Latest comments

In response to: Microsoft Office 2003 keeps asking me to accept the EULA in Windows 7

Steve [Visitor]
Thanks for the info. I just tried it and voila !!

One more for the good guys !!!

Thanks again.
PermalinkPermalink 09/01/10 @ 14:13

In response to: Microsoft Office 2003 keeps asking me to accept the EULA in Windows 7

Tammy [Visitor]
Thank you for your post - just tried it and finally found something that worked!
PermalinkPermalink 08/29/10 @ 04:33

In response to: Microsoft Office 2003 keeps asking me to accept the EULA in Windows 7

homepage [Visitor]
Nice post, thanks!
PermalinkPermalink 08/26/10 @ 01:21

In response to: Microsoft Office 2003 keeps asking me to accept the EULA in Windows 7

Cab [Member] · http://blog.rosbif.org
I just love comments like that. It makes the 'net seem such a friendlier place. :-)
PermalinkPermalink 08/18/10 @ 21:50

In response to: Microsoft Office 2003 keeps asking me to accept the EULA in Windows 7

Johnboy [Visitor]
Mate, you are now an official Hero of the Office Union (First Class)! Thanks for passing on this help, it's the little niggly things that bug us most, isn't it!
PermalinkPermalink 08/18/10 @ 16:50

In response to: Microsoft Office 2003 keeps asking me to accept the EULA in Windows 7

Deanna [Visitor]
I have this same problem, but your solution isn't helping. When I use all of the steps outlined and I get into "Office11", my list does not contain "Excel.exe" nor any other .exe programs.

Here is what I did.

On my list I have Excel - which type is "application" and Excel - which type is "Microsoft Office Setup".

I right-clicked on the Excel "application" one and then clicked "run as administrator".

I went further down the list and did the same for WINWORD, which is Microsoft Word for your documents. I did not download Office Outlook on mine as I use a different email program, so I didn't worry about that one.
PermalinkPermalink 08/10/10 @ 16:23

In response to: Microsoft Office 2003 keeps asking me to accept the EULA in Windows 7

Cab [Member] · http://blog.rosbif.org
Blimey, glad I helped out Bob there :-)

It was a frustrating problem, but the resolution is of real worth to a lot of people.
PermalinkPermalink 06/27/10 @ 19:38

In response to: Microsoft Office 2003 keeps asking me to accept the EULA in Windows 7

Bob [Visitor]
Thank you, Thank you, Thank you.
I don't know how many times I did a reinstall with countless different options selected to see what if anything I was doing wrong.
Again Thank you
PermalinkPermalink 06/27/10 @ 02:01

In response to: Outlook and Dovecot self signed certificates.

Pablo salgado [Visitor]
Thanks a lot.

I found the pem file.

I also have to build a new one to match the CN name certificate with my mailserver adress and voila no more warnings.

An easy way to find the pem file location is to look the dovecot config file, usually
/etc/dovecot/dovecot.conf
or
/etc/dovecot/conf.d/01-dovecot-postfix.conf
PermalinkPermalink 06/21/10 @ 05:41

In response to: Outlook and Dovecot self signed certificates.

Cab [Member] · http://blog.rosbif.org
On my box, it's in :

/etc/pki/dovecot

In any case, just run a quick find on files terminating with the extension .pem
PermalinkPermalink 06/18/10 @ 22:19

In response to: Outlook and Dovecot self signed certificates.

Pablo salgado [Visitor]
Hey I have the same issue

where is the public cert in the linux box?

I want to use your workaround but i do not know where is the cert to copy it in windows
PermalinkPermalink 06/18/10 @ 06:54

In response to: Jailbreaking the iPhone

Spete [Visitor]
Jailbreak can be used to test 'evaluation' copies of software (.app files). I may or may not have done this a while back to try TomTom and LogMeIn
PermalinkPermalink 04/29/10 @ 12:03

In response to: Microsoft Office 2003 keeps asking me to accept the EULA in Windows 7

Kim [Visitor]
Thank you so much. I thought it was something I overlooked when upgrading to windows 7. But running one of the office tools as admin & accepting the EULA did it!
PermalinkPermalink 04/02/10 @ 02:44

In response to: Microsoft Office 2003 keeps asking me to accept the EULA in Windows 7

Andrew [Visitor]
THANK YOU for this solution for getting rid of never-ending EULA request with legit copy of Office 2003. It worked, at long last...! THANK YOU!
PermalinkPermalink 03/04/10 @ 02:58

In response to: Removing a greyed / grayed out password policy on Windows Mobile 6.0

C64er [Visitor]
EXCELLENT!!!

I have the Ultimate 8502 and syncs with thw online service of the iMate (for online customisation). I put a password policy but I could NOT change it!!
your trick SAVED MY DAY!! CHEERS!!

PermalinkPermalink 09/06/09 @ 00:36

In response to: YANT

Neil [Visitor]
And it doesn't work!

Try again MS.
PermalinkPermalink 03/10/09 @ 23:40

In response to: Creating your own dovecot certificate in Redhat FC4

Cab [Visitor]
You can always do this too.

openssl req -x509 -nodes -days 3650 -subj '/C=CA/ST=QC/L=Montreal/O=Company Name/CN=server.name.com' -newkey rsa:1024 -keyout new_key.pem -out new_cert.pem
PermalinkPermalink 01/06/09 @ 08:44

In response to: Removing a greyed / grayed out password policy on Windows Mobile 6.0

Cab [Member] · http://blog.rosbif.org
I've found out that it does depend upon the company server. Some servers constantly push this policy out, so even if you soft reset, it reinstalls the policy. For some, like 11Bravo, it works fine.

Lucky bugger, that's all I can say. :-)
PermalinkPermalink 10/06/08 @ 20:26

In response to: Removing a greyed / grayed out password policy on Windows Mobile 6.0

11Bravo [Visitor]
Awesome. My company's Exchange server pushed out this policy the other day and it's been driving me nuts. This reg tweak worked beautifully even after a soft reset.
PermalinkPermalink 10/05/08 @ 23:52

In response to: Removing a greyed / grayed out password policy on Windows Mobile 6.0

Nick [Visitor]
Worked excellent, just after a soft reset, it returned to be greyed oput again.
It seems that the reset also resets the registry settings.
Did you experienced the same.

Also, when the check box is greyed out, I can only choose from a 0,1or 5 minuted prompt after device is unused. (After applying the register alterations, you can also choose from 15, 30, 60 min. etc.)
PermalinkPermalink 10/02/08 @ 18:22