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Well I never got an answer to what I should use to replace it when I asked last time about Norton specifically. All the answers seemed uninformed and not possible for my situation.
CleaKO
"I think you'll be okay here, they have a thin candy shell. 'Surprised you didn't know that.'" - Tommy (Tommy Boy) "Fill it up again! Fill it up again! Once it hits your lips, it's so good!" - Frank the Tank (Old School)
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I never knew you asked. The big one as far as a performance killer is Save and Restore. It's also useless because my Dad's machine has been killed more than a few times by an installation that S&R just couldn't recover from. It's useless, offering no better performance over XP's built in System Restore.
As far as the firewall, to each his own. I don't use any on my machines.
Dave Kreskowiak
Microsoft MVP
Visual Developer - Visual Basic 2006, 2007
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AVG Anti-Virus is a good, simple, and non-resource-hogging anti-virus package. I don't bother with an outbound firewall, in my experience they're all annoying and offer little security benefit as long as you're keeping malware off your machine. I just use XP SP2's built-in firewall.
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My SO got a new laptop from her company that has 4Gb of RAM. I was wondering how useful this is on a 32 bit processor that only addresses 4Gb of physical memory. As I recall from my VAX/VMS days, User space is the lower 2Gb and the upper space is System, for virtual memory, paging, etc. So if the machine has 4Gb of RAM, it means that the entire O/S is running in memory, right?
I don't quite understand what the benefits might be, since the whole idea of virtual memory is to use a limited amount of physical memory for User mode processes. Can someone explain this to me? There's still paging going on, as processes are switch in and out of context, right?
QRZ? de WAØTTN
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Hi all,
I've recently started a new job and one of my first tasks is to sort out the company login 'script'. It's actually a VB app (with one function spanning 5000 lines...) that displays a form and then configures machine settings, adds reg keys, printers, virus updates etc etc. As it stands, log in time for a machine is ~90 seconds and I've been challenged with not only reducing this to ~20 seconds but to have a look at other ways of configuring the machine at startup.
What sort of techniques are other people using to update their networked machines? I've already started having a look at BITS from MS for installing software updates which looks like it might be a nice solution but that only accounts for about 15s of loading time. Standard desktop OS is XP Pro SP2 if that helps.
Any advice is much appreciated!
Dave
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Group Policy and Active Directory is what normally handles this. Get the Windows Server 2003 Resource Kit and read up on it.
Dave Kreskowiak
Microsoft MVP
Visual Developer - Visual Basic 2006, 2007
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Hi,
I have a Laptop and a Desktop PC.
I have made a Internet connection on the Desktop PC, and i have 2 LAN Cards on my Desktop.I am using CC Proxy for internet sharing.
Internet sharing / file sharing is going fine till the point of ime i have to use my outlook express or remote SQL Server access and other things whihc need remote connedtivity. How can i set these rights on the Desktop so that i dont get an error while doing these type of connectivity.
Deepak Surana
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Right now some buddy of mine is not able to get connected to web while i am
V r on the same LAN and workgroup
his iexplorer shows internet web page cannot be opened
Any solutions!
Spread wat u Know!
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I once had a problem like this and it was caused by my firewall(Norton internet security 2007) blocking internet explorer from connecting to the internet.
So check to see whether it is a firewall blocking your browser from connecting.
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you shoud check the TCP/IP Properties
Subnet mask<br />
Getway <br />
Preferred DNS<br />
Alternate DNS
that may help u
SP
--
Bugs can neither be created nor be removed from software by a developer. They can only be converted from one form to another. The total number of bugs in the software always remain constant.
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I've wasted the entire day so far trying to get XP to install and boot off of a new 300Gb Maxtor drive. I've chosen the default partition size of the entire drive, installed XP SP2, and XP hangs on the initial post-installation boot.
I tried formatting the drive with the Maxtor utility with the same results. Then I tried installing Win2K, which worked, but only allowed me access to a 137Mb partition, which is a known behavior.
