Click start>click run type in msconfig and then press enter. Goto the start up tab and uncheck programs you do not want.
msconfig
Start-programs-accesories-system tools-system information-tools-system configuration utility-startup- From there you can see what is being loaded up at startup. You can also check/uncheck the programs you don't want. There is a chance that your machine may not have this function, if it wasn't loaded during the machine's setup. If not, then you will have to go and get it off the 98SE CD. The startup configuration utility can also be started by going to the 'Run' item in the start menu and entering 'msconfig'.
False. Run just allows you to use a command line for one command.
If you don't have a utility program like System Suite or something like it, you can do it manually from the Configuration Manager in Windows. Go to Start - Run Type in Config.sys, then Enter This will bring up the Configuration Manager, which will list your Startup Programs and all other background programs. First make a list of the programs you must have to start your system - you don't want to turn those off. To find the offending program, narrow it down by a process of half-splitting - turn off one half of the startup programs in the list you have of the ones you can shut down without any problem, then restart your system. If the problem goes away, you know it was in that group - if not, it's in the other half. Once you narrow it down to a smaller group, split that group in half again and shut half down and restart again. Keep doing it until you find the program. There's an easier way to find the problem also - you can run a Selective Windows Startup. Choose it from the initial startup screen before Windows boots. Selective Startup allows you to perform each startup process one at a time, allowing you to narrow it down to the one that's causing the problem you're having.
Msconfig Allows you to cusotmize files proccessed at startup
cmd
Nslookup
NSLookup
The Go To Command.
Signal handling is a programming concept that allows programs to talk to each other via 'signals'. A user can also issue signals to a program at will using the 'kill' command. For example, kill -15 <command> tells the command to terminate kill -9 <command> tells the command to terminate forcibly kill -USR1 <command> tells the command to do whatever it was programmed to do when it received the USR1 signal.
The command line interface allows you to interact with a computer using text-based commands or instructions. The earliest computers did not have graphical interfaces, so this was the only way to launch programs, perform file operations, and navigate the computer.
more command