Horny Feed Takeaway

Thursday 27 January 2005

Jay Z-KingDom Come

NSFW Reddit!

Genre: Rap Mp3 224 Kbps 115 Mb Rs.com


Track Listings:
1. The Prelude
2. Oh My God
3. Kingdom Come
4. Show Me What You Got
5. Lost One featuring Chrisette Michele
6. Do U Wanna Ride featuring John Legend
7. 30 Something
8. I Made It
9. Anything featuring Usher & Pharrell
10. Hollywood featuring Beyonce
11. Trouble
12. Dig A Hole featuring Sterling Simms
13. Minority Report featuring Ne-Yo
14. Beach Chair featuring Chris Martin

Itunes Bonus Tracks:
1. Politics As Usual
2. Can't Knock The Hustle
3. Can I Live
4. 44 hours
Download From Rapidshare:
http://5gjeptrf23.rapidsafe.de/

Listen to this ablum live online!
Check out Jay Z newest Video ""cant knock the hustle" as well.






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Tuesday 18 January 2005

Mika Life In Cartoon Motion rapidshare live testdrive

NSFW Reddit!

Album Review

Very talented young man. But after listen to his whole album, I found out his music bears too much resemblance to Queen, Scissor Systers or even Bee Gees, which has done him a lot of good so far partially because of British enormours appetite towards campy glam pop. But I'm afraid his caminess's gona absorb his talent into a limited direction. From a financial point of view, I'm afraid that his music sounds too much like the 1980s' gay club dance tune that mainstream american music buyer will find it hard to digest. Hiphop, Rap, and Rock music has tough up the american music fans' muscles so much that campy glam pop will never be cool in this country.
But here are several songs very rock and roll from his very successful debut album.My favouite is Lollipop. It bends hiphop and pop rock seamlessly altogether.Cachy tune!






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Monday 17 January 2005

BillBoard Top 10 Singles mp3 Rapidshare Live Drive

NSFW Reddit!

Issue Date: 2007-02-03




1

2


Fall Out Boy
This Ain't A Scene, It's An Arms Race

3





4


5


6


7


Fergie
Fergalicious


8



9


10




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How to install and use the Recovery Console in Windows XP

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View products that this article applies to.

Article ID:307654
Last Review:June 26, 2006
Revision:5.8
This article was previously published under Q307654
On This Page

INTRODUCTION

Microsoft recommends that you use the Recovery Console only
after Safe mode and other startup options do not work. The Recovery Console is
recommended only if you are an advanced user who can use basic commands to
identify and locate problem drivers and files. Additionally, you must be an
administrator to use the Recovery Console.



MORE INFORMATION


How to install the Recovery Console


You can install the Recovery Console on your computer to make it
available if you cannot restart Windows. You can then select the Recovery
Console option from the list of available operating systems during startup.
Install the Recovery Console on important servers and on the workstations of IT
personnel. This article describes how to install the Recovery Console to your
Microsoft Windows XP-based computer. To install the Recovery Console, you must
be logged on as an administrator.

Although you can run the Recovery
Console by starting directly from the Windows XP CD, it is generally more
convenient to set it up as a startup option on your startup menu. To run the
Recover Console directly from the CD, see the "How to use the Recovery Console" section.

To
install the Recovery Console, follow these steps:
1.Insert the Windows XP CD into the CD-ROM drive.
2.Click Start, and then click Run.
3.In the Open box, type
d:\i386\winnt32.exe /cmdcons
where d is the drive letter for the CD-ROM
drive.
4.A Windows Setup Dialog Box appears. The Windows Setup
Dialog Box describes the Recovery Console option. To confirm the installation,
click Yes.
5.Restart the computer. The next time that you start your
computer, "Microsoft Windows Recovery Console" appears on the startup
menu.
Alternatively, you can use a Universal Naming Convention
(UNC)-established connection to install the Recovery Console from a network
share point.

