click start, programs, and MS-Dos prompt when you boot from a bootable disk or a windows 9x Me startup disk, you get a command prompt instead of the windows desktop
There are many facets of an Operating System that helps protect data. The most important thing however, is that the user themselves protect data. Do not send your data to unknown sources or allow unknown users access to your data. To answer your question more specifically, hard drive encryption is one of the most OS specific ways to protect your data. Windows 10 Pro and Windows 10 Enterprise will allow you to encrypt your data using Bitlocker. Encryption will prevent someone from being able to access your data if the computer is stolen or the hard drive is stolen. From an application level, UAC (Universal Access Control) that is built into the Windows OS helps prevent Administrative access to install unwanted applications that may contain malware or virus that could steal your data.
There are a few easy ways to stop LanSchool.1. You can make a batch file from notepad typing in the following;:xTASKKILL /F /IM "student.exe"GOTO xSave as (name).bat(This method will open a command prompt and repeatedly spamming the kill process for lanschool, that way it isn't restarting itself.)2. Unplug your Ethernet cable (you wont be able to connect to your account if its on a school domain.)3. Search for a program called Lanhack, it gives you the ability to disable LanSchool as well give you the teacher privledges to.4. If you get access to the machines registry, you can find the lanschool reg files in the HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE->Software->Lanschool and then delete it.
It depends on the operating system you are using. For Windows based systems, at the command prompt, use the command 'ipconfig'. You can also use the 'netstat' command to get this information. For a Unix/Linux system, the command is 'ifconfig', although you may also use 'netstat' to find your IP address. also using internet Allaboutsite offers whatismyiptool to find your ipaddress. As the name suggests, this tool lets you instantly find out your IP address online. Just head to the page and see your IP address displayed at the top along with it's physical location on a Google map.
Originally, Windows NT was to be known as OS/2 3.0; the connection is actually quite intimate. Windows NT resulted from the fact that IBM and Microsoft decided to go their own ways with OS/2 after the success of Windows 3.0. Microsoft added a Windows-like API to "their" OS/2, on top of the OS/2 API, and christened the result "Windows NT" (mid 1993; there were a number of other differences between early Windows NT and OS/2, but the API was the principal one). IBM continued development of OS/2, with a more-or-less "native" API. Windows NT and OS/2 continued to diverge over the next few years. For more, see this excellent article on Windows NT: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Windows_NT
The answer is that they are mad and foolish
either go to Start >> All programs >> Accessories >> Command prompt OR go to Start >> Run >> and type in cmd and hit enter.
I'm not sure about Windows 95/98, but in newer versions, there are a couple of ways I know of:"[Windows Key] + R" keyboard shortcut then type "cmd" and press enter"Start Menu" -> "Programs" -> "Accessories" -> "Command Prompt"You could try these out and see if they are the same in earlier OS versions.
go to notepad. type in cmd. save it as a .bat file.click start, hit run, type cmd.
There are several ways to open a command prompt window on Windows 2000. One way is to click Start, then Run, type cmd.exe, and finally press Enter.
Launching the Command Prompt in WindowsThere are many ways to access the command prompt, you only need to do one of the following below:Go to Start - Programs - Accessories - Command PromptClick Start - Run (or Windows Key+R), type "cmd", then press enter. Note: you don't need to include the speech marks.Similar to the above, on Windows Vista or 7, open the start menu, type cmd, then press enter.Launching the Command Prompt with a Batch FileOpen Notepad (Run "notepad" or Start-Programs-Accessories-Notepad)Type the following in notepad: "start cmd.exe" (without speech marks)Open the Save dialog (Ctrl-S or File-Save)Type in "cmd.bat" and Save as Type: All files (*.*), then save the file.Launch the cmd.bat file.
javaw.exe is the java runtime environment process. If you run a java application(usually a .jar file .class file) there are 2 main ways of doing this. 1 is by using the command 'java' which will show a command prompt window. The other is using the 'javaw' command which wont show a command promps windows. It will, however, show error windows when a appication is damaged.
click start, click shutdown, and select Restart in MS-DOS mode from the shutdown dialg box. Using this method, you get a command prompt provide by the DOS real-mode core of trhe Windows 95/98
There are seven simple ways to check server uptime in a Windows 2008. One way is to check under the performance tab in the 'Task Manager', another is typing 'systeminfo' in 'Command Prompt'.
There are two ways 1. By adding roles manually. 2. By using command prompt " DCPROMO "
Click log out and it will prompt you to ask if you want to log out or switch users.
There are three ways I know of to run regedit, which is probably what you want. You can do any one of these:Click Start and type in to the search box (Win 7) "regedit" and press enter. If you are using an earlier system like XP, you will need to click Start then click "Run..." to type it in.Click start and find Command Prompt (CMD.exe). Launch that, then type this exact string in: "start "" regedit" and press enter.Open Windows Explorer and browse to C:\Windows\System32 and find and run one of the following: regedit.exe regedt32.exe or regedt64.exeIf none of these work, then you may need to read and edit through CMD, using the "reg" command. If so, type"reg /?" into Command Prompt to get started.
There are three ways I know of to run regedit, which is probably what you want. You can do any one of these:Click Start and type in to the search box (Win 7) "regedit" and press enter. If you are using an earlier system like XP, you will need to click Start then click "Run..." to type it in.Click start and find Command Prompt (CMD.exe). Launch that, then type this exact string in: "start "" regedit" and press enter.Open Windows Explorer and browse to C:\Windows\System32 and find and run one of the following: regedit.exe regedt32.exe or regedt64.exeIf none of these work, then you may need to read and edit through CMD, using the "reg" command. If so, type"reg /?" into Command Prompt to get started.