TassiloVP> something about wine. As a matter of fact I have two viruses stored 
as
TassiloVP> files ( I did not run them though ;-) and I am rather curious to see
TassiloVP> what they *would* do if I ran them. Is there perhaps a way of finding
TassiloVP> out when running them with wine ?  I guess this cannot damage 
anything
TassiloVP> but perhaps I finally know what they were supposed to do.

FYI.

It's not a virus I tried to run, but running wine(991212) on slink,
when I was checking if every program would run, iexplore.exe took a very long 
time to start up, and after it started, the files in c:/windows were changed so 
badly that when I started the dual boot in windows, I found a very very clean 
desktop.

Has anyone experienced this?
It could be due to my Japanese version of Windows, but I can't find a reason 
why iexplore.exe would want to change the filenames of directories for storing 
desktop and application things into $!$!$!$!.app and $!$!$!$!.dsk and that kind 
of thing.

---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Junichi Uekawa, a.k.a. dancer
 a member of the Dept. of Knowledge Engineering and Computer Science 
   Doshisha University.
powered by Debian  and pronounce Linux as Leenooks!!

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