same name, ABC, in your current local directory. help to request a list of all available FTP commands lcd to change directory on your local machine (same as UNIX cd) ls to list the names of the files in the current remote directory mkdir to make a new directory within the current remote directory mget to copy multiple files from the remote machine to the local machine;
you are prompted for a y/n answer before transferring each filemget * copies all the files in the current remote directory to your current local directory, using the same filenames. Notice the use of the wild card character, *. mput to copy multiple files from the local machine to the remote machine;
you are prompted for a y/n answer before transferring each fileopen to open a connection with another computer open brubeck opens a new FTP connection with brubeck;
you must enter a username and password for a brubeck account
(unless it is to be an anonymous connection).put to copy one file from the local machine to the remote machine pwd to find out the pathname of the current directory on the remote machine quit to exit the FTP environment (same as bye) rmdir to to remove (delete) a directory in the current remote directory
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May 22, 2006 at 2:23 pm #3147869
Windows Management Instrumentation Command
by lorenr13 · about 17 years, 10 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
WMIC.exe
Windows Management Instrumentation Command.
Read a huge range of information about local or remote computers. Also provides a way to make configuration changes to multiple remote machines.Syntax
Retrieve information about:
WMIC [global_switches] [/locale:ms_409] <alias> [options] [format]
Interactive mode:
WMIC
Aliases:
ALIAS - Access local system aliases [CALL]
BASEBOARD - Base board management (motherboard or system board)
BIOS - BIOS management (Basic input/output services)
BOOTCONFIG - Boot configuration
CDROM - CD-ROM
COMPUTERSYSTEM - Computer system [CALL/SET]
CPU - CPU
CSPRODUCT - Computer system product information from SMBIOS.
DATAFILE - DataFiles [CALL]
DCOMAPP - DCOM Applications.
DESKTOP - User's Desktop
DESKTOPMONITOR - Desktop Monitor
DEVICEMEMORYADDRESS - Device memory addresses
DISKDRIVE - Physical disk drive
DISKQUOTA - Disk space usage for NTFS volumes.[SET]
DMACHANNEL - Direct memory access (DMA) channel
ENVIRONMENT - System environment settings [SET]
FSDIR - Filesystem directory entry [CALL]
GROUP - Group account [CALL]
IDECONTROLLER - IDE Controller
IRQ - Interrupt request line
JOB - Jobs scheduled using the schedule service.[CALL]
LOADORDER - System services that define execution dependencies.
LOGICALDISK - Local storage devices [CALL/SET]
LOGON - LOGON Sessions.
MEMCACHE - Cache memory
MEMLOGICAL - System memory, layout and availability
MEMPHYSICAL - Physical memory management
NETCLIENT - Network Client management.
NETLOGIN - Network login information for a particular user.
NETPROTOCOL - Protocols (and their network characteristics).
NETUSE - Active network connection.
NIC - Network Interface Controller (NIC)
NICCONFIG - Network adapter. [CALL]
NTDOMAIN - NT Domain. [SET]
NTEVENT - NT Event Log.
NTEVENTLOG - NT eventlog file [CALL/SET]
ONBOARDDEVICE - Common adapter devices built into the motherboard.
OS - Operating System/s [CALL/SET]
PAGEFILE - Virtual memory file swapping
PAGEFILESET - Page file settings [SET]
PARTITION - Partitioned areas of a physical disk.
PORT - I/O ports
PORTCONNECTOR - Physical connection ports
PRINTER - Printer device [CALL/SET]
PRINTERCONFIG - Printer device configuration
PRINTJOB - Print job [CALL]
PROCESS - Processes [CALL]*
PRODUCT - Windows Installer [CALL]
QFE - Quick Fix Engineering (patches)
QUOTASETTING - Setting information for disk quotas on a volume. [SET]
REGISTRY - Computer system registry [SET]
SCSICONTROLLER - SCSI Controller [CALL]
SERVER - Server information
SERVICE - Service application [CALL]
SHARE - Shared resourcees [CALL]
SOFTWAREELEMENT - Elements of a software product*
SOFTWAREFEATURE - Subsets of SoftwareElement. [CALL]*
SOUNDDEV - Sound Devices
STARTUP - Commands that run automatically when users logon
SYSACCOUNT - System account
SYSDRIVER - System driver for a base service. [CALL]
SYSTEMENCLOSURE - Physical system enclosure
SYSTEMSLOT - Physical connection points including ports,
slots and peripherals, and proprietary connections points.
