Wednesday, October 5, 2011

Online Microsoft Windows XP Support Services With Experts

Windows XP is one of the operating systems produced by Microsoft. It was the successor to both Microsoft 2000 and Me. Windows XP Home Edition was targeted at home users and XP Professional was targeted at power users, business and enterprise clients.

Microsoft offers support for all its products whether an operating system or Office Suite. In case you are a XP user, you can take assistance from Microsoft support website in resolving your technical issues. If you are not an XP user, then you can get information from Microsoft XP support in installing XP, customizing user accounts, switching between users and many more.

Revealing Microsoft Windows XP Support

You may have several technical issues related to XP, like how to obtain latest Microsoft XP service pack, how to partition and format a hard disk by using Microsoft XP setup program, how to perform disk error checking in Microsoft XP, how to back up and restore the registry in XP OS, and many others. You can visit Microsoft support website for getting information about your technical issues.

You can take assistance from Microsoft Windows XP support, in case you require any technical help. You may face many technical issues related to Microsoft XP. In this situation, you can contact a support professional by e-mail, online or by phone. You can resolve most of your technical issues by taking help from, Microsoft XP Fix it Solutions.

Some of the technical issues related to XP, which are solved by Microsoft Fix it Solutions are as follows. A new window opened in Internet Explorer displays a blank white page, my view settings or customizations for a folder are lost or incorrect, you cannot log in or connect to secure Websites in Internet Explorer, how to disable balloon tips in notification area in Windows XP, how to restore security settings to default settings, how to turn on or off the firewall in Windows XP service pack 2, how to move the Windows Taskbar from its default position, and many others.

You can contact Microsoft support in case you need assistance in any technical issues related to OS.

Source: http://EzineArticles.com/3648082

Thursday, September 29, 2011

Microsoft Product Support Reports


The Microsoft Product Support Reporting Tool facilitates the gathering of critical system and logging information used in troubleshooting support issues. This information helps diagnose problems in the software quicker and provide solutions.

The tool offers the ability to select the particular scenarios for which system configuration data will be collected: General, Internet and Networking, Business Networks, Server Components, Windows Update Services, Exchange Servers and SQL and other Data Stores (MDAC) . Depending on the particular system configuration and the categories selected, Microsoft Product Support Reports might take between 7 to 25 minutes or more to complete the data collection. Please read the readme.txt files for more details about the information collected by each category.

There are two executables, that correspond to each specific OS architecture, 32 or 64 bit. Please make sure to download the version that correspond to your system architecture.

You may install and use an unlimited number of copies of MPSReports solely for the purpose of gathering system information necessary for your support professional to provide you with technical support services requested by you. All other purposes are not supported by Microsoft. Please refer to the EULA for more detailed information regarding your usage rights.


System requirements

Supported Operating Systems: Windows 7, Windows Server 2003, Windows Server 2003 R2 (32-Bit x86), Windows Server 2003 R2 x64 editions, Windows Server 2003 x64 editions, Windows Server 2008, Windows Server 2008 R2, Windows Vista, Windows XP, Windows XP 64-bit

* Requires Microsoft .NET Framework 2.0

* Requires Windows Powershell 1.0

* Requires Windows Installer 3.1

* Requires Microsoft Core XML Services (MSXML) 6.0

Top of pageTop of page
Instructions

1. Download the executable specific to your OS architecture, 32 or 64bit.
2. Copy the file to the system having the problem.
3. Double-click the executable to launch the report gathering tool.
4. Accept the Microsoft License Agreement.
5. Follow the steps as guided by the Wizard.

How long will Microsoft support XP



How long is your favorite version of Windows going to be supported? Maybe longer than you think. One current version, in fact, will still be supported in 2020. And no, it’s not Windows XP. I’ve summarized the official dates in one easy-to-read table.

In an ideal world, old versions of Windows would roll off Microsoft’s list of supported products and be replaced by new ones at regular, predicable intervals. That upgrade cycle has been anything but smooth and predictable in recent years, however. Microsoft’s support policy is still returning to normal after XP was allowed to live well past its normal retirement date and then got multiple extensions to placate customers who just said no to Vista.

I was reminded of this confusion earlier today when Matt Gardenghi asked a great question via Twitter:

Where would I find a list of supported MS OS versions? Trying to determine what’s in support and what’s out of support.

Microsoft product lifecycle policy is actually quite coherent and easy to understand, at least on paper. I wrote this two years ago in How long will Microsoft support XP and Vista?:

Microsoft has a well-documented support lifecycle for its software products. It’s part of the agreement that the company makes with everyone who installs Windows, especially business customers who want some assurance that they’ll be able to get updates and support for operating systems and applications even if they choose not to upgrade to the latest and greatest.

