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Jens Loco

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Aug 4, 2024, 10:12:33 PM8/4/24
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PowerToysAwake is designed to keep a computer awake without having to manage its power & sleep settings. This behavior can be helpful when running time-consuming tasks, ensuring that the computer does not go to sleep or turns off its displays.

File Explorer add-ons enable Preview pane and thumbnail rendering in File Explorer to display a variety of file types. To open the Preview pane, go to View in File Explorer and select Preview Pane.


File Locksmith is a Windows shell extension to check which files are in use and by which processes. Right-click on one or more selected files in File Explorer and select Unlock with File Locksmith.


Image Resizer is a Windows Shell extension for quickly resizing images. With a right click from File Explorer, instantly resize one or many images. This code is based on Brice Lambson's Image Resizer.


Mouse utilities add functionality to enhance your mouse and cursor.With Find My Mouse, quickly locate your mouse's position with a spotlight that focuses on your cursor. This feature is based on source code developed by Raymond Chen.Mouse Highlighter displays visual indicators when basic mouse buttons are clicked.Mouse Jump allows a quick jump on large displays.Mouse Pointer Crosshairs draws crosshairs centered on the mouse pointer.


Use PowerRename to perform bulk renaming; searching and replacing file names. It includes advanced features, such as using regular expressions, targeting specific file types, previewing expected results, and the ability to undo changes. This code is based on Chris Davis's SmartRename.


PowerToys welcomes your contributions! The PowerToys development team is excited to partner with the power user community to build tools that help users get the most out of Windows. There are a variety of ways to contribute:


Before starting work on a feature that you would like to contribute, read the Contributor's Guide. The PowerToys team will be happy to work with you to figure out the best approach, provide guidance and mentorship throughout feature development, and help avoid any wasted or duplicate effort.


Inspired by the Windows 95 era PowerToys project, this reboot provides power users with ways to squeeze more efficiency out of the Windows shell and customize it for individual workflows. An overview of the original PowerToys can be found here: Using Windows 95 PowerToys.


PowerToys is a rapid-incubation, open source team aimed at providing power users ways to squeeze more efficiency out of the Windows shell and customize it for individual workflows. Work priorities will consistently be examined, reassessed, and adjusted with the aim of improving our users productivity.


Did you install Visual C++ Build Tools as well? Without them, things aren't going to work. They easily take up 10+GBs of memory, though - so if you'd rather save up space, consider using msys2 instead.


The Microsoft Build tools command line uses "-add" to add components.

As documented here, the component

Microsoft.VisualStudio.Workload.VCTools

contains

Microsoft.VisualStudio.Component.VC.CoreBuildTools (C++ Build Tools core features)


Not sure about the file that's being downloaded for you, for me it prompts to install the "Visual Studio Installer", which presents the following window. Selecting "desktop development with C++" allows to select and deselect the items that need to be installed - the first 2, along with Cmake, as far as I'm aware, are essential for Rust - and cumulatively they take up almost 7 GB of space.


At work (a mostly Unix development shop), I've had an OS X box for the past 1.5 years and a Linux box before that. Due to various circumstances, I'll be getting a Windows XP laptop in the next few weeks. I'm of mixed feelings about this - it's good in that, as a manager, I'm used to running a Windows install (via Parallels) for Excel, Outlook, etc., but it's bad in that I'll miss all of the Unix tools available on OS X.


So, my question to you (community wiki perhaps?) is: What sort of tools would a Unix developer find handy when using a Windows machine? I'd like to be able to do some development on the machine (Perl, mostly), and also easily remote to other (Unix) machines. Here's what I've been recommended so far:


There is also a windows port of The Gimp, free and opensource, offers the same and more functions as adobe photoshop (but with another interface). It's modest bit more difficult to use, though. -win.sourceforge.net/


If you have Vista Ultimate or XP, you can install SUA/WSU, Windows Services for Unix.On Vista, it's in the OS Components tab under add/remove software in the control panelOn XP, you must download 300 MB from Microsoft.


