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- chessKIDS academy lessons on 2009-11-15
- Chess for Kids on 2009-11-15
- Chess Rules for Kids on 2009-11-15
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tcsd_win32.exe "memory cannot be written on" error on 2009-10-09
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The free file information forum can help you find out if tcsd_win32.exe is a virus, trojan, spyware, adware which you can remove, or a file belonging to a Windows system or an application you can trust.
tcsd_win32.exe file information
The process belongs to the software NTRU Hybrid TSS v by NTRU