Now that Windows 7 is firmly entrenched in the marketplace, I’m starting to get questions about its life span (and it doesn’t help when high-profile web sites and bloggers get the facts dead wrong, as they did last month with the bogus “XP in 2020″ story). To help clear the air, I’ve put together a chart listing all of Microsoft’s supported operating systems. The calculations start with the general availability (GA) date for each product. Consumer operating systems are supported for five years after their GA date, and business OSes are supported for 10 years (with the last five years classed as “extended support”). The official date of retirement for support is the second Tuesday in the first month of the quarter following that anniversary (which also happens to be Patch Tuesday), which means each support cycle typically gets a few weeks or months of extra support tacked on at the end.

For Windows 7, you can do the math yourself. The GA date for all Windows 7 editions was October 22, 2009. Five years after that date is October 22, 2014. The next calendar quarter begins in January, 2015, and the second Tuesday of that month is January 13. So, that’s when mainstream support is scheduled to end. Extended support for business editions goes an extra five years, until January 14, 2020 (the second Tuesday of the month).

For Windows XP, however, those calculations don’t work, because Microsoft has extended XP’s life artificially. To find XP’s end-of-support date, you should use the Microsoft Product Lifecycle Search page to get the official answer. Enter the name of the OS and click Search, and you get back a table that shows the general availability date, the retirement dates for mainstream and extended support, and retirement dates for service packs, which are governed by a separate set of rules.

Source :zdnet

Tuesday, September 27, 2011

How Windows 8 Could Be “Windows Great”


Less than 24 hours before I attended Microsoft’s Windows Server 8 Reviewers Workshop, in which Microsoft allowed several journalists to be some of the first non-Microsoft employees to see what Windows 8 server and desktop will deliver, I gave some serious thought to how the new Windows OSs could be a success—before I was influenced by seeing what Microsoft has actually done. Here, in no particular order, is my pre-preview wish list:

1. Help us with passwords. As a security guy, I help IT staffs struggle with what is probably the biggest security problem in the computer world: the passwords that users choose. No user enjoys being preached at by the local IT geek, so I’ve always liked systems that offer an opinion on the effectiveness of your password whenever you create or change one. For example, Google’s password evaluator is terrific—but whatever Microsoft might offer needn’t be anywhere near that good and it could still be of great benefit. A simple check against the 400,000-ish words in the English language would take any modern computer no more than a second. Add a length check, perhaps with some simple comment such as, “Hey, that’s a six-character password, and a PC like me could try every six-letter combination in X seconds; maybe add another character or two.” Toss in the 100 most common passwords (e.g., 1234, Fred, sex, secret, ncc1701,nascar, letmein, jesus) and instantantly we have A Safer Windows. (In case you’re wondering, my approach to finding a hard-to-crack, easy-to-remember password involves the notion known as “passphrases,” stringing together two or three words that have nothing to do with each other, such as “walnuthole.” Works great. Throw in a capital letter or a number and it’s even better, if slower to type.)

2. And speaking of passwords, I offer this second suggestion with tongue only partially in cheek. Now that I’m using longer passwords, it’s getting harder to type the blasted things, because I can’t see what I’m typing, so it. It would be great if all standard Windows logon dialog boxes had a “trust me, Windows, there’s nobody else in the room, please show me what I’m typing” check box. Of course, a network’s admins should be able to block that feature via Group Policy.

3. Tempt me into the cloud. One thing that could really equalize the dew point and atmospheric temperature for cloudnostics like me would be good, cheap, reliable, amazingly-easily-accessed cloud storage. Over the years, DOS, Windows, and now the Windows NT family have quietly expanded the meaning of letter/colon combinations, such as T:, from its original meaning—a floppy disk drive, in DOS 1.0—to a broader meaning (floppy disk or hard disk, in DOS 2.0)—and so on to its current state, where T: might refer to a floppy disk, a Blu-ray drive, an attached virtual hard drive (VHD) file, an iSCSI LUN, a network share, and probably one or two things I’ve forgotten. Give me an interface to cloud storage that uses Windows Explorer, not Internet Explorer. Remember that I don’t live in the Seattle area, and that I therefore sometimes spend as much as an hour at a time not connected to the Internet (honest, Microsoft, such things do happen)—so give me a smart caching system that I don’t notice working and that doesn’t annoy me, which means that it can’t contain any code from Offline Files. (Sorry about that, Offline Files folks. I really want to like it, but it drives me crazy.)

4. Put DiG into the OS. DiG, the Domain Internet Groper, is a DNS troubleshooting tool that beats the pants off Nslookup, the DNS troubleshooting tool that Windows has included since it started supporting TCP/IP back in the Windows for Workgroups 3.11 “Wolverine” days. And heck, as long as we’re talking about raising the quality of the built-in tools, you guys bought Russinovich and Cogswell 5 years ago—isn’t it time to replace Task Manager with Sysinternals’ far-superior Process Explorer?

