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Can you provide some sample code or any website resource on how to do this?
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just open Visual studio, select the exe or the dll from which you want to open the resource, select "open with resource editor" (which is not the default case), and open it...
TOXCCT >>> GEII power [toxcct][VisualCalc 2.24][3.0 soon...]
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Which .exe or .dll file that will change the text of the start button?
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thanks all!!!
Lxcite's Planet
...the ultimate solution
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There's no DCOM related services in my Win2k Server, and I added all the components it in 'add/remove' but DCOM services still no where to be seeing. Is anybody konws how to add it?
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What were you expecting? You won't find anything under the Start/Programs menu...
Except Start/Programs/Administrative Tools/Component Services. Even then, there's nothing that screams "Hey! Welcome to DCOM!" DCOM is just about entirely below the covers of the OS. It's Distributed COM, so there's just nothing to really see...
RageInTheMachine9532
"...a pungent, ghastly, stinky piece of cheese!" -- The Roaming Gnome
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Not entirely sure what you mean, but try running DCOMCNFG if you want to see the registered COM components.
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On other desktop(XP), I saw an active "DCOM Server Process Launcher" service. So I figure my Win2K server is short of some related services in order to do something with DCOM.
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LiYS wrote: On other desktop(XP), I saw an active "DCOM Server Process Launcher" service. So I figure my Win2K server is short of some related services in order to do something with DCOM.
No, Win2k server does not have this service. Have you run DCOMCNFG.exe as I suggested? This will show you all the registered DCOM services on the server.
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I want to know whether my system is connected to network or not
in my program how we can check this programatically is there any system message
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Is there a way to protect the user created streams for MS-word files on Windows 2000?
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On Windows 2000, the Alternate DAta Streams(ADS) are deleted for MS-Word 2000 files when the file content is modified. why?
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I take it your not modifying the file in Word?? You shouldn't be doing that at all. Not properly modifying the file according to OLE 2.0 will cause the other data streams to be lost.
There is no support for multistream files native in the .NET Framework BCL, so you'll have to P/Invoke all the necessary Win32 functions to work with one of these files. The problem with this is that most of the documentation for OLE 2.0 was archived years ago.
You might be able to gleen something from this[^] example though...
RageInTheMachine9532
"...a pungent, ghastly, stinky piece of cheese!" -- The Roaming Gnome
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I am trying to setup home folders for all my users in active directory and redirect their My Documents folder to the home folder on the Domain Controller
1>The idea is to save all data on the server so it can be backed up.
This is what i have done so far with no luck.
1> Created user, Selected properties for the user, select the profiles tab, in the home folders group box i selected local path and provided a local path I also used the %username% so that it will automatically create a folder for the user.
(which it currently does not do when the user logs in onto the domain)
2> To redirect myDocuments i went into the default domain policy and configured the redirection policy for mydocuments to point to the home folder.
(With no success)
3> When i logged in with a test user no new folder for the user was created on the server and after i saved a text document in my documents it was all local to the workstation.
What am i doing wrong or missing.
Thanks for the help in advance
Kourvoisier
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kourvoisier wrote: i selected local path and provided a local path I also used the %username% so that it will automatically create a folder for the user.
Local path? you mean "D:\Data\..." . It is not possible to do that, you need to share the folder that you want to people to redirect it and put the path to that share name ex: "\\server\sharefoldername\" and configure appropriate permission for that folder. The reason that it is failure because when you try to access on the client computer, it will check the local path "D:\Data\..." , so the client could not find this local path. Try to read this article[^] and it might give you some idea.
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Recently on my computer their has been alot of programs that fail execute (installers, winrar, ect..) a console window pops up that says "program too big to fit in memory" -- this pop up happens so fast that i had to softice it, in order to read it.
The thing is that i have 1 gig of ram, and at that time only 3% of cpu was being used, and 211mb of ram was being used.
What i have to do in order to have that exe work again is to *reinstall the whole thing*. But that become a bit ridiculous, when that message just keeps on coming back with that same dos scheme error.
What i'm asking is for someing to help me fix this bug on my xp computer!
Thankz.
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That message usually comes up when an .EXE has become corrupted. You might want to scan your machine for viruses, trojans, and spyware.
RageInTheMachine9532
"...a pungent, ghastly, stinky piece of cheese!" -- The Roaming Gnome
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Lol theirs one tinny little thing, tried to norton gost the subject, then this binary corrupter starts spreading through norton's core files, disableing them from working! This time it did'nt wait for a reboot, whent's traight to the file.
Oh how i hate, DebugPriv(); but at the same time love it!
Thankz for the suggestions though!
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my friends,
i want to know that where toolbar informations
are stored like (refresh,searh,cut, favourite......)
and where can i see it to in my pc.
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That depends on the application. Some applications hard-code this stuff, others let you customize it, like Office. But in all cases, the storage of this information is unique and specific to each application. There is no one place that every application stores this stuff.
RageInTheMachine9532
"...a pungent, ghastly, stinky piece of cheese!" -- The Roaming Gnome
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