Try some basic housekeeping first to ensure the PC is in good order and
check within Photoshop what the various scratch disk settings are - it's
been a while but I seem to remember that in Photoshop you specifically
configure areas of disk for it to use as scratch space - OK the machine
may not be
On our teamspeak server for a MMORPG game I play, some of the younger guys say
“lol” all the time. Took me a couple of days to catch on to what they were
saying. Feeling my age...
From: Harry Singh [mailto:hbo...@gmail.com]
Sent: 10 March 2011 14:30
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: Re:
http://support.microsoft.com/kb/325413
*ASB *(Find me online via About.Me http://about.me/Andrew.S.Baker/bio)
*Exploiting Technology for Business Advantage...
*
On Thu, Mar 10, 2011 at 1:07 PM, N Parr npar...@mortonind.com wrote:
I could have sworn this has been asked before but don't
That was the issue, it was odd since our gateway A/V was blocking it but I
wasn’t receiving an email about the blockage as I normally would.
From: Richard Stovall [mailto:rich...@gmail.com]
Sent: Thursday, March 10, 2011 5:37 PM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: Re: Downloading Hotfix
I did forget about the CCD boot drive, good idea, I use the Xbox360 to
stream recorded TV to my 52” plasma so the computer noise is not a problem
it’s in my home office and the Xbox is networked to the living room.
SJ
On Thu, Mar 10, 2011 at 5:08 PM, Jim McAtee j...@zolx.com wrote:
I agree
Are you referring to the Intel recall of SandyBridge (spelling?)
SJ
On Thu, Mar 10, 2011 at 6:16 PM, Harry Singh hbo...@gmail.com wrote:
If you build and go i7, make sure to wait a few weeks until the new B3
stepping boards are released.
On Thursday, March 10, 2011, Carl Houseman
Building is generally cheaper, but shop around first. If prices start to
get close to one another (bought vs. built), warranty coverage may sway
your decision to just buy already built.
I rebuild/replace our home systems every 3-4 years and usually go the
Newegg route. My friend is a hardware
My last system was built using an ASUS MB, if I go that route and us an ASUS
MB again waht would be your recommendations of model for the MB?
SJ
On Fri, Mar 11, 2011 at 8:50 AM, Guyer, Don don.gu...@fiserv.com wrote:
Building is generally cheaper, but shop around first. If prices start to
get
Not often, but when I do those are exactly the hours it happens.
No complaints, been with them several years.
On Thu, Mar 10, 2011 at 1:45 PM, Angus Scott-Fleming angu...@geoapps.comwrote:
On 10 Mar 2011 at 10:03, G.Waleed Kavalec wrote:
Brinkster's been good to me.
It was actually DEP (data execution prevention).
I changed it to turn on for essential Windows programs and services
only), rebooted the server, and voila!
Everyone is opening IE8 with no problems today.
Also - the server memory is hovering around 500MB available and pagefile
is 4GB
Hey all,
I am setting up a new Hyper-V server for a company where I am P2V'ing 3 of
their physical servers. Currently I want to just set up one virtual network,
and if they add servers down the road I will add another. The physical host
machine comes with 4 NIC's. My questions are these:
Thanks for the tip David.
On Fri, Mar 11, 2011 at 10:13 AM, David Mazzaccaro
david.mazzacc...@hudsonmobility.com wrote:
It was actually DEP (data execution prevention).
I changed it to “turn on for essential Windows programs and services
only”), rebooted the server, and voila!
Everyone
I disable DEP down to that level whenever I put a Citrix/RDS server or
template together, it generally helps with problems launching applications
or app instability, especially the flakier older ones that every environment
seems to have at least a few of.
On 11 March 2011 15:13, David Mazzaccaro
The more I was researching this, the more I saw it coming into play.
Next, I may try switching it to AlwaysOff as mentioned in this KB:
http://support.microsoft.com/kb/875352
One thing at a time though...
From: James Rankin [mailto:kz2...@googlemail.com]
Sent: Friday, March 11,
Cool. Glad it was easy to track down.
On Fri, Mar 11, 2011 at 8:28 AM, Jonathan Gruber jgru...@jblong.com wrote:
That was the issue, it was odd since our gateway A/V was blocking it but
I wasn’t receiving an email about the blockage as I normally would.