5. Take off the speed limiters and training wheels, and let boot-from-VHD fly. Windows 7 and R2’s ability to let you package a Windows image as a single VHD file and then boot a physical machine from that file is way cool—and trust me, Microsoft, I’m the guy who’d know, because I’ve done a lot of work with it. But you won’t support the one-VHD-PC scenario or the boot-Windows-from-VHD-on-a-USB-stick scenario, requiring users to use boot-from-VHD only as a second copy of the OS, which is sort of an uncommon situation. Oh, and while you’re at it, could you tweak the code that enables differencing disks? (Differencing disks—which I’ve discussed at length in my regular “Windows Power Tools” column—provides a neat way to bring the convenience of virtual machine “snapshots” to a physical Windows system, and enabled the Steadier State tool that I give away.) When doing a boot-from-VHD scenario from a child VHD, the current Windows code wastes a lot of time every boot cycle by blowing the child VHD up to its maximum size—which also inflates the physical hard disk requirements. Windows 7/R2’s VHD support was a great first step. Let Windows 8’s be even better.

6. Let me configure how Network Awareness works. The idea is a good one: Set things up so that your PC knows where you are, which lets you tell Windows to automatically reconfigure it in different locations. For example, I spend much of my time in one of two locations—my office in Virginia or my office in North Carolina. If my PC were better able to discern which network it was connected to at the moment, I’d like (to offer a simple example) my wired NIC to have one static IP address when in Virginia and a different static address in North Carolina, and I’d like the PC’s default printer to change depending on whether the PC is in Virginia or NC. Some of that capability currently exists in Windows 7, but it’s not really reliable, nor is it well-documented enough for me to get much traction in troubleshooting it. If I could tell Network Awareness, “Just pay attention to the MAC address of your default gateway—if it’s X, you’re in Virginia, and if it’s Y, you’re in NC.” Or, in other cases, I might say, “If your current DNS suffix is X, you’re in Virginia,” and so on. Again, Network Awareness is a great idea, but make it more configurable, and extend what I can do with it.

7. Reduce my reboots. I recently needed to create a clean, freshly-built Windows 7 image. I started from the Windows 7 DVD Setup disk that already includes Service Pack 1 and thought, “Hey, I’m about done”—but nothing could have been further from the truth. It took six reboots’ worth of patches before Windows Update finally shut up. In other words, in late August 2011, I installed a new-in-February-2011 OS, and I still needed about one reboot a month to get current— which certainly isn’t a recipe for four nines of reliability. You’ve been promising us a “more modularized” Windows for quite a while, so please finish the job so we can patch without reboots. (And you’ll notice that I haven’t mentioned that Linux has been doing this for the past 15 years or so. Haven’t mentioned it at all.)

8. Astonish me, Microsoft. At least once. C’mon, you can do it. When you folks lifted the veil on Windows Vista, we saw a lot of amazing stuff. A new TCP stack that understands how to get the most out of big pipes and big, slow pipes. Well thought-out, secure volume encryption. Transaction-based NTFS and registry operations. A new kind of anti-rootkit file permissions, Windows Integrity Levels. (OK, so not all of the amazing stuff turned out to be useful or a good idea, but it was still amazing nonetheless.) Sure, Vista was a marketing disaster, but it introduced the vast majority of the “new features” that supposedly appeared in Windows 7 and R2. Think of it this way: On October 25, 2011, XP will turn 10—and I’d be willing to bet that XP still sits on the majority of Windows desktops. But why? Because buyers don’t see any gotta-have-it-ness. They didn’t see it in Vista (I only did because I’m an OS geek), they didn’t see it in Windows Server 2008 for quite some time, and many still don’t see it in Windows 7. Why on earth, then, release yet another version of Windows for people to ignore? Hence: Astonish us.

Now that I’ve actually seen Windows 8 in action, I definitely have some feedback for Microsoft. Stay tuned to see what I thought of the newest Windows OSs.

Source : windowsitpro

No PWS Or IIS on Windows XP Home


It has come to light that Windows XP Home Edition does not support PWS (personal web server) or IIS (internet information server) both are used to test apps written in ASP or ASP.Net. You might say hang on I have the iis.dll (this is the main part of IIS) on my machine. Have a good look! It's been crippled and stops you from installing the software!

OK what do I do? Well you have a couple of options open to you if you have a copy of Windows 98 that has the PWS on it you might be able to install that from the CD but don't count on it. Windows ME users had the same problem with PWS not being shipped with that version of Windows. There is a work around but still not good enough! Download the newest version of PWS from Microsoft. Microsoft now don't support this so you'll have to try to find an old disk which could still have the PWS.

OK, you want IIS. If you have a copy of Windows 2000 that ships with IIS, so here is the work around. Before we start back-up your hard drive or important data be aware that implementing this is done at YOUR OWN RISK! since you have to alter files.

