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Error : Log onto incoming mail Server (pop3) Unable to logon to the incoming mail server (POP3) please verify the settings in the user Name, Password and Email fields. [:wft: I've given the right username and password but why it doesn't work?]
Send Test mail: The specified server was found,but there was no response from the server. Please verify that the port and the SSL information is correct. To access these settings, close this dialog and click on advanced tab. [ Did the same a 100 times, but doesn't work]
It's a Gmail account.
POP3 : pop.gmail.com
SMTP : smtp.gmail.com
I already *Enabled* pop feature for my account in www.gmail.com!!
I've given the right port numbers as advised by this page^
Then ???
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[My Current Status]
Link2006 wrote:Let's take it outside of CP
Jeremy : Please don't.I would love to see this.I'm making the popcorn already.
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Oops, one error is solved. actually I didn't click on "Save settings" in gmail after I enabled POP.
But still I'm not able to send a test mail. It simply says,
<br />
Not able to send mail, check email address. Bullsh*t :mad:<br />
Btw, I'm able to receive mails.
<marquee scrollamount="1" scrolldelay="1" direction="up" height="10" step="1">--[ ]--
[My Current Status]
Link2006 wrote:Let's take it outside of CP
Jeremy : Please don't.I would love to see this.I'm making the popcorn already.
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Have you enabled the SMTP authentication?
Just Google it.
Failing that try phoning
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Yup I've done it. I also selected the "use same account" for SMTP.
<marquee scrollamount="1" scrolldelay="1" direction="up" height="10" step="1">--[ ]--
[My Current Status]
Link2006 wrote:Let's take it outside of CP
Jeremy : Please don't.I would love to see this.I'm making the popcorn already.
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Hi all =)
I've got windows XP pro but now it won't boot. Better, the system boots, but nothing works. I get a gray screen an can only run applications through the process manager. Explorer.exe won't start, i've run norton internet security (fully updated) but it finds nothing (although it's highly likely it is a virus), i've tryied restoring the system but nothing happned..
Any sugestions ?
best regards
hint_54
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Wipe the drive and reinstall from scratch.
It's also possible that whatever your using for virus scanning is actually preventing EXPLORER.EXE from running! I know, that's insane, but I've seen it a couple times before. Try and launch EXPLORER.EXE yourself from the TaskManager and see.
Dave Kreskowiak
Microsoft MVP - Visual Basic
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Dave Kreskowiak wrote: Try and launch EXPLORER.EXE yourself from the TaskManager and see.
I did it. It didn't work.
The problem is solved now. (The whole thing happened at a friend's machine) He deleted a dll (don't remember the name) that was somehow related to the problem. When he tried to open the explorer.exe the box for reporting errors to microsoft showed up and that dll was identified there. He tried deleting it, it worked.. Else, 9 virus were identifyed with AVG, none with Norton..
regards
hint_54
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Trust you are not running more than one anti-virus prog.
modified 1-Aug-19 21:02pm.
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No.. He uninstalled norton..
regards
hint_54
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Hello and good day
Windows XP Professional allows for "locking" of a computer as opposed to logging out or shutting down. Currently, the network I am on has no Event Sync for this practice whereas it does have them for Logon and Logout.
I'm trying to write a small application that will populate a column in a datagrid with the status of individuals on the network (whether they are in or out of the office). To do this, I need an Event Sync to push out to all network machines that fires when their computer is locked.
Any help would be greatly appreciated. I have also posted in this in a couple other message boards because I'm not 100% certain which board it most pertains to.
Thank you!
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If a program that is displaying an icon in the notification area (aka tray) of the Windows taskbar crashes or is terminated, the icon still remains until you move the mouse over it. (I guess Windows doesn't remove the icon until it determines that it the program is non responding).
Does anybody know of a way to cause Windows to force a refresh of the notification area and thereby remove the orphaned icon? I need to do this programmatically (from a process that is monitoring the program which created the icon but then crashed or was terminated).
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nrcaliendo wrote: Does anybody know of a way to cause Windows to force a refresh of the notification area and thereby remove the orphaned icon
AFAIK, there is no way to force a cleanup of the tray area. I haven't been able to find any API's in Win32 to do this.
Dave Kreskowiak
Microsoft MVP - Visual Basic
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Dave Kreskowiak wrote: AFAIK, there is no way to force a cleanup of the tray area. I haven't been able to find any API's in Win32 to do this.
