How to observe Windows clipboard?

I want to make a sys-clipboard program,but i don' t know how.
Some question puzzled me.
I don' know what can i do for observe system clipboard.(Dynamic Observe).
Thanks very much.

How did i do like this?But i have got any responses in
it.
How can i do ?Thanks.
//Code:
import java.awt.Toolkit;
import java.awt.datatransfer.Clipboard;
import java.awt.datatransfer.FlavorEvent;
import java.awt.datatransfer.FlavorListener;
* 创建日期 2004-2-13
更改所生成文ߥ
;模板为
* 窗口 > 首选项 > Java
代码生成 >代码和注释
* @author Administrator
更改所生成类ࣁ
;注释的模板为
* 窗口 > 首选项 > Java
代码生成 >代码和注释
public class Cliper extends Clipboard implements
Runnable
     * @param arg0
     Thread thread;
     public Cliper(String arg0)
          super(arg0);
// TODO
O
自动生成构造函
数存根
          thread=new Thread(this);
          thread.start();
     /* (非 Javadoc)
     * @see java.lang.Runnable#run()
     public void run()
// TODO
O
自动生成方法存
根
          for(int i=0;i<=10;i++)
this.addFlavorListener(new
ew
Flavorlistener(Toolkit.getDefaultToolkit().getSystemCli
board()));
               try
                    Thread.sleep(1000);
               catch(Exception e){
                    e.getStackTrace();
     class Flavorlistener implements FlavorListener
          Clipboard c;
          public Flavorlistener(Clipboard c)
               this.c=c;
          public void flavorsChanged(FlavorEvent arg0)
// TODO
DO
&#33258;&#21160;&#29983;&#25104;&#26041;&#27861;&#23384;
&#26681;
               arg0=new FlavorEvent(c);
               System.out.println("aaaa");
     public static void main(String[] args)
          new Cliper("test");
}A Big5 for the very oriental comments in the code.

Similar Messages

  • How do I load a picture from the clipboard (either Windows clipboard or Labview clipboard) into image data that can then be processed in Labview?

    I want to load a picture from the Windows clipboard (and if not possible, then from the Labview clipboard) into actual numerical image data so that it can be processed in lab view. When I'm at the main screen where I can add controls, I see a section of controls called "Vision" in the tool bar where all the different controls can can be added from. When I go to the control called "Image" and put that on my form, and then look at the flowchart/blockdiagram programing window to see what inputs and outputs it has, I only see one output, and no inputs. And when I right click on it, I see NO way to load an image into the Image control. PLEASE help me.
    Message Edited by Ben321 on 11-09-2008 04:32 PM

    Hi Ben,
    National Instruments has an image processing software called Vision and although I am not completely sure, I think the controls that you found in the control pallet are used in conjunction with the software. Depending on what kind of image processing you want to conduct in LabVIEW, you might want to consider purchasing that product.
    If cost is an issue, there are functions in LabVIEW which allows you to take in image files and process them. However, please keep in mind that the capabilities are limited.
    Images should be loaded onto LabVIEW not via the clipboard but through loading it from folders or directories. (There might be a way to and so if you find a way please let me know! I would like to know myself =D) If you open the function pallet by right clicking on the block diagram, in the programming folder you should find a directory called "Graphic and Sound". There, you'll find functions in which allows you to process images.
     In the "Graphic Type" directory there should be a function called Read JPEG file.vi. There are also others which allows you to read png and bmp files. Please note that there are functions which write as well. Set a file path on the block diagram and inside the "Grahic and Sound" there is a "Picture Function" directory and inside there, there should be a function called "Draw Flattened Pixmap.vi" That changes the image into a format where you can process on LabVIEW. Inside the "Picture Function" directory there are several functions which allows you to process the specified image. Play around with it and see how it goes. And don't forget to Write the file in the end to save any changes.
    I hope this helps
    National Instruments Japan
    Applications Engineer Taiki Hoshi

  • Set document title from windows clipboard contents

    Hi Folks!
    I have a process which I perform all the time, which leads me to believe that it's a good candidate for scripting. However, my scripting capabilities are only VB stuff and I think this may be beyond that.
    Specifically, I print invoices from Quickbooks into PDF files, and the PDF then automatically opens in Acrobat.
    Today, I populate the Windows Clipboard while in Quickbooks. Next, I "print" the invoice to PDF, and Acrobat opens with that document. I then choose File->Properties, and paste the contents of the clipboard into the "Title" of the Properties dialog. Finally, I save and close the PDF.
    What I'd like: Upon pressing a button on toolbar (I hope this is possible!), I'd like to have the open document's "Title" set to whatever the contents of the Windows Clipboard is, then save and close the PDF document.
    Can anyone help with a shell of a script here? I have little to no experience in Acrobat (or javascript) scripting. I find the Adobe docs on this quite confusing, as I don't know whether to be using an external editor (how do I connect the external script to an Acrobat button?) or the internal Javascript Console (again, connect to button)?
    Any assistance here would be most appreciated.
    thanks in advance

    This can't be done with JavaScript in Acrobat, since it has no access to the clipboard.
    The only option is an external GUI automation script (like AutoIt).