Open sysoc.inf use find file to locate, should be in c:windowsinf find the line that says [Components] Change iis=iis.dll,0cEntry,iis.inf,hide,7 to iis=iis2.dll,0cEntry,iis2.inf,,7 With the Windows 2000 in your disk drive go to Start > Run type the following expand d:/i386/iis.dl_ c:/temp/iis2.dll change d to the drive letter of your CD drive. You could try to delete iis.dll but system knows and puts it back so using a different name solves the problem. Open your temp folder on your hard drive drag & drop the new file iis2.dll to c:windowssystem32setup folder also find in the temp folder iis2.inf drag & drop this file to c:windowsinf OK your nearly there. Go to control panel and click on add/remove programs, select add/remove windows components. In the list of windows components you should see IIS. Nearly done. If at any time your asked for files they should be either on your XP or Win2000 CD somewhere! You can use Find to locate them.

Once the installation has been done go back to the control panel Start > control panel in classic view double click on Administration Tools. WOW you should now have IIS as one of the options.

Microsoft says that Windows XP Home Edition does not include or support any versions (1.0, 2.0, 4.0) of Microsoft Personal Web Server (PWS). Users that need Web server functionality in a desktop operating system should use Windows XP Professional. Why?

Source: EzineArticles

Thursday, September 22, 2011

4 Ways to Hang on to XP After the Cut-off Date


One of the most successful operating systems of all time is retiring at the end of the month. Microsoft will stop selling and licensing Windows XP to PC manufacturers.

Those of us who are a little old fashioned want to stick with the operating system we've known and loved for years, after all we've been through a lot together. Since the release of XP, the average computer user will have spend over 8000 hours on their PC, and XP was the system most of us first used to connect to the internet. Now there's a story to tell your kids.

So if you are not prepared to update to Vista, what options do you have after the cut-off date?

Getting Support for Windows XP Problems

In terms of getting support for the numerous technical issues that XP users come across everyday, some form of support from Microsoft will exist until at least 2014, so that gives you another six years, although the support may be more difficult to get hold of.

You may want to purchase a premium tech support service to get around this problem or purchase software to keep your registry in tact. Or you can search on tech forums as there is a good chance if you have a problem that other users will also have the same problem, far easier than asking Microsoft for support.

XP On Brand New Machines

It will still be possible to purchase a PC with XP installed after the deadline despite Microsoft categorically stating that this will not be possible after the cut-off date.
Retailer and PC manufacturers that have acquired unused XP licenses before the cut-off date will still be allowed to sell the operating system on new PCs.

Switching Operating Systems

Downgrade rights are the second way for you to get your hands on a new computer with XP. If a manufacturer has downgrade rights from Microsoft, they'll be able to sell you a PC that started on Vista, but which they downgraded to XP before they sold it to you.

If this is the case, you'll be supplied with the discs for XP and it's drivers, as well as the same discs for Vista, so you can re-upgrade at a later date if you decide to. Dell have confirmed that they will make this option open to customers, but it only lasts out until January 31st next year.

'Limited Hardware Capabilities'

There is an alternative legal way of getting your hands on XP. That is purchase a PC that has 'limited hardware capabilities,' a term that Microsoft has phrased for machines that lack the muscle power such as slow processor or limited memory, to run Vista. Laptops such as the Asus EEE lack both processor power and hard-disk space to run Windows Vista. Instead these machines must run XP.

XP Still Has Life Yet

Windows XP still has many more years ahead of it, even if Microsoft wants everyone to upgrade to Vista or its successor. XP support is likely to extend well into the next decade allowing us enough time to get used to the idea.

Source: EzineArticles

Wednesday, September 21, 2011

Microsoft: Don't stop deploying Windows 7


SINGAPORE--Companies looking to leapfrog the current iteration of Microsoft's Windows operating system (OS), namely Windows 7, to Windows 8 should think twice, says company executive, who adds that developer feedback for the latest Windows platform has been encouraging.

Rich Reynolds, general manager of Windows commercial marketing, told ZDNet Asia in a phone interview Wednesday that Microsoft's internal research showed that 90 percent of companies polled indicated they had plans or were in the process of migrating from Windows XP or Vista, to the current OS release, Windows 7. The version was launched in 2009.

Within the Asia-Pacific region, Jason Lim, general manager of Windows Client at Microsoft Asia-Pacific, noted that the uptake of Windows 7 was "very similar to global trends" and he expects a high percentage to deploy the OS in the next couple of quarters.

Research firm Gartner earlier forecasted that 42 percent of all PCs would be powered by Windows 7 by end-2011 and 94 percent of all newly minted PCs would be sold with the current flavor of the OS.

For companies thinking of holding back on plans to refresh their operating systems, Reynolds said Microsoft's advice is for them to continue and accelerate deployment of Windows 7. It would be "extremely dangerous" for businesses to skip implementation of Windows 7 and wait for the release of Windows 8 since official support for Windows XP will end in April 2014, he said.