*From:* Richard Stovall
One thing at a time though.
Smart man! J
Disabling DEP is also a step when troubleshooting issues with Office
2003/2007 in a TS/RDS/Ctx environment.
Carl Webster
Consultant and Citrix Technology Professional
http://dabcc.com/Webster http://dabcc.com/Webster
From: David
Got a request from management to allow users to use the Task Manager, which
I originally had disabled via GPO, but they only want it to show the
Applications and Processes tabs. Nothing else. Not that they can do much on
the other tabs, but they want them all hidden anyway. This is on a 2008 R2
Have you looked into Forefront?
I hear from a lot of folks who are switching with great success.
From: Weatherford, Chad [mailto:cweatherf...@scvl.com]
Sent: Friday, March 11, 2011 11:00 AM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: Antivirus Vendor Replacement
We are looking to replace our
How much bandwidth do you need?
-ASB: http://about.me/Andrew.S.Baker
Sent from my Motorola Droid
On Mar 11, 2011 10:15 AM, Jay Dale jd...@unetek.com wrote:
Hey all,
I am setting up a new Hyper-V server for a company where I am P2V'ing 3 of
their physical servers. Currently I want to just set
Vipre. Small footprint, easy to configure, great support
John W. Cook
Systems Administrator
Partnership for Strong Families
From: Weatherford, Chad cweatherf...@scvl.com
To: NT System Admin Issues ntsysadmin@lyris.sunbelt-software.com
Sent: Fri Mar 11 10:59:56
+1
On Fri, Mar 11, 2011 at 11:08 AM, John Cook john.c...@pfsf.org wrote:
Vipre. Small footprint, easy to configure, great support
John W. Cook
Systems Administrator
Partnership for Strong Families
--
*From*: Weatherford, Chad cweatherf...@scvl.com
*To*: NT
Good luck on the catches all of the bugs part, regardless of vendor.
Vipre has the smallest footprint of Trend, McAfee, Eset, and a couple of others
that have been tested here in the last couple of months.
From: Weatherford, Chad [mailto:cweatherf...@scvl.com]
Sent: Friday, March 11, 2011 10:00
Currently they are on a 22MB/2MB connection from Entouch, they have a BES and
are migrating to Exch 2010 from 2003 - heavy BB and email usage, not as much
remote usage, only a couple of minor-staffed remote offices with site to site
VPN connections - they are a community residential
Hehe, I missed that catches all bugs.
If someone finds that product, I want it.
On Fri, Mar 11, 2011 at 11:15 AM, Kim Longenbaugh
k...@colonialsavings.comwrote:
Good luck on the “catches all of the bugs” part, regardless of vendor.
Vipre has the smallest footprint of Trend, McAfee, Eset, and
I would also recommend Vipre as it is very unobtrusive and easy to
configure.
However I am of the feeling that reactive AV is losing its effectiveness,
and that AV combined with good whitelisting is the best way to try and keep
systems clean. And, of course, not giving anyone admin rights who
Depends.
I think I read a best practice that said at least two separate connections.
One for guest access and one for host management.
Possibly a third for backup and fourth for iscsi if needed.
From: Jay Dale [mailto:jd...@unetek.com]
Sent: Friday, March 11, 2011 10:14 AM
To: NT System Admin
I have been using Dell R610 servers to move many of our physical servers to
HyperV. The R610 has 4 NIC Ports and 6 SATA drives. I am creating 3 RAID1
volumes, one for OS and one for each VM. I am assigning each VM its own NIC.
I would suggest doing the same if there are bandwidth intensive
On Thu, Mar 10, 2011 at 4:43 PM, Kramer, Jack jack.kra...@ur.msu.edu wrote:
That's definitely true - but we're talking an hour or (at the most) two.
You also have to factor in product research (specs, compatibility
checking, trouble history, maybe reviews), procurement, and on-going
support.
+1 for Vipre
From: James Rankin [mailto:kz2...@googlemail.com]
Sent: Friday, March 11, 2011 11:19 AM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: Re: Antivirus Vendor Replacement
I would also recommend Vipre as it is very unobtrusive and easy to
configure.
However I am of the feeling that
Try Avira Antivir. Not sure how well known it is in the US but in most
of the labs it comes out well on detection and it's very light.
