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Micro

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Posts posted by Micro

  1. Micropocalypse -

    Speak for yourself, not for me!

    Some of us are legal.

    Some of us actually are MS Technical Beta testers, not wannabe's.

    And what does having "not yet released to the public software" have to do with TweakXp's plagarism and fraud ?

    Your comments make no sense?

  2. Ok this question is for the higly quilifed hackers. My cable provider is telling me I should be getting this great speed, well Im not. They also informed me I was capped. Now besides doing the normal reg hack is there a way to reprogram my modem or do a major improvment to my connection?

    Second question: Anyone find the reg spot to raise your RWIN?

    -chris [/quote:cb794953ce]

    1. Not if you have a DocSis based modem (and Adelphia probably does)

    The "uncapper" only worked for 1 old model modem only.

    Your cap is programmed evey time your modem connects to the system and also at "random" "wakeup" events.

    2. Same as in Win2k. All Win2k tweaks to the TcpIp stack work (only thing that is unchangable is MTU on a PPOE connection)

  3. Lou

    I understand the tweaks have been around.

    Tweaks and their newness is relative to one's experience.

    As you say, many of us have been using them for quite some time.

    Many sites quote these same tweaks.

    But they do so without stealing someone else's article on the subject and claiming it as their own.

    It's the blatant "cut n paste" along with the "written by", "edited by", and "copyright by" that galls me.

    The TweakXp article is a COMPLETE cut and paste, all 3 sections INCLUDING the space between paragraphs AND sections, and well as EVERY word are exactly the same. Every single word and space on the TweakXp page was cut n pasted from Ars Technica, not a single letter, punctuation, or space was changed.

    Compare the 2 pages and you can see this easily. There is NO doubt.

    THAT IS STEALING, not borrowing.

    When you build a website by simply copying someone else's text and claiming them as your own, it's wrong. (I won't go into where the code for their product came from. Adults know how to use the "compare" feature in hex editors)

    When you add your own "written by, edited by, and copyright by" to someone else's work, it becomes criminal in most parts of the world.

    If you'll check TweakXp's other pages, you can easily find where they were cut and pasted from on the net, as well as TweakXp's "written by and edited by and copyright by" claims.

  4. Not sure what "gulp" means, so here's the background history for newcomers - :cool:

    I see the ability to "change to PID of the OS before setup" has been "rediscovered" with XP.

    Guys, that's pretty OLD news and has been in use since Win2k in the NT series and since Win95 in the Win9x OS.

    It's also probably not the "best" way to go.

    In Win9x, PIDs are in the 100 series, 101, 102, 108, 110, etc.

    Changing them allowed the OS to be installed and recognized as a full, upgrade, OEM, beta, educational, etc. installation and use the appropriate Product Key (serial number), as they were not interchangable among the different PIDs.

    PIDs are similar in the way they work in Win2k/XP, as ProductKeys (serial numbers) are "keyed" to be accepted only by certain PIDs.

    (OEM keys accepted only by OEM versions, etc.)

    It was soon discovered that changing PIDs was not necessary to make specific product keys work with OS versions they shouldn't work with.

    In the Win9x OS's, a single DLL makes the "call" to pidgen.dll to verify the product key entered.

    A simple 2 byte change to the dll "calling" pidgen.dll for verification, allowed ANY serial number to work with any PID (version) of the Win9x OS. (In fact, any key that advanced the cursor across the product key entry screen, including the rt. arrow and space keys, were accepted as valid product key entries.)

    Now it stands to reason that the same modification to the "call" to pidgen.dll in Win2k/XP would have the same result, any Product Key (serial number) would be accepted as valid for any version.

    So, end of history lesson. :)

    I ask again, does anyone know which exe or dll makes the "call" to pidgen.dll during the setup process, as I have been unable to determine this? :confused

    Any help gladly accepted. :rolleyes:

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