There is always a way! Use a hook and send a WM_MOUSEMOVE? event across the entire task bar every 5 seconds or so.
static int Sqrt(int x) { if (x<0) throw new ArgumentOutOfRangeException(); int temp, y=0, b=0x8000, bshft=15, v=x; do { if (v>=(temp=(y<<1)+b<<bshft--)) {="" y+="b;" v-="temp;" }="" while="" ((b="">>=1)>0); return y;
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Lousy solution since it actually moves the mouse pointer away from where you put it with the mouse. You'd have to reposition the mouse to where you found it, just before you hijacked it, then put it back. Oh! You also have to hope that the user isn't actually using the mouse at the time!
Dave Kreskowiak
Microsoft MVP - Visual Basic
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Dave Kreskowiak wrote: Lousy solution since it actually moves the mouse pointer away from where you put it with the mouse. You'd have to reposition the mouse to where you found it, just before you hijacked it, then put it back. Oh! You also have to hope that the user isn't actually using the mouse at the time!
Not so becuase you are not moving the mouse. You are sending the mouse move event to a window. You can also send keyboard events to "type" in a window even though that window does not have focus. The same is true for the mouse or any other events. If you had a top level window you could send a WM_MOUSEMOVE to a window that is underneith it. Hooks allow you to have alot of power.
static int Sqrt(int x) { if (x<0) throw new ArgumentOutOfRangeException(); int temp, y=0, b=0x8000, bshft=15, v=x; do { if (v>=(temp=(y<<1)+b<<bshft--)) {="" y+="b;" v-="temp;" }="" while="" ((b="">>=1)>0); return y;
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Hi.I need any advice.We have a server with 2 hard disks each by 250 Gb.Which is the most efficent partition I have to use?I mean from your experience how many parts is better to create?
Best Regards
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Efficiency depends on the application.
What I've done in the past is a smaller hard drive that holds only the boot and system, mirrored with an identical drive, and the remaining, larger capacity drives, reserved for applications and user data, usually RAID 5.
I don't partition the drives at all in the method you're thinking of. I consider it a waste because if the drive goes down, partitioning won't make any difference what-so-ever. In the above solution, if a drive goes down, I'll lose either the system, which is backed by a mirror drive, or the RAID 5 array keeps running without the bad drive, until it's replaced.
Dave Kreskowiak
Microsoft MVP - Visual Basic
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Dave Kreskowiak wrote: I consider it a waste because if the drive goes down, partitioning won't make any difference what-so-ever.
True, but only if the *drive* fails. File systems can also become corrupt do to software failures. Each partition contains a seperate file system.
static int Sqrt(int x) { if (x<0) throw new ArgumentOutOfRangeException(); int temp, y=0, b=0x8000, bshft=15, v=x; do { if (v>=(temp=(y<<1)+b<<bshft--)) {="" y+="b;" v-="temp;" }="" while="" ((b="">>=1)>0); return y;
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I've had drives fail FAR more than I've had a file system get corrupted unrecoverably.
Dave Kreskowiak
Microsoft MVP - Visual Basic
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Do you beat them with a sledge hammer or something?
Touch wood I've never had a hard-drive fail on me in 7 years, only one to "fail" resulted in me pulling the power connector too hard when it got jammed in, but then just whipped out the soldering iron and put it back on.
I've had corrupted file systems more than hard-drive failures, but even then not than many, maybe once or twice.
Just Google it.
Failing that try phoning
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Man, I've had 3 fail in one week! Western Digitals and a Maxtor. No, I didn't touch them. When I was at [major automotive manufacturer], we had 8 drives fail (all Seagates), out of some 1,200+, in 4 years in the manufacturing plants.
Dave Kreskowiak
Microsoft MVP - Visual Basic
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Ouch, any idea what caused them to fail?
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Nope. No time to really get into it - replace 'em and move on. Compaq ships everything Next Day Air, so we really didn't care, so long as we didn't run into a large string of 'em.
Dave Kreskowiak
Microsoft MVP - Visual Basic
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hello all
i need a program that changes system date and makes it persian.
not a date convertor. i need a system date convertor , if there is any?
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Are you saying that you want Windows to process all dates on the Persian calender? System wide, not just in your app?
Dave Kreskowiak
Microsoft MVP - Visual Basic
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