From: Weatherford, Chad [mailto:cweatherf...@scvl.com]
Sent: 11 March 2011 16:00
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: Antivirus Vendor Replacement
We are
We're happy Forefront users here. Easy to deploy and update via WSUS, if you
already have WSUS in place.
John Hornbuckle
MIS Department
Taylor County School District
www.taylor.k12.fl.us
From: Rod Trent [mailto:rodtr...@myitforum.com]
Sent: Friday, March 11, 2011 11:08 AM
To: NT System
Big issue is manageability in a corporate environment.
All products have their quirks. Would be nice to see a good feature matrix
prepared by a non-vendor.
McAfee ain't so crappy anymore with VSE 8.8, though we're getting too many
false positives with Artemis, even at a low sensitivity level.
+1 for Sophos.
I'm a big fan - easy deployment, easy to manage via console, catches a
ton of stuff that Symantec did not and I got great pricing from our
local VAR.
Jim Holmgren
Senior Manager, Infrastructure Services
XLHealth Corporation
The Warehouse at Camden Yards
351 West
All,
My manager is looking for a network/server monitoring package, which
pleases me no end. My SAlive installation if 5.0 running on a Win2k
box, and I haven't had time to do more than a token install of nagios.
However, he doesn't want open source stuff (so nagios, mrtg, jffnms,
opennms, etc.
Wow. They can't come up with anything better for you to do than this? :)
I would just tell management that it's not realistically possible and rather
pointless anyway.
One option might be Process Explorer. Obviously it has WAY more UI than task
manager, but it *might* have some option for
++
From: John Hornbuckle [mailto:john.hornbuc...@taylor.k12.fl.us]
Sent: Friday, March 11, 2011 10:48 AM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: RE: Antivirus Vendor Replacement
We're happy Forefront users here. Easy to deploy and update via WSUS, if you
already have WSUS in place.
John
PRTG from Paessler is good.
-Original Message-
From: Kurt Buff [mailto:kurt.b...@gmail.com]
Sent: 11 March 2011 17:11
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: OTish: Network monitoring tools
All,
My manager is looking for a network/server monitoring package, which pleases me
no end. My
How about Op5? Nagios based but fully supported and a pretty slick
interface. They offer appliances as well. We're looking to deploy here.
Jack Kramer
Computer Systems Specialist
University Relations, Michigan State University
w: 517-884-1231 / c: 248-635-4955
On 3/11/11 12:10 PM, Kurt
We use GFI Max - $12.95 per server, has a ton of monitoring options, nice
dashboard interface, and integrates with ConnectWise.
Jay Dale
Senior Systems Administrator
c:832.373.7883
-Original Message-
From: Kurt Buff [mailto:kurt.b...@gmail.com]
Sent: Friday, March 11, 2011 11:11 AM
Don't do it!
Why you don't want to edit your pending.xml to resolve 0xC034 issues - The
Windows Servicing Guy - Site Home - TechNet Blogs:
http://blogs.technet.com/b/joscon/archive/2011/03/11/why-you-don-t-want-to-edit-your-pending-xml-to-resolve-0xc034-issues.aspx
I know that one of
+2
From: Jonathan Link [mailto:jonathan.l...@gmail.com]
Sent: Friday, March 11, 2011 11:13 AM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: Re: Antivirus Vendor Replacement
+1
On Fri, Mar 11, 2011 at 11:08 AM, John Cook john.c...@pfsf.org wrote:
Vipre. Small footprint, easy to configure, great
Ok... I probably should have listened to you guys when you griped about me
jumping on the first thing that I came up with, but it seems to have turned
out OK. The first battery I got from the Amazon vendor was apparently bad as
it didn't even last 5 minutes, but the replacement battery is working
That certainly looks interesting.
Kurt
On Fri, Mar 11, 2011 at 09:15, Kramer, Jack jack.kra...@ur.msu.edu wrote:
How about Op5? Nagios based but fully supported and a pretty slick
interface. They offer appliances as well. We're looking to deploy here.
Jack Kramer
Computer Systems
Ok.. we *might* have found the problem... the memory settings were set to
about 900 megs max for Photoshop, but there was about 1.5 gigs available
RAM.
