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Thanks, Michael. I didn't check the Winsock LSP, but did use both AdAware and Spybot, to no avail. Stupid question: what is the Winsock LSP? I know what Winsock, just not the LSP. Where do I find it?
Thanks.
Kyosa Jamie Nordmeyer - Cho Dan
Portland, Oregon, USA
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Dear all,
i have a problem with the network as the following :
my domain server has an ip1
and my ISP hase the DNS1,DNS2
when i configure a client to login to the domain i have to put ip1 as it dns and to brows internet from the the same client i have to set both DNS1 and DNS2 for the client
when i did the first senario i could not access the internet and when i used he second senario have long time to login to the domain
I have tried to add that DNS1 , DNS2 as DNS server in the DHCP server but i still have the same problem
if anybody know how to solve this problem i will be thankfull for his help
Regards
Mhmoud Rawas
------------
Software Eng.
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We have a standard Windows application running on Win2K+ OSes. One of our customers has a special requirement where he needs touch screen monitors. So, my query is regarding the compatibility of my app. Will it require any changes, or does Windows handle it by itself, or do I require any third-party software? Some basic issues like how is right-click handled are not clear to me.
Can somebody provide me with some insight into this?
Thanks,
Krishnan
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My application uses a touch screen from ELO TouchSystems[^]. With ELO, your application doesn't know that the touchscreen is installed. The touchscreen works in parallel with or in place of a mouse. The touchscreen can perform single clicks, double clicks, and drag and drop operations. There is no way to implement right click operations using the touch screen only, unless you place a touch area (a button) that means "perform a right click on the point I was last touching", which isn't very intuitive.
The biggest modification you have to make to your application is to make windows and controls touchable. This usually means making them larger, and making their touchable areas obvious to the user. I've found that a 'metric' value of min(screen width,screen height)/12 is a good minimum size for a comfortable control.
Push buttons are easy; just make them bigger. Radio buttons and check boxes work better if they are made larger, and they are given the WS_EX_DLGMODALFRAME extended style. This gives them a raised edge look that gives the user an indication of the touchable area for the control.
Edit controls require an on-screen keyboard. I've made mine task-specific, so I use a numeric spin button, a numeric keypad, or a full alphanumeric keypad depending upon the contents of the edit control.
Scroll bars and track bars are more difficult. The sizes of the Windows scroll bar controls are fixed by the system metrics values. You can increase the size, and Windows displays the scroll bar at the larger size, but it doesn't scale the arrows well, which is ugly. The thumb control for the track bar doesn't appear to resize up to a touchable size. I ended up writing my own scroll bar and track bar controls that sized appropriately.
Software Zen: delete this;
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That's useful to know, particularly the link to ELO, who have international resellers. I like the idea of an on-screen numeric keypad, but I'm not sure I'd want to use a full alphanumeric one!
Is your keypad simulating a staggered qwerty, or is it more rectangular? Don't suppose it makes that much difference to the user, since touch-typing (in the conventional sense) isn't likely to happen!
Steve S
Developer for hire
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Steve S wrote:
Is your keypad simulating a staggered qwerty, or is it more rectangular?
The alphanumeric keyboard is a staggered QWERTY. The keyboard is a relatively simple dialog box, and the keys are pushbutton controls. One important note: the pushbutton controls are a little unusual. Normal pushbuttons issue a BN_CLICKED notification when the button is released. The pushbuttons I use in my keyboard and numeric keypad issue a notification when the button is pressed. This results in a much more natural feel, in terms of the onscreen keyboard feeling like a real one.
Software Zen: delete this;
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I am currently accessing the internet through a proxy server. However, I can't seem to get any IM (MSN,Yahoo, ICQ, etc.) to connect using the same proxy.
Is there anything else I'm missing?
"if you vote me down, I shall become more powerful than you can possibly imagine" - Michael P. Butler.
Support Bone
It's a weird Life
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Sorry if this is the obvious, but did you configure access to each of the programs? (They don't run off the Windows proxy settings)... Make sure you've selected the correct proxy type (Mine is HTTP) and that should be over port 80.
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Yeah, I did. Didn't help though.
Is there anything you can think of?
"if you vote me down, I shall become more powerful than you can possibly imagine" - Michael P. Butler.
Support Bone
It's a weird Life
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IE Works though or no? The only other thing I can think of is if you are running over port 80 and have IIS installed then it can't route traffic beacuse you already have something using port 80. What kind of proxy server is it? A service or just a free proxy or what?
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IE works just fine.
Never mind. A friend recommended e-messenger. Less hassle all around, I think.
Anyway, thanks for the assist.
"if you vote me down, I shall become more powerful than you can possibly imagine" - Michael P. Butler.
Support Bone
It's a weird Life
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All of the IMs I know of use ports other than 80 for communication. You have to enable those ports on the proxy server to allow them to work. Changing the programs to use port 80 won't help because the server end of the connection isn't listening to that port.
