مصدرك جيّدة من معلومة وأخبار حوالي نافذات [فيستا], برمجيّة و [فيستا] على الإنترنت

[فيستا] مواد أعلى 50 [فيستا] [فيديو] [فيستا] ليّنة [فيستا] مساعدة

[بوورشلّ]

أنت حاليّا تستعرض المواد من [مس ويندووس] [فيستا] [كمبتيبل سفتور] تلاءم الصنف [بوورشلّ].

ثبتت الأولوية من عملية [بي نم] تلقائيّا, في [فيستا] - جزء 2

هذا ليس ماذا أنا أريد أن يكون كتبت حوالي. غير أنّ يجبرني اكتشاف حديث أن يتمّ هكذا. هكذا, قد قرّر أنا أن يجعل هذا تجربة, ويتسوّل إعتذاراتك أنّ هذا لن يتلقّى كثير إستحقاق فنّيّة على الرغم من العنوان.

بعد الموقعة متأخّرة, ثبتت الأولوية من عملية [بي نم] تلقائيّا, في [فيستا] (أيّ على الأرجح استطاع يتلقّى يكون عيّنت كثيرا جيّدة), اكتشف أنا أنّ الموقعة كان قد جعل طريقه إلى بعض أخرى موقعات. يظهر هذا موقعات أن يسحب محتوى من [ألّ وفر] النسيج, يعبّئ هو فوق ك هم خاصّة, ويقذف [أد] [ألّ وفر] هو. واحدة محظوظة إن الموقعة يتساوى مراجع الأصليّة مؤلفة أو خطوات [بك تو] الموقعة أصليّة من الموقعة. هو يثبّط, أن يقول ال بعض. أنا كلّ لتوزيع من معرفة و [ث.ليك], غير أنّ يأخذ أنّ هو أيضا بعيدا. ربّما أنا سوفت لا يشعر هذا طريق, غير أنّ وضع أنا (مثل أخرى) دماغ عرق ووقت داخل العمل أنا أتمّ, وهو كان لطيفة إن المصدر من المعلومة على الأقلّ كنت ذكرت إن هم يكون يذهبون أن ينشر هو دون المؤلفة رضاء.

هكذا زار أنا اثنان من هذا موقعات (أيّ أنا أتلقّى

طقطقت أن يستمرّ يقرأ "يثبت الأولوية من عملية [بي نم] تلقائيّا, في [فيستا] - جزء 2"

يكتب ب "/\/\ |\/" ®© فوق يناير - كانون الثّاني [31ست], 2008 مع ما من تعليقات.
قرأت كثير مواد فوق [أثرسفتور] و مدربة معامل و أولوية و [سسنترنلس] و [بوورشلّ] و [فيستا].

[بوورشلّ] مجموعة سياسة ينعش جهاز تحكّم عن بعد

فحصت خارجا هذا جديدة [بوورشلّ] [كمدلت] [مر-ليا] من [درّن]:

نحن قد تلقّينا الإمكانية مع أخرى أدوات/نص - غير أنّ يستعمل [بس] جديدة, مادّة خام عظيمة!

 

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يكتب بيعقوب [ه.]. هيدلبرغ فوق يناير - كانون الثّاني [30ث], 2008 مع ما من تعليقات.
قرأت كثير مواد فوق [أثرسفتور] و مجموعة سياسة و [بوورشلّ].

ثبتت الأولوية من عملية [بي نم] تلقائيّا, في [فيستا]

الأخرى يوم لعب أنا كان حوالي مع ال Image File Execution Options and Sysinternals’ Process Monitor, in Vista. I saw an interesting query take place. Using notepad.exe as an example, I saw a query for a key called “PerfOptions” in [HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows NT\CurrentVersion\Image File Execution Options\notepad.exe] when I ran notepad. The result was NAME NOT FOUND, so I decided to rectify that. After adding a key named “PerfOptions”, I ran notepad again. In Process Monitor, I saw queries for four values:

