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hi,
Thanks for reply.However it requires windows server 2003 or windows XP Enviornment.I am using "Windows 2000 Professional"..
So I can not use TweakUI.
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pubududilena wrote: But I think Domain computer,it can not do...
Read this article[^] and try to test the key DefaultDomainName key under HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\WindowsNT\CurrentVersion\Winlogon
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Hi guys
I only was wandering what I have to do to simulate the moon and sun keys in my keyboard if I don't have it.
Is there an equivalence if you don't have these keys in your keyboard?
Doc
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doctorpi wrote:
the moon and sun keys
What kind of keyboard are you used to - Atari?;P
Boredom, Bull$^%&, Baggage, Bar - all start with 'B' Coincidence?
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You have never seen a PC keyboard with a moon an a sun?
What kind of country do you use to live? Nepal?
Moon = Sleep computer
Sun = Wake up computer
My answer is so polite as yours.
I'll not continue answering your "non helping" post.
Doc
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doctorpi wrote:
What kind of country do you use to live? Nepal?
The US, and despite having used keyboards since the ASR33 Teletype was considered state of the art, I've never seen a sun or moon key on any of them. But since you've clarified the meaning of your original post, such functionality is implemented in the keyboard driver software that is installed with the device. You could write a new driver for your keyboard, but it may be possible to write an application to intercept keycodes before Windows processes them and execute your own custom instructions for specific codes. A simple keyboard input scanner will help you to determine which keycodes to look for.
Boredom, Bull$^%&, Baggage, Bar - all start with 'B' Coincidence?
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well I have to say I too was wondering what keys you were talking about. There is no sleep/wake keys on my keyboard - I had one that did (but there was no moon or sun on them) and I got rid of it as fast as I could find another without them - they should be banned. Nearly had a heart attack first time my computer suddenly turned itself off and I had no idea why... I'd accidently hit Sleep. Horrible things.
And if you can't ask clear questions you can't expect the answer you want.
Phil
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I am trying to use the File.Delete(path) command in an ASP.NET application. It works fine on the remote webserver, but here on my development machine (XP Pro with IIS) I get a permissions error....
...the erro page says I can change the file-access permissions via Windows Explorer (right-click/properties/security) but there is no security tab here... I am logged in as the computer administrator.
How can I chagne the permissions associated with the ASPNET machine account? Going the obvious way via control panel doesn't seem to give any options... there is no ASPNET user account as such, except when I look under admin tools / computer management / users - but again, no options to change anything useful, as far as I can see...
any ideas greatly appreaciated
thanks
Phil
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Thanks - my problem is that I can't get this "security" tab to appear! However, I solved things by simply adding a
<identity impersonate="true" />
to web.config - this, I gather, makes the application impersonate my admin user rather than then the built-in aspnet machine user... it works!
ta
Phil
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yes, I know that! But this is only on my development machine - on the webserver proper it runs fine without having to modify web.comfig. Ta, P.
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Hmmm... Does the XP version of IIS install an IUSER account or equivalent? Granting Admin rights to it might help.
Boredom, Bull$^%&, Baggage, Bar - all start with 'B' Coincidence?
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Yes, it does... I guess it would make more sense to impersonate that account rather than the admin one, but security isn't really not an issue on this machine...
...on a slight tangent, I can't help but feel that Microsoft, bless their little cotton socks, are in danger of losing sight of the woods for the trees with regards their OS security - it's so damn complex, so many options and settings and possibilities, that anyone who isn't a real expert (ie an awful lot of us) end up either ignoring it or leaving gaping holes because we haven't configured it right... surely it doesn't have to be so hard to understand? I think there is maybe a case for going back to the drawing board, Bill..
thanks for you reply
Phil
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Phil Uribe wrote:
there is maybe a case for going back to the drawing board, Bill..
I'm in complete agreement with you there!
Boredom, Bull$^%&, Baggage, Bar - all start with 'B' Coincidence?
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Conspiracy, complexity, crap... all begin with "C" - as does Coincidence....
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Boredom, Bull$^%&, Baggage, Bar - all start with 'B' Coincidence?
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Hi all, I just signed up here and come to find out most of this stuff is all over my head. I thought someone here would tell me how to use xphome edition and not have to re-install every 30 days before shut-down. And please don't tell me to Register the damn thing. :-Dlol I'm not much a a bull-shitter so I can't call 'em up on the phone and give a story...I'm no good at that.
Thanks I sure would like to know this!
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If you don't activate your legal copy by phone or via the Internet, it will fail to run every thirty days. Just do it.
If your copy isn't legal, buy a legal copy and install it and activate it.
If that's not acceptable, you're a thief and we have no use for you here. We all, in one way or another, make a living creating intellectual property, and we respect the rights of others who have done so before us. TANSTAAFL. If that's undecipherable to you, you won't like it here very much, anyway.
Boredom, Bull$^%&, Baggage, Bar - all start with 'B' Coincidence?
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If your Windows is ilegal to disable automatic updates do this
right click on MyComputer icon -> Properties -> Automatic Updates-> then click checkboc where write TurnOff AutomaticUpdates
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I have inherited a W2K/terminal server/IIS system with an activex control on specific web-pages.
The TSAC control doesn't specify the .SecuredSettings.StartProgram on the web page, but a system policy is configured on the server wih the Windows NT Shell->Custom User Interface->Custom Shell enabled for certain groups and users. This setting specifies the executable to run...
Is there a good reason to use the system policy instead of specifying it in the control?
Is there a way to specify the app to launch based off the user's membership in groups?
What I have is working, just curious if there is a good reason for the way that it is setup.
Any comments would be appreciated.
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...though anyone else can feel free to answer.
I am having a problem on my home network that is also appearing at a customers site I will be visiting again later this morning. Both networks are run from an ADSL modem/router (mine is a Netcomm NB-1300 Plus 4, customers D-Link DSL-504G0) that is the DNS and DHCP servers.
IP are given correctly, internet access is fine, browsing, email, pinging by IP and HostName. When accessing within the internal network pinging by IP Address is working but pinging by HostName fails, with DNS unable to resolve.
This isn't a big deal, but the Third Party software (it's a Smash Repair shop and the software connects to insurance companies for quotes. I am only a Sys Admin/Technician, I'm not coding anything) wants to talk to each other by HostName.
Any idea why? (Forgot to say XP Pro and Win2000 Pro are the 2 machines at customer).
Michael Martin
Australia
"I controlled my laughter and simple said "No,I am very busy,so I can't write any code for you". The moment they heard this all the smiling face turned into a sad looking face and one of them farted. So i had to leave the place as soon as possible."
- Mr.Prakash 24/04/2004
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