| bio | website | |
|---|---|---|
| location | ||
| age | ||
| visits | member for | 9 months |
| seen | May 20 at 21:31 | |
| stats | profile views | 2 |
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May 20 |
awarded | Caucus |
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Nov 7 |
awarded | Scholar |
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Nov 7 |
accepted | Process listed as 8 character short name in Task Manager |
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Nov 7 |
comment |
Process listed as 8 character short name in Task Manager This pretty much sums up my experience. I was hoping there was more of a reason behind the choice to use a short name for a process, but I can't find any information about it anywhere. I guess I'll just have to write into the script to kill more process name variations in anticipation of an increment to the number at the end of the process name. Thanks! |
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Nov 5 |
comment |
Process listed as 8 character short name in Task Manager I apologize - it's pretty custom so I didn't think it would be relevant. I added it. |
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Nov 5 |
revised |
Process listed as 8 character short name in Task Manager Process name per comment request |
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Nov 5 |
comment |
Process listed as 8 character short name in Task Manager The process is a third party application that gets launched via an IIS webapp. I would love to fix the issue altogether, but it's not a realistic short term solution. |
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Nov 5 |
awarded | Student |
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Nov 5 |
asked | Process listed as 8 character short name in Task Manager |
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Sep 19 |
comment |
Using command line to see if a given computer's local guest account is disabled Ahh.. yes. You are correct! |
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Sep 19 |
answered | Using command line to see if a given computer's local guest account is disabled |
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Sep 19 |
awarded | Commentator |
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Sep 13 |
comment |
Getting network interface device name in powershell DeviceID isn't the right spot. However, I just checked, and double checked, and when I run this on my machines, the Name property is properly showing #2 at the end of the adapter name. Description shows it as just the adapter name. |
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Sep 13 |
comment |
Simple active directory permissions issue A couple other troubleshooting steps I can think of: Try adding Kim_Akers to the local admin group on the server and see if it fixes things. Also, try turning UAC off on the machine temporarily and see if it gives the user access. |
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Sep 12 |
comment |
Simple active directory permissions issue Have you double checked that Domain Admins is in the local administrators group on the SQL servers? Is this only happening on SQL-A, or on all 4 servers with that user? What about a different user in the same groups? |
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Sep 11 |
comment |
Script to restart server when no user is remotely connected The "social engineering" solution is the correct solution. You don't want to set the standard that you'll bend over backwards to avoid any maintenance time on the servers. Schedule a reboot time - either at night, or tell them to go play ping pong for 5 minutes so the server can reboot. |
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Sep 7 |
awarded | Organizer |
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Sep 7 |
revised |
How can I systematically shut down Windows services in order? Add Powershell tag |
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Sep 7 |
suggested | suggested edit on How can I systematically shut down Windows services in order? |
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Sep 7 |
awarded | Analytical |