jack_d'quick Posted February 9, 2007 Share Posted February 9, 2007 kaw lang ba gumagamit ng pc mo? it seems wla ka administrative rights to perform the task.yup. ako lang ang gumagamit ng pc.. yan nga din ang gusto kong malaman kung paano ma enable yung RUN kasi ako naman ang administrator Quote Link to comment
abiakak Posted February 9, 2007 Share Posted February 9, 2007 hello... i'm using windows xp pro.. recently nagtanggal ako ng spyware using AVG.. natanggal naman at smooth na ulit ang performance.. until malaman ko na wala na yung "RUN" command sa start menu!! sinubukan ko ung 'Windws +R' para di lumabas yung run command pero eto ang error "This operation has been canceled due to restrictions in effect on this computer, please contact your system administrator" nitry ko din i-customize yung start menu items, pero wla dun yung option na "RUN" para ma display sya sa start menu. HELP! dahil yan sa group policy restrictions sa pc mo.baka nung nag-delete ka ng mga garbage e nasama ung ibang registry entries na akala ng ng scanner e adware Quote Link to comment
jack_d'quick Posted February 9, 2007 Share Posted February 9, 2007 ^ sir, pwede kaya mabalik yun using the registry editor? i can access the registry editor using the command prompt. Quote Link to comment
wildswans Posted February 9, 2007 Share Posted February 9, 2007 hello MTC Lawyers i'm selling a small business and an aquaintance of mine will be buying it. i will be including all the supplies and equipment for him to start it right away. i don't mind if he will use my business name and just opt for change of ownership but he plans to change business name as well so that's fine with me also. there will be no royalties or such thing involve as this is not a franchise so he has all the option to change the mode of operation and the money that will be involve here is the amount we agreed upon. my questions are: 1. do we need to sign some sort of deed of sale(don't know if it's the right term) and notarized it? 2. is it adviceable if i let a lawyer make the deed of sale or can i just grab a copy off of the net and just put the conditions i want and let both parties sign it? 3. is there any thing that i should know regarding this kind of transaction? any info will be appreciated. Quote Link to comment
jopoc Posted February 9, 2007 Share Posted February 9, 2007 hello MTC Lawyers i'm selling a small business and an aquaintance of mine will be buying it. i will be including all the supplies and equipment for him to start it right away. i don't mind if he will use my business name and just opt for change of ownership but he plans to change business name as well so that's fine with me also. there will be no royalties or such thing involve as this is not a franchise so he has all the option to change the mode of operation and the money that will be involve here is the amount we agreed upon. my questions are: 1. do we need to sign some sort of deed of sale(don't know if it's the right term) and notarized it? 2. is it adviceable if i let a lawyer make the deed of sale or can i just grab a copy off of the net and just put the conditions i want and let both parties sign it? 3. is there any thing that i should know regarding this kind of transaction? any info will be appreciated. 1. yes, there must be a deed of sale and have it notarized. this will bind both parties and the whole world with respect to your contract 2. it is adviceable that a lawyer would draft the deed. it will be more personalized and the true agreement of the parties will be reflected. 3. yes, study the consequences as to the taxes, the permits and registration with respect to the business and the sale of it. . Quote Link to comment
dretch Posted February 9, 2007 Share Posted February 9, 2007 (edited) hi can anybody have an idea how to connect Linksys WRT54G to Prolink H9200P DSL/Router? it seems that when i connect the linksys WRT54G to Prolink it doesnt connect to the internet and it also cannot see the IP add of the prolink H9200P. dretch Edited February 9, 2007 by dretch Quote Link to comment
MODERATOR bonito99 Posted February 9, 2007 MODERATOR Share Posted February 9, 2007 selling a corporation or single-proprietorship business? Quote Link to comment
Itachi Posted February 10, 2007 Share Posted February 10, 2007 pwede bang binyagan ang bata (baby) sa sinmbahang katoliko kahit ndi kasal ang mga magulang? Quote Link to comment
wildswans Posted February 10, 2007 Share Posted February 10, 2007 1. yes, there must be a deed of sale and have it notarized. this will bind both parties and the whole world with respect to your contract 2. it is adviceable that a lawyer would draft the deed. it will be more personalized and the true agreement of the parties will be reflected. 3. yes, study the consequences as to the taxes, the permits and registration with respect to the business and the sale of it. . ok thank you sir. selling a corporation or single-proprietorship business? it's a single proprietor business, sir. Quote Link to comment