TAPEDRIVE - Tape drives
TEMPERATURE - Temperature sensor (electronic thermometer).
TIMEZONE - Time zone data
UPS - Uninterruptible power supply (UPS)
USERACCOUNT - User accounts [CALL/SET]
VOLTAGE - Voltage sensor (electronic voltmeter) data
VOLUME - Local storage volume [CALL/SET]
VOLUMEQUOTASETTING - Associates the disk quota setting with a specific disk volume. [SET]
WMISET - WMI service operational parameters [S -
May 22, 2006 at 2:23 pm #3147870
Windows XP/2000 Commands & Tools
by lorenr13 · about 17 years, 10 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
Here’s the ultimate Windows XP/2000 command list that will make any Linux user feel at home at the command prompt. A lot of these commands are intended for administrating a network, but they are great for savvy home users as well. We even listed which OS you need for these commands.
- at (windows XP/2000)
Scheduling utility. - bootcfg (XP only)
This utility allows you to set up your boot options, such as your default OS and other loading options. - cacls (XP, 2000, & NT4.0)
Changes the ACLs (security Settings) of files and folders. Very similar to chmod in Linux. - comp (XP & 2000)
This utility is very similar to diff in Linux. Use the /? switch to get examples of command usage. - contig (works with NT4.0 and newer)
A great defrag utility for NTFS partitions. - control (XP only) – unpublished!
Allows you to launch control panel applets from the command line. - defrag (XP only – NT4.0 and Win2k use contig)
Yes, XP comes with a command line disk defrag utility. If you are running Win2k or NT4.0 there is still hope. Contig is a free defrag program that I describe on the defrag page. - diskpart (XP only)
Use this command to manage your disk partitions. This is the text version for the GUI Disk Manager. - driverquery (XP only)
Produces a list of drivers, their properties, and their versions. Great for computer documentation. - eudcedit (XP only) –
- fsutil (XP only) – unpublished!
This is a utility with a lot of capability. Come back soon for great examples. - getmac (XP & 2000)
This command gets the Media Access Control (MAC) address of your network cards. - gpresult (XP & 2000)
This generates a summary of the user settings and computer group policy settings. - gpupdate (XP only)
Use this utility to manually apply computer and user policy from your windows 2000 (or newer) domain. - ipconfig (XP, 2000 & NT4.0)
This handy tool displays IP settings of the current computer and much more. - MMC (XP, 2000 & NT4.0) – Microsoft Management Console
This is the master tool for Windows, it is the main interface in which all other tools use starting primarily in Windows 2000 and newer systems. - more
Utility used to display text output one screen at a time. Ex. more c:\windows\win.ini - msconfig (XP only)
The ultimate tool to change the services and utilities that start when your Windows machine boots up. You can also copy the executable from XP and use it in Win2k. - msinfo32 (XP &smp; 2000)
An awesome diagnostic tool. With it you can get a list of running processes, including the residing path of the executable (great for manually removing malware) and get detailed information about hardware and system diagnostics. - narrator (XP only)
Turns on the system narrator (can also be found in accessibility options in control panel). Will will allow your computer to dictate text to you. - netsh (XP & 2000)
A network configuration tool console. At the ‘netsh>’ prompt, use the ‘?’ to list the available commands and type “exit” to get back to a command prompt. - openfiles (XP Only)
Allows an administrator to display or disconnect open files in XP professional. Type “openfiles /?” for a list of possible parameters. - Pathping (XP & 2000)
A cross between the ping and traceroute utilities. Who needs Neotrace when you can use this? Type “pathping” and watch it go. - recover (XP & 2000)
This command can recover readable information from a damaged disk and is very easy to use. - reg (XP & 2000)
A console registry tool, great for scripting Registry edits. - sc (XP & 2000)
A command line utility called the Service Controller. A power tool to make service changes via a logon/logoff or startup/shutdown script. - schtasks (XP only)
A newer version of the AT command. This allows an administrator to schedule and manage scheduled tasks on a local and remote machines. - secedit (XP & 2000)
Use this utility to manually apply computer and user policy from your windows 2000 (or newer) domain. Example to update the machine policy: secedit /refreshpolicy machine_policy /enforce
To view help on this, just type secedit.
