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-Gabriel
MGVR
When you see the Microsoft progress bar appear, you know the ____, including all critical services and drivers, has loaded. Answer: Windows Kernel
When you see the progress bar, you know the Windows kernal has loaded successfully.
i dont know u bum
ldlinux.sys is the name of the bootloader file used in SYSLINUX and ISOLINUX (used for booting Linux off of FAT32 and ISO9660 filesystems, respectively). It is loaded into memory by the BIOS on bootup. The loader then parses the configuration file (syslinux.cfg or isolinux.cfg) to know which kernel to launch, along with parameters to be passed to it.
Know it is loaded.
basically, if i understand your question, you want to know in plain ol' english what a kernel is. Basically it is just the main part of the operating system that gets information from applications and submits it to hardware for processing. If you want more specific info regarding a kernel, check out the wikipedia page for it.
If you are able to add roles and manage them, win 2003 was installed properly. Methode: 1. If during installation win server 2003. No any error. 2: If installed active directorey successfully with dns. Note: If you want more information so you can visit http://www.iyogibusiness.com/
Windows only knows its .dll's when it needs them. com dll's are indeed registered by storing the clsid/dll info in the registry under HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT. Non-com dll's can just be copied to an arbitrary place on the system, and Windows searches for the files in the following sequence While a program/application is running: - The directory from which the application loaded. - The current directory. - 32-bit Windows system directory. - The Windows directory. - The directories that are listed in the PATH environment variable.
C:\windows\winn.sif
It depends. Obviously the more you have in the kernel the less you will have for resident memory. This may improve performance if these modules are in use, or it might just take up memory if they are not active. With dynamic loadable modules the idea was to install the module in the resident kernel if it were required at run time rather than compiling them into the kernel. This way an admin can load and unload the modules at will, assuming they know when the modules will be in use.
Until you open up the action and visually inspect the magazine and chamber, you don't. Which is why you always treat a firearm as if it were loaded.
i don't know.................srry