  • How to install windows 7 in bootcamp from flash drive os x 10.9.1

    How to install windows 7 in bootcamp from flash drive os x 10.9.1

    oooHideooo wrote:
    It DOESN'T WORK!!
    I tried tonnes of method already, and the apple guide method absolutely doesn't work for MacBook Air, 10.9.1
    Did you even tried it yourself????!! with Maverick 10.9.1 you will NOT be able to get pass the bootcamp first page:"install window 7". It will give an error msg saying "The installer disc could not be found"
    My usb confirmed bootable! I created it with bootcamp, and tested it on a different macbook and it works. But doesn't work on MacBook Air. (Even startup disk doesn't detect it as bootable in Air)
    anyone else has a real solution to this problem?
    Thousands have successfully tried it themselves and installed Windows on a Macbook Air. Perhaps if you provided some details about what you did and what errors you observed we could help you. The Boot Camp instaructions, if followed, will produce a successful install.

  • ITunes 7.6.0.29 locks up on using Windows Clipboard in Vista

    Hi I'm using the latest iTunes on Vista Business Edition on a Dell Inspiron 9300 (1.86GHz Pentium M, 2Gb RAM, 120Gb HDD).
    I've recently found that iTunes will lockup/freeze when I use the Windows Clipboard. This seems to happen mostly when I've got Parallels Workstation 2.2 for Windows running and I try to copy between the Host Vista System and the Guest Win XP Pro SP2 System. BUT today I was trying to copy an embedded photo from an MS Word document in to Paint Shop Pro X1 and iTunes locked up on me again! This time Parallels Workstation was NOT running.
    The only way out is to use the Windows Task Manager and force iTunes to close. Any suggestions as to why it's doing this, and how to resolve this would be most welcome.
    Thanks in advance,
    Jonathan R. Portwood.
    IT Consultant,
    PQSA Network.

    I have a "Duct Tape" fix that worked for me. Follow this path to the app. AppleMobileDeviceHelper.exe
    C:\Program Files\Common Files\Apple\Mobile Device Support\bin
    Change:
    AppleMobileDeviceHelper.exe
    to:
    AppleMobileDeviceHelper.exe.old
    Seems to fix the problem. I'm not exactly sure what the AppleMobileDeviceHelper.exe does, but I'm sure it has something to do with the new iPhone. So proceed with caution.
    Dell XPS M170   Windows Vista  

  • How to install window 7 on mac mini ?

    how to install window 7 on my mac mini?

    Windows on Intel Macs
    There are presently several alternatives for running Windows on Intel Macs.
         1. Install the Apple Boot Camp software.  Purchase Windows
             XP w/Service Pak2, Vista, or Windows 7.  For Boot Camp
             4.0 and above you can only use Windows 7 or later. Follow
             instructions in the Boot Camp documentation on
             installation of Boot Camp, creating Driver CD, and
             installing Windows.  Boot Camp enables you to boot the
             computer into OS X or Windows.
         2. Parallels Desktop for Mac and Windows XP, Vista Business,
             Vista Ultimate, or Windows 7.  Parallels is software
             virtualization that enables running Windows concurrently
             with OS X.
         3. VM Fusion and Windows XP, Vista Business, Vista Ultimate,
             or Windows 7.  VM Fusion is software virtualization that
             enables running Windows concurrently with OS X.
         4. CrossOver which enables running many Windows
             applications without having to install Windows.  The
             Windows applications can run concurrently with OS X.
         5. VirtualBox is an Open Source freeware virtual machine such
             as VM Fusion and Parallels that was developed by Solaris.
             It is not as fully developed for the Mac as Parallels and VM
             Fusion.
    Note that VirtualBox, Parallels, and VM Fusion can also run other operating systems such as Linux, Unix, OS/2, Solaris, etc.  There are performance differences between dual-boot systems and virtualization.  The latter tend to be a little slower (not much) and do not provide the video performance of the dual-boot system. See MacTech Labs- Virtualization Benchmarks, January 2013 | MacTech for comparisons of Boot Camp, Parallels, and VM Fusion. Benchmarks of all of the above except Crossover can be found in Benchmarking Parallels, Fusion, and VirtualBox Against Boot Camp - The Mac Observer. Boot Camp is only available with Leopard or later. Except for Crossover and a couple of similar alternatives like DarWine you must have a valid installer disc for Windows.
    You must also have an internal optical drive for installing Windows. Windows cannot be installed from an external optical drive.

