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Phil Uribe wrote:
there is maybe a case for going back to the drawing board, Bill..
I'm in complete agreement with you there!
Boredom, Bull$^%&, Baggage, Bar - all start with 'B' Coincidence?
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Conspiracy, complexity, crap... all begin with "C" - as does Coincidence....
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Boredom, Bull$^%&, Baggage, Bar - all start with 'B' Coincidence?
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Hi all, I just signed up here and come to find out most of this stuff is all over my head. I thought someone here would tell me how to use xphome edition and not have to re-install every 30 days before shut-down. And please don't tell me to Register the damn thing. :-Dlol I'm not much a a bull-shitter so I can't call 'em up on the phone and give a story...I'm no good at that.
Thanks I sure would like to know this!
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If you don't activate your legal copy by phone or via the Internet, it will fail to run every thirty days. Just do it.
If your copy isn't legal, buy a legal copy and install it and activate it.
If that's not acceptable, you're a thief and we have no use for you here. We all, in one way or another, make a living creating intellectual property, and we respect the rights of others who have done so before us. TANSTAAFL. If that's undecipherable to you, you won't like it here very much, anyway.
Boredom, Bull$^%&, Baggage, Bar - all start with 'B' Coincidence?
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If your Windows is ilegal to disable automatic updates do this
right click on MyComputer icon -> Properties -> Automatic Updates-> then click checkboc where write TurnOff AutomaticUpdates
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I have inherited a W2K/terminal server/IIS system with an activex control on specific web-pages.
The TSAC control doesn't specify the .SecuredSettings.StartProgram on the web page, but a system policy is configured on the server wih the Windows NT Shell->Custom User Interface->Custom Shell enabled for certain groups and users. This setting specifies the executable to run...
Is there a good reason to use the system policy instead of specifying it in the control?
Is there a way to specify the app to launch based off the user's membership in groups?
What I have is working, just curious if there is a good reason for the way that it is setup.
Any comments would be appreciated.
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...though anyone else can feel free to answer.
I am having a problem on my home network that is also appearing at a customers site I will be visiting again later this morning. Both networks are run from an ADSL modem/router (mine is a Netcomm NB-1300 Plus 4, customers D-Link DSL-504G0) that is the DNS and DHCP servers.
IP are given correctly, internet access is fine, browsing, email, pinging by IP and HostName. When accessing within the internal network pinging by IP Address is working but pinging by HostName fails, with DNS unable to resolve.
This isn't a big deal, but the Third Party software (it's a Smash Repair shop and the software connects to insurance companies for quotes. I am only a Sys Admin/Technician, I'm not coding anything) wants to talk to each other by HostName.
Any idea why? (Forgot to say XP Pro and Win2000 Pro are the 2 machines at customer).
Michael Martin
Australia
"I controlled my laughter and simple said "No,I am very busy,so I can't write any code for you". The moment they heard this all the smiling face turned into a sad looking face and one of them farted. So i had to leave the place as soon as possible."
- Mr.Prakash 24/04/2004
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I'm not sure if this applies to P-to-P networks, and I'm too tired to research it right now, but try enabling NetBIOS over TCP/IP. If there's a server involved, allow WINS to update DNS. A simpler solution, if the network is small, is to put entries in the HOSTS and LMHOSTS files that refer HostNames to specific IP addresses. DHCP doesn't usually randomly change local addresses, but tends to reuse the last address assigned for each host unless requested to provide a new address range for a new scope.
Boredom, Bull$^%&, Baggage, Bar - all start with 'B' Coincidence?
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I have a Windows 2003 Server. I notice that as I log in using remote desktop, a window (similar to an MIRC window) pops up and suddenly disappears. There hasnt been any anomalous activity on the server such as web-traffic or missing file, etc. I was wondering what could be causing that?
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Can you tell what the window's name is?
.............................
There's nothing like the sound of incoming rifle and mortar rounds to cure the blues. No matter how down you are, you take an active and immediate interest in life.
Fiat justitia, et ruat cælum
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no i cant, it shows up and goes away too fast and when i press pause on the window, it opens up a link to www.mirc.com or something. but i did notice and mirc.ini in my system32 directory. i just want to make sure my server hasnt been hacked and if so, how to prevent it in the future.
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Asad Hussain wrote: it opens up a link to www.mirc.com or something
In opinion, you windows might inffect with spyware. Normally windows do not cotain any specific application like the client. Try to increase your server security by:
- Update the anti-virus definition.
- Update the security patch or service pack from windows update website.
- Download and install windows defender[^] in order to clean any virus in your server.
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I'm having a heckuva time trying to find the answer to this. I have an Active Directory (Windows 2000 version) network, and I'm trying to force all machines on that network to include a route in their routing table that I've specified, somehow, on my Active Directory controllers. I've fiddled with DHCP, Routing and Remote Access, and Active Directory, and have yet to figure it out. I'm sure this is simple as heck; it's just eluding me. Any ideas?
Thanks in advance.
Kyosa Jamie Nordmeyer - Taekwondo Yi (2nd) Dan
Portland, Oregon, USA
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I'd suggest a system startup script published through Group Policy which includes a route add command.
Create a new Group Policy Object, either using the Group Policy tab in Active Directory Users and Computers, or with Group Policy Management Console if you've installed that. Go to Computer Configuration > Windows Settings > Scripts (Startup/Shutdown). Open the Properties for the Startup setting. Click 'Show Files...' at the bottom - this opens an Explorer window on the startup script folder for the GPO. Create a new text file and name it something like route_to_xyz.cmd - the icon should, if you have "always show extension" turned on, change to the cog-in-a-window icon. Edit the script to contain the appropriate route add command. Then, in the Group Policy console's Startup Properties dialog, click Add, then Browse to the script you just created.
