ping 127.0.0.1
Internal commands are executed by the shell and do not exist as a separate binary program. You can find out which of these there are by looking at the 'man' entry for the shell you are using. External commands can be found in various directories, such as /bin, /usr/bin, etc.
An internal command is one that is built in to the shell interpreter and is likely to be used quite a bit. An external command is a file in a directory that can be searched, loaded, and executed. The reason for having internal commands is for performance; it takes a lot less time to have the shell just execute the given internal command than it would take to find it on the system, load it into memory, and then execute it.
No, the wireless mouse adapter was meant to receive the signal from the mouse only. This is because there are many wireless devices and your adapter was designed only to pick up the one registered device. Even if you could donate the mouse responder to the router, the adapter would expect the router to send it mouse specific commands only.
It's fairly common for a processor to have its L1 cache divided into two parts: one for storing data and one for storing instructions. It would the the instruction half of the L1 cache in which incoming commands would be stored.
The ping 127.0.0.1 has host name Loopback, and is used to ping your server to verify software. On the command prompt, the technician would type, PING '127.0.0.1' or PING LOOPBACK.
INTERNAL COMMANDSThese are those commands which are contained in command.com files of MS-DOS.These are those functions that are built into the command interpreter.There is no need of any external file in computer to read internal MS-DOS command.These commands can be used as long as DOS is running on the system.Internal commands do not vary from system to system.These are ver, time, del, md, cd, copy con, cls, date, vol, ren, copy etc.EXTERNAL COMMANDSThese are those commands which are not in-built in MS-DOS.External commands are those which are not included in the interpreter.There is a need of an internal file in the computer to read external MS-DOS command.External command may vary from system to system. This means any two computers with same version of MS-DOS may have same internal commands, but may have different external commands.These are tree, xcopy, diskcopy, more, print etc.
Quite simply no. This is because this would leave you with only the female end of the adapter. I would just get a female to male adapter.
Commands are meant to be effective, otherwise they would be 'requests'
A 12v AC adapter can be use to power devices that requires 12VDC and up to 500mA. It can also be use with electrical devices that require power but do not contain internal components to derive the required voltage and power from the main power.
You would overload and damage the device and/or the adapter.
You can do it with "net user" commands.
Yes, it would actually be a little heftier power supply as to how much amperage it could draw without blowing out the internal fuse.