no. It will cause applications to begin to act irregularly, then the computer will begin to slow down, and the BSD may appear. overheating will cause the life of your computer to be reduced and possibly break. Some components may melt, which can virtually end the life of your system.
Yes shutdown <computer IP shutdown>
CPU might be overheating. try clelaning the dust away or upgrading the heat-symc and fan.
shutdown -m \\computername - Remote computer to shutdown/restart/abort shutdown -t xx - Set timeout for shutdown to xx seconds
If you are the legitimate administrator of the (Windows) computer in question, you can do this using the Computer Management tool. If you are not, this is illegal (and the odds are you won't be able to anyway).
because its overheating you need a new PC cooler,or you have a low ram there you answer
Shutdown over Network... You can simply go to the computer on the network through the command prompt and type: Shutdown -s This will turn your computer off in 60 seconds to stop this just type: Shutdown -a There are many more options to the Shutdown command.
engine smoking indicates overheatingdue to low coolant and/or oil if it shutdown because of overheating you may have already done serious damage
three
shutdown you're computer and log in then shutdown again and so on...
Well a couple of things usually will cause a computer to shutdown in that amount of time, first your power supply, or a temp sensor, thus a overheating cpu. To complicate matters Windows xp (before sp1) had issues with the network stack that could cause an overflow, and cause the computer to shutdown. These are the main things that may cause a computer to just shutdown, as vaug as that is. If you in need of more help, please send an email at aerowize @ yahoo dot com -Rob
That depends. Most computers are restricted so that a remote shutdown is only possible for authorised users. But, yes, most computers can be configured in a specific way to allow for being shutdown from another computer.
no way hose