What we're doing is rendering a room scene. We have a room scene picture
that we use to display our carpet in and we re-use that room scene with
Bummer... we're on CS3. :-(
-Original Message-
From: Bill Humphries [mailto:nt...@hedgedigger.com]
Sent: Thursday, March 10, 2011 9:14 PM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: Re: Upgrade O/S or GPU?
yeah, and unless you have cs4 or cs5, you don't see any gains. those
are the only
I've seen that before. Not quite what he wants.
On Fri, Mar 11, 2011 at 09:15, Paul Hutchings paul.hutchi...@mira.co.uk wrote:
PRTG from Paessler is good.
-Original Message-
From: Kurt Buff [mailto:kurt.b...@gmail.com]
Sent: 11 March 2011 17:11
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject:
Paul, I think you may have hit the nail on the head. Photoshop was set to
use a maximum of like 900 some megs of RAM when there was almost twice that
much available. We've since upped the RAM and we'll see how that does...
From: Paul Hutchings [mailto:paul.hutchi...@mira.co.uk]
Sent: Friday,
You should consider aggregating 2 or 3 of the NICs and using them for guest
traffic in a way that provides redundancy. Use a separate NIC for
management.
-ASB: http://about.me/Andrew.S.Baker
Sent from my Motorola Droid
On Mar 11, 2011 11:16 AM, Jay Dale jd...@unetek.com wrote:
~ Finally,
Whatever you get/use, suppliment it with registered Malwarebytes.
--
ME2
On Fri, Mar 11, 2011 at 7:59 AM, Weatherford, Chad cweatherf...@scvl.comwrote:
We are looking to replace our current AV (McCrappy Total Protection for
Endpoint) with something that is more light weight AND catches
Longitude, from Heroix, is the best I've come across that doesn't cost an arm
and 15 legs. It's much less expensive than the SolarWinds stuff, and monitors
a lot of stuff, including but not limited to Windows WMI, SQL, Netflow, Citrix,
Exchange, VMware, and,well, a lot of stuff.
They have
1. How many NICs you use depends on the load and bandwidth requirements
of your VMs. Use one NIC for managing the host and one or more for the
virtual network connections (aggregated or dedicated to specific VMs).
2. I would enable static addresses for all, or at least DHCP
Wow.it's been a long time since I've had to use Malwarebytes - even when
supporting friends' or family PCs these days.
Anymore, someone calls with some crazy Trojan or virus, I tell them to
download and install Microsoft Security Essentials on their own and it takes
care of it, and keeps them
I remember them being discussed here a while ago.
I'll check them out again.
On Fri, Mar 11, 2011 at 10:24, Kim Longenbaugh k...@colonialsavings.com wrote:
Longitude, from Heroix, is the best I've come across that doesn't cost an arm
and 15 legs. It's much less expensive than the SolarWinds
To add to this, when cleaning a system post-infection (yea yea, in cases
where I cant just reformat) Malwarebytes is invaluable. I clean a system
with multiple tools, and Malwarebytes always catches things that all of the
other vendors I use miss.
--
ME2
On Fri, Mar 11, 2011 at 10:36 AM,
Malwarebytes #winning
From: Micheal Espinola Jr michealespin...@gmail.com
To: NT System Admin Issues ntsysadmin@lyris.sunbelt-software.com
Sent: Fri, March 11, 2011 1:41:04 PM
Subject: Re: Antivirus Vendor Replacement
To add to this, when cleaning a system
And I've seen the exact opposite, where AV tools including MSE, did not
adequately protect against newer drive-by exploits.
Malwarebytes however blocked the source of the malware completely based on
IP.
YMMV, but I see lots of residentials where Malwarebytes is the difference
between winning or
I have NEVER had good luck w/ aftermarket batteries (or AC adapters).
Batteries never seem to last, and AC adapters have caused TV
interference.
-Original Message-
From: John Aldrich [mailto:jaldr...@blueridgecarpet.com]
Sent: Friday, March 11, 2011 12:50 PM
To: NT System Admin Issues
The only issue I have with Vipre are the ratings I have seen on Gartner
and such...I take that all with a grain of salt but we still have to
consider what is said.
