Q. We have here at our church a donated computer on which a user account has expired. The donor, the original administrator, does not remember his password unfortunately... There are quite some important files behind this user account. I know about Linux installation etc but can't do that (don't have Linux). Starting in safe mode did not work either. Is there some program I can use?
Thanks! x D-J in L.A.
Thanks! x D-J in L.A.
A. I have used the Offline NT Password & Registry editor at work a few times after somebody forgot the admin password.
It works really well, just follow instruction on the link below, file download is near bottom of page.
It looks alot more complicated than it really is........trust me!
All you need is to unzip and write it to floppy disk using the bat file supplied in the zip file.
Although it says NT it works on NT/2000/XP (looks into the computers SAM file which holds the passwords)
Hope this helps.
It works really well, just follow instruction on the link below, file download is near bottom of page.
It looks alot more complicated than it really is........trust me!
All you need is to unzip and write it to floppy disk using the bat file supplied in the zip file.
Although it says NT it works on NT/2000/XP (looks into the computers SAM file which holds the passwords)
Hope this helps.
How to open or run applications in Solaris 10?
Q. I am having difficulty figuring out how to actually run an application through terminal or in JDS.
For example, If I am using the command line and I want to open and read a READ ME document.
What is the command that I need to type in order to open and view the text file? What about applications that i download and unzip like OpenOffice ?
For example, If I am using the command line and I want to open and read a READ ME document.
What is the command that I need to type in order to open and view the text file? What about applications that i download and unzip like OpenOffice ?
A. I don't know much about JDS, but I can offer some assistance with the terminal bits. In a terminal, the simplest way to view a text file is the 'cat' command, to see the contents of the file 'readme.txt' just type:
cat readme.txt
There are some other commands which offer better functionality, such as paged results and scrolling up and down, the common ones are 'less' and 'more' - just use them the same way:
more readme.txt
You can run programs by typing their name in terminal, whether they are commands or not is determined by a file attribute. Type the command 'ls -l' to see file attributes, the ones where you can see an 'x' (but not a 'd') are executable (if they have a 'd' they're directories, they'll have an 'x' but they're not files).
If the commands are in your path then just typing them in to the terminal, if you want to run a program in your current directory you have to prefix it with './' - so to run the 'oowriter' command when you're in the same directory as the program file, you would type:
./oowriter
For a more complete introduction look for anything which covers 'bash' - at the basic level all the Unix type OSes are very similar (Solaris, Linux, Mac OSX etc.), I've linked to one below.
cat readme.txt
There are some other commands which offer better functionality, such as paged results and scrolling up and down, the common ones are 'less' and 'more' - just use them the same way:
more readme.txt
You can run programs by typing their name in terminal, whether they are commands or not is determined by a file attribute. Type the command 'ls -l' to see file attributes, the ones where you can see an 'x' (but not a 'd') are executable (if they have a 'd' they're directories, they'll have an 'x' but they're not files).
If the commands are in your path then just typing them in to the terminal, if you want to run a program in your current directory you have to prefix it with './' - so to run the 'oowriter' command when you're in the same directory as the program file, you would type:
./oowriter
For a more complete introduction look for anything which covers 'bash' - at the basic level all the Unix type OSes are very similar (Solaris, Linux, Mac OSX etc.), I've linked to one below.
Can i use the ubuntu linux commands on windows XP?
Q. I know a bit of commands that i learnt from ubuntu linux and i want to use the ubuntu linux commands on Windows XP.
Can i use it on Windows XP?
Thanks
Can i use it on Windows XP?
Thanks
A. I guess you can do Cygwin, but it is usually overkill. What I like best is just put a few Unix tools on Windows and use the best of both worlds.
Goto http://downloads.sourceforge.net/unxutils/UnxUtils.zip?modtime=1172730504&big_mirror=0
I just unzip exe's in archive folders bin and usr/local/wbin/ to the system32
Goto http://downloads.sourceforge.net/unxutils/UnxUtils.zip?modtime=1172730504&big_mirror=0
I just unzip exe's in archive folders bin and usr/local/wbin/ to the system32
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