The same mistake had happened to me too. You must have given the ending date at the option " The books beginning from". Read everything carefully.
Right click on the file and select "open with" and then "choose program"
Why wouldn't a 1991 dodge shadow with a turbo boost start you've tried almost everything?
My '91 Turbo has similar problems. It will mysteriously die going down the road. Sometimes when it is not warmed up yet, sometimes when it has been driven for hours. Sometimes it will quit at 60 mph, or when trying to pass, or when slowing for a stop. No rhyme or reason. You just have to pull over and keep trying to start it until it starts. Sooner or later it just starts and goes. It may do it 3 times a day or not for several months.
I too have found noone who has a clue to the problem.
AnswerA couple questions...are you able to check and see if you are getting spark when you experience the stall/hard start condition? If you are not, then you have to trace the ignition circuit. A faulty coil can give you problems like that. If you are getting a spark there could be ECM problems. There is also a chance that you are having fuel pump/system problems if spark is present. AnswerIf you check the spark and you have it, then you check to see if its getting fuel and you do. Then check to see if the time belt is moving. The access hole is on the passenger side of the enging at the top. there should be a black plastic plug in the hole. about the size of a nickel or quarter. pull it out and look in ther while somebody trys to start it. if it don't move when trying to start it. you have about a 99% chance you need to replace your timing belt. if you do it yourself. The belt isn't real bad to change but getting the engine in the exact right time is the hard part. and if its not REALLY close then it wont run.When have a hyphenated name how do you file the name alphebetically?
I assume you are speaking of something like this
Brian O-Connor
Brian O Connor
Either can go first, but if you're working for a company, I suggest you check with them.
Here's how I finally fixed the problem…
Go to control panel and click on Performance and Maintenance.
Click on System.
Click on Hardware.
Click on Device Manager.
At the top, Click on view. . .
. . .then click on Show hidden devices.
I found the phantom printer listed here, I right-clicked on it
And deleted.
Keep the key LPTENUM - ignore the MS tech documentation - but change the permissions for key LPTENUM for "SYSTEM" to "Deny" for "Full Control" & "Read". Close REGEDIT and re-IPL.
Problem gone, however if you later require a printer attached you may need to re-visit these changes.
Replace newdev.dll with one that closes itself automatically. Deleting the dll will cause it to be recreated however.
Your OS is recognizing a printer attached to your system on boot. If you don't have a printer, then you need to remove any listed from the add/remove programs. If you do have one, then you need to install/reinstall the driver and software that was included with it at purchase. The best way to do that is insert the disc/floppy when the systems boots, then choose to search from the location the disc is in (cd drive/floppy drive), then follow the instructions given by the wizard.
go to following link to find out a workaround:
http://support.microsoft.com/?kbid=166047
Correction: Go to this site:
http://support.microsoft.com/default.aspx?scid=kb;en-us;298370
You can disable the plug and play services but your system become unstable. All your multimedia are turned off, the device manager sees nothing.
I also have been suffering from this problem, this has absolutely nothing to do with drivers but a broken "Reg Key", and is identified as a "broken component" in the hardware installation wizard for XP. I can only assume that not all users are affected as many will have printers already physically attached/installed. I do not, I only use XP as my employer insists upon it, so I have no requirement for any printing whatsoever from a Windows system....... Anyway ....
The MS article describes deleting the LPTENUM key in the registry - that does not work if like me you do not have any printing. Issues with being denied deleting the key are down to the "Permissions" for the key. Allow "EVERYONE" permission to the key you can delete it. However, the next restart will simply re-add the key, and the problem will re-surface.
MS article - by the way is : http://support.microsoft.com/kb/298370
"The New Hardware Wizard may detect the printer device after every restart of the computer"
SYMPTOMS
"Whenever you restart your computer, the Found New Hardware Wizard may detect your previously installed printer, even though it is not a newly installed printer. "
A SOLUTION !! I have a good solution. It took me a while to figure this out. First of all, find out if your driver/software has it's own removal included. I found a scrubber in my HP printer's installation file folder, even though the driver was not fully installed. It will uninstall/delete all the files that keep it re-installing. If you don't have this file, then go to "start", then "search". Locate any references to your driver/programs and delete them all. Be sure not to delete any other similar named files if possible. This should stop hardware wizard as well.
Why use cmd exe in windows xp?
its a command prompt shell, must be there if you want to use command prompt
Chkdsk utility
What happens when you press CTRL ESC?
why cant you spend three seconds doing that yourself?
And when you spend those 3 seconds, you will note that it brings up the 'Start Menu".
What do you do if you can't access the Internet or LAN after you install Windows XP Service Pack 3?
try some new software (look up the make of your laptop(i have the software of a acer travle mate2350)if stuck e-mail me( ittiny@hotmail.com ))
(By SammytheHusky)
Your network adapter is probably not compatible with Windows XP Service Pack 3.
Here's what you can do:
Uninstall Windows XP Service Pack 3.
OR
Try using a different network adapter.
What is the difference between the root directory your home directory and your working directory?