Chad Weatherford | Network/Security Administrator | Shoe Carnival, Inc.
| (:812.867.8314 | 7: 812.471.9866 | *:
HA HA! I know that's a pipe dream...just mentioned it for a grin
Chad Weatherford | Network/Security Administrator | Shoe Carnival, Inc.
| (:812.867.8314 | 7: 812.471.9866 | *: cweatherf...@scvl.com
From: Jonathan Link [mailto:jonathan.l...@gmail.com]
Sent: Friday, March 11, 2011
I agree with that, James. Trend has a nice looking product especially in
their Deep Security product. Their Gartner and SC ratings are good...but
the thought of 'I Love You' coming in again and passing right by
OfficeScan's defense's is a little worrisome :o)
Chad Weatherford |
On Fri, Mar 11, 2011 at 2:01 PM, Weatherford, Chad
cweatherf...@scvl.com wrote:
The only issue I have with Vipre are the ratings I have seen on Gartner and
such…I take that all with a grain of salt but we still have to consider what
is said.
I dunno about the and such, but for Garter, that
Yeah... I learned my lesson on that one. *crossing fingers* So far, the 3rd
party A/C adapter seems to be working... and we don't have any TV to cause
interference with, so that's not an issue. :-)
-Original Message-
From: David Mazzaccaro [mailto:david.mazzacc...@hudsonmobility.com]
I did notice them, Paul. I really haven't heard much about them so I was
a bit reluctant. Do you use it?
Chad Weatherford | Network/Security Administrator | Shoe Carnival, Inc.
| (:812.867.8314 | 7: 812.471.9866 | *: cweatherf...@scvl.com
From: Paul Hutchings
Ah.but are you filled with Tiger blood?
From: Micheal Espinola Jr [mailto:michealespin...@gmail.com]
Sent: Friday, March 11, 2011 1:36 PM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: Re: Antivirus Vendor Replacement
And I've seen the exact opposite, where AV tools including MSE, did not
adequately
+1 (although I've only had the opportunity to pilot test it for now)
*ASB *(Find me online via About.Me http://about.me/Andrew.S.Baker/bio)
*Exploiting Technology for Business Advantage...
*
On Fri, Mar 11, 2011 at 1:24 PM, Kim Longenbaugh
k...@colonialsavings.comwrote:
Longitude, from
LOL! I wondered about that!
Chad Weatherford | Network/Security Administrator | Shoe Carnival, Inc. |
:812.867.8314 | : 812.471.9866 | : cweatherf...@scvl.com
-Original Message-
From: Ben Scott [mailto:mailvor...@gmail.com]
Sent: Friday, March 11, 2011 13:07
To: NT System Admin
My Tiger Mom wouldnt let me get the transfusion.
--
ME2
On Fri, Mar 11, 2011 at 11:13 AM, Rod Trent rodtr...@myitforum.com wrote:
Ah…but are you filled with Tiger blood?
*From:* Micheal Espinola Jr [mailto:michealespin...@gmail.com]
*Sent:* Friday, March 11, 2011 1:36 PM
*To:* NT
Yes. We had Trend OfficeScan previously and I felt we were getting too
much sneaking past it.
I looked at several products and Avira came out best for us. It's very
light and these days we virtually never have to run cleanups on PC's
(though to be entirely fair I use good URL filtering so
Agreed. But, Gartner plays to the CIOs and CTOs who are the ones that actually
listen to them.
-Original Message-
From: Ben Scott [mailto:mailvor...@gmail.com]
Sent: Friday, March 11, 2011 13:07
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: Re: Antivirus Vendor Replacement
On Fri, Mar 11, 2011
I just became aware of this program, it won't create a PST I don't think,
but it purports to allow you open and read any OST file, and it's free. I
have not used it (yet).
http://download.cnet.com/OST-Viewer/3000-2369_4-75289423.html?tag=mncol;1
Carl
-Original Message-
From: Bill
I have never seen Longitude before. We use Solarwinds (mostly for network but
have been monitoring a few servers) and it was a lot cheaper than what we were
using (Cisco Works...NOT). For server performance monitoring we use NetIQ's
AppManager (at least I think that's who still owns them). It
I assume the ACL is to allow the machine running both apps to reach the
switches?
Chad Weatherford | Network/Security Administrator | Shoe Carnival, Inc.
| (:812.867.8314 | 7: 812.471.9866 | *: cweatherf...@scvl.com
From: itli...@imcu.com [mailto:itli...@imcu.com]
Sent: Friday,
I did give Process Explorer a thought...however, I have, in the face of the
overwhelming evidence that this ain't possible, managed to convince
management otherwise.