Note You may receive an error message that is similar the
following:
Setup cannot continue because the version of
Windows on your computer is newer than the version on the CD.
If this
problem occurs, click the following article number to view the article in the
Microsoft Knowledge Base:
898594 (http://support.microsoft.com/kb/898594/) You receive an error message if you try to install the Recovery Console on a Microsoft Windows XP Service Pack 2-based computer

How to use the Recovery Console


You can enable and disable services, format drives, read and
write data on a local drive (including drives that are formatted to use the
NTFS file system), and perform many other administrative tasks. The Recovery
Console is particularly useful if you have to repair your computer by copying a
file from a disk or CD-ROM to your hard disk, or if you have to reconfigure a
service that is preventing your computer from starting correctly.

If
you cannot start your computer, you can run the Recovery Console from the
Microsoft Windows XP startup disks or the Windows XP CD-ROM. This article
describes how to perform this task.

After Windows XP is installed on
your computer, to start the computer and use the Recovery Console you require
the Windows XP startup disks or the Windows XP CD-ROM.

For more information about how to create Startup disks for
Windows XP (they are not included with Windows XP), click the following article
number to view the article in the Microsoft Knowledge Base:
310994 (http://support.microsoft.com/kb/310994/)

Obtaining Windows XP Setup boot disks

Note To start the computer from the Windows XP CD-ROM, you must
configure the basic input/output system (BIOS) of the computer to start from
your CD-ROM drive.

To run the Recovery Console from the Windows XP
startup disks or the Windows XP CD-ROM, follow these steps:
1.Insert the Windows XP startup disk into the floppy disk
drive, or insert the Windows XP CD-ROM into the CD-ROM drive, and then restart
the computer.

Click to select any options that are required to start
the computer from the CD-ROM drive if you are prompted.
2.When the "Welcome to Setup" screen appears, press R to
start the Recovery Console.
3.If you have a dual-boot or multiple-boot computer, select
the installation that you must access from the Recovery Console.
4.When you are prompted, type the Administrator password. If
the administrator password is blank, just press ENTER.
5.At the command prompt, type the appropriate commands to
diagnose and repair your Windows XP installation.

For a list of
commands that are available in Recovery Console, type recovery
console commands
or help at the command
prompt, and then press ENTER.

For information about a specific
command, type help
commandname
at the command prompt, and
then press ENTER.
6.To exit the Recovery Console and restart the computer, type
exit at the command prompt, and then press
ENTER.

How to use the Recovery Console command prompt


When you use the Recovery Console, you are working at a special
command prompt instead of the ordinary Windows command prompt. The Recovery
Console has its own command interpreter. To enter this command interpreter, you
are prompted by Recovery Console to type the local Administrator
password.

When the Recovery Console starts, you can press F6 to
install a third-party SCSI or RAID driver, in case you need such a driver to
access the hard disk. This prompt works the same as it does during installation
of the operating system.

The Recovery Console takes several seconds
to start. When the Recovery Console menu appears, a numbered list of the
Windows installations on the computer appears. (Generally, only c:\Windows
exists.) Press a number before you press ENTER, even when only one entry
appears. If you press ENTER without selecting a number, the computer restarts
and begins the process again.

When you see the prompt for
%SystemRoot% (generally C:\Windows), you can start using the available commands
for the Recovery Console.

