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Navin wrote:
Windows didn't help me at all in this scenario. I looked through my debug log files and figured out what was going on. (As noted in a thread above, Windows NT will do strange things if you remove msvcrt.dll.
Matt Newman Sonork: 100:11179
"Jokes should at least try to be intelligent - this is just toilet humor" - Heath Stewart
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Matt Newman wrote:
SA is not associated with a trusted connection
I had this problem until I enabled mixed mode authentication in SQL. Apparently it's set to NT authentication by default. HTH
Paul
Garfield.Bark();<br />
---Configuration: garfield - Win32 Deworm---<br />
C:\garfield.cpp(9) : error C2039: 'Bark' : is not a member of 'CCat'<br />
modified 18-Jul-18 11:59am.
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I apply all the latest patches from windows update and it still says all my pcs are severe risks. Also is it possible to have it ignore the Password never expires problem. I tend to believe if you have people change their password too frequently they will forget it and require it to be reset frequently. After getting tired of this they just tape it to their pc or place a sticky note somewhere on their desk which is way less security than letting them keep their same password...
John
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I'm downloading it now, I'll see what I can figure out
[EDIT]Some warnings are custom settings. For example my Outlook Security is set to Custom (I allow only trusted domains) and it would prefer I were on Medium instead. As for the never expires password, it doesn't even check on XP Pro not on a domain, so I'm not sure about that. As for the updates, there are a few that I have never seen on Windows Update.[/EDIT]
Matt Newman Sonork: 100:11179
"Jokes should at least try to be intelligent - this is just toilet humor" - Heath Stewart
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I've used it, after applying everything I can think of to protect it, and after installing all the available security patches. It still reports severe risk. I guess they know best...
I suspect that the only way to make a server secure by the standards of this tool is to disconnect all the NICs and modems.
"Welcome to Arizona! Drive Nice - We're Armed..." - Proposed Sign at CA/AZ Border
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Roger Wright wrote:
It still reports severe risk. I guess they know best...
Thanks. I was wondering if it was just me...
John
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I managed to get mine down to potential risk. The only reason it was that was because it couldn't determine if some updates were installed (they were) and my Office 2000 Macro settings were too low (I don't have Office 2000 installed )
Matt Newman Sonork: 100:11179
"Jokes should at least try to be intelligent - this is just toilet humor" - Heath Stewart
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Matt Newman wrote:
(MBSA) Microsoft Baseline Security Analyzer
From the likes of this thread, this sounds like another winner of an app to me.
"When a man sits with a pretty girl for an hour, it seems like a minute. But let him sit on a hot stove for a minute and it's longer than any hour. That's relativity." - Albert Einstein
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Navin wrote:
From the likes of this thread, this sounds like another winner of an app to me.
Its nice because it points out things I normally wouldn't think of, but it kind of craps out with beta-ware and previously lingering unistalled software reg keys
Matt Newman Sonork: 100:11179
"Jokes should at least try to be intelligent - this is just toilet humor" - Heath Stewart
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They realize that there are security problems inherent in the OS, I suppose.
"When a man sits with a pretty girl for an hour, it seems like a minute. But let him sit on a hot stove for a minute and it's longer than any hour. That's relativity." - Albert Einstein
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Thanks for all who answered... So it is not just me...
John
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Hi there:
I am interested in getting some information on what to look for when detecting spyware and keystroke loggers. Is it keyboard hooks, and interprocess message intercepts? And how do I determine if they are occuring? I have seen many applications out there but I am not sure if I trust some of them any more than I trust the original spyware. Is there a quick do-it-yourself solution?
J.
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I don' tknow how to determine them, but Ad-aware[^] is really good and easy.
Matt Newman Sonork: 100:11179
"Jokes should at least try to be intelligent - this is just toilet humor" - Heath Stewart
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Hi!
I have Win XP home edition preinstalled. I want to install XP Pro to install. But I do not want to go through, uninstalling xp home and back-uping my entire hard disk to do that. Is there an easy way to upgrade my OS without losing any data?
Please help
thanks,
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You can upgrade to XP Pro, but your still gonna want to back up and you may just be better off doing a fresh install.
Matt Newman Sonork: 100:11179
"Jokes should at least try to be intelligent - this is just toilet humor" - Heath Stewart
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I'll second doing a backup, but I was surprisingly happy with the upgrade from Home to Pro on my laptop.
After 8 months of use it finally got to the point where enough junk had accumulated to make me want to reinstall from scratch but those 8 months were enough for HP to upload a driver pack so I could do the install from scratch
James
"I despise the city and much prefer being where a traffic jam means a line-up at McDonald's"
Me when telling a friend why I wouldn't want to live with him
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James T. Johnson wrote:
on my laptop.
I would probably have done the same thing on a laptop. I have found myself stuck out of luck without drivers and a failed laptop install
Matt Newman Sonork: 100:11179
"Jokes should at least try to be intelligent - this is just toilet humor" - Heath Stewart
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On Windows 2000.
