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When you right click on a program and click on properties, there is a section to create your own keyboard shortcut to the program. However I have never been able to get this to work. I have set internet explorer to CTRL+SHIFT+ALT+E - yet pressing that does nothing at all. How are these things supposed to work (if at all)?
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Web Administrators:
I need your assistance. I do not know how to create a File DSN on a Windows 2003 Server installation. I have created the equivalent of a SQL Server database on the server utilizing the UDDI component on the server.
Could somebody who knows how to create a File DSN please provide me with step by step instructions as to what to do? Do I utilize the DNS component in Administrative Tools or do I do something with the IIS server component?
I would really appreciate some assistance with this issue.
New_Phoenix
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Hi,
I want to know about java proxy server. is java proxy server is like a jana
proxy server.
Is java proxy server is better then jana proxy server.Can I use java proxy
server in window server 2003 enterprise ediion.
thanks.
nilesh
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Remote Desktop requires that the machine being connected to have port 3389 open (http://www.microsoft.com/windowsxp/using/mobility/rdfaq.mspx), but what about the machine connecting to the remote server?
I'm trying to connect to a remote machine and I am suspecting that router on my side is blocking outgoing traffic - wonder if I need to open certain port on my side. But for starter, I can determine which port Remote Desktop client opens (and name of Remote Desktop client). I ran fport trying to identify "Remote Desktop Client" and corresponding open port but found nothing.
Norman Fung
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This may be a shot in the dark, but have you tried opening up 3389 on your firewall/router? If running through a NAT, make sure that that port is being forwarded to the correct IP on the inside of the network.
If the server your connecting two supports two-way communication (most do...), it has to OK the connection request from your machine, then it makes a connection request back to your machine, usually on the same port number, which your machine has to OK.
Dave Kreskowiak
Microsoft MVP - Visual Basic
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"usually on the same port number, which your machine has to OK."
Thanks, but thought client port and server port are usually different? I was thinking to identify remote desktop client outgoing port and open that on my router at home.
Norman Fung
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norm wrote: but thought client port and server port are usually different
Whoops! My bad. That's what I get for doing this while I'm falling asleep.
When the client makes a connection to the server, it requests an available port number (1024 and above) from the O/S. This number is not predetermined!
At least on mine, and many others that I've used, you can turn off the outbound filtering. Any app can use any port to get to the outside world. Filtering occurs on the inbound connections and is allowed only on the port numbers that were used to initiate a request to the outside world.
Now, you can have filtering on the outbound connections, but you have a problem. Since any TCP client, like a web browser, uses any random port number above 1024 to try and connection to a server, you really can't block these outbound ports. Your web browser wouldn't be able to connect to a server on the web if you did.
Remote Desktop appears to use either a random port number in the client range OR 3389 to contact an RD Server. The server listens on 3389, by default. Soooo, you can start by allowing outbound traffic on any port above 1024 and inbound on 3389. Get it to work first, the go back and close outbound ports, in ranges, until RD doesn't work anymore.
Dave Kreskowiak
Microsoft MVP - Visual Basic
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Does anyone know, or know where i can find the registry entries for different web browsers(IE, Mozilla, Firefox, Netscape, Opera, etc.)? Also would these be the same for win9x as they would be for win2k/XP? I would like to not have to install all of them to find out. Thanks in advance.
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Hi
I am developing a scripts in C# which can be used to test windows based applications. I use Win32 API's to perform click operations etc. To uniquely identify a control in a window rather than using absolute position of a control I have been using Control-ids and captions of the control. But I found scenarios where the control-id was dynamic and the control didn't have a caption. What I mean by caption is the text of the control. A control, say a button can have both name and text - Name: btnOk and Caption: OK. What I hoping to get is the Name "btnOk" that can uniquely identify it in a window because no two controld can have the same name, but it can have the same caption. I have searched through the Win32 API's and I have been able to find a suitable API that does the job. Any kind of help will be appreciated. Thanks a lot.
with Regards
Anoop Kumar
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I have to drop an Open application for my own file type somewhere on the target machine where it will be accessible to other applications. I can't be certain of our normal application folder being present, so is there a Windows folder I can use? Something like Windows\System would be suitable, but I don't want to pollute a system folder. Isn't there one for uses like mine?
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Brady Kelly wrote: I can't be certain of our normal application folder being present
So why not create it when you install you're app?