  • Clearing the windows clipboard

    I have a non LabWindows CVI application that outputs info to the clipboard and I am pulling the info off the clipboard with my CVI application. I would like to monitor the clipboard to know when a certain operation is completed on the other application and then pull the data and clear the clipboard so that I can monitor it again for new data when it becomes available.
    Is there a way to clear the windows clipboard from inside my CVI application?
    thnaks

    Al S wrote:
    Robojeff:
    I took a closer look at ClipboardGetText().  It looks like I was wrong about your use of free(CB).  ClipboardGetText() must allocate the memory it needs when you call it.  Your code closely follows the help example for ClipboardGetText().
    I ran your loop under different conditions and could not get it to fail with an error.  I tried running with and without the expected character.  I tried with a single character in the clipboard and with >2Meg of text there.  I tried running the loop while I dumped text onto the clipboard.
    I tried pasting graphics and reading it as text: I didn't get an error on ClipboardGetText(), but I did trying to read CB[0].
    How big is the dataset you're writing to the clipboard?
    Have you checked what is in the clipboard after you get the error?
    ================
     That is why I added the else free(CB): as I thought it might free up whatever memory that was being taken up during the many times that the clipboard is getting checked. The clipboard should only have * in it and getting the clipboard in the loop should not change the size of CB and how much memory that this takes should it?
    When dummy = 1, here is the data that is on the clipboard:
    Cal Signal Test Range: 6170 - 6821 Start Ch: 1
    PASS
    6545.0 6544.0 6561.0 6554.0 6550.0 6556.0 6548.0 6549.0
    6564.0 6548.0 6558.0 6554.0 6554.0 6552.0 6554.0 6556.0
    6561.0 6553.0 6559.0 6554.0 6559.0 6553.0 6551.0 6524.0
    6532.0 6527.0 6523.0 6534.0 6535.0 6533.0 6538.0 6534.0
    6570.0 6565.0 6573.0 6531.0 6529.0 6531.0 6519.0 6523.0
    6526.0 6536.0 6529.0 6513.0 6503.0 6523.0 6516.0 6563.0
    6536.0 6525.0 6527.0 6534.0 6523.0 6515.0 6524.0 6509.0
    6526.0 6522.0 6534.0 6528.0 6527.0 6531.0 6508.0 6533.0
    I do not need to set CB to ' ' before getting the clipboard on each pass of the loop do I?

  • Paste some text in the windows clipboard

    Hello,
    i want to paste some text within a customer-specific scenario into the windows clipboard (CNTRL+C automatically done in background); has anyone some ideas how to solve this issue? I am inside a BSP, so i cannot use the old frontend services anymore...
    Kind regards
    Christian

    Use - FM - CLPB_EXPORT - but it is obsolete.

  • Access windows clipboard

    Hi,
    Can anyone tell..how can I access windows clipboard in SAP using Function Modules...I want to paste data from a list in SAP to windows clipboard so that it can be pasted later in E-mail Ctrl-V
    Regards,

    DATA l_rc TYPE i.
    CALL METHOD cl_gui_frontend_services=>clipboard_export
      IMPORTING
        data                 = itab[]
      CHANGING
        rc                   = l_rc
      EXCEPTIONS
        cntl_error           = 1
        error_no_gui         = 2
        not_supported_by_gui = 3
        OTHERS               = 4.

  • HDD failure, I'd like to know how to get Windows 7 back on it.

    Hello everyone, I've had a HDD issue lately, but before I move on to describe my issue, here are the specs of my notebook:
    HP Pavilion dv6-3264ca
    AMD Triple-Core CPU 2.2 Ghz
    6GB RAM
    128MB ATI Graphic Card
    750GB Toshiba HDD
    Windows 7 64-bit
    The issue:
    Recently I've had a very unfortunate HDD failure. The recovery partition wouldn't even load. I tried booting my notebook on Linux with the HDD still attached, and it wouldn't read. I extracted the HDD and placed it in an HDD-enclosuer and it still wouldn't load on Windows XP or Vista or 7. It would however read in the device manager of Windows and also in the BIOS.
    I needed to extract some high-priority data from there so I managed to retrieve all my data safely through a data recovery service, but now the drive is rendered useless. I was told a low-level format might be able to help it be usable again, and if that were to happen, the recovery partition would then be removed in the process. 
    In addition to that, I would like to install Windows 7 64-bit onto the drive, but the notebook box did not come with an installation CD, which is quite frustrating. Is there any way HP can let me download Windows 7 through some warranty service?
    I have a one-year warranty on my laptop.
    So in closing, I would like to know if I can get Windows 7 back onto my HDD for free, or if I need to go about buying Windows 7 again.
    Any advice from you kind folks?
    This question was solved.
    View Solution.

