If you are running winxp, (1)Click Start,,, (2)go to my computer. On the top left hand side of the window (3)click "View system information" under "System Tasks". In the System Properties Window, (4)click the "System Restore" Tab. There is a chech box beside Turn off System Restore,,, (5)Place a check mark there and (6)click apply,, ( this deletes all your previous system restore point, thus deleting the virus, trogan, worm, dialers etc)....
IMPORTANT: (((Make sure you repeat the same steps to turn system restore back on)))
Make sure you run a good anti-virus , firewall, spyware remover and adware remover regularly.... If you need the name of some good free ones I will be more than happy to let you know Marz
Java does not require header files like C/C++.
Yes, include files can be nested in C and C++. In fact, most library implementations do just that.
Compilation is the process of translating source files into object files.
In C: nothing in TurboC: datafiles, necessary to graphics modes
Include files are also known as header files.
no, no problems should happen, but you will niot be able to restore you system if a problem does happen
Delete all past restore points do a disk clean up of everything (history, temp files etc.) and the defragment and see what that does.
c:\windows\system32\config\regback
To remove the Trojan from C:restore-temp You need to delete your restore files. The best thing to do is a system restore. If you do not have a safe restore point, Just delete the restore files.You can do this by going to My Computer properties (System Properties) select System Restore tab and check turn off system restore, click apply. Now your restore files together with the Trojan will be removed. Now turn on System Restore again. Could you please give the Trojan name?
C:\Program Files\SMINST\Restore7.exe for the recovery manager. All the files are located in the parent directory (C:\Program Files\SMINST) When you try to recover anything like apps, drivers, or do a full system restore with the restore7 program it gets all the data files from the recovery partition.
c:\windows\system32\config\regback
C:\WINDOWS\system32\Restore
I have found viruses in temporary internet files. Delete files from your history folder. And I always created a restore point and did a system restore. Always set "days to save internet files" to zero. I think default is 20 days.AnswerI have AVG installed, but I must not have updated properly. I now have a Trojan horse download keenval.j on file c:/Program files/common files/updater/wupdate.exe I also have a Trojan horse startpage.4am on c:/windows/system32/nbibgh.dllIs there another download available to fix this?Thanks John
If you are referring to the System Restore feature in Windows ME/XP then this is how you can do it: The easiest would be to simply disable System Restore, reboot, and then enable it again. This should remove the files. Or you could do this manually: 1) Use a boot disk and boot to DOS. 2) Go to C:\System_Restore (I think this is the location) 3) Simply delete all the files in there. You don't want to leave any since all the files are dependent on each other, and deleting just some will leave a corrupted Restore set. To do it automatically, go to the Control Panel. (Click on Start> Settings> Control Panel). Then navigate to System. When the window appears click on System Restore. Pick a drive and click Settings. Then simply navigate the amount of space to use to the minimum. Or of course you can turn of System Restore then reboot, then turn it back on, this should also remove the files.
To restore hidden files on drive, open CMD. To open cmd, tap and hold "windows button" and hit "r". Type "CMD" [without quotes]. Then find the prefix of the drive you want to restore (e.g. C: ; D: ; F: ; etc.). Now type the prefix to the cmd. Hit enter. Then type [attrib -s -h /s /d *.*] (without brackets). Wait for the prompt to finish.
Java does not require header files like C/C++.
Yes, include files can be nested in C and C++. In fact, most library implementations do just that.