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Hi,
I have an remote Win-XP box to which I need to connect (Means I want to log on to Win-XP box from Win 2000 Prof box) . How can I get connected on to it. I am on a box which has Windows 2000 Professional.
Came to know that Terminal services is not for Win-XP, Will WinVNC work?
Or any other way.
Thanks,
Prashant
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If it's Windows XP Pro, go to Control Panel > System, Remote tab, and check 'Allow Users To Connect Remotely To This Computer'. You can now use Remote Desktop Connection[^] to connect to the PC. Remote Desktop Connection is basically the new name for Terminal Services Client.
XP Home doesn't offer Remote Desktop.
Stability. What an interesting concept. -- Chris Maunder
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Hi guys
How we can recover a deleted file in windows. i think we can do it by changing some file table entry.
Help me if any one knows.
Thanks in advance
bye
i can do anything
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What do you mean? By any software or by your software?
There are alot of utilities that can help you recovered deleted files. For example: GetDataBack, DiskEdit, iRecover, NU...?
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I have a standard Win32 application ( MFC, SDI ) that I have written.
On most user's desktops, set to run at 1280x1024 with "small fonts", the application appears fine.
However, when the application runs on one user's machine the fonts appear larger than normal causing the application's window to not fit on the display without showing scroll bars.
I have verified her settings are 1280x1024 with "small fonts" like everybody elses ..
What else should I look at to determine why the application is behaving differently on her machine ?
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You'd think something like this would be easy... but it has been a difficult journey so far. But anyway, I am simply trying to be able to run the MSDN installer from the command line, in an unattended mode.
I can mostly make it work with this gem:
msiexec /qb /i F:\msdn.msi SETUP_EXE=yes
(assuming F: is a CD or network share or someplace containing the MSDN install package.) That will always install it into C:\Program Files\MSDN, and I may or may not want it there. I want to be able to specify a target directory on the command line.
After some poking in the MSI package, I tried this, but to no avail:
InstallFolder=C:\Foo
I then found I can specify this property to make it work:
MSDN_QTR.3643236F_FC70_11D3_A536_0090278A1BB8=C:\Foo
There has to be a better way. I am worried that the identifier there is arbitrary and might change on me when the next MSDN comes out. Does anyone know a better or more reliable way of doing this??
Sometimes I feel like I'm a USB printer in a parallel universe.
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Do you have a copy of ORCA or msi2xml?
This would let you look in the tables, and you could examine different MSIs from say, Jan and April, and see if the install folder is different. This will be in the properties table somewhere.
The trailing bit looks suspiciously like a GUID, so it may well change from release to release...
Steve S
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Yes, I found it using ORCA. I should probably look in the April release (I used this one from the January release) to see if it changes... if it does, I guess I'm hosed.
Sometimes I feel like I'm a USB printer in a parallel universe.
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This is odd. The PC I gutted last week, replacing the PII motherboard with a 3GHz P4, runs as slow as the old one. A bit of exploration revealed that the C: drive is operating in MS-DOS Compatibility Mode. That explains the slow operation, but none of the Technet Knowledge Base solutions applies to this unit. I've sorted through about 40 of the articles, and all talk about specific situations which are not applicable. Any other ideas?
Some people think of it as a six-pack; I consider it more of a support group.
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Roger Wright wrote:
replacing the PII motherboard with a 3GHz P4
I can't say I've ever used a P4 as a motherboard for a PII system...
Seriously though, you might want to check the bios see if there is something in there. (Assuming this was the Win 98 machine you were talking about earlier) Could it be something with some of the P4 features that aren't compatible with 98? Is hyperthreading enabled?
Matt Newman
All rise for the honorable Judge Stone Cold Steve Austin - From Dilbert Episode 30
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Matt Newman wrote:
Could it be something with some of the P4 features that aren't compatible with 98?
I doubt it, as I've seen a few systems using a P4 with Win98SE. Things just got weirder, too. I was working on another Win98SE PC today for an entirely different customer, and that one is running in MS-DOS Compatibility Mode, too! What the heck is going on here, some kind of plague?
Some people think of it as a six-pack; I consider it more of a support group.
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MS-DOS Compatibility Mode can sometimes be caused by a boot-sector virus. Use a virus scanner.
My other suggestion is to use a modern operating system
Stability. What an interesting concept. -- Chris Maunder
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Although searching Technet has been futile, Google came up with some interesting tidbits. For one, if the PCI controller supports serialization between channels, and a CD-ROM driver is loaded from AUTOEXEC/CONFIG, the hard drive is forced to operate on Compatibility Mode. Another is a damaged MBR caused by an earlier virus infection - and I know that both PCs have had virus problems before. A third possibility is that, at some time in the past, the system failed to intialize 32-bit protected mode drivers for the drive controller. Once that happens, a NoIDE value is added to HKLM\System\CurrentControlSet\Services\VxD\IOS, and several entries of BAD_IDE are written in the Registry. If these are manually removed the system will attempt to detect a 32-bit driver again, but as long as they remain it will never try again.