Command actions


The following list describes the available commands for the
Recovery Console:
Attrib changes attributes on one file or subdirectory.
Batch executes commands that you specify in the text file, Inputfile.
Outputfile holds the output of the commands. If you omit the Outputfile
parameter, output appears on the screen.
Bootcfg modifies the Boot.ini file for boot configuration and
recovery.
CD (Chdir) operates only in the system directories of the current Windows
installation, removable media, the root directory of any hard disk partition,
or the local installation sources.
Chkdsk The /p switch runs Chkdsk even if the drive is not flagged as dirty. The
/r switch locates bad sectors and recovers readable information.
This switch implies /p. Chkdsk requires Autochk. Chkdsk automatically looks for
Autochk.exe in the startup folder. If Chkdsk cannot find the file in the
startup folder, it looks for the Windows 2000 Setup CD-ROM. If Chkdsk cannot
find the installation CD-ROM, Chkdsk prompts the user for the location of
Autochk.exe.
Cls clears the screen.
Copy copies one file to a target location. By default, the target
cannot be removable media, and you cannot use wildcard characters. Copying a
compressed file from the Windows 2000 Setup CD-ROM automatically decompresses
the file.
Del (Delete) deletes one file. Operates within the system directories of the
current Windows installation, removable media, the root directory of any hard
disk partition, or the local installation sources. By default, you cannot use
wildcard characters.
Dir displays a list of all files, including hidden and system files.
Disable disables a Windows system service or driver. The variable
service_or_driver is the name of the service or
driver that you want to disable. When you use this command to disable a
service, the command displays the service's original startup type before it
changes the type to SERVICE_DISABLED. Note the original startup type so that
you can use the enable command to restart the service.
Diskpart manages partitions on hard disk volumes. The /add option creates a new partition. The /delete option deletes an existing partition. The variable device is the
device name for a new partition (such as \device\harddisk0). The variable drive
is the drive letter for a partition that you are deleting (for example, D).
Partition is the partition-based name for a partition that you are deleting,
(for example: \device\harddisk0\partition1) and can be used instead of the
drive variable. The variable size is the size, in megabytes, of a new
partition.
Enable enables a Windows system service or driver. The variable
service_or_driver is the name of the service or
driver that you want to enable, and start_type is
the startup type for an enabled service. The startup type uses one of the
following formats:

SERVICE_BOOT_START

SERVICE_SYSTEM_START

SERVICE_AUTO_START

SERVICE_DEMAND_START
Exit quits the Recovery Console, and then restarts the
computer.
Expand expands a compressed file. The variable source is the file that
you want to expand. By default, you cannot use wildcard characters. The
variable destination is the directory for the new file. By default, the
destination cannot be removable media and cannot be read-only. You can use the attrib command to remove the read-only attribute from the destination
directory. The option /f:filespec is required if the source contains more than one file. This
option permits wildcard characters. The /y switch disables the overwrite confirmation prompt. The /d switch specifies that the files will not be expanded and displays
a directory of the files in the source.
Fixboot writes a new startup sector on the system partition.
Fixmbr repairs the startup partition's master boot code. The variable
device is an optional name that specifies the device that requires a new Master
Boot Record. Omit this variable when the target is the startup device.
Format formats a disk. The /q switch performs a quick format. The /fs switch specifies the file system.
Help If you do not use the command variable to specify a command, help lists all the commands that the Recovery Console
supports.
Listsvc displays all available services and drivers on the
computer.
Logon displays detected installations of Windows and requests the local
Administrator password for those installations. Use this command to move to
another installation or subdirectory.
Map displays currently active device mappings. Include the arc option to specify the use of Advanced RISC Computing (ARC) paths
(the format for Boot.ini) instead of Windows device paths.
MD (Mkdir) operates only within the system directories of the current
Windows installation, removable media, the root directory of any hard disk
partition, or the local installation sources.
More/Type displays the specified text file on screen.
Rd (Rmdir) operates only within the system directories of the current
Windows installation, removable media, the root directory of any hard disk
partition, or the local installation sources.
Ren (Rename) operates only within the system directories of the current
Windows installation, removable media, the root directory of any hard disk
partition, or the local installation sources. You cannot specify a new drive or
path as the target.
Set displays and sets the Recovery Console environment
variables.
Systemroot sets the current directory to %SystemRoot%.

Recovery Console rules


Several environment rules are in effect while you are working in
the Recovery Console. Type set to see the current
environment. By default, these are the rules:
AllowAllPaths = FALSE prevents access to directories and subdirectories outside the
system installation that you selected when you entered the Recovery
Console.
AllowRemovableMedia = FALSE prevents access to removable media as a target for copied
files.
AllowWildCards = FALSE prevents wildcard support for commands such as copy and del.
NoCopyPrompt = FALSE means that you are prompted by the Recovery Console for
confirmation when overwriting an existing file.

How to delete the Recovery Console


To delete the Recovery Console:
1.Restart your computer, click Start, click My Computer, and then double-click the hard disk where you installed the
Recovery Console.
2.On the Tools menu, click Folder Options, and then click the View tab.
3.Click Show hidden files and folders, click
to clear the Hide protected operating system files check box,
and then click OK.
4.At the root folder, delete the Cmdcons folder and the Cmldr file.
5.At the root folder, right-click the Boot.ini file, and then click Properties.
6.Click to clear the Read-only check box, and then click OK.

