Tuesday, December 25, 2018

How can I detect the amount of memory slots I have with out Opening Computer

Open Command Prompt ( Run -> CMD) Enter

wmic MEMORYCHIP get banklabel, capacity, caption, devicelocator, partnumber
 

Monday, November 26, 2018

Enabling BCC in Outlook

Outlook 2010, Outlook 2013 and Outlook 2016

Show Fields: Bcc and FromWhen composing a message, select the Options tab and press the “Show BCC” and “Show From” buttons to enable them.

Using Outlook 2013 or Outlook 2016 and reply or forward an email from the Reading Pane, the Show Fields group can be found all the way to the right on the Message tab.
Note 1: The From field will always be visible in Outlook 2010, Outlook 2013 and Outlook 2016 when you have more than one account configured. You cannot disable the From field then either.


Outlook 2007

Select the Options tab and press the “Show BCC” and “Show From” buttons to enable them.

Outlook 2003 and previous with Outlook as the email editor

View-> BCC Field
View-> From Field

Enabling the Developer tab in Outlook

Outlook 2010, Outlook 2013 and Outlook 2016

  1. Press File button next to the Home tab and choose Options.
  2. Select the section Customize Ribbon.
  3. In the right pane, enable the selection field before “Developer”.
  4. Press OK to close the open dialog.

Outlook 2007

  1. Open a message or create a new one.
  2. Click on the Office logo in the left top and choose Editor Options.
  3. In the Popular section, enable the option: Show Developer tab in the Ribbon.
  4. Press OK to close the open dialog.

Sunday, November 25, 2018

SOP Tables Gp

 SOP (Sales Order Processing) to invoice your customers, the tables involved are these:
SOP Tables
SOP10100
SOP Header on unposted documents
SOP10200
SOP Line items on unposted documents
    (For Kits, there is one record per kit component)
SOP10101
Commissions on posted and unposted documents
SOP10103
Payments on posted and unposted documents
SOP10105
Sales Taxes on posted and unposted documents
SOP10106
User Defined fields on posted and unposted documents
(Also contains the transaction-level comment))
SOP10107
Tracking Number(s) on posted and unposted documents
SOP10201
Serial/Lot Number(s) on posted and unposted documents
SOP10202
Line Comment(s) on posted and unposted documents
SOP30200
SOP Header on posted documents
SOP30201
Sales Deposits on posted documents
SOP30300
SOP Line items on posted documents
   (For Kits, there is one record per kit component)

The SOP Type tells you what kind of document you’re dealing with. Only the Invoice and Return documents can post.
SOPTYPE (SOP Document Types):
1
Quote
2
Order
3
Invoice
4
Return
5
Back Order
6
Fulfillment Order

If, instead of SOP, you are using the Invoicing module, you’ll need to look in these tables
IVC10100
Invoicing Header on unposted documents
IVC10101
Invoicing Line Items on unposted documents
IVC10102
Serial and Lot Numbers
IVC10103
Line Item Comments
IVC10200
Payments on documents
IVC10400
Commissions
IVC10500
Sales Tax
IVC30101
Invoicing Headers on posted documents
IVC30102
Invoicing Line Items on posted documents

If you are simply entering documents directly in the Receivables Management module, you’ll need to look at the tables below. Keep in mind that once a transaction is posted from either the SOP or Invoicing module, they are moved to the RM posted sales documents table:
Receivables Documents
RM10301
Receivables unposted sales documents
RM10201
Receivables unposted cash receipts
RM10501
Receivables commissions on unposted documents
RM10601
Receivables Sales Tax on unposted documents
RM20101
Receivables posted sales documents
RM30101
Receivables history sales documents
RM30601
Receivables Sales Tax history
RM30501
Receivables commissions history

The RMDTYPAL (RM Document Type) field tells you what kind of receivables document you have.
Receivables Document types
0
Reserved for balance carried forward records
1
Sales / Invoice document
2
Reserved for scheduled payments
3
Debit memo
4
Finance Charge
5
Service / Repair document
6
Warranty document
7
Credit memo
8
Return document
9
Payment document

Thursday, November 22, 2018

Shortcuts for Mac OS

  • Command + F: Open Find window to search text.
  • Command + H: Hide windows of the front app.
  • Command + N: Open a new document or window.
  • Command + O: Open a selected item.
  • Command + P: Print current document.
  • Command + X: Cut selected text and copy it.
  • Command + C: Copy selected text.
  • Command + V: Paste copied text.
  • Command + Z: Undo previous command.
  • Command + A: Select all items.
  • Command + S: Save current document.
  • Command + W: Close front window.
  • Command + Q: Quit the app.
  • Command + M: Minimize the front window to the Dock.
  • Command + Spacebar: Open Spotlight search field.
  • Command + Tab: Switch between open apps.
  • Command + B: Bold selected text.
  • Command + I: Italicize selected text.
  • Command + U: Underline selected text.
  • Command + Semicolon (;): Find misspelled words in document.
  • Option + Command + Esc: Choose an app to force quit.
  • Shift + Command + Tilde (~): Switch between open windows.
  • Shift + Command + 3: Take a screenshot.
  • Fn + Up Arrow: Scroll up one page.
  • Fn + Down Arrow: Scroll down one page.
  • Fn + Left Arrow: Scroll to beginning of document.
  • Fn + Right Arrow: Scroll to end of document.

Chkdsk problems

Windows Desktop -> Start -> Run

Bring up the computer's command prompt by typing CMD into the address bar.

Type chkdsk /r just as it's written, no exceptions.

It will ask you if you want to run this at next Startup, type in Y for Yes

Then Restart your computer

SSD VS HDD

Access time An SSD has access speeds of 35 to 100 microseconds, which is nearly 100 times faster. This faster access speed means programs can run more quickly, which is very significant, especially for programs that access large amounts of data often like your operating system. A typical HDD takes about 5,000 to 10,000 microseconds to access data.
Price The price of a solid-state drive is higher than an HDD, which is why most computers with an SSD only have a few hundred gigabytes of storage. Desktop computers with an SSD may also have one or more HDDs for additional storage. HDD is considerably cheaper than SSD, especially for drives over 1 TB.
Reliability The SSD has no moving parts. It uses flash memory to store data, which provides better performance and reliability over an HDD. The HDD has moving parts and magnetic platters, meaning the more use they get, the faster they wear down and fail.
Capacity Although there are large SSDs, anything over 1 TB SSD is usually outside of most people's price range. Several terabyte hard disk drives are available for very reasonable prices.
Power The SSD uses less power than a standard HDD, which means a lower energy bill over time and for laptops, an increase in battery life. With all of the parts required to spin the platters, the HDD uses more power than an SSD.
Noise With no moving parts, SSD generates no noise. With the spinning platters and moving read/write heads, an HDD can sometimes be one of the loudest components in your computer.
Size SSD is available in 2.5", 1.8", and 1.0", increasing the available space available in a computer, especially a desktop or server. HDDs are usually 3.5" and 2.5" in size for desktop and laptops respectively, with no options for anything smaller.
Heat Because there are no moving parts and due to the nature of flash memory, the SSD generates less heat, helping to increase its lifespan and reliability. With moving parts comes added heat which can slowly damage electronics over time, so the higher the heat, the greater the potential for wear and damage.
Magnetism  SSD is not affected by magnetism. Because a hard drive relies on magnetism to write information to the platter, information could be erased from an HDD using strong magnets.

How to Tell if You Are an Administrator

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