A Gartner research paper released on Sep. 19 also urged companies running on Windows XP and working on Windows 7 migrations to "continue as planned" and not switch to Windows 8 just yet.

Authors Michael Silver, David Cearley and Stephen Kleynhans pointed out that even though Microsoft did not reveal a shipping date for Windows 8, the predicted release date would likely be planned to target back-to-school buyers in mid-2012, in which case, the release to manufacturing would likely be around April 2012.

That said, even if the software giant were able to meet that "very aggressive timeline", the Gartner researchers said independent software vendors and enterprises would likely need 9 to 18 months to obtain and test supported applications and plan deployments. This also meant that the earliest Windows 8 deployment date for most organizations would begin only in 2013, they added.

As such, with support for Windows XP ending in 2014, the analysts said it would be "dangerous" for organizations currently running XP to skip Windows 7 and move directly to Windows 8.

Reynolds also pointed out that since all Windows 7 applications would run on the Windows 8 version, and the hardware requirements would be the same--if not less--for the next iteration, it would be a good "stepping stone" for companies to first get on the latest available OS version.

Enterprise focus remains
The Redmond executive also highlighted Windows 8 features that were relevant to the enterprise space, while acknowledging that much of the focus for the company's Build developer conference held in the United States last week was geared toward consumer apps.

Identifying IT consumerization as an ongoing trend in the global business realm, Reynolds said the software vendor had looked to make Windows 8 available to all users regardless of the working style and environment they were in.

To enable users to work from anywhere, he highlighted Windows to Go as a feature that enterprises would appreciate. With the tool, IT administrators will be able to configure a bootable USB stick for individual employees who can boot up their profile on any Windows 8-enabled device--including any downloaded apps--and work from the device. When the employee has completed his work, he then unplugs the USB stick and all traces of information will be removed from the device he was working on, he explained.

He also pointed to Secure Boot, which will automatically check for malware before the system boots up and before the existing antivirus software is operational. Push Button Reset is another feature that can be incorporated to enable IT administrators to reset to the default device setting or standard company profile, if they are pressed for time to restore faulty systems.

These features, along with others, underscored Microsoft's continued commitment to enterprise customers even as the OS evolved to target consumer-based devices such as tablets, Reynolds said.

The Gartner researchers said Windows 8 would be a "watershed release" for Redmond which, they said, was "hoping to reinvigorate its image in the consumer market". They noted that the popularity of Apple's iPhone and iPad demonstrated that consumer products were becoming increasingly important in the enterprise as users brought tools they used at home into work, and the new Windows release could enable Microsoft to compete "more effectively" with Cupertino in the tablet space.

Delivering vibrant, profitable app ecosystem
With regard to developer feedback since the OS was previewed, Reynolds said initial response had been encouraging and people were happy with the new tools to produce rich apps and the ability to rapidly deploy these apps. The newly supported development languages of HTML5 and JavaScript were also embraced, particularly by the many younger developers who were more familiar with Web technologies, he added.

According to Richard Edwards, principal analyst at Ovum, developers' buy-in was particularly important, given today's app-centric, consumer-oriented world. In a statement last week, Edwards said Windows 8's success would be measured by the revenue Microsoft was able to drive through its new Windows App Store.

He added that it would be a big challenge, where "failure is not an option", since the company would need to generate a new revenue stream as sales in other areas of its business declined.

Edwards did note that the signs were good for Redmond should it deliver on developing a vibrant app ecosystem. "The corporate market is currently exploring the idea of 'bring your own device' [strategy] and we believe that the timing of Windows 8 couldn't be better," he said.

However, should the software giant fail in its execution of its Windows ecosystem, it would then probably be "game over" for the Windows PC as people have come to know it, the analyst surmised.

Monday, September 19, 2011

How to Troubleshoot Microsoft XP Professional


While Windows XP has proven to be a very stable and user friendly PC system, it may not always do exactly what you want. If you have a problem, use Microsoft's online help tools to troubleshoot your issue and find a solution.


Instructions
Microsoft Online Support:

1. Open a web browser, and head to the Microsoft Online support center.

2. Enter a description of your problem in the Bing search box at the top of the page and press ENTER. You should include the words "XP+professional" in your search.

3. Browse the search results and click on the result that best describes your problem.

4. Follow the instructions given by Microsoft Support to resolve your problem.

Source : eHow.com

Thursday, September 15, 2011

End of Microsoft XP support accelerating desktop virtualization



With less than thousand days to go until Microsoft no longer supports Microsoft® Windows XP, organizations across the globe are reporting they are accelerating their migration to modern desktops powered by Microsoft Windows 7. In addition, the high level of awareness among these organizations of desktop virtualization’s potential to simplify the move to a new operating system such as Windows 7 is driving their decision to invest.


