Power the Computer Off After Shutdown
Enabling the setting will cause Windows NT to automatically powerdown your computer once it has finished the shutdown process.
Enabling the setting will cause Windows NT to automatically powerdown your computer once it has finished the shutdown process.
Modifying the string will change the path that the Windows 95 setup program will look for the installation files.
This setting allows extended characters to be used in 8.3 filenames. Short file names with extended characters may not be viewable on computers that do not have the same character code page.
These values control the TCP/IP parameters of the network interface cards. Configurable parameters include IP Address, Subnet Mask and Default Gateway.
This setting controls whether TCP/IP should use DHCP to automatically assign an IP address, or if it should use the statically defined address.
By default, Windows NT posts an alert when the amount of free space remaining on your hard disk falls below 10 percent.
If this settings is enabled, when users with roaming prfiles log off, the system will delete the cached copy of their roaming profile. This will help to save disk space where that are lots of roaming users.
When starting a 16bit application you have the option of running it in a seperate virtual machine. From this setting you can change the default setting for using VDM’s.
Windows NT workstation will halt by default when you get a dreaded Blue Screen of Death (BSOD). Changing this setting will force Windows NT to automatically reboot when it crashes instead.
Often when Windows NT shutdown, a task will return as ‘Not Responding’ and you are given the choice to ‘End Task’ enabling this function automatically ends the task.