There is no folder, other than Program Files, that is useful for what you want. Although, technically, you're not supposed to be putting files directly in the Program Files folder. You're supposed to put it in its own folder under Program Files.
The other option that I've used at other companies is to create a "standard" folder for such apps and log files company wide.
Dave Kreskowiak
Microsoft MVP - Visual Basic
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Hi,
I need your suggestion, I have created an Windows service to mointer my mail id, it stores the content of the mail in the data base. I want to install my service in an remote system. I dnt know how to do it.
Plz suggest me how to install it in remotew machine........
Thanks in advance
Bye
Exelio
Know is Drop, Unknown is Ocean
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You'll need physical access to that machine to install the service. You can't install it, or anything else for that matter, remotely.
Dave Kreskowiak
Microsoft MVP - Visual Basic
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The debug viewer, from SysInternals, does just this; it remotely installs a service on a given machine, assuming that you have appropriate permissions.
Since 'administrative shares', the registry, and the SCM are all accessible remotely, it's not that difficult.
Steve S
Developer for hire
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So long as you have the permissions to make the registry changes remotely, and know what they all are, and can copy all the files over, yes you can. Various software distribution packages, like SMS, Tivoli, and Altiris all do that very thing.
Beyond that, you'll have to use some other application to launch the installer in a non-interactive mode. I've seen PSEXEC used, a bit too liberally, and watched it trip various virus scanners, stopping the process cold. You can even do it with WMI. But in all cases, you cannot launch an interactive process remotely.
Dave Kreskowiak
Microsoft MVP - Visual Basic
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I don't disagree with you; particularly on the latter point(!), which is why remote desktop is handy. I was merely pointing out that you don't necessarily need physical access (i.e. keyboard/mouse/screen) to the machine, if you have network access - indeed, I've written an app that does all of those things to remote machines (although installing per-user desktop shortcuts isn't on that list!).
Steve S
Developer for hire
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I'm not disagreeing either. I just don't feel up to explaining the whole process to him in a forum environment. Usually, someone who asks this question is not doing for the right reasons.
I too have written apps to do remote installs. And I've even had to do the per-user deployments of various icons! I know, it's stupid, especially when 250 people share most of the machines around here. But if you knew where I worked, it wouldn't make perfect sense to you, but you'd understand completely! And, you'd feel very sorry for me! "We just can't seem to buy the right tools for the job...but hey, I just work here, what do I know?" Sound familiar where you're at?
Dave Kreskowiak
Microsoft MVP - Visual Basic
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I have created custom log file and its key is added to HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Services\Eventlog\CustomLog. But if I give a path value greater than say 100 characters for File key under CustomLog windows is not taking this path. Is there any restrictions on path length for File key in registry?
C++beginer
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Hi,
I have a PC running XP Home OEM, however the Motherboard in this PC is failing.
If I replace the Motherboard, will the XP Home OEM activate ok on the new hardware?
I know I will need to re-install from scratch, due to the IDE drivers, and I prefer to do that anyway, the main issue is, will the existing OEM licence transfer to the 'new' motherboard ok?
Thanks..
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If you obtain a new motherboard from the PC vendor (OEM), you will be fine. However, the version of the OS you have - if it's from a large vendor like Dell or HP - may not install on a generic third-party motherboard.
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The system was custom built, and the OEM Windows purchased for it (So its not a Dell/HP style OEM). The new motherboard is a different chipset (its a Socket A system, so finding the same MB would be difficult now anyway, and I have a suitable replacement here).
The issue is, can an OEM licence be transfered like that? I thought the main limitation of the OEM licence was that it cannot be transfered to a 'new' computer, so does replaceing the motherboard make the computer appear as 'new'.
Thanks...
Stormblade
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Can i install WinCE into my notebook? if it is possible can you help me? thank
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You'd need WinCE drivers for all the relevant hardware, like the video, network etc. There is an x86 WINCE, but you then can't run non-WINCE applications, of course.
There's emulation available, would that do...?
Steve S
Developer for hire
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I would want to use my notebook with WinCe
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Windows CE is not an end-user operating system. It requires some critical device drivers to be linked into the operating system image, which is intended to be written to a ROM. It's intended for handheld and embedded devices. It does not have the capability of swapping to disk as the desktop does - you are limited to the amount of physical RAM in the system.
Windows CE will run on a so-called CEPC (a PC configured with specific hardware) but this is really only intended for testing parts of an operating system image before the final hardware is available.
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