NOTE: In Windows XP SP1 this command is superceded by: gpupdate /force - sfc (XP & 2000)
The system file checker scans important system files and replaces the ones you (or your applications) hacked beyond repair with the real, official Microsoft versions. - shutdown (XP & 2000)
With this tool, You can shut down or restart your own computer, or an administrator can shut down or restart a remote computer. - sigverif (XP only)
Microsoft has created driver signatures. A signed driver is Microsoft tested and approved. With the sigverif tool you can have all driver files analyzed to verify that they are digitally signed. Just type ‘sigverif’ at the command prompt. - systeminfo (XP only)
Basic system configuration information, such as the system type, the processor type, time zone, virtual memory settings, system uptime, and much more. This program is great for creating an inventory of computers on your network. - sysedit (XP/2000)
System Configuration File Editor. An old tool that was very handy for the Windows 9X days. msconfig is what you want to use now. - tasklist (XP pro only)
Tasklist is the command console equivalent to the task manager in windows. It is a must have when fighting scumware and viruses. Try the command:
tasklist /svc
to view the memory resources your services take up. - taskkill (XP only)
Taskkill contains the rest of the task manager functionality. It allows you to kill those unneeded or locked up applications. - tree (XP & 2000)
An amazing experience everyone should try! This command will provide a ‘family tree’ style display of the drive/folder you specify. - WMIC (XP & 2000)
Windows Management Instrumentation Command tool. This allows you to pull an amazing amount of low-level system information from a command line scripting interface.
control userpasswords2, for example will launch a helpful local user admin utility.
unpublished!
Private Character editor. Yes with this program built into Windows XP you can create your own font! - at (windows XP/2000)
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May 22, 2006 at 2:23 pm #3147871
XPize
by lorenr13 · about 17 years, 10 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
Found this neat little utility that changes most of XP’s boring icons, and etc. Check it out.
What is XPize?
XPize is a GUI enhancer for Windows XP and above. It replaces most of the non-XP icons, avis and bmps that Microsoft has always overlooked.The installer simply automates the process of replacing resources in critical system files, making your XP’s look better.
It also includes some extras and a reloader, which you can use after visiting Windows Update.
XPize does not contain any spyware or ad-ware of any kind.
If you are not satisfied with the results, you can completely uninstall XPize.
XPize is compatible with any version (except x64) and any language of Windows XP (Home, Pro & MCE) and 2003.
Features - Patches more than 150 system files without user interaction.
- Updates tons of old resources still existent in Windows XP coming from Windows 95/98/2000.
- Gives Windows XP a fresh new look, with new animations, icons and images.
- Installs some cool extras, such as a boot screen, logon screen, screensaver and more.
- Lets you create a custom Windows CD using the I386 Patching feature.
- Is compatible with nLite’s hotfix integration.
- Has advanced switches to let you install it silently and with the components you want.
System Requirements Windows XP or Windows Server 2003 (any version (except x64), any language) -
May 22, 2006 at 2:23 pm #3147872
The Hosts File and what it can do for you
by lorenr13 · about 17 years, 10 months ago
In reply to IT Help Support
Introduction
When using the Internet most people connect to web sites, ftp servers or other Internet servers by connecting to a domain name, as in http://www.bleepingcomputer.com. Internet applications, though, do not communicate via domain names, but rather using IP addresses, such as 192.168.1.1. Therefore when you type a domain name in your program that you wish to connect to, your application must first convert it to an IP address that it will use to connect to.The way these hostnames are resolved to their mapped IP address is called Domain Name Resolution. On almost all operating systems whether they be Apple, Linux, Unix, Netware, or Windows the majority of resolutions from domain names to IP addresses are done through a procedure called DNS.
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Check out this site.. the cheap and easy way of blocking ads, and malicious sites. You can even use it to prevent your kids from accessing certain web sites.
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