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chanu1982@rediffmail.com wrote:
making a project for a bank
chanu1982@rediffmail.com wrote:
they want it in win98
chanu1982@rediffmail.com wrote:
because security in win98 is less
Remind me never to put money in a bank that requires soemone use Windows 98.
Ech!
George Carlin wrote:
"Don't sweat the petty things, and don't pet the sweaty things."
Jörgen Sigvardsson wrote:
If the physicists find a universal theory describing the laws of universe, I'm sure the a**hole constant will be an integral part of that theory.
My Blog[^]
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first, i don't understand your "-VE ATTITUDE"... why don't you just tell what you think with full non-hidden words ?
secondly, i was just wondering why you were acting like that, just because the MBR is a very critical section for a system, a some viruses replace the sector 0 with their own code to work still the computer is powered on...
that's all.
TOXCCT >>> GEII power [toxcct][VisualCalc]
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Sorry sir* 1000,
But if you know any idea can you please suggest how i achieve my goal.
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How about windows service? Try to create a windows service in vb.net and deploy it in windows.
A thousand mile of journey, begin with the first step.
APO-CEDC
Save Children Norway-Cambodia Office
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is there any chance to speed up video (tv) download?
generaly it works ok 90% of time just sometimes stops for second-two seconds
are for this download managers usable?
or they just for download of files (save-as) when are more mirrors available?
reading reviews at download.com (f.e. freedownloadmanager) i read horror comments "my computer sometimes freezes" etc.
any experience? thanks
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i don't think you can much speed up media player by tweaking, but you can try to increase buffer size or try another player
slowdowns are caused by your inet/ISP bandwidth limit or the server's hosting media stream bandwidth
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I think you can when i get home i will post it
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If i partition the O.S. then any physical partition layer is created or it is logical.
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Partitioning a physical drive allocates a set of clusters on the drive to a logical device. A partition table written to the drive records the assignments.
"...putting all your eggs in one basket along with your bowling ball and gym clothes only gets you scrambled eggs and an extra laundry day... " - Jeffry J. Brickley
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I am hoping somebody out there can help me with this. We have a demo of our application on a terminal server. We have configured it so it can be accessed using the webbrowser RDP client. If accessed in this way it automatically logs the person on to the server and goes straight to the application logon. There is no desktop and we have ensured that there is no access to explorer. Unfortnatley i still dont think we have done enough.
For example i managed to launch explorer from our report engine which allows customization using scripts. Is there anything else i need to be thinking about. I need to be sure the user cannot access any admin tools, launch any applications or access the file system (apart from the tied down folders we want them to.)
JJ
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Hi:
Even after going through the following steps:
(*) Delete Cookies
(*) Delete Files (Temporary Internet Files folder)
(*) Content -> Autocomplete Forms Clear
(*) Content -> Autocomplete Password Clear
(*) Clear History
(*) Close all Running Internet Explorer instances
(*) Logoff and Login,
when we focus the cursor into the Addressbar of Internet Explorer, some of the URLs dynamically appear.
We even searched for that 'text' in Windows Search. (Start -> Search -> Find Text in All Files and Folders)
Where else, does Internet Explorer store these content?
Deepak Kumar Vasudevan
Personal Web: http://vdeepakkumar.netfirms.com/
I Blog At: http://deepak.blogdrive.com/
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Just wanted to add a couple of more observations. In Windows Search, would it also include the Protected Storage locations and would Internet Explorer use them to store history URLs? If yes, then how to clear them?
Deepak Kumar Vasudevan
Personal Web: http://vdeepakkumar.netfirms.com/
I Blog At: http://deepak.blogdrive.com/
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I have a machine with 1.5GB memory (Total Physical Memory). I started logging "Available MBytes" performance counter and it hovers, relatively stable, around 960 MB.
Now, what can I say about this figure? What's "Available MByte"? Should anything above zero be a good sign? That there's spare memory available for non-system threads? Is that what it means?
system consuming around = 1500 MB - 960 MB = 540 MB
Is this right? There's fair amount of paging however, hovers around 4 Pages/sec (I was told that 2 Pages/sec) is "good". "2-20 Pages/sec" is acceptable. Beyond that it probably means you need more memory.
