A bootable recovery CD, Fort Lewis mum on laptop loser's fate
| Posted by Stone Age at 16 July 2008 18:29 | |
World is becoming so fast now, boisterous cities with all the colors of rainbow, I cannot find myself. If you link my peaceful little stone house, come have a .... cup of water. |
About computer, quite easy, at IBM Computer, Laptops and Servers, I wrote everything as simple as possible.
The synthesis of the idea of computer dominated early news:
Submitting by Jacob Beneke - Blog: OS Fanatic From the project website. UBCD4Win is a bootable recovery CD that contains software used for repairing, restoring, or diagnosing almost any computer problem. Our goal is to be the most complete and easy to use free computer diagnostic tool. Almost all software included in UBCD4Win are freeware utilities for Windows®. Some of the tools inlcuded are "free for personal use" copies so users need to respect these licenses. A few of the tools ..>>.
While more information waited to be found, that is what I found:
Curious about what will happen, disciplinary action-wise, to the Army employee who took a government laptop home and put some 900 soldiers at risk for identity theft when a prowler swiped it from his unlocked truck? We asked. Fort Lewis' answer, per a post spokesman: "Regarding the laptop computer, this incident has been informally investigated by the employee's civilian supervisory chain of command. The result of the investigation is being handled as an administrative personnel action. ....
Those who keep up to date with plenty of information know for sure that what I need.
When we discover, as most of us do, how little our precious possessions will fetch in the marketplace we are inclined to be disillusioned, event to feel that we are being updated.
As defined on Wikipedia: * Jargon: Flag day is also a term used in discussing computer systems to denote a change which will require a complete restart or conversion of a sizable body of software or data. This usage of the term originates from an obscure such change in the Multics operating system's definition, which was scheduled for the US's Flag Day, June 14th, 1966. * One such day is January 1 1983, the day when the ARPANET changed from NCP to the TCP/IP protocol suite. A flaw has ..Read the rest of this post.
You will not be alone at the moment, when you need an indeed helpful hand.
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