I have managed to restrict the Task Manager window to the Applications tab
only, using AppSense to block out all the tab controls.
When you describe the tasks management asks of you, I imagine...
A laser pointer aimed at a wall, while my cats go crazy trying to get it.
Just sayin'.
On Fri, Mar 11, 2011 at 2:53 PM, James Rankin kz2...@googlemail.com wrote:
I did give Process Explorer a thought...however, I have, in the
Well, the only good thing coming out of it is the fact that I have gotten
them to rethink how long this project is going to take, in light of the
exact way they are demanding their desktop environment look. So I've just
gotten my contract extended by an extra eight weeks :-)
On 11 March 2011
Thanks for all of the comments! I will gladly except more...swapping out AV is
not an easy decision or task.
Chad Weatherford | Network/Security Administrator | Shoe Carnival, Inc. |
:812.867.8314 | : 812.471.9866 | : cweatherf...@scvl.com
-Original Message-
From: Rod Trent
Vipre here. However our weekly deep scans are almost as bad as when we
had Symmantec. My PC is running the weekly deep now and it's slow,
even at low priority. I'm slowly enabling wake on lan for all of our
PCs, so they can be powered on before staff arrive, then Vipre can do
it's thing.
Speaking of Vipre: Is Sunbelt fully partnered with Malwarebytes yet? Does
Vipre have or spec'd to have full MB functionality?
--
ME2
On Fri, Mar 11, 2011 at 12:10 PM, Tom Miller tmil...@hnncsb.org wrote:
Vipre here. However our weekly deep scans are almost as bad as when we had
+1 and dumb.
Are you also blocking access to tasklist.exe ? Have fun trying to block
switch syntax. :-)
--
ME2
On Fri, Mar 11, 2011 at 9:11 AM, Crawford, Scott crawfo...@evangel.eduwrote:
Wow. They can’t come up with anything better for you to do than this? J
I would just tell
Actually I can block specified keystrokes on specified windows, but luckily
I haven't been asked anything that crazy yet :-)
On 11 March 2011 20:26, Micheal Espinola Jr michealespin...@gmail.comwrote:
+1 and dumb.
Are you also blocking access to tasklist.exe ? Have fun trying to block
We've had Sophos up and running for about 6 weeks now. It does use up more
resources than Vipre, though.
Jim-I have yet to find a way to deploy the agent w/o using the console. With
Vipre it was easy to create an agent and then use that to deploy on a single
machine. Sophos is a bit of a
On 11 Mar 2011 at 16:15, Kim Longenbaugh wrote:
Good luck on the catches all of the bugs part, regardless of vendor.
Vipre has the smallest footprint of Trend, McAfee, Eset, and a couple of
others that
have been tested here in the last couple of months.
I and my users have
We've been using Opsview, another Nagios based system. Very easy to setup and
use, the development community is very strong and there are checks for almost
anything you can dream of already available.
-Original Message-
From: Kurt Buff [mailto:kurt.b...@gmail.com]
Sent: Friday, March
On 10 Mar 2011 at 12:45, Angus Scott-Fleming wrote:
On 28 Feb 2011 at 8:37, Oliver Marshall wrote:
Can anyone recommend a hard disk checking tool for Windows that will
give an external disk a
good going over? Ideally free/open source J
We have 8 disks from a
On Fri, Mar 11, 2011 at 2:57 PM, Jonathan Link jonathan.l...@gmail.com wrote:
When you describe the tasks management asks of you, I imagine...
A laser pointer aimed at a wall, while my cats go crazy trying to get it.
I have a laser pointer in my desk that projects the image of a dollar
sign.
LOL! Where did you get it?
--
ME2
On Fri, Mar 11, 2011 at 1:41 PM, Ben Scott mailvor...@gmail.com wrote:
On Fri, Mar 11, 2011 at 2:57 PM, Jonathan Link jonathan.l...@gmail.com
wrote:
When you describe the tasks management asks of you, I imagine...
A laser pointer aimed at a wall,
Wireless bridge or gaming adapter at a consumer store like best buy.