Norman Fung (c)
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That's a bit of a tough one, actually. 'Available MBytes' is the sum of physical memory pages that are free, those that have been zeroed, and those on the Standby and Modified lists.
This needs a bit of explaining. The difference between the four lists is in how much effort the OS needs to go to in order to give that memory to something that needs it (either a process, or some system component).
For security reasons, when a user-mode process allocates a page, the page is filled with 0s (otherwise the previous contents would be visible to the process, possibly disclosing sensitive information). To ensure that it can quickly satisfy the demand for 0 pages, there's a thread (the 'zero page thread') which simply writes zeros to free pages, moving them from the Free list to the Zero Page list. This thread runs in the context of the System Idle Process, and has a priority below everything else, and is never boosted (thread priorities are normally boosted if a thread hasn't run for a long time because higher priority threads are using all the CPU time). In effect, it only runs when the system is otherwise idle.
The Free list is used for allocations when a zero page is not required. This covers system allocations, and also user-mode allocations for memory-mapped files, where the data will be loaded from the file when the program reads the page.
If the Free list is exhausted the OS then tries the Standby list, and if that is exhausted it can try the Modified list. If it must take a page from the Modified list it first has to write the page back to disk, for the Modified list contains pages which have been changed since last written (or changed at all if never written).
That covers allocation but not how these lists fill up again. If a process or component stops using a page completely (uses VirtualFree), it returns to the Free list. More commonly though, pages are removed through working set trimming. The working set is the set of pages that the process or component has used recently. Each process has its own working set, and there's one system working set. The system working set consists of pages used by the system cache, and by pageable code and data in the kernel and drivers, and by paged pool (small data blocks used by the kernel and drivers). Periodically, and when there's memory pressure (signalled by low numbers of pages on the various lists), a system thread wakes up which trims the working sets - places pages that have not been used in a while on one of the Standby or Modified lists. If the page has been written to, it goes on the Modified list. Otherwise it goes on the Standby list.
Periodically, another thread wakes up, which writes a number of pages on the Modified list back to the disk. It tries to do this so that the pages it writes are close together, to reduce the number of I/O operations required.
You may be wondering what the point of these intermediate lists is. The point is that, if the data is still in memory, and the original working set tries to reference them, the OS just gives the page with the existing data on it back to the previous owner. This is referred to as a soft fault, but it's still counted as a page fault. When the page is moved from the Standby to the Free list, or allocated to another working set, the original working set has to be updated to indicate that the page is no longer available. These operations show up in the "Transition Faults/sec" counter.
Windows counts the Standby and Modified lists as 'Available', but it also counts them as 'System Cache'. I suppose they are cached, in a way, because the OS doesn't need to go back to the disk for the data. On this machine, I often see the sum of Available and System Cache exceed the physical memory fitted: right now Available is 510MB and System Cache is 590MB, and there's only 1GB fitted.
Stability. What an interesting concept. -- Chris Maunder
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I've only got the one "good" machine, so I want to do this right without Windows eating itself. The target machine is a Windows 2000 Server with a lot of software installed and bunches of data I don't want to lose. It also contains many programs and settings that have been lovingly configured over the years that I might never be able to duplicate. All it lacks is a means of backing all this stuff up to another location.
In my hot little hands I have Win2K3 Server - Standard and Premium edition, along with multiple copies on Small Business Server 2003. The dilemma is, first - which should I install, and the second - how should I do so to minimize the damage done? Has anyone done this upgrade yet and survived? Tips would be most welcome!
BTW - I do have space for one more hard drive, IIRC, and installing it on a new drive is a possible option, though reconfiguring it would be quite tedious.
"...putting all your eggs in one basket along with your bowling ball and gym clothes only gets you scrambled eggs and an extra laundry day... " - Jeffry J. Brickley
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The main reason is to try it out, and learn about it in depth. The tribe I work for is in the process of upgrading all their servers, and the one I maintain will eventually get updated. I'd like to have some solid experience using it before the change. That's actually the only reason I have Win2K Server here at home. At my last job they were considering upgrading to Win2K, so I built a server and installed it. Of course, after all that expense, they laid me off a few months later.