It includes the Busybox implementation of vi, sed, awk, wget, and grep, as well as openssh-server, ssh, scp, bash, rsync, X server, lots more and you can add things like perl, emacs (why?! :D ) screen, curl or python as plug-ins just by downloading them (versions from the mobaxterm site) into the same directory.The tools in Busybox are not POSIX complete, but it is a pretty good start out-of-the-box.


Just download the 'portable edition' zip file, extract it into a directory, open the executable NOT the customizer..., ignore any warnings, set a persistent home [Settings > Configuration > Misc Tab], close the application, restart the application, and then configure to your taste. This way all of your settings will be saved.Now you can also make another directory to save logs to and turn on logging.


I like leaving 'Paste using right-click' "OFF" (unchecked) because it automatically pastes with a middle-button click anyway, like many terminals. BTW: Highlighting text adds it to your buffer/clipboard automatically.


If the cygwin installation is too heavy-weight for you, and the GnuWin32 installation is too cumbersome (you have to install every tool individually), you can also try out GOW: The only downside is that the binaries are quite old..


Better yet, when you install cygwin select the packages openssh, perl and emacs. Then install ssh daemon using ssh-host-config -y and follow instructions. Now you can ssh to your Windows machine from your Linux box, happily use vi or emacs and develop in Perl, run your perl code, or any other command line Windows exe, or Java or Python, etc. as long as they are console apps (vs a graphical one).


I think you must have messed something up with the keys because on WIN 11 everything in this area works. Your best bet is to open Obsidian settings, use the keyboard shortcut to get to the development tools open development tools this will enable you to avoid running a hotkey.


Long story short, we purchased a Palo Alto 3260 to replace our ASA 5585. I'm looking into the best method, and easiest method to transition from our old device to the Palo. This tool looks like it would be a great option, but we do not have an Ubuntu server to use. We also cannot install an Ubuntu server, as that was already denied when asked.


The short answer is no there is not a supported way to run it on a windows 10 machine. However if you are familiar with docker and have the ability to run hyper V on your windows 10 machine you can always run it within a container, this is not a supported method but some people have discussed it on the forum ( -discussions/docker-container-for-expedition/m-p/2907... ).


That I know of no the PAN will not build rules based off of what it sees over the SPAN port. Your best bet would be to export what you see in the traffic log and craft security policies around it probably but its quite the manual process.


Jamf tools (I assume you mean admin, recon, etc) are macOS native, so probably not. An option is setting up esxi / vcenter on supported mac hw, create mac VMs, install whatever you want, and then use remote console to connect from a Windows device.


The moral of the story is that you have to do admin work on the machine that you are targeting, not have one machine to rule them all. You cannot analyze where are files are going to go in a Mac installer on a Windows computer and you cannot analyze the Windows registry very well on a Mac.


Just to chime in, we have a mixed environment. I have a headless windows machine that i use Microsoft Remote Desktop.app to log into when I have to. A full time windows machine is basically worthless to me.


Jamf's purpose is to simplify work by helping organizations manage and secure an Apple experience that end users love and organizations trust. Jamf is the only company in the world that provides a complete management and security solution for an Apple-first environment that is enterprise secure, consumer simple and protects personal privacy. Learn about Jamf.


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The Windows SDK (10.0.26100) for Windows 11 provides the latest headers, libraries, metadata, and tools for building Windows applications. Use this SDK to build Universal Windows Platform (UWP) and Win32 applications for Windows 11, version 24H2 preview and previous Windows releases.


Windows App SDK

The Windows App SDK provides a unified set of APIs and tools that are decoupled from the OS and released to developers via NuGet packages. These APIs and tools can be used in a consistent way by any desktop app on Windows 11 and downlevel to Windows 10, version 1809.


Installation on Windows 8.1 and earlier operating systems requires an Update for Universal C Runtime in Windows. To install through Windows Update, make sure you install the latest recommended updates and patches from Microsoft Update before you install the Windows SDK.


Windows app samples are now available through GitHub. You can browse the code on GitHub, clone a personal copy of the repository from Git, or download a zipped archive of all the samples. We welcome feedback, so feel free to open an issue within the repository if you have a problem or question. These samples are designed to run on desktop, mobile, and future devices that support the Universal Windows Platform (UWP).

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