I'm about to haul this drive back to Fry's to trade in for a different manufacturer, but I thought it might be a good idea to ask the gurus here if this is a known issue.
Thanks,
-- Dave
QRZ? de WAØTTN
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I had a similar problem once, it was because my BIOS didn't recognize large drives and therefor installed Windows on a 150Mb partition instead of the full 300. What I had to do was update my BIOS and then reinstall once more. The BIOS then recognized the entire drive and installed properly.
Trinity: Neo... nobody has ever done this before.
Neo: That's why it's going to work.
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Thanks for the information M/C. I checked the motherboard (EliteGroup 848P-A) manufacturer's web site and none of their suppport links work. This board is only two years old, so I'm surprised that a) the BIOS don't support big drives, and b) the manufacturer doesn't seem to be supporting this board anymore. It looks like it's time for a new motherboard Or maybe it's time to build a new computer.
Thanks again for your suggestion.
QRZ? de WAØTTN
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Well, my solution was pretty simple. It was clearly the BIOS, so I bought a new mo-bo that was on sale with an Intel 2.6Ghz duo-core processor. $640 later for 2Gb of DDR2, a 500Gb HD for the same price as the 300, a new case, and a super deal on a $20 DVD writer (after rebate) and I've got a brand new screaming system. After the shopping spree, it only took a couple of hours of (very cautious) assembly. The old system has now replaced my ancient Win98 home-use computer, which is now sitting in the recycling pile. I'm a very dude and the new system is very
QRZ? de WAØTTN
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Sweet!!
Trinity: Neo... nobody has ever done this before.
Neo: That's why it's going to work.
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IN windows Xp there is a command Runas /user <appln> .The password can be entered only when asked.
Is there any way to give the password also with the Runas command?
Proud To Be an India
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Nope. How secure would it be if you could type your password in clear text on the command line?
Dave Kreskowiak
Microsoft MVP
Visual Developer - Visual Basic 2006, 2007
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No Dave - iam not giving it directly from command prompt. Iam calling the command in a VBS file thro my VC++ program.
IT works
Option explicit
dim oShell
set oShell= Wscript.CreateObject("WScript.Shell")
oShell.Run "runas /user:administrator ""PrintArt.exe"""
WScript.Sleep 100
'Replace the string yourpassword~ below with
'the password used on your system. Include tilde
oShell.Sendkeys "yourpassword~"
Wscript.Quit
Proud To Be an Indian
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vivekphlp wrote: iam not giving it directly from command prompt
vivekphlp wrote: oShell.Run "runas /user:administrator ""PrintArt.exe"""
How much do you want to bet you're not?
This has some problems because you're waiting 100 (0.1) seconds, then sending the keys. What if the window takes longer than that to show up?? You just typed your password into another window, possibly Notepad?? Nice...you just typed your password, in clear text, into a TextBox.
vivekphlp wrote: Iam calling the command in a VBS file thro my VC++ program.
Why???? Why not just do the same thing in your VC++ app where you'll have much greater control?
Dave Kreskowiak
Microsoft MVP
Visual Developer - Visual Basic 2006, 2007
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Dave Kreskowiak wrote: Why???? Why not just do the same thing in your VC++ app where you'll have much greater control?
Yes , I am now re-coding it to VC++, for time time being i can satisfy my clients with that.;)
Proud To Be an Indian
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That's a nasty hack for something that you should be able to code in about 30 minutes.
Dave Kreskowiak
Microsoft MVP
Visual Developer - Visual Basic 2006, 2007
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In just 30 min??? Thats great - can u just give me an idea of how to code that... plz
Proud To Be an Indian
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Nope. I haven't touched C++ in quite a while. But, the functions are in the Win32 library. You're looking for CreateProcess, probably FindWindow, SendMessage, maybe even WriteConsole.
Dave Kreskowiak
Microsoft MVP
Visual Developer - Visual Basic 2006, 2007
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THanks DAVE For ur help ...
Proud To Be an Indian
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