XP Space Mining alternative features of Task Schedule

  
                  

Windows XP comes with a "task plan" that helps us run a program or perform certain operations within a specified time, which greatly facilitates many friends with "amnesia". If you can play the hidden functions and special settings in the "Task Plan", its "efficacy" will also grow exponentially.

Let the old computer also start from

Some old motherboard BIOS does not support the timed start function. If you use the "task plan" and then combine the power management of Windows, you can let the old computer also It can be automatically started every morning to wake up the Windows XP system that is in hibernation.
Click "Start" → "Accessories" → "System Tools" → "Task Schedule" to open the Task Schedule Wizard. Click "Next" to select a song from your computer. Click "Next", select the setting "Daily" to execute the task, the execution time is "7:00", and then enter the current administrator account name and password. Finally select "Open the advanced properties of this task when you click Finish". After clicking "Finish", in the properties dialog of the task plan, select the "Settings" tab and select the "Wake the computer to run this program" option. In this way, when the computer is turned off, if the “hibernation” item is selected, at 7:00 every morning, the old computer will automatically wake up the system and start the corresponding program to play the specified song, wake you up. After

a "mission" multiple "plan"

Under normal circumstances, the establishment of a Task Scheduler, can only be performed within the specified time. Have you ever thought about having a task to carry out multiple plans? The method is very simple. Open the "Task Schedule" folder, right click on a scheduled task, select the "Properties" command in the context menu, and select the "Schedule" tab in the pop-up dialog box. After selecting the "Show multiple tasks" item, set the type of the scheduled task and the execution time, click the "New" button to add multiple execution plans for the task.

If you have enough imagination, you can even send a prepared plan task to the rookie by e-mail, let them perform some automatic operations and solve some simple problems by performing the scheduled tasks.

Write and add a task plan on this machine, then open the task plan folder, select the task plan you just added, right click on it and select the "Copy" command, then "paste" it to other folders In the middle, get the mission plan with the suffix ".job". Finally, open the Email Send window, add the copied task plan file to the attachment, and send it to the rookie by email. Once it is received, simply drag and drop the task plan file into the Task Schedule folder.

Batch termination of the mission plan

some point, you may need to temporarily stop all scheduled tasks in the current system, open the Scheduled Tasks folder, one by one by one to stop and too cumbersome. At this point, you can stop the task scheduling service by executing the "net stop Schedule" command in the "Run" dialog box. When you want to resume all task schedules, you can restart all scheduled tasks by executing the command "net start Schedule" command in the Run dialog.

Quickly set up a mission plan

When you use the Task Scheduler to create a task, you need to go through several steps. This step can be simplified if you use the AT command of the Window XP system. For example, if you want the computer to automatically play music half an hour before work this afternoon, you can execute the "AT 17:30 E:\\Music\\Go Home.mp3" command in the "Run" dialog box. Open the Command Line Prompt window and enter the "AT /?" command to get more usage of the AT command.

It is very convenient to use the AT command, but the hacker usually uses the AT command remotely to add the Trojan's mission plan to achieve the purpose of the invasion. In this case, if you do not want to stop the mission planning service, and do not want to give the hacker any chance, you need to limit the right to add services to the AT, so that it is "all inclusive." //This article comes from the computer software and hardware application network www.45it.com

Open the "Task Schedule" folder, click the "Advanced" → "AT Service Account" command in the menu. In the pop-up window, select the "This Account" item and enter an account name and password that are not commonly used. After the determination, when the hacker uses the remote attack to invade the system, it is no longer possible to add the Trojan's mission plan using the current system account.

Viewing the Mission Plan Log

Want to know if the hacker has moved his mission plan? You can view the task schedule log saved in Windows XP. Just use Notepad to open the "C:\\windows\\SchedLgU.Txt" file, where you can view the log information for all mission plans. It clearly records when the mission planning service was stopped or started, and which mission plans were added by the user to the system.

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