    Hi,
    Here are Two options.
    1.  If you have ( or can borrow ) a retail Windows 7 installation disc that is exactly the same version as your OEM installation - ie if your notebook came with Windows 7 Home Premium 64bit this is the exact retail version you would need.
    If you don't have access to a retail disc, you can create an installation disc yourself - just download the correct Disc Image from the link below and use an application such as ImgBurn to burn the ISO correctly to a blank DVD.
    http://www.mydigitallife.info/download-windows-7-iso-official-32-bit-and-64-bit-direct-download-link...
    Use the disc to perform the installation, enter the Windows activation key found on the underside of your notebook when requested and when the installation has completed, use the 'Phone Method' detailed in the link below to activate the OS - this method supported by Microsoft and is popular with people who just want a clean installation of Windows 7 without the additional software load normally bundled with OEM installations.
    http://www.kodyaz.com/articles/how-to-activate-windows-7-by-phone.aspx
    Any additional drivers you may need can be found Here.
    2.  You can order a replacement set of Recovery Discs using the link below - these cost around $30 if you live in the US.
    http://h10025.www1.hp.com/ewfrf/wc/document?docname=c00810334&cc=us&lc=en&dlc=en
    If you have any problem with this link, order them directly from HP.
    If you live in the US, contact HP Here.
    If you are in another part of the world, start Here.
    Regards,
    DP-K
    ****Click the White thumb to say thanks****
    ****Please mark Accept As Solution if it solves your problem****
    ****I don't work for HP****
    Microsoft MVP - Windows Experience

  • How to install Windows 7/Vista as 2nd OS and retain predesktop environment (service partition)