  • IoPriority
  • PagePriority
  • CpuPriorityClass
  • WorkingSetLimitInKB

Because of recent explorations with process priorities*, CpuPriorityClass grabbed me right away. Looking at the SetPriorityClass function, one can see the different values for the dwPriorityClass parameter. I created a REG_DWORD named CpuPriorityClass in PerfOptions, and set the value to 0×80 in the hopes that notepad would launch with “HIGH_PRIORITY_CLASS”. Instead, it launched with a priority of NORMAL_PRIORITY_CLASS (8) - the setting had not made any impact. Then, I set the value to 8 and launched notepad. Notepad launched with a priority of 8. I changed the value to 4, and that had no impact. I changed the value to 0 - no impact. I tried 10 - no impact. I couldn’t see any

Click to continue reading "Set the Priority of a Process By Name Automatically, in Vista"

Written by «/\/\Ø|ö±ò\/»®© on January 27th, 2008 with 1 comment.
Read more articles on otherSoftware and Process Monitor and priority and sysinternals and PowerShell and vista.

Windows PowerShell: Screencast on JAMS

This is my first screencast (ever!), and I am hoping to do more on PowerShell, and anything related to PowerShell. In this first screencast, I’m going to do a demo of JAMS: JAMS (Job Access & Management System) is a commercial software product that provides job scheduling for Windows, OpenVMS, UNIX and Linux systems. As of a few months ago, it now provides full PowerShell support

The idea of doing a screencast came to me a few months back, Jeffrey Snover blogged about JAMS on the Windows PowerShell team blog. He mentioned that he would like to see some kind of video demo of how JAMS worked. Since nothing was available, I decided to do a screencast on it, and here it is in Flash format: JAMS screencast.

If there’s anything in particular related to PowerShell that you’d like to see a screencast on, leave a comment here or post something in the scripting forum, and I’ll add it to my list of things I’d like to cover in the future.

I hope you enjoy it!

Click to continue reading "Windows PowerShell: Screencast on JAMS"

Written by marco.shaw on October 29th, 2007 with no comments.
Read more articles on PowerShell.

Introducing Marco Shaw

I think Windows PowerShell is one of the greatest things to have been released recently (yes, I am a poshoholic).

At TechEd 2007 last June in Orlando, a lot of people were talking about PowerShell. Ben Pearce put together a list of the top 5 questions he was asked while doing demos. I will leave it up to you to check out the questions, which have pretty detailed answers. I am going to start blogging on TLA about Windows PowerShell, and how it can make *your* world a lazier better place. I am hoping that, along the way, I can help you understand and appreciate the POWER of PowerShell, and help you automate your environment or even just help with your regular daily stuff. At any time, please post in the scripting forum, if you have any questions or comments on PowerShell. You can even post your own scripts in other languages, and ask “how do I do this in PowerShell?”. I will help you find the answers…

I want you to be as excited as I am about this new technology.

Exchange 2007 was basically *built on* PowerShell, and as of Windows Server 2008 beta 3, it can

Click to continue reading "Introducing Marco Shaw"

Written by marco.shaw on August 30th, 2007 with no comments.
Read more articles on PowerShell.

Web Site Monitoring with PowerShell

The following example opens a URL every 5 minutes, tests the content, and measures the time it took to download the HTML for the page. Notice that all the HTML is dumped into a big fat string. The string is then searched for specific text that is known to be in the requested page. Note that this script runs forever and can be stopped with a Ctrl-C.

Example PowerShell script:

$webClient = new-object System.Net.WebClient
$webClient.Headers.Add(”user-agent”, “PowerShell Script”)

while (1 -eq 1) {
$output = “”

$startTime = get-date
$output = $webClient.DownloadString(”http://www.sysinternals.com/“)
$endTime = get-date

if ($output -like “*Mark Russinovich*”) {
“Success`t`t” + $startTime.DateTime + “`t`t” + ($endTime - $startTime).TotalSeconds + ” seconds”
} else {
“Fail`t`t” + $startTime.DateTime + “`t`t” + ($endTime - $startTime).TotalSeconds + ” seconds”
}

sleep(300)
}

Don’t have PowerShell? Get it here!

News Source: blogs.technet.com

Written by Odd-Magne Kristoffersen on August 23rd, 2007 with no comments.
Read more articles on PowerShell.

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