These are some of the key findings of a commissioned study conducted by Forrester Consulting on behalf of Dimension Data on the desktop virtualization market. Of the 546 organizations that were surveyed, close to half (46 percent) said that they had begun ‘aggressive efforts’ to migrate to Windows 7, with a further 17 percent) planning to deploy within the next year.
While 13 percent of companies said they had completed their enterprise-wide migrations, 51 percent of IT managers surveyed said they have linked their Windows 7 migrations to their organization’s PC refresh cycle. Around 21 percent of enterprises are prioritizing desktop and application virtualization over their Windows 7 upgrade, and 29 percent are deliberately coinciding their investments in Windows 7 and desktop virtualization.


Neville Burdan, General Manager of Microsoft Solutions, Dimension Data Asia Pacific said, “The Forrester research tells us that organizations are under pressure to beat the Windows XP end-of-support deadline. Of those 124 Enterprise IT decision-makers surveyed in Asia which included Singapore, India, Hong Kong and China, the respondents confirmed that they still support a large population of Windows XP and Vista users (40.6 percent and 9.5 percent respectively) compared to 36.5 percent of users already on Windows 7. However, most of the organizations are aggressively upgrading their end users to Windows 7 desktop. 16 percent of the respondents have already completed their Windows 7 migration, 48 percent are in the process of deploying Windows 7 and 16 percent planning to start deploying Windows 7 within 6 to 12 months.”
With the use of desktop virtualization predicted to grow significantly in the next two years, Burdan believes Windows 7 is an ideal opportunity for organizations to implement a more modern, next- generation desktop that will be more secure and less time and labor intensive to deliver end-users with the functionality, interface and access they desire. However, he warned that desktop virtualization is not a silver bullet to address all desktop related challenges.

“Organizations must first understand their business drivers, workforce demands, and the state of their application ecosystem before they define their next generation desktop roadmap. Many of our clients are grappling with complex issues relating to their applications ecosystems. And while the research indicates that the major drivers behind desktop virtualization are cost reduction and security, 56 percent of participants said that they recognized that applications virtualization will help them to migrate to Windows 7. To reduce complexity, organizations would do well to tie virtualization investments into their Windows 7 migration plan,” Burdan said.

Source : informationweek

Wednesday, September 14, 2011

Microsoft XP Professional - Troubleshoot


While Windows XP has proven to be a very stable and user friendly PC system, it may not always do exactly what you want. If you have a problem, use Microsoft's online help tools to troubleshoot your issue and find a solution.

Instructions

Microsoft Online Support

1. Open a web browser, and head to the Microsoft Online support center: http://support.microsoft.com/.
2. Enter a description of your problem in the Bing search box at the top of the page and press ENTER. You should include the words "XP+professional" in your search.
3. Browse the search results and click on the result that best describes your problem.
4. Follow the instructions given by Microsoft Support to resolve your problem.

Microsoft Answers
1. Open the Microsoft Answers forum in your web browser: http://answers.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/default.aspx. Here, Microsoft users and technicians can discuss problems and solutions concerning Microsoft products.
2. Click the Windows XP tab on the left hand side of the page.
3. Browse through the list of categories and click the one that best represents your problem. A list of threads on this topic will be displayed.
4. Browse the threads and open any which contain your problem. Follow the instructions given in the post to fix your problem.
5. Click the "Ask a Question" button to ask a new question if you cannot find an answer in the existing posts. Your question will be answered by another forum user or a Microsoft support staff member.

source : ehow articles

Wednesday, September 7, 2011

How to Configure Outlook?

1. In Microsoft Outlook, from the E-mail Accounts menu, select Tools.

2. On the E-mail Accounts wizard window, select Add a new e-mail account, and then click Next.

3. For your server type, select POP3 or IMAP, and then click Next.

4. On the Internet E-mail Settings (POP3/IMAP) window, enter your information as follows:

Your Name
Your first and last name.
E-mail Address
Your email address.
User Name
Your email address, again.
Password
Your email account password.
Incoming mail server (POP3)
POP, Pop.secureserver.net or IMAP, imap.secureserver.net.
Outgoing mail server (SMTP)
Smtpout.secureserver.net

Click More Settings.

NOTE: "smtpout.secureserver.net" is an SMTP relay server. In order to use this server to send e-mails, you must first activate SMTP relay on your e-mail account. Log on to your Manage Email Accounts page to set up SMTP relay. If you do not have SMTP relay set up and your Internet Service Provider (ISP) allows it, you can use the outgoing mail server for your Internet Service Provider. Contact your Internet Service Provider to get this setting.

5. On the Internet E-mail Settings window, go to the Outgoing Server tab.

6. Select My outgoing server (SMTP) requires authentication.

7. If you did not change the SMTP relay section, select Use same settings as my incoming mail server. If you changed the user name and password in the SMTP relay section of your Manage Email Accounts page, select Log on using and enter the user name and password. The following example assumes you did not change your SMTP relay section in your Manage Email Accounts page.