-Jeff
On Mar 11, 2011 4:56 PM, Sam Cayze sca...@gmail.com wrote:
At a WiFi only site right now, no cat5 anywhere. Have a few old print
pieces of Ethernet-only equipment I need to hook up.
Is there anything that will
What Jeff said. Some wireless print servers can also be used as bridges,
and Netgear's Wireless Range Extender WN2000RPT is also a bridge.
http://www.netgear.com/home/products/wireless-range-extenders/wireless-range-extenders/WN2000RPT.aspx
On Fri, Mar 11, 2011 at 4:59 PM, Jeff Steward
We use SCCM to deploy most of ours. You can also go to the SophosUpdate share
on the Update Manager and manually install the client.
Jim
From: pdw1...@hotmail.com [mailto:pdw1...@hotmail.com]
Sent: Friday, March 11, 2011 3:49 PM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: RE: Antivirus Vendor
You can use a Netgear WNCE2001. I used it successfully to hook up a printer
that had no access to network drop.
Thanks,
Hugo Hernandez
IT Manager
FUTURE ADS LLC
1920 Main St, Suite 550
Irvine, CA 92614
P: 949-251-0640 x215
F: 949-251-0680
AIM: hugoatfutureads
*
The thing to look for is that it is a non-router with a built-in switch.
These are usually marketed as repeaters, extenders, or gaming adapters.
Or you can do this with any Apple Airport.
--
ME2
On Fri, Mar 11, 2011 at 1:55 PM, Sam Cayze sca...@gmail.com wrote:
At a WiFi only site right
Awesome guys. Thanks for the quick responses.
-Sam
From: Micheal Espinola Jr [mailto:michealespin...@gmail.com]
Sent: Friday, March 11, 2011 4:09 PM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: Re: Ethernet on a WiFi Only site?
The thing to look for is that it is a non-router with a built-in
We use a startup script to deploy Sophos.
From: Jim Holmgren [mailto:jholmg...@xlhealth.com]
Sent: Friday, March 11, 2011 3:03 PM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: RE: Antivirus Vendor Replacement
We use SCCM to deploy most of ours. You can also go to the SophosUpdate
share on the
On Fri, Mar 11, 2011 at 4:53 PM, Micheal Espinola Jr
michealespin...@gmail.com wrote:
I have a laser pointer in my desk that projects the image of a dollar
sign. I tell people I can usually get management to chase it. ;-)
LOL! Where did you get it?
Hmmm. I forget. It was a kit of a
On Fri, Mar 11, 2011 at 5:09 PM, Micheal Espinola Jr
michealespin...@gmail.com wrote:
The thing to look for is that it is a non-router with a built-in switch.
These are usually marketed as repeaters, extenders, or gaming adapters.
Be aware that, technically speaking, an 802.11 repeater is not
Preferred fix here: http://support.microsoft.com/KB/975484
Carl
From: Jim Dandy [mailto:jda...@asmail.ucdavis.edu]
Sent: Friday, March 11, 2011 12:41 PM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: Windows 7 64-bit SP1 fails
I installed SP1 on a bunch of test systems with no problem. So, I
My cheap 3rd party battery gave good runtime when it was first installed
too, but that didn't last a year. Your jury is still out.
Carl
-Original Message-
From: John Aldrich [mailto:jaldr...@blueridgecarpet.com]
Sent: Friday, March 11, 2011 12:50 PM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject:
A refurb router that can DD-WRT can be configured as wireless-wired bridge,
and will very likely be cheaper than a gaming adapter or print server.
Carl
From: Sam Cayze [mailto:sca...@gmail.com]
Sent: Friday, March 11, 2011 4:56 PM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: Ethernet on a WiFi
Wow.
That's not even a fix.
That's a 'get you running so you can try to install it again'.
I wonder if they're going put out a update for this.
Kurt
On Fri, Mar 11, 2011 at 14:43, Carl Houseman c.house...@gmail.com wrote:
Preferred fix here: http://support.microsoft.com/KB/975484
Carl
Fully expecting re-release (SP1A?) at least for WSUS distribution. Not sure
whether this affecting WU users.
Carl
-Original Message-
From: Kurt Buff [mailto:kurt.b...@gmail.com]
Sent: Friday, March 11, 2011 5:55 PM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: Re: Windows 7 64-bit SP1 fails
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