Backtrack:  
 
showing posts of September 15th, 2017
 
edited by on September 15th 2017, at 14:25
On October 31 2017, RPC over HTTP will be deprecated in Office 365, as stated here. This means that older Outlook versions (those that use RPC over HTTP) will no longer be able to connect to Office 365. The reason for this is that RPC over HTTP will be replaced in favor of the much newer MAPI over HTTP.

This switchover has an impact on all (older) Outlook versions that do not have the required update (incorporating MAPI over HTTP) functionality installed. Only Outlook versions that get this update will be able to connect to Office 365, resulting in the following changes:

Outlook 2007: no longer supported (there is no update).

Outlook 2010: only supported with SP2 and KB 2878264 installed   ...
edited by on September 15th 2017, at 11:52
Firefox 52 introduced an insecure form warning: whenever a password is requested on a web form through a non-SSL website (i.e. no "https"), Firefox displays a warning popup below the focused field:

While the gesture is appreciated (user awareness and all), it can become annoying. There is a way to turn the warning off through the advanced configuration of Firefox:

Start up Firefox and enter the following URL in the address bar: about:config

You'll get a This might void your warranty! page. Click the I accept the risk! button to continue.

You'll get a list of everything there is to configure in Firefox. In the search bar, paste the following value to quickly locate the correct p  ...
edited by on September 15th 2017, at 10:06
Sometimes it may become necessary to make changes to a DHCP scope on your Windows DHCP Server. Unfortunately, for existing scopes, not all scope options are editable, and it can become quite a hassle to recreate the scope, especially when there are a lot of reservations. Luckily, there's a workaround which allows you to edit the scope options, which is by using netsh.

It is not possible for netsh to directly edit scope options, but you can create a dump of the complete scope configuration (including all reservations), edit the resulting file, and import it back into the DHCP server. For this to work, you'll need admin (elevated) privileges on the DHCP server.

Notice
The procedure described  ...
 
showing posts of September 15th, 2017
 
 
« April 2024»
SunMonTueWedThuFriSat
 123456
78910111213
14151617181920
21222324252627
282930    
 
Links
 
Quote
« If the batteries of a TV remote run out, why do we press the buttons so much harder? »