Some people think of it as a six-pack; I consider it more of a support group.
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Hello all,
I have created a certificate using the makecert.exe utility (I do not have a certificate server available at this moment). The certificate was created and I moved the certificate to my C:\Intepub\wwwroot directory.
I then opened up the directory security tab in the web site properties dialog box. Then, I clicked on the Server Certificate button and the "Welcome to The web Server Certificate Wizard" opened. I clicked next--> selected radio button option "Assign an existing certificate" and clicked next. The IIS certificate wizard opened but there was no option to browse to where my certificate was located (in: C:\Intepub\wwwroot).
How do I install the certificate I created into IIS? I have looked all over msdn and the web to find some hint of how to do this, but could not find anything.
Any and all help would be appreciated.
TYIA,
lonelobo
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I had to issue the following command:
makecert -r -n "CN=www.benningfield1.com" -b 01/01/2000 -e 01/01/2036 -eku 1.3.6.1.5.5.7.3.1 -sk ANewKey -ss my -sr localMachine -sky exchange -sp "Microsoft RSA SChannel Cryptographic Provider" -sy 12
After that it the certificate wizard "saw" the newly created certificate.
lonelobo
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You need to use Microsoft Management Console to import the certificate into "Computer" certificate storage (it's MY logical storage, Registry\HKLM "physical" storage). Then you can select the certificate from storage in IIS.
Eugene Mayevski
EldoS Corp., CTO
Networking and security solutions, custom development services
http://www.eldos.com
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How about doing it the easy way? Download the IIS Resource kit from microsoft's website and run SelfSSL.
/\ |_ E X E GG
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What is difference between server o.s. desktop o.s. and network o.s. ( operating system) Please explain in detail?
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They really differ in use. Many operating systems come in several flavors because of this, e.g. Windows, Linux, etc.
A Desktop OS targets an end-user, and is [usually] optimized for Graphical Interfaces, Media, et al., while not needing robust features required or needed by Server OSs.
Server OSs are meant to be used by multiple users and as such are optimized for background processing, application/file sharing, print services, databases, internet and network services, fault tolerance, etc.
Network OSs are meant to be used by clients (such as a Terminal Server Client for Windows or VNC or an X-Windows client in the case of Unix.) Applications and ilk run on the Network OS across the wire, the client just sees a representation of it on their "terminal." The client is usually the only software running on the local machine when using a Network OS -- and may be a very stripped down OS whose sole purpose is to be a "terminal" to a Network OS.
Ian Mariano - Bliki | Blog
"We are all wave equations in the information matrix of the universe" - me
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I'm going to resolve my server problem by adding a new drive as C: and re-installing Win2K Server on it. I can then recover anything I need from the existing drives at my leisure, after I have a clean, stable server configured. The question is, since I'll be installing the new drive on IDE 0 as master, when I move one of the existing drives to IDE 1 (where the CD-RW currently resides alone) should it be master, or slave? If this was a simple CD-ROM drive, I'd make it a slave, but I'm concerned about problems writing CDs if the CD-RW drive is not the bus master. Any thoughts?
Some people think of it as a six-pack; I consider it more of a support group.
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I don't think it would matter, I'm running my CD-RW slave to my DVD-RW and it works fine. I don't think the master/slave issue is really as pertinent as in the past which is why SATA doesn't have it.
Matt Newman
All rise for the honorable Judge Stone Cold Steve Austin - From Dilbert Episode 30
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i have a problem with my outlook express in windows xp. when i get new messages, the number of new message appear next to the inbox icon. but when i click the inbox icon to read the mail, there are no new mail in my inbox and number of the new message change to 1. it seem that there is something error in my computer. does any one know about this problem?
Roath Kanel
APO-CEDC
Save Children Norway-Cambodia Office
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Hello,
Is there any way to programatically restore a foreign application from the system tray? (the same as, in most cases, double clicking the tray icon)
All I have found are ways to maximize/minimize windows that are already running out of the tray...
Thanks for any help!
BigManel
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Hey everyone,
Well I am fairly new to linux and I have been messing around with Red Hat. I have been looking for information on the web but just cant seem to find it. I am trying to access data on my windows XP partition while I am in Linux. I see online you are able to do this with FAT32 but not NTFS. Is there anyway to access my NTFS data from within Linux without recompiling the kernal? Thanks for all of your help!
There are 10 kinds of people in this world. Those who understand binary and those who don't.
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As for the reason why this is made so difficult: specifics of VFAT and MSDOS are fairly well known to all. NTFS is less known because Microsoft is keeping this information a bit secret .
Oh, make sure you download the correct rpm for your distro, maybe you have redhat 8 instead of 9 (link on first comment).
more distro's[^]
there's more to the picture than meets the eye...
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