    This is a step-by-step instruction how to install Windows Vista or Windows 7 as a second OS on a Lenovo Thinkpad that originally shipped with Windows XP AND how to retain the access to the Lenovo Service Partition.
    I have been searching the internet for instructions like these but could not find anything useful. So I am posting it
    here. Maybe this helps other users.
    I have tested the procedure below with installation of Windows Vista Ultimate (64bit) and Windows 7 Ultimate (64bit). I believe that the procedure will also work with the 32bit versions of these OSs. I am not totally convinced that this works when the OS to install is Windows XP (64bit or 32bit). XP has a completely different boot sequence compared to Vista or 7. The basic steps would remain the same, but the XP setup is less forgiving when it finds an unknown partition. If somebody wants to try it out, please post your results as a reply to this forum entry.
    Never never never try to install an older OS (like Windows 2000 or NT) as a second OS when XP is already installed! This is doomed to fail.
    The procedure below does NOT work for Linux installations. I am not a Linux wizard, but any Linux bootmanager I know about is incompatible with the Lenovo Service Partition.
    The procedure was tested on a Thinkpad R61 model 8918-B9G. It should work similar on other models.
    You definitely need a service partition with Rescue&Recovery version 4. It will NOT work with older versions of R&R or if the service partition is not a type12 partition (see below how to find out about that).
    I assume that the harddisk partitions are unmodified, i.e. still have factory settings. This is likely the case if you
    never attempted any OS install or recovery action. If this is not the case, the procedure may or may not work.
    You also need a bootable CD with a tool that can change the size of your current system partition. I was using gparted live version 0.5.2-9. ( http://gparted.sourceforge.net/ )
    Everything you do is at your own risk. I am in no way related to Lenovo, other than being a customer using their
    products.
    Step 1) Make a full backup of your harddisk. Get yourself recovery CDs for your Thinkpad model if you don't have any. The changes we are about to make can completely screw up your harddrive. A typo is sufficient for that to happen.
    Step 2) Power on the system. Check that you can boot into the Service Partition by pressing the Thinkvantage button when the startup screen appears. (Older systems may have a differently named button.) If there is a problem booting the service partition now, it is likely that the rest of this procedure will not fix it.
    Step 3) From the service partition choose 'Warmstart' to reboot the system. Reboot Windows XP, logon.
    Open a command prompt. CD to the following directory:
    \Program Files\Common Files\Lenovo\BMGR
    On a german language system (like mine) it is
    \Programme\Gemeinsame Dateien\Lenovo\BMGR
    If you have an older IBM system the directory may be named
    \Program Files\Common Files\IBM\BMGR
    or something like that. Maybe you need to search around.
    In the following, I will call this the "BMGR dir".
    Enter the following command:
    bmgr32 /info /v
    You should get an output similar to this:
    C:\Programme\Gemeinsame Dateien\Lenovo\BMGR>bmgr32 /info /v
    It's a Lenovo  MBR
    Opened Master Boot Record to see whose MBR it is.
    It's a Lenovo MBR
    Opened drive for reading
    Partition 0 the SP? no, type 0x07 is not correct
    Partition 1 the SP? (512)  Label is SERVICEV
    Using version 2.05 of Lenovo Boot Manager
    Reading: \\.\PHYSICALDRIVE0
            MBR Sector 1 Index: 1   Checksum: 00    Disabled
            MBR Sector 2 Index: 4   Checksum: 03    Passed
            MBR Sector 3 Index: 5   Checksum: FD    Passed
            MBR Sector 4 Index: 6   Checksum: 58    Passed
            MBR Sector 5 Index: 7   Checksum: 96    Passed
            MBR Sector 6 Index: 8   Checksum: 7F    Passed
            Data Sector  Index: 3   Checksum: F1    Passed
            Original MBR Index: 2   Checksum: BD    Passed
            No Patch Sectors
            Checksum Byte: 00
            Think Flag: 1
            WinPE Partition (0-3): 1        Alt Boot Partition (0-3): 1
            Boot Config: 2 (Service Partition containing two Service OS's)
            Boot State: 0                   Alt Boot Flag: 0
            (Normal booting operation, will boot to Customer OS)
            RRU: 00000000 00000000          Prev Active Part: 255
            Previous Partition Type: FF     Patch IN: 0     OUT: 0
            CIRT Disabled
            TOC: 0000000000000000           Lock: 0
            Show Error: 0                   Halt on Error: 0
            CIRT Load Return: 0
            CIRT Execute Return: 0
            Pause Duration: 10              Scan Code: 0085
            F11 Msg: To boot to the Rescue and Recovery Environment, Press F11
            Check Msg: There has been a signature failure
     #  active  type      start CHS      end CHS      startLBA       size
     0   0x80   0x07      1   1   0   239 255 255           63    301296177
     1   0x00   0x12      0 193 255   239 255 255    301296240     11279520
     2   0x00   0x00      0   0   0     0   0   0            0            0
     3   0x00   0x00      0   0   0     0   0   0            0            0
    C:\Programme\Gemeinsame Dateien\Lenovo\BMGR>
    The important thing to look for is the 0x12 partition type in the partition table at the bottom. This is the service
    partition. If you do not have a 0x12 partition, then you can stop here because the rest of the procedure will not work
    for you.
    Step 4) Shutdown and boot gparted from CD. Shrink the system partition to the desired size. Do NOT touch the service partition! Do NOT attempt to create another partition! Leave the new white space on the disk untouched! Apply changes and restart the system.
    Step 5) Reboot XP. gparted has set the NTFS dirty bit. This will cause XP to run a full CHKDSK. Depending on how much files there are on the partition this may take considerable time. Let CHKDSK run to completion. When CHKDSK finishes, the system will automatically reboot.
    Step 6) XP reboots now. Logon. When loading the desktop, XP will show a popup window, stating that system settings have been changed and new devices been discovered and that the system should be rebooted. This is ok. XP actually recognized the shrunk system partition and applied the necessary changes to its own system parameters. Click YES to reboot the system.
    Step 7) XP reboots. Logon. Open a command prompt, CD to the BMGR dir and enter:
    bmgr32 /info /v
    The output you get should be similar to the output you have seen in step 3, except that the partition 0 size column
    shows a smaller value.
    Step 8) Shutdown, restart. Check that you can still access the service partition by pressing the blue Thinkvantage button when the system startup screen appears.
    Step 9) From the predesktop environment choose warmstart. Reboot XP. Logon, logoff, shutdown.
    DO NOT SKIP THIS STEP!!! If you start the Windows Vista/7 install right after shutting down from the predesktop
    environment, the Win Vista/7 setup program will screw up your harddisk! The Lenovo MBR bootmgr reboot takes two steps for completion. The first step is the shutdown and the second step is executed when booting from harddisk. A boot from the Windows CD will skip this second step and disaster finds its way...
    Step 10) Insert the Windows Vista/7 DVD and boot it. Start the setup. Choose "Custom (advanced)" install. It will show the partitions on the disk. Select the white space (unallocated). Click on "disk options (advanced)". Click on "New" to create a new partition in the white space. Keep the default size, click "Apply". Click "Format". A popup window appears stating that the partition may hold OEM data. Continue. Click "Next". Installation starts.
    Continued in the second post...