Warning: Modifying the Boot.ini file incorrectly may prevent your
computer from restarting. Make sure that you delete only the entry for the
Recovery Console. Also, change the attribute for the Boot.ini file back to a
read-only state after you finish this procedure. Open the Boot.ini file in
Microsoft Windows Notepad, and remove the entry for the Recovery Console. It
looks similar to this:
C:\cmdcons\bootsect.dat="Microsoft Windows Recovery Console" /cmdcons
7.Save the file and close it.

How to install Recovery Console during an unattended installation


To install the Recovery Console during the unattended
installation of Windows, you must use the [GuiRunOnce] section of the
unattend.txt file.

Command1="path\winnt32 /cmdcons /unattend"
For more information about how to use the Unattend.txt file, see
the Deployment Planning Guide of the Windows 2000 Server
Resource Kit.

REFERENCES


You can use Group Policy to change the rules and expand the
power that you have in the Recovery Console.

For more information about how
to do this, click the following article number to view the article in the
Microsoft Knowledge Base:
310497 (http://support.microsoft.com/kb/310497/)

How to use Group Policies to add more power to the Recovery Console



APPLIES TO
Microsoft Windows XP Professional
Microsoft Windows XP Home Edition

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Bootcfg command and its uses

NSFW Reddit!

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Article ID:291980
Last Review:January 15, 2006
Revision:1.3
This article was previously published under Q291980

INTRODUCTION



This article discusses the bootcfg command and its uses.

MORE INFORMATION



The bootcfg command is a Microsoft Windows XP Recovery Console command that manipulates the Boot.ini file. This command has a function that can scan your hard disks for Microsoft Windows NT 4.0, Microsoft Windows 2000, and Windows XP installations, and then add them to an existing Boot.ini file. The function can also rebuild a new Boot.ini file if one does not exist. With the bootcfg command, additional Boot.ini file parameters can be added to existing or new entries.

To use the bootcfg command, start the Recovery Console with the Windows XP CD-ROM, and then click Recovery Console. Or, install the Recovery Console locally, and then select the command from the Boot menu.


The bootcfg command has the following uses:
The bootcfg /default command sets the default operating system option in the Boot menu. The command selects the operating system entry automatically.
The bootcfg /add command scans the computer for Windows NT 4.0, Windows 2000, or Windows XP (if it is dual booting) installations, and then displays the results. From this location, you can add an installation to the Boot menu.

You may receive a message that is similar to the following message:

Scanning all disks for Windows Installations

Please wait, since this may take a while...


Total Identified Windows Installs: 2


[1] C:\Windows

[2] D:\Windows


Select installation to add: (select a number)


Enter Load Identifier: (Custom description for an operating system loading from the Boot menu)

Enter Operating System Load Options: (that is: /fastdetect)


This process adds a new entry in the Boot menu. When you add an installation, the bootcfg command also makes the installation the default operating system boot entry.
The bootcfg /rebuild command scans the hard disks of the computer for Windows NT 4.0, Windows 2000, or Windows XP installations, and then displays the results. You can add the detected Windows installations.

You may receive a message that is similar to the following message:

Total Identified Windows Installs: 2


[1] C:\Windows

Add installation to boot list? (Yes/No/All):

Enter Load Identifier: (Custom description for an operating system loading from the Boot menu)

Enter Operating System Load Options: (that is: /fastdetect)


[2] D:\Windows

Add installation to boot list? (Yes/No/All):

Enter Load Identifier: (Custom description for an operating system loading from the Boot menu)

Enter Operating System Load Options: (that is: /fastdetect)
The bootcfg /scan command scans the hard disks of the computer for Windows NT 4.0, Windows 2000 or Windows XP installations, and then displays the results.

You may receive a message that is similar to the following message:

Scanning all disks for Windows Installations

Please wait, since this may take a while...