Fortunately this company is growing, not dying like the last, so there's little risk of a repeat.;)
"...putting all your eggs in one basket along with your bowling ball and gym clothes only gets you scrambled eggs and an extra laundry day... " - Jeffry J. Brickley
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Acronis true image just saved me from an upgrade failue. Make the recovery CD and just backup to an external USB/firewire drive and you can have your system back to the original config in next to no time. Plus it is a great backup application. Of course you can just do a regular backup if you have the free space.
I just upgraded the test server I have at home from 2k to 2003 and I think the 2k installation was from 2001 or so and didn't have any problems. In fact it fixed some problems the system had with wireless networking. The adapter drivers under 2k required a user logged on to access the network.
I can imagine the sinking feeling one would have after ordering my book,
only to find a laughably ridiculous theory with demented logic once the book arrives - Mark McCutcheon
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andy brummer wrote:
In fact it fixed some problems the system had with wireless networking
Hmmm... That's definitely a consideration. I recall now that when I installed Win2K, then installed my wireless drivers, it worked for a while. Then Windows Update insisted that it had new and improved drivers for my stuff. That crashed everything, and made it impossible to download correct drivers from the manufacturer. It took two weeks to locate the original driver CD, and a day of trial and error to get the right set installed to match the firmware version on my rf card. What a misery! I'll look into the Acronis product, but I'm inclining toward upgrading my hard drives while I'm at it now. The prices are falling like stones!!!
"...putting all your eggs in one basket along with your bowling ball and gym clothes only gets you scrambled eggs and an extra laundry day... " - Jeffry J. Brickley
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Roger Wright wrote:
I'll look into the Acronis product, but I'm inclining toward upgrading my hard drives while I'm at it now. The prices are falling like stones!!!
That's why I bought True Image. I upgraded my laptop hard drive. Moving to 7200 RPM made a big difference in performance. NewEgg had a good deal, especially compared to something like ghost, and they have a simple copy image to larger hard drive feature for desktop systems.
Roger Wright wrote:
It took two weeks to locate the original driver CD, and a day of trial and error to get the right set installed to match the firmware version on my rf card. What a misery!
I learned my lesson the hard way in tech support. After spending a couple of multiple hour calls chasing through the registry deleting keys over the phone, I would try to fix for a few minutes and if that didn't work, I'd format and reinstall because that way I could spend my time having a converstation while they reinstalled rather then both of us pulling our hair out in frustration.
My problem was with WiFi, which has much better support in 2003 and XP compared to eariler versions. You should probably google around for compatability problems with your particular model of rf card before you upgrade just to be safe.
I can imagine the sinking feeling one would have after ordering my book,
only to find a laughably ridiculous theory with demented logic once the book arrives - Mark McCutcheon
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andy brummer wrote:
WiFi, which has much better support in 2003 and XP
XP definitely doesn't support it. The entire WiFi thingy in XP has to be disabled to allow the card (or any other Lucent product) to work. Hopefully Win2K3 has improved on it some.
"...putting all your eggs in one basket along with your bowling ball and gym clothes only gets you scrambled eggs and an extra laundry day... " - Jeffry J. Brickley
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Make sure you have a backup.
Roger Wright wrote:
"...putting all your eggs in one basket along with your bowling ball and gym clothes only gets you scrambled eggs and an extra laundry day... " - Jeffry J. Brickley
I can imagine the sinking feeling one would have after ordering my book,
only to find a laughably ridiculous theory with demented logic once the book arrives - Mark McCutcheon
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You should never use windows update to replace a working driver. In addition to the fact that it doesn't always correctly ID the hardware and installs bogus drivers by mistake the certifed drivers it provides are often several years behind the latest release drivers from the manufacturers website. If your driver's already hosed/missing there's no harm in trying it but getting drivers from the manufacturer is (almost?) universally a better choice.
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dan neely wrote:
installs bogus drivers by mistake the certifed drivers it provides are often several years behind the latest release drivers from the manufacturers website
Exactly. I have seen this many times especially with network and graphics cards. I have no clue why they bother to put these drivers in windows update.
John
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