TRENDING NEWS

POPULAR NEWS

Is It Possible To Read The Code On An Xp Disc

Blue Screen of Death in Windows XP. The code 0x0000007B (0xF78AA524, 0xC0000034, 0x00000000, 0x00000000)?

oh geez, is that the error code you got?

ok quick, find some duck tape and a tarp, wrap your computer in the tarp and seal it GOOD.

or else a foul smell will be known

Why is reading code much harder than writing it? How can I read code and understand what the code actually is doing (in Python to be precise)?

There are plenty of great answers here, so I am just going to add a comment…It is indeed much harder to read code than to write it…for all of the reasons listed by the answers here. Problem solving is hard. Understanding the solution, algorithms, and processes, takes patience and study.When reading code, one wishes that he/she could focus on one statement at a time without having to look back and cross-reference code in several other places. We also wish that the intent of the programmer was more obvious.Yet we spend much more time reading code than writing it. It gets written once, but it then must be debugged - while reading it. Later it gets enhanced - while reading it. As the code ages it gets debugged again and again, as well as having more enhancements added - while reading it.That is why it is SO important that code be readable, unambiguous, concise, and explicit.Newbie's Top Request…So, newbies, when you tell us that language X is too verbose, has too many constraints, or that you could create a language that would be so much easier for “writing code,” please understand that you are exposing your naivete.Experienced programmers are FAR more concerned with ensuring that the code is clearly readable than making it easy to write.Yes, we already know that you could design a language that uses one-tenth as many keystrokes, has “powerful” commands, a really simple syntax, be forgiving of typos, and so on and so on. Of course you could. We all could. But we don't want that language.

A DISC READ ERROR OCCURRED PRESS CTRL+ALT+DEL TO RESTART HELP?

I used a disc to reinstall Windows XP and it started the installation and then my computer restarted and now everytime I try to boot my laptop it keeps giving me the same error message and I've tried all the boot options. Now I'm locked out of my laptop and I need it. Please help

Is it possible to access files inside a "password protected windows account" on a laptop/desktop by putting the hard disk on another computer?

There are mixed answers being given below. Security protections are in layers, and some are portable, while others are not. Files in a “password protected windows account” CAN be compromised if you can physically relocate the drive to another computer or dock connected via USB. If you have admin access, then you can see those files. Why? Because the that particular layer is not portable, and ownership of the files can be changed by a different local admin account.If the goal is to protect the contents of the drive, then you need to use security that continues to protect outside of the system. This would be encryption (BitLocker, for example), single file encryption, Bitlocker-2-Go, DRM, etc. You can encrypt a file and require someone to know the password for the file to gain access. You can encrypt the entire drive and it will be inaccessible without the key or recovery key. With DRM, files are only accessible to Internet/Cloud verified credentials, so you don’t need to enter a password, but your credentials are validated through another channel.In short, without more details about other ways data is secured, yeah, you’d see the files. How do I know this? Because I can remove an unencrypted drive from the machine to my left, connect it to the dock, log in as a local admin on my work machine, and view all the contents. The files are in the Documents folder for my work account in the machine to the left, and I’m using the local admin on this work machine. I see everything.Which…is why we encrypt everything on our work machines. Take the drive, and it’s worthless.

Can I play a Blu-ray disk on a PC DVD drive?

The answer is no. Although you can play a DVD in a Blu-ray disc player, you cannot play a Blu-ray Disc in a DVD player. The reason is that Blu-ray Discs are embedded with more video and audio information than a DVD player is designed to read. In addition, the "pits" used to store the information on a Blu-ray disc are much smaller than a DVD, which requires a blue laser to read the information, whereas DVD players use red lasers.Solution for playing Blu-ray disc on regular DVD playerFor those people who don't have a Blu-ray Disc player but are favor of watching high definition movies Blu-ray movies, it would be pain for you to find that you are out of luck to put your pricey Blu-ray movies into your standard DVD players. Fortunately, with the assistance of Blu-ray to DVD converter software, you can easily rip the contents on your Blu-ray disc and then convert them into a format that can be played on your DVD players.Here, we would like to recommend you a highly appreciated Blu-ray to DVD converter software called Pavtube BDMagic, the program not only helps to remove copy & region protection from all commercial Blu-ray disc, but also helps to rip Blu-ray to DVD player compatible DVD video format with both NTSC and PAL video standard for displaying on TV in different areas.How to Rip and Play Blu-ray Movies on Regular DVD Players?Step 1: Load Blu-ray disc into the program.Launch the program on your computer, insert your Blu-ray disc into an internal or external Blu-ray drive, on the program's main interface, click "File" > "Load from disc" to load commercial Blu-ray disc to the application.Step 2: Output DVD player supported file formats.Check the specification explanation on your TV to see which video standards your TV using: NTSC or PAL, you should also be clear of your TV display screen aspect ratio: 16:9 or 4:3. Then click "Format" bar, from its drop-down list, select "VCD/DVD/SVCD" > "DVD PAL (16:9)"/DVD PAL (4:3)" or "DVD NTSC (16:9)"/DVD NTSC (4:3)" according to your own situation.Step 3: Start Blu-ray to DVD video conversion process.Clicking the Convert button on main interface, you can go to Conversion window to start conversion. You can find conversion information on the window, such as Time elapsed, Time left, Generated size, and Estimated size.After the conversion, you can click "Open output folder" to pop output directory with the converted files.

TRENDING NEWS