8. Go to the Advanced tab, and then change the Outgoing server (SMTP) port to 80 or 3535.

9. Click OK.

10. Click Next.

11. Click Finish.

Friday, August 26, 2011

Configure WPA Support in Windows XP


WPA is short for Wi-Fi Protected Access, a security standard for wireless networks. It replaced Wired Equivalent Privacy (WEP) and is designed to work with wireless network interface cards. WPA encrypts data with the RC4 cipher that uses a 128-bit key and a 48-bit initialization vector, making it much more difficult to defeat than WEP. The following steps will show how to configure WPA support in Windows XP.

Instructions

Read Microsoft Knowledge Base Article (MKBA) Q815485 (Overview of the WPA Wireless Security Update in Windows XP.) The document provides basic information on the important security features of WPA and how the network adapters and access points must support them.

Patch the Windows XP wireless clients, if needed. They will need to run Windows XP Service Pack 1 or greater.

Ensure the network adapters for the client will support the Wireless Zero Configuration (WZC) service. Check the documentation or website for the adapter or call the customer service number to get this information. Upgrade the adapter's driver or configuration to support WZC, if needed.

Download and install the Windows XP Support Patch for Wi-Fi Protected Access by adhering to the included instructions.

Read more: http://goo.gl/yAc2H

Thursday, August 18, 2011

Configure WPA Support in Windows XP


WPA is short for Wi-Fi Protected Access, a security standard for wireless networks. It replaced Wired Equivalent Privacy (WEP) and is designed to work with wireless network interface cards. WPA encrypts data with the RC4 cipher that uses a 128-bit key and a 48-bit initialization vector, making it much more difficult to defeat than WEP. The following steps will show how to configure WPA support in Windows XP.

Instructions

Read Microsoft Knowledge Base Article (MKBA) Q815485 (Overview of the WPA Wireless Security Update in Windows XP.) The document provides basic information on the important security features of WPA and how the network adapters and access points must support them.

Patch the Windows XP wireless clients, if needed. They will need to run Windows XP Service Pack 1 or greater.

Ensure the network adapters for the client will support the Wireless Zero Configuration (WZC) service. Check the documentation or website for the adapter or call the customer service number to get this information. Upgrade the adapter's driver or configuration to support WZC, if needed.

Download and install the Windows XP Support Patch for Wi-Fi Protected Access by adhering to the included instructions.


Complete additional modifications to the wireless network adapters or access points as required by MKBA Q815485. These devices must have their firmware updated to support the security features of WPA, including the information element, two-phase authentication, Temporal Key Integrity Protocol and a message integrity code algorithm known as Michael.


Read more: http://goo.gl/RDTA4

Wednesday, March 2, 2011

Fix Windows XP on BootCamp Problems

Problem :

I was installing Windows XP on Boot Camp, so I did everything normally and I felt like I didn't add enough space for Windows, but it continued installing Windows. After a while it restarted the computer and I noticed that it looks like its loading the same thing over and over again. I've tried quitting it and it says it will reboot, but every time it reboots it brings me back to the opening screen. Help?!


Solution :
Hold down the 'Control' key while booting, and it'll let you select Mac OS X to boot up, that'll at least get you working again.

I can't say for sure what the issue is with the installation... if you gave it at least 10GB of space, that is enough to install Windows. Resizing is a huge pain, and it is really difficult for the Windows OS to read things from the Mac partition, so I'd recommend making the FAT32 partition (windows) much larger, and then putting all of your data onto it, since it will be accessible from both OSes.

Monday, February 28, 2011

Fix Windows XP SP3 Installation Hangs Error

Problem:

whenever i try to install windows xp sp3 it gets to the point where it creates a restore point and hangs. i have tried it under a normal login, a safemode as admin login and a safemode as me login and every time it hangs at the same spot and every time. i have had to restart the computer via the reset button every time. and a few times on reboot my computer cant find my harddrive. is the hang a natural occurence or is there actually a problem? also where do i find the install logs?

Solution :


While SP3 still hanging

1- Start TaskManager

2- Select Process

3- Select Regsvr32.exe

4- End Process

5- Close TaskManager

You should notice an extensive hard disk activity.let it go until the end of installation and restart.

Tuesday, February 22, 2011

Fix Reboot Loop After Installing Windows XP SP3

To solve this problem you have to grab a pen, a piece of paper and the Windows XP Disc. Make a nice drinks or coffee or tea to make you feel relax...

1. Start the computer and keep tapping F8 button when the system starting until you see the "Windows Advanced Options Menu" Please select an option:
select the "Disable automatic restart on system failure" then press enter.

2. Now we're on the Blue Screen Of Death (BSOD) showing the symptom that causes the illness. Write down the name of the file....

