System environment variables
The windows operating system is active whether or not you are logged in. Hard drive activity is normal.
Windows XP and Windows Vista.
Because you may either be logged in as a Guest and not as an administrator and/or the documents are somehow hidden or locked. It can depend on which operating system you are running.
Yes. Just make sure you have the path to the programs in your PATH environment variable.
Sometimes if you are logged into your phone, it will stay logged in until you've logged out. You may not be logged into your account on your computer but you may in fact be still logged in on your phone.
DBYN:If in any derivation we replace the variables starting from the left side then it is called leftmost derivation in automata.let us take an example:consider the following production set--S->aBCB->ccaC->aBThen the leftmost derivation is as below:S=>aBC=>accaC[replacing variable B by cca]=>accaaB[replacing variable C by aB]=>accaacca[replacing variable B by cca]first time i don't have to logged in,i just click on answer it & share as much as i know,but in the 2nd time i have to logged in in order to improve the answer.Anyone knows why is that?
The two concepts build upon each other. A single tasking (ST) operating system is necessarily a single user (SU) operating system, but a single user operating system may be a multi-tasking (MT) operating system. For example, MS-DOS is a SU, ST operating system (there was only one "user" and only one program could run at a time), Microsoft Windows 3.1 was a SU, MT operating system (only one user could be logged in at a time, but multiple tasks could run at once), and Windows XP is a multiple user (MU), MT system, as multiple users could be logged in at once, and multiple tasks could be run at once. There is no known example of a MU, ST operating system.
The past tense of "log on" is "logged on."
No. Multiuser operating systems create a shell for each user. It would be possible to see what each users was doing from a system administrator viewpoint but not form the normal logon window.
The past tense is logged it in.
in your house
I think you type in coordinates and its logged thats how I do it.