    Step 11) Win Vista/XP will reboot several times during installation. You will always see the Windows bootmanager with an entry for "Earlier Windows version" and "Windows Vista/7". DO NOT DARE to touch the blue Thinkvantage button on any reboot or press any function keys!
    Step 12) When the installation is finished, check that you can successfully reboot Win Vista/7 by selecting it from the Windows bootmanager.
    Step 13) Reboot XP by choosing "Earlier Windows version" from the Windows bootmanager. Open a command prompt. CD to the BMGR dir. Enter the following command:
    bmgr32 /info /v
    The output will now look like this:
    C:\Programme\Gemeinsame Dateien\Lenovo\BMGR>bmgr32 /info /v
    Opened Master Boot Record to see whose MBR it is.
    Opened drive for reading
    Partition 0 the SP? no, type 0x07 is not correct
    Partition 1 the SP? no, type 0x07 is not correct
    Partition 2 the SP? (512)  Label is SERVICEV
     #  active  type      start CHS      end CHS      startLBA       size
     0   0x80   0x07      1   1   0   254 255 255           63    109675692
     1   0x00   0x07    239 255 255   239 255 255    109676544    191619072
     2   0x00   0x12    239 255 255   239 255 255    301296240     11279520
     3   0x00   0x00      0   0   0     0   0   0            0            0
    C:\Programme\Gemeinsame Dateien\Lenovo\BMGR>
    startLBA and size will of course differ, depending on the actual partition sizes you have set. Note that Windows setup moved the service partition to entry 2 of the partition table. If you do not see the 0x12 partition then stop here.
    Otherwise the following step will likely screw up you harddisk.
    Enter the following command (case sensitive?):
    bmgr32 /Fbootmgr.bin /m0 /IBM /v
    The output will look like this:
    C:\Programme\Gemeinsame Dateien\Lenovo\BMGR>bmgr32 /Fbootmgr.bin /m0 /IBM /v
    installing MBR
    finding free sectors
    Sector 9 is free
    Sector 10 is free
    Sector 11 is free
    Sector 12 is free
    Sector 13 is free
    Sector 14 is free
    Sector 15 is free
    Sector 16 is free
    Opened Master Boot Record to see whose MBR it is.
    It's a Lenovo MBR
    Opened drive for reading
    Partition 0 the SP? no, type 0x07 is not correct
    Partition 1 the SP? no, type 0x07 is not correct
    Partition 2 the SP? (512)  Label is SERVICEV
    Setting Think bit
    C:\Programme\Gemeinsame Dateien\Lenovo\BMGR>
    This command reinstalled the Lenovo bootmanager in the MBR that was erased by the Win Vista/7 setup program.
    Enter the following command:
    bmgr32 /info /v
    The output will now look like this:
    C:\Programme\Gemeinsame Dateien\Lenovo\BMGR>bmgr32 /info /v
    It's a Lenovo  MBR
    Opened Master Boot Record to see whose MBR it is.
    It's a Lenovo MBR
    Opened drive for reading
    Partition 0 the SP? no, type 0x07 is not correct
    Partition 1 the SP? no, type 0x07 is not correct
    Partition 2 the SP? (512)  Label is SERVICEV
    Using version 2.05 of Lenovo Boot Manager
    Reading: \\.\PHYSICALDRIVE0
            MBR Sector 1 Index: 1   Checksum: 00    Disabled
            MBR Sector 2 Index: 11  Checksum: 03    Passed
            MBR Sector 3 Index: 12  Checksum: FD    Passed
            MBR Sector 4 Index: 13  Checksum: 58    Passed
            MBR Sector 5 Index: 14  Checksum: 96    Passed
            MBR Sector 6 Index: 15  Checksum: 7F    Passed
            Data Sector  Index: 10  Checksum: 01    Passed
            Original MBR Index: 9   Checksum: 12    Passed
            No Patch Sectors
            Checksum Byte: 00
            Think Flag: 1
            WinPE Partition (0-3): 2        Alt Boot Partition (0-3): 2
            Boot Config: 0 (Service Partition containing one Service OS)
            Boot State: 0                   Alt Boot Flag: 0
            (Normal booting operation, will boot to Customer OS)
            RRU: 00000000 00000000          Prev Active Part: 255
            Previous Partition Type: FF     Patch IN: 0     OUT: 0
            CIRT Disabled
            TOC: 0000000000000000           Lock: 0
            Show Error: 0                   Halt on Error: 0
            CIRT Load Return: 0
            CIRT Execute Return: 0
            Pause Duration: 10              Scan Code: 0085
            F11 Msg: To boot to the Rescue and Recovery Environment, Press F11
            Check Msg: There has been a signature failure
     #  active  type      start CHS      end CHS      startLBA       size
     0   0x80   0x07      1   1   0   254 255 255           63    109675692
     1   0x00   0x07    239 255 255   239 255 255    109676544    191619072
     2   0x00   0x12    239 255 255   239 255 255    301296240     11279520
     3   0x00   0x00      0   0   0     0   0   0            0            0
    C:\Programme\Gemeinsame Dateien\Lenovo\BMGR>
    So you have actually regained the Lenovo bootmanager. But you are not done yet.
    Step 14) Shutdown. Restart the system. DO NOT PRESS THE BLUE THINKVANTAGE BUTTON AT THE SYSTEM STARTUP SCREEN!!! IT DOES NOT WORK YET! When the system startup screen DISAPPEARS, quickly press F11 (maybe several times). The system should now boot the predesktop environment from the service partition.
    Step 15) When the predesktop is there, choose "warmstart". When the system startup screen appears, press the blue Thinkvantage button. The system should again boot into the predesktop. The blue Thinkvantage button now works permanently.
    Step 16) Check that you can boot Win XP and Win Vista/7 from the Windows bootmanager. You're done!