Total Identified Windows Installs: 2


[1] C:\Windows

[2] D:\Windows
The bootcfg /list command reads the Boot.ini file, and then displays the operating system identifier, the operating system load options, and the operating system location (path).

You may receive a message that is similar to the following message:
Total entries in boot list: 2


[1] Microsoft Windows Whistler Professional

Operating System Load Options: /fastdetect

Operating System Location: D:\Windows


[2] Microsoft Windows Whistler Server

Operating System Load Options: /fastdetect

Operating System Location: C:\Windows

The bootcfg /redirect command enables redirection in the boot loader with the configuration specified as port and baudrate. This command is used to turn on the Headless Administration feature.

The following example uses this command:
bootcfg /redirect com1 115200
bootcfg /redirect useBiosSettings
The bootcfg /disableredirect command disables redirection in the boot loader with the configuration specified as port and baudrate. This command is used to turn off the Headless Administration feature.
You can also modify the Boot.ini file in the Windows XP graphical user interface (GUI):
1.Click Start, click Control Panel, click Performance and Maintenance, and then click System.
2.On the Advanced tab, click Startup and Recovery, and then click Settings.
3.Under System Startup, click Edit.
4.Save your changes, and then click OK.
5.Click Start, click Run, and then type msconfig to start the System Configuration utility.
6.Click the Boot.ini tab.

APPLIES TO
Microsoft Windows XP Home Edition
Microsoft Windows XP Professional

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"Invalid Boot.ini" or "Windows could not start" error messages when you start your computer

NSFW Reddit!

View products that this article applies to.
Article ID:330184
Last Review:June 2, 2004
Revision:1.0

This article was previously published under Q330184

SYMPTOMS



When you start your computer after you upgrade to Microsoft Windows
XP, you may receive one or both of the following error messages:
Invalid Boot.ini


Windows could not start because the following file is missing or corrupt:


Windows\System32\Hal.dll

CAUSE



This issue may occur if the Boot.ini file is missing,
damaged, or contains incorrect entries.

RESOLUTION
To resolve this issue, start the computer from the Windows XP CD, start the Recovery
Console, and then use the Bootcfg.exe tool to rebuild the Boot.ini file. To do this, follow these steps:
1.
Configure the computer to start from the CD-ROM or DVD-ROM drive. For information about how to do this, see your computer documentation, or contact your computer manufacturer.
2.
Insert the Windows XP CD-ROM into your CD-ROM or DVD-ROM drive, and then restart your computer.
3.
When you receive the "Press any key to boot from CD" message, press a key to start your computer from the Windows XP CD-ROM.
4.
When you receive the "Welcome to Setup" message, press R to start the Recovery Console.
5.
If you have a dual-boot or multiple-boot computer, select the installation that you have to use from the Recovery Console.
6.
When you are prompted, type the administrator password, and then press ENTER.
7.
At the command prompt, type bootcfg /list, and then press ENTER. The entries in your current Boot.ini file appear on the screen.
8.
At the command prompt, type bootcfg /rebuild, and then press ENTER. This command scans the hard disks of the computer for Windows XP, Microsoft Windows 2000, or Microsoft Windows NT installations, and then displays the results. Follow the instructions that appear on the screen to add the Windows installations to the Boot.ini file. For example, follow these steps to add a Windows XP installation to the Boot.ini file:
a.
When you receive a message that is similar to the following message, press Y:
Total Identified Windows Installs: 1 [1] C:\Windows Add installation to boot list? (Yes/No/All)
b.
You receive a message that is similar to the following message:
Enter Load Identifier
This is the name of the operating system. When you receive this message, type the name of your operating system, and then press ENTER. This is either Microsoft Windows XP Professional or Microsoft Windows XP Home Edition.
c.
You receive a message that is similar to the following:
Enter OS Load options
When you receive this message, type /fastdetect, and then press ENTER. Note The instructions that appear on your screen may be different, depending on the configuration of your computer.
9.
Type exit, and then press ENTER to quit Recovery Console. Your computer restarts, and the updated boot list appears when you receive the "Please select the operating system to start" message.

APPLIES TO
Microsoft Windows XP Professional Edition
Microsoft Windows XP Home Edition

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