If this is your first visit, be sure to
check out the FAQ by clicking the
link above. You may have to register
before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages,
select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below.
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
How can you create a cmd prompt session inside Windows Explorer?
www.turnpike.com and it costs £15 (Now. I paid a little more than that when I bought it originally (updates have so far been free for life) -of course, it used to come with a full winsock, and WS_FTP Pro. Sadly, now all we get is PGP & a spell checker. About a 20MB download.
> What mail client do you use? I'm unhappy with Eudora,
> and I was unhappy with Outlook Express, because of security.
Just <a href="http://forums.murc.ws/showthread.php?s=&postid=283150#post283150" title="why I switched">switched</a> from Outlook TO Outlook Express.
Both products are <a href="http://www.slipstick.com/outlook/antivirus.htm#protect" title="turn off preview pane, read mail in the restricted sites zone">easy to secure</a>. This is really another
discussion, but if you're looking for something different,
have you tried <a href="http://www.mozilla.org/mailnews/specs/labels/images/Label1.gif" title="You should still disable javascript in mail & news, but it's pretty secure out of the box">Mozilla Mail</a>?
> Thought about something I'd do if I could code for the
> last few months - a command prompt for windows that's
> always docked (like the start bar), and only one
> (or two or three, configurable) line high - which
> automatically had keyboard focus (or a handy keyboard
> shortcut, like ctrl+m). -Az
Something similar can be accomplished without coding:
- Create shortcut_to_cmd.exe.lnk
- Edit the properties so it's 1-3 lines high
- Place it where you want
- Assign a keyboard shortcut to the shortcut
does sound different, did not mean to jump on you, it does appear to do the job for a lot of people here.
I have just dumped XP, and am avoiding most .net stuff as best I can.
We will be sticking with Visual studio 6 for a long time, and a lot of developers don't like where .net is heading either.
Comment