Just execute the setup file through DOS. Say if your Mozilla setup file "mozilla.exe" is in D drive then just run the below command:
C:\> d:
D:\> mozilla and press enter..
it can be accessed via command prompt
To open a command prompt via "Run" make sure you are the admin on your computer. Open the run box and in it type "cmd" and press enter. A black command prompt box should open up.
There is usually no way to undo a command. Everything executed in the command prompt, is usually final, and has to be manually undone via the same way it was done. There are some command line programs that allow you to undo what it has done. But with the vagueness of your question I am unable to give you a definitive answer. NOTE: Deleting a file from the command line is irreversible and external software will be needed to retrieve the file.
Command prompts can be quickly used to accomplish things that cannot be accomplished via using a graphical user interface. Some people can do something (like finding out their own internal IP address) much faster and more efficiently by using the command prompt then they can if they were to click through menus. Furthermore, in the event that the desktop is unavailable, the command prompt can be the only way of performing certain repair tasks (like fixboot/fixmbr commands when a windows CD is booted in 'repair mode', to fix an unbootable computer).
The hypertext transfer protocol allows the transfer of web pages via a browser.
You can contact a computer repairman and/or QWEST to determine the cause of this issue and to try to find a solution.
In windows you can access DOS mode by clicking "run" in the start menu and typing "command" into the blank. DOS mode can also be accessed via the boot menu (accessed by pressing F8 during startup) and choosing command-line.
Unix and Unix-like systems would be referred to as command interpreters because of the nature of their interface. These systems are interacted with via a shell (i.e. Bash), which is a 'command-line interface' where the user types in text commands and they are executed by the system. This is in contrast with modern operating systems where the primary method of interaction is via a 'graphical user interface' or GUI, where the system is represented with graphics (like windows, cursors, toolbars etc.). These modern OS's still include command-line interfaces, like Command Prompt in Windows and the Terminal in OSX.
Command line interface is giving direct line commands to the computer via a terminal of some kind (MS-DOS command prompt in Windows). Resource protection is a set of rules set in the operating system to disallow the user from changing or deleting a file, because it is critical to the operability of the operating system.
You can log in via telnet or ssh protocol for a command line prompt environment to Unix, or you can use a graphical user interface such as KDE or Gnome, or the CDE environment via X-windows. In any of these protocols, you must supply a username and password to successfully log into the Unix system.
via usb cable
install via iPhone Utility.