3.Put the Windows XP Disc into CD/DVD Drive and press the reset button to restart the computer, then press any key when the system starting for the Windows XP Disc. Now you see a "Window Setup" with blue screen background and please wait until it settle down.

4. Press R for Recovery Console... We are on the "Microsoft Windows XP (TM)Recovery Console" press 1 to log on...then press enter.

5. Administrator Password is the main password when you install the Windows XP. If no main password then press enter.

6. As you can see the "C:\WINDOWS> " This is where we type the DOS COMMAND PARAMETERS ....

7. Now we have to make a backup of the file you wrote in the system folder. Type this command parameters;

CD C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM32\

press enter

RENAME NTDLL.dll NTDLL.orig (change NTDLL.dll to the name of file you wrote)

press enter

8. Then copy the NTDLL.dll from C:\WINDOWS\SERVICEPACKFILES\I386\ to the system folder with the right command parameters:

CD C:\WINDOWS\SERVICEPACKFILES\I386\

press enter

COPY NTDLL.dll C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM32\

press enter

To restart the computer type EXIT then press enter....

Monday, February 21, 2011

STOP: 0x0000007B, Blue Screen Error on Windows XP Start UP

Problem :

Windows XP will not open in any safe mode. It just restarts over and over until I stop it. I try "Disable Automatic Restart on System Failure" and the blue screen had these codes; I guess this is the BSOD, although I don't know what BSOD is right now. The codes were--STOP:0x0000007B (0xF78AA524, 0x0000034, 0x00000000, 0x00000000). I conclude this tells a knowledgeable person what is wrong but I don't know what it is or how to fix it. I consider myself an intermediate level person; I am comfortable with some things and others I am not. I am reluctant to make settings that I don't know what the results will be. I don't experiment.

Until this, my Toshiba L300 laptop (about a year old) worked okay; I think it has a virus as a "news 11 window" kept popping up in IE. I ran the Windows scan and it didn't find anything. I was trying to run a Norton software check which is supposed to run in the safe mode and that is when this happened.


Solution :

STOP 0x7B means INACCESSIBLE_BOOT_DEVICE.

1. First you can restart the PC and press F8 to enter the Windows XP Advanced Options Menu. Once the menu appears select "Last Known Good Configuration". See if Windows XP starts correctly. If it does restart the PC again and make sure it goes in normally.

2. The second thing you want to do is enter recovery console and run a check disk. Here is how to enter the recovery console with your Windows XP CD:

Once in recovery console you want to type

chkdsk c: /r

Then press enter. Allow ChkDsk to run and fix any errors. Restart the PC once done and see if it is now working.

3. If it still doesn't work restart the PC again and enter Recovery Console. Once in Recovery Console type the following pressing enter after each line:

Fixboot

Fixmbr

Once done exit recovery console and restart the PC.



Tuesday, February 15, 2011

Fix Windows XP Service Pack 3 installation Failed with Error Code 0x80070005

Windows XP SP3 installation may fail with the error code 0×80070005 and/or one of the following errors

Service Pack 3 setup error. Access is denied.

Service Pack 3 setup error. Service Pack installation did not complete

This is very likely a restricted registry permission in the Windows Registry. This could be caused an application like Antivius software which changs the System Access Control lists (SACL) causing this issue.

To quickly identify if it really is a registry permission issue check the

C:\Windows\Svcpack.log (or %windir%\Svcpack.log) for something similar to the following lines

DoInstallation:DoRegistryUpdates failed.
Access is denied.
Message displayed to the user: Access is denied

To fix or workaround the problem in installing SP3 would be to do one of the following:

Solution 1. Download the Service Pack 3 file directly from Microsoft Download Center and start the install to see if that helps.

Solution 2. Disable all your programs that doesn’t need be running at startup temporarily (especially your antivirus, antispyware products) and try again

Solution 3. Reset the permissions on the Registry and file by using the Subinacl.exe
Download and install the utility from here

Once installed, try the following:

1. Open notepad and paste the following text into it and save it as a cmd file (say resetperm.cmd:
cd /d “%ProgramFiles%\Windows Resource Kits\Tools”
subinacl /subkeyreg HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE /grant=administrators=f /grant=system=f
subinacl /subkeyreg HKEY_CURRENT_USER /grant=administrators=f /grant=system=f
subinacl /subkeyreg HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT /grant=administrators=f /grant=system=f
subinacl /subdirectories %SystemDrive% /grant=administrators=f /grant=system=f
subinacl /subdirectories %windir%\*.* /grant=administrators=f /grant=system=f
secedit /configure /cfg %windir%\repair\secsetup.inf /db secsetup.sdb /verbose
or download the file Reset Permissions script
2. Run the file resetperm.cmd as an administrator. This should reset the permissions. Now, try to install Windows XP SP3 and all should work OK.