jopoc Posted February 10, 2007 Share Posted February 10, 2007 pwede bang binyagan ang bata (baby) sa sinmbahang katoliko kahit ndi kasal ang mga magulang? sir, its not a legal question, depende sa church yun... usually sa mga parish priests. but normally, pwede. Quote Link to comment
rocco69 Posted February 10, 2007 Share Posted February 10, 2007 hello MTC Lawyers i'm selling a small business and an aquaintance of mine will be buying it. i will be including all the supplies and equipment for him to start it right away. i don't mind if he will use my business name and just opt for change of ownership but he plans to change business name as well so that's fine with me also. there will be no royalties or such thing involve as this is not a franchise so he has all the option to change the mode of operation and the money that will be involve here is the amount we agreed upon. my questions are: 1. do we need to sign some sort of deed of sale(don't know if it's the right term) and notarized it? 2. is it adviceable if i let a lawyer make the deed of sale or can i just grab a copy off of the net and just put the conditions i want and let both parties sign it? 3. is there any thing that i should know regarding this kind of transaction? any info will be appreciated. Since you will be selling all of the business (including supplies and equipment) this is covered by the Bulk Sales Law (Act No. 3952). The law requires, for the sale to be valid, that you furnish a list of all your creditors to the buyer (in an affidavit, the format of which is already provided for by law), otherwise the sale is void. You could also be subject to criminal prosecution by your creditors if you fail to comply with the law. Quote Link to comment
tripmate Posted February 10, 2007 Share Posted February 10, 2007 hi can anybody have an idea how to connect Linksys WRT54G to Prolink H9200P DSL/Router? it seems that when i connect the linksys WRT54G to Prolink it doesnt connect to the internet and it also cannot see the IP add of the prolink H9200P. dretch i believe you need to setup your router to pppoe connection and need to input your uid and pass or if your dsl modem is already setup w/ pppoe connection on it you might need to setup you router w/ dhcp setup.... Quote Link to comment
M16A2 Posted February 11, 2007 Share Posted February 11, 2007 Ive been reading my book about legal ethics and I cant seem to understand the definition behind"purposes of courses in action". This is in connection with the fiduciary obligation of a lawyer to a client which involve legitimate investments. So anyone? BTW, under the cannon of professional ethics it is improper for a lawyer to purchase a property or acquire an interest over the subject matter of a litigation, as this rule is absolute, mere circumvention is still prohibited.But supposing the litigation is finished after a successful one, can you as a lawyer validly place an interest or purchase the property from your client which was involved in a litigation? Quote Link to comment
dearhunter Posted February 11, 2007 Share Posted February 11, 2007 Ive been reading my book about legal ethics and I cant seem to understand the definition behind"purposes of courses in action". This is in connection with the fiduciary obligation of a lawyer to a client which involve legitimate investments. So anyone? BTW, under the cannon of professional ethics it is improper for a lawyer to purchase a property or acquire an interest over the subject matter of a litigation, as this rule is absolute, mere circumvention is still prohibited.But supposing the litigation is finished after a successful one, can you as a lawyer validly place an interest or purchase the property from your client which was involved in a litigation? Could you actually be referring to "purchase of choses in action"? If so: a lawyer cannot acquire "choses in action" (otherwise defined as the right of enforcing by legal proceedings the payment of a debt) if the result would be that the lawyer files cases (to collect the debt) for his own profit. In other words, the purchase of the "choses in action" makes the lawyer litigate for purposes of personal profit - which should not be since the practice of law should be for public service, not for trade or business. As for the second situation, the lawyer can validly purchase property AFTER the litigation. This is no longer cvovered by the prohibition, as the same covers purchase of the client's property IN litigation, not those before or after the litigation. Quote Link to comment
Kurtsky Keigee Posted February 11, 2007 Share Posted February 11, 2007 (edited) PLS HELP recently lang may blue screen ako na nakukuha lumalabas IRQ_NOT_LESS_OR_EQUALMEMORY DUMP something something Minsan.. PAGE_FAULT_ON_NON_PAGED_AREA Pls Help.. Edited February 15, 2007 by kUrTsKY Quote Link to comment
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