Some people think of it as a six-pack; I consider it more of a support group.
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I am not sure what the problem could be, but I am unable to bring up the IIS
web site properties. It won't come for the default web site as well as for
sub-webs. I have IIS 5.1 on XP Professional SP 1. I did install PHP earlier
today and am not sure if that might have caused any issues.
Any help is appreciated.
Now with my own blog - void Nish(char* szBlog);
My MVP tips, tricks and essays web site - www.voidnish.com
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Sounds like maybe PHP's isapi dll was not installed correctly. You could try reinstalling php maybe that would clear it up. If not you could try uninstalling php then IIS, reinstalling IIS and PHP.
Matt Newman
All rise for the honorable Judge Stone Cold Steve Austin - From Dilbert Episode 30
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Nishant S wrote:
I was hopin' there'd be an easier way out
Yeah, it would be my last resort too but I couldn't find anything else.
Matt Newman
All rise for the honorable Judge Stone Cold Steve Austin - From Dilbert Episode 30
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Hi to all,
i have developed a Remote Desktop application.
The server in a Windows Service.
When i restart the PC, i send ctrl+alt+del from client, and then i must send the authntication data.
I'm not able to capture the login screen.
Can anyone suggest me a function to capture the login screen, or how i can log in my system by-passing the windows login window (not auto-login)
Thanks in advance
Davide Vitiello
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Some time I can't delete files (avi) and I get the well known message:
Cannot delete file abcd.avi. It is used by an another process. Try closing any process using this file and try again"
But unfortunately, I don't have no process using this file, and trying to delete it at windows boot up don't succeed any more.
Do anyone have a utility forcing deleting.
thanks,
H.
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There's a handy program called "WhosLocking" that I found using Google a couple years ago. Once it's installed it's available in the context menu of explorer - right click on a file and select WhosLocking. It displays all processes that are currently using the target file, and double-clicking on a process name shuts it down. I've used it for a long time to get rid of files that I can't delete by normal means, but you have to use some judgement in using it. Some processes can't be stopped without making your system unstable, so you really have to know what you're doing. What I usually do is determine what program I want to shut down, locate it, and view its properties to see if it's something critical to Windows before I kill it.
Some people think of it as a six-pack; I consider it more of a support group.
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Hi,
thx.
I tried it, but unfortunately, it pointed to the files as not locked by any process. In the other hand I still wasn't able to delete them because of the same reason as before.
Very strange for me. sort of voodoo
Haim
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Ok,
I found the utilisty @ www.sysinternals.com.
It not only do delete any file, but is deleting it using DoD 5220.22-M secure file deleting requirement.
For all those who need it, it may be found at:
http://www.sysinternals.com/ntw2k/source/sdelete.shtml
Enjoy it
and thanks to Mark Russinovich for this great utility
Haim
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simply go to dos and type this
forcedel /S <filename>
I know it works on win2k have not tried it on windows xp
Win32newb
"Programming is like sex, make one mistake and you have to support it for a long time"
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I've had my Windows XP autoupdate downloading a critical patch every single day for the past week or so. I install the patch and the very next day it downloads again. I'm not 100% certain it's the same patch, but I'm pretty sure it is.
So I've come up with two possiblities.
1. I've got a virus that keeps erasing files from the critical patch, forcing it to re-downlad every day.
2. The critical patch is actually a virus, which re-downloads itself after the virus is removed by my scanner everyday.
I've scanned for viruses several times with the latest dat files and everything appears to be clean. So what's going on?
I also keep getting emails from system admins around the world saying my email was blocked because it contained unsafe attachments. The attachment is listed, but not contained in the email. These are all emails I haven't sent, to the best of my knowledge. They're to people and companies that aren't even in my address book. I can only assume it's someone I know who's got a virus on their machine that is sending itself out with my name on it, from their address book.
Any thoughts on these two issues would be greatly appreciated. Thanks
Kevin Ranville
"Go to, I’ll no more on’t; it hath made me mad." - Hamlet
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For a while, I got some emails from sysadmins saying my email was blocked. I traced it to my use of my un-obscured email address in some MS newsgroups.
One of the worms, I cannot recall which, was in the habit of harvesting email addresses from those newsgroups, and then using them in its emails. Quite nasty.
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