How can i reset a file association ?
I can go into Folder Options->File Types, and change manually the application for each file type, but for example, bitmap files (.bmp) are set to opera, which I removed a long time ago, and I want to reset it to the initial default application for bitmaps.
Thanks.
Maximilien Lincourt
"Never underestimate the bandwidth of a station wagon filled with backup tapes." ("Computer Networks" by Andrew S Tannenbaum )
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right click on any bmp file and choose the 'open with' option. There on, select the MS Paint or your bmp application, and select the check box below promption for open with this in future.
That willl do the best, I guess?!?!
I was born intelligent Education ruined me!.
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I am trying to install XP on my dads computer because his suddenly got a case of reboot as soon as it starts up. So I am trying to install XP on a spare drive. When it is in the copy files mode it will suddenly stop and say something about file not copied etc etc. I have switched between 2 cd drives 2 XP Home cds and I even tried my XP Pro CD. I have tried it on 2 different HDs. I tried cleaning one of the XP Home cds and that didn't help. I can kind of coax it along switching between Home and Pro cds whenever it gets an error. I don't want to do that because it will probably take forever and I have no idea what kind of result I will get (maybe XP Phrome :P) I can only imagine that it is a hardware problem but I don't know where to look. Its an OEM system so everything is integrated. Anyone have any ideas?
Matt Newman Sonork: 100:11179
"Jokes should at least try to be intelligent - this is just toilet humor" - Heath Stewart
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Matt Newman wrote:
Anyone have any ideas?
You've already taken the CD, CD-ROM and HDD out of the problem equation. Only other easily swapped and tested item I can think of is IDE cables. Put another one in and test it again.
Other possibilities are RAM and the IDE ports on the motherboard itself. I mention RAM as I have had machines in the past that worked fine with Windows 9x and then fail with Linux. This I believe is due to memory being handled differently between the operating systems. Windows XP would be more demanding on memory (using every last bit). What OS was on there previously?
Michael Martin
Australia
"I personally love it because I can get as down and dirty as I want on the backend, while also being able to dabble with fun scripting and presentation games on the front end."
- Chris Maunder 15/07/2002
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I'm glad you responded as when you did, I was about to go out and buy a new motherboard. I swapped ram with another working machine. I never thought to try another IDE cable (Lord knows I have plenty of extra IDE cables ) It was running XP before. I think it may be the IDE Controller though (of course like any good OEM machine its integrated). Even when it was new it never seemed to handle disk access very well. I originally wrote it off as Win ME but the problem still existed to a smaller degree when we upgraded it to XP. I'll try the IDE cable thing tomorrow morning and see if it resolves it.
[EDIT] I decided to sacrafice needed sleep to try it, but I didn't waste much. It did the same thing with known working IDE cables. Guess its off to buy the mobo, the wonderful mobo of ...
You know, I better just get some sleep [/EDIT]
btw I forgot how loud those old 5400 rpm 10.2 Gig HDs are. I have a barracuda IV (which is regarded as one of the quitest drives I guess, I didn't know that when I bought it) and I thought that thing was suspiciously loud after I silenced my cooling. With this old thing running I can't even hear my machine its kind of scary
Matt Newman Sonork: 100:11179
"Jokes should at least try to be intelligent - this is just toilet humor" - Heath Stewart
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Michael Martin wrote:
I mention RAM as I have had machines in the past that worked fine with Windows 9x and then fail with Linux.
Interesting. I have one machine that refuses to accept Windows of any flavor - it boots with a corrupt registry after a fresh install. But installing Linux works perfectly, even though Linux declares that there isn't enough RAM to work. Gremlins exist, and they live inside dusty old PCs.
"Welcome to Arizona! Drive Nice - We're Armed..." - Proposed Sign at CA/AZ Border
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We use a mixture of Win98/2K/XP here at work.
I'm concerned that the security updates are not being done (most people just ignore the auto update dialog).
I would like to download all the patches to my server, and then get the PCs to automatically get the correct one locally.
I've downloaded the patch list (mssecure.xml) and I could write a package to do the new updates during login, but I thought there might be something already done.
I've seen the package from MS (a sub-contractor actually), but it only supports 2K or XP.
Does anyone know of such a package, or perhaps would be willing to help write one?
Cheers
Neil
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It sounds like you need Software Update Services[^].
SUS is basically a Windows Update server that you install on your domain somewhere. It accesses Microsoft's Windows Update and tells you when new updates become available. You then assign the updates to workstations.
Your workstations still run the automatic update software, but now they pull the updates from your local server as configured, rather than from the Windows Update website. You can also schedule installations to occur at specific times.
Unfortunately this still only works in a Windows 2k, XP, 2003 environment - there isn't an automatic update component for Win98.
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