If you created the GPO with GPMC by selecting New > Group Policy Object, you'll now need to link it to a container. Select the container then select Action/Link An Existing GPO. Select the GPO you created.
The script will execute the next time each machine is restarted after Group Policy is refreshed. This will occur automatically at the next user logon, or can be forced by running gpupdate .
I'd normally create such routes on the default gateway, though. That avoids the problem entirely.
Stability. What an interesting concept. -- Chris Maunder
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Hi, I have a problem with software installation for my digital camera. I just purchase a digital camera SONY. It attache with a CD driver and application. When I install the device driver for my digital camera, it appear the message box that "Access denie" during the installation reach 50% of installation progess then the installation progress stop automatically. My user account is the member of administrator group, the driver signing is set to WARN level. So I don't know what is the main problem. Does any one have any idea???
A thousand mile of journey, begin with the first step.
APO-CEDC
Save Children Norway-Cambodia Office
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I had a bit of a problem with a friends machine today. I initially got it to install an old PCI 56K modem I had lying around. That was the easy bit.
While I had it I decided to apply updates for Windows 2000 and Norton SystemWorks. The Windows updates went fine but I was having great trouble with the LiveUpdate. Searching Symantec's KnowledgeBase I found I had to uninstall LiveUpdate then reinstall it again off the internet. This allowed SystemWorks to LiveUpdate from within the application but it wasn't there on the Start Menu. The whole machine at this time still felt wrong.
Talking to her I found she had a newer version of SystemWorks sitting at home. I got her to drop it off as the subscription on this one had just over 4 weeks to go.
So started several hours in the Symantec KnowledgeBase again figuring out how to uninstall the old SystemWorks (the kids had stuffed it good and proper). After manually killing the files, folders and registry entries I was good to go.
Installed SystemWorks and rebooted to run into yet another problem. When SystemWorks came up I found a blank white dialog with a Next button in it that did nothing when I clicked it. I knew the dialog box should have had some message about SystemWorks (installed it enough times to remember that but not what it should ahve said). I also remembered that Symantec did most of their applications with an HTML UI.
Distant memories began to surface where I had fixed similar UI problems in the past. As the UI is HTML the HTML rendering engine is at fault. In this case it is IE. So I reinstalled IE 6SP1, clicked Yes, I know the current version is installed but don't give a f*** just do it button, waited, rebooted and SystemWorks UI was now fixed.
Then told you lot here just incase this tidbit comes in handy some day.
Michael Martin
Australia
"I controlled my laughter and simple said "No,I am very busy,so I can't write any code for you". The moment they heard this all the smiling face turned into a sad looking face and one of them farted. So i had to leave the place as soon as possible."
- Mr.Prakash 24/04/2004
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Nice trick! But it should never be necessary. Norton products are the most destructive I know of, and destroy as many PCs as they protect. Installing System Works or NAV almost always involves many hours of searching the Knowledge Base to fix the errors created by the process.
Boredom, Bull$^%&, Baggage, Bar - all start with 'B' Coincidence?
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Hi, I have a problem with the clock in my computer. My computer desktop run windows 2000 professional, First I found that the clock in windows is slower than my watch around 30mn. Then I try to adjust the clock in the computer to the same as my watch. But after I working with the computer around 1 hour I found that the clock in my computer is difference from my watch around 30mn again. I already compare my watch with the other people watch and it working fine (accurate). So I could identify that it is wrong from my computer. Can anyone give me any idea or point to check my computer in order to find out the solution???
A thousand mile of journey, begin with the first step.
APO-CEDC
Save Children Norway-Cambodia Office
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Colin Angus Mackay wrote:
Do you have some sort of time synchronising software running? I can't remember if it was first built in to Windows at 2000 or XP
Could be that his computer is connected to a domain and a Domain Controller is synchronising the time. I think the stand alone Windows time Synching came in in XP.
Michael Martin
Australia
"I controlled my laughter and simple said "No,I am very busy,so I can't write any code for you". The moment they heard this all the smiling face turned into a sad looking face and one of them farted. So i had to leave the place as soon as possible."
- Mr.Prakash 24/04/2004
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Michael Martin wrote:
Could be that his computer is connected to a domain and a Domain Controller is synchronising the time
Sorry one more thing that I did not tell all of you that my computer is connect to domain controller. But i log it with the local user profile, not romaing profile. So I think the clock shoud be differnce from the server whether the computer join with domain... Do you have any idea???
A thousand mile of journey, begin with the first step.
APO-CEDC
Save Children Norway-Cambodia Office
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The man from SCN-CO wrote:
Sorry one more thing that I did not tell all of you that my computer is connect to domain controller. But i log it with the local user profile, not romaing profile. So I think the clock shoud be differnce from the server whether the computer join with domain... Do you have any idea???
It's been a while since I have been connected to a (corporate) Domain where I have had any control, so this is from memory. Roaming profiles and time synching are not connected, last place I worked (I was only Domain User) we didn't use Roaming Profiles and the time and date were always synchronised. I know this since I was able to add myself to the Local Administrators group (nice when one of the long term employees had contacts who could give him the local admin password) I would occassionaly change the date/time and a few minutes later it would be back in synch again.
Michael Martin
Australia
"I controlled my laughter and simple said "No,I am very busy,so I can't write any code for you". The moment they heard this all the smiling face turned into a sad looking face and one of them farted. So i had to leave the place as soon as possible."
- Mr.Prakash 24/04/2004
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If your computer is a member of a domain, it will be synchronised to a domain controller. You should ensure that your domain controllers are synchronized with an external time source. See the w32tm tool for how to configure this.
You can override this on the workstation, but it's better to get the domain time correct.
Stability. What an interesting concept. -- Chris Maunder
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