Yes, there are several NetBIOS commands that can be used for network services on Windows systems. Common commands include nbtstat
for displaying NetBIOS over TCP/IP statistics, net view
to list shared resources on a network, and net use
for connecting to shared resources. These commands can help in managing and troubleshooting network connections involving NetBIOS.
a list of additional commands is a sub-menu
when is NetBIOS routable
The menu bar contains a list of commands.
there is no list persay but help in the consel (press ~ key) should give you commands but for a list of commands and what they do just google css consel commands
They are commands. If you put a list of commands together to carry out a more detailed task, the list of commands are referred to as a program.
netbios is built in application in dos command mode we can use netbios in command mode. Its a default in every system that is installed with xp using netbios we can see the types of protocols used types and ip addresses of currently using servers we can also trace out ip addresses of th e servers that are connected with our servers we can also remotely work with other computers using netbios command mode some of the commands are netstat, nbtstat, tracer (posted by earningsmugglers@gmail.com)
sub-commands
DNS commands, or Domain Name System commands, can be confusing. However, the website 'alliedtelesis' provides a list of DNS commands that are easy to download in a handy PDF format.
Just search on the internet for full list of keyboard commands
A dialog box contains a list of commands from which you make selections
To list the user EXEC commands, you can use the command ? or help in the command-line interface of a Cisco device. Simply enter either of these commands at the user EXEC prompt, and a list of available commands will be displayed. This is useful for quickly identifying the commands you can use in that mode.
No, you cannot have the same netbios names because there would be a conflict between the computers and Netbios names are unique names.