The root directory is the top level directory of the entire file system. Every branch starts from there.
The current working directory is where you happen to be in the tree at the moment. If the root is always "/" and my process is in the directory /usr/local/bin/test/data, then the root directory is still "/" and my working directory is currently /usr/local/bin/test/data
Will all programs work on 64 bit computers?
No, programs written for 32 bit computers and lower may need a virtual machine in order to work.
One thing you MUST do when you have a BSOD, GET THE ERROR MESSAGE Write down the error message and then find a system to use and go to Microsoft's knowledge base and put that exact error in the search string line and it should give you some kind of indication what is happening. You may have to play around with the error string but just put it in on the website and see what solutions come back.
Sometimes after you reboot a message will pop up saying "The system has recovered from a serious error" and a option will let you send data to microsoft". Press "send data" and in a couple minutes a web browser window will pop up telling you the problem.
What is the reason bad boot ini file error in windows XP?
There is a file named "boot.ini" under the main partition (C:\). This file contains booting information for windows. Use a startup disk to check the file has correct data
There are 3 step to repair bad boot ini file error
If you got bad boot ini file error then there is a 94% chance that your computer has registry problems. To repair bad boot ini file error you need to follow the steps below:
* Step 1 - Download a Perfect Optimizer,install this error repair tool.
* Step 2 - Click the Repair All Button.It will scan you PC for Free.
* Step 3 - Then click the Repair All Button again and your done! It is very easy to repair bad boot ini file error.
Here are the url of Perfect Optimizer: http://www.fixerror365.com/tidpp-bad_boot_ini_file_error-zz0005
Clicking sound in the neck cause?
Any joint can form an air pocket, which is usually harmless and painless. You could get a check-up with a chiropractor if it's annoying or causes pinched nerves.
bone spurs, or rough articulating facettes of the cervical vertibra are the most likely causes
The owner of the registry keys are usually listed as?
This question doesn't make sense, can you be more specific?
Gmail is not working in internet explorer?
Google products are coming up with higher version of Microsoft product compatible.
IE8 will work. Is ur IE lower version.?
But this is not very effective; might be they are starting off with some regions first.....
Try to install chrome or Mozilla and check. I think it is fine as of today!
How do you solve error check toner cartridge in canon laser shot LBP-1210?
problem is chek tone cartridge
"Commit charge" is the total size of all memory which could be stored in the page file(s). It can be thought of as the amount of memory needed by running programs and their data. (In this context, "memory" can be more than just "RAM".)
Modern computers and operating systems don't simply put programs and data into RAM "as is". They use more sophisticated techniques to manage memory. Memory is divided into "pages". Each task gets its own "virtual address space" (also called "virtual memory"). Pages in the virtual address space are mapped to physical RAM and other hardware. That mapping is done by the memory management unit, which is part of the microprocessor.
Some pages may be shared among multiple tasks. These may be the same for all processes. Some shared pages may be "copy on write", where a page starts out as a virtual copy of another page. As long as that virtual copy is only read -- and never written to -- only the original page is needed. An actual copy in RAM isn't made until the virtual copy is written to -- the copy is made "on write", not "on copy".
Some pages in the virtual address space are not used for program storage at all. Disk, video, and network interface controllers generally have memory or buffers of their own, and these get mapped in to virtual memory as well. These pages are used for hardware input/output operations, not storage.
Files from file-systems on disk volumes can also be mapped into virtual memory, making reading and writing to those files work just like reading or writing memory.
As a program runs, it requests memory from the operating system. The system allocates that memory as pages, but doesn't necessarily map them to RAM right away. The system may wait until the program actually accesses the pages before mapping them. This lets a program request a big chunk of memory all at once, even if it doesn't need it right away.
As RAM gets used up, the system can move the contents of less-recently-used pages out to disk (in the page file), freeing up RAM for more active use. If a program then tries to read or write from such pages, the system reads the contents back into RAM before allowing the program to continue.
Because of all this, pages allocated in virtual memory doesn't necessarily use RAM or the page file. Not all pages are allocated for storage, and even those that are allocated for storage may be copies or unused. The system hasn't necessarily allocated actual storage for those yet. However, once a page is allocated for storage, the system is committed to being able to provide storage for it if needed. That is the "commit charge" -- the storage the system has to be able to provide if asked.
Imagine a program which allocates a huge chunk of memory but doesn't use any of it right away. The commit charge will be large, even though actual storage used (RAM, page file) will be small. If that program then writes to every one of those pages, the storage used will catch up to the commit charge.
The limit on the commit charge is the size of usable RAM, plus the size limits of all page files.
Why do network managers often ask users to change their passwords on a regular basis?
because they want to :D
How do you delete scripts from windows live plus?
On the main Windows Live Messenger window, or any other chat windows, click 'Plus!' in the menu bar (accesible by pressing alt, if hidden).
Choose 'preferences and options', entering a password if necessary
Select the 'general' tab, and then the 'Scripts' side option.
Select the offending script (by left-clicking) and press remove.