  • How to reset Windows 7/Vista/XP/2000 password if you forgot or lost windows

    How to reset Windows 7/Vista/XP/2000 password if you forgot or lost windows password
    It is truly very often for us to meet the password problem, sometimes we would forgot windows password or lost windows password, and could not login windows system and make a big trouble. At this time, you would hope to find a way to reset and recover the forgotten password.
    Actually, a lot of methods are available to recover or reset the Windows password. But most of them are designed for PC experts, not common PC users, those solutions are too complicated to get it work for us. And in this article, I will show you a professional software tool which could help you to reset forgotten windows password easily.
    Total Windows Password Reset is powerful password recovery software to reset Windows admin
    passwords for you to login Windows OS without reinstalling the OS when you forgot windows password or lost windows password. It could remove windows password and set the password to blank. Just boot from the program CD/DVD or USB flash drive, choose the account you wish to reset and all will be done. It is not a method to crack or bypass windows password, just remove or delete windows password and set it to blank so you could login windows to set new password.
    Below is the guide of how to reset windows password with this software, only 3 steps are needed to reset windows 7/Vista/XP password:
    Step 1: Download the setup file of Total Windows Password Reset on the official website:
    http://www.resetwindowspassword.net/downloads/totalwpr.exe
    And install it on another PC. Then you could startup the password recovery software to prepare the bootable disc.
    Step 2: Burn the windows password recovery bootable CD/DVD or USB disc with the software.
    Now, you may select “Burn DVD/CD Disc” or “Use USB Disc”. If you select first method, you need to have a blank CDR/DVDR disk, a COMBO or DVDRW drive on the PC. If you select to use USB disc, you just need to pay attention: This USB devices would be formatted, so you must make sure to back up all the data before use it. And the maximum capacity of the USB devices cannot exceed 2G.
    Tips: We recommend you to use the DVD/CD method to do the windows password reset, because some computers may not support USB start-up.
    Below is step by step to show you how to burn the CD/DVD
    1. Launch Total Windows Password Reset main window, Click “Burn DVD/CD Disc” button.
    2. In BurnCC’s main window, click “Browse” button and in the open window, locate the file “TWPR.iso” on your desktop, select it and click on Open to get back to the main window. Then, click “Start” button.
    3 Your DVD drive should open and insert a blank CD-R or DVD-R disc into the drive and close it. Click “OK” button. Your CD will be burned in a few minutes.
    Tips: if there is already a CD/DVD disc in the drive before run the software, the CD drive will open automatically . Please close it again. The process will be continuing.
    Below is step by step to show you how to burn the USB drive
    1 Insert a USB drive into a USB slot on your computer and run Total Windows Password Reset, Click “Use USB Disc” button.
    2 Click“Step1”button. Then, Right-click on the usb_format.exe and choose “Run as Administrator”.
    3 In USB Disk Storage Format window, set the file system to FAT, Check the Quick Format box, check the Create DOS Bootable Disk, Browse to the DOS_files folder on your Desktop, click OK & then Start.
    4. Click OK on the following window and then close the USB format tool. Your USB drive now is formatted.
    5. Click “Step2” button and open the USB drive with your computer. Then, copy the files from the USB_files folder and paste them directly to the USB drives main directory. 2 of the files may become hidden and you will not see them on the USB drive. This is okay. Your USB drive is now complete.
    Step 3: Boot your PC with the burned CD/DVD or USB disc to reset windows password.
    You need to insert the Created CD/DVD or USB drive into the optional drive of the locked computer and reboot it.
    Tips: It your computer still boots from hard drive Windows OS, it's necessary for you to change your COMS or BIOS settings to make it boot from CD/DVD or USB drive. If you don’t know how to set it, you may visit the official website: http://www.resetwindowspassword.net or contact the computer manufacture.
    The computer boots from CD/DVD or USB drive, then
    1 The program will ask for the Windows OS hard drive volume. Enter the ID number of the hard drive volume that Windows is installed.
    2 The program has detected all the user names of Windows and asks which user name password is to be removed. Enter the ID number for the User Name.
    3 The program asks to confirm weather to remove the password or not. Enter "y" (yes) to confirm your action and "n" (no) to deny the action and hit "Enter".
    4 The program asks whether to continue to remove passwords for other accounts. Enter "y" to continue and "n" to finish. Eject your USB from your computer first and press any key to restart the computer from Windows. Now you can log in Windows with an empty password (with no password.), just click “Enter” when you login.
    If you have any questions of the procedure and the settings, you could visit the website:http://www.resetwindowspassword.net or send email to [email protected].
    Now you could see that to reset or recover the admin login password of windows OS: XP, Vista, Windows 7 or 2000 is not so difficult and you can do it with ease.

    Very interest posting. Thank you for this detailed description and useful links.
    If you have more interesting stuff to share with us you are welcome.

  • How to install Windows 8.1 Pro on Macbook Pro

    Hello everyone,
         I'm new to these forums and new to bootcamping as well but have been reading all kinds of posts about how to install Windows 8.1 on their Macs using bootcamp. I am however having trouble with this situation as I have no clue what to do next. I have a Macbook Pro 2011, running on Maverics, and I recently downloaded a digital copy of Windows 8.1 Pro, 64-bit, for the Mac platform, along with its CD key through my University's hub website as can be seen here.
    After finishing the downloading process, I received this file which is about 4GB large.
    When i double click on the file this happens. It opens something on DEVICES which gives me what is on the 2nd image.
    At this point, I'm at a loss on what to do next. Do i burn the file on a DVD hoping that Bootcamp will recognize it as a windows disc? Any help would be appreciated, thank you.

    You need a 'Full' Installer.
    From Boot Camp 5.1: Frequently asked questions - Apple Support
    Which versions of Windows work with Boot Camp 5.1?
    Boot Camp 5.1 supports 64-bit, non-Enterprise versions of Windows 7, Windows 8.0, and Windows 8.1. This version of Boot Camp doesn't support Windows XP, Windows Vista, or any 32-bit version of Windows. Depending on your Mac, you may be able to use an earlier version of Boot Camp to work with other versions of Windows. For details, see the Boot Camp system requirements for Microsoft Windows.
    Can I perform an upgrade install from a 32-bit version of Windows to a 64-bit version of Windows?
    It's not possible to upgrade a 32-bit version of Windows to a 64-bit version of Windows. Back up your important files, then perform a new install of the 64-bit version of Windows.

  • How to install windows 7 on my macbook pro mid 2009 using usb. right now aim using mavericks 10.9 can any one please help me. I tried to edit plist in boot camp but it went wrong please help me

    how to install windows 7 on my macbook pro mid 2009 using usb. right now iam using mavericks 10.9 can any one please help me. I tried to edit plist in boot camp but it went wrong please help me.
    Iam new to coding. please help me.

    try the solution posted by kunu here and report back
    https://discussions.apple.com/thread/5105056?tstart=0

  • How to install Windows 7 on a MacBook Air?

    Hi everybody,
    I am sorry in case this has been covered before, but i couldnt find anything searching different categgories here, so i´d appreciate some help.
    I have got a late 2011 MacBook Air with lots of SSD and so on and i want to install windows 7.
    I bought a wndows 7 OEM DVD (actually, two discs, one says support software)
    I have tried to run bootcamp and follow the instructions, but to now end.
    on my macbook air, i get the option "create a windows 7 disc" or something like that (the first option), which doesnt help me because i dont have optical drive
    when i start boot camp on my iMac, this option will be greyed out.
    Also, I have tried to to ISO copys of the windows DVD and save them to a USB stick but i just wouldnt come to any result.
    does anybody have a good, comprehensive instruction on how to install windows 7 on an MBA withou optical drive?
    Also, is 30GB OK for Win 7 if you basically dont wanna do to much in windows (no office etc, just some small clients)
    thanks!

    30GB is not enough, especially on an SSD. Normally 50-60GB and with SSD I'd go with 80-90GB.
    http://www.apple.com/support/bootcamp faq, how to, special instructions for Air
    There is a program to create DVD from ISO or .exe
    Apple Boot CAmp Assistant should have prompted to save a driver for you to support a USB-DVD, in addition to the normal Apple B.C. drivers you save to flash card.
    Disk Utility is not a good method for burning Windows DVDs.
    http://simplyburns.en.softonic.com/mac
    https://discussions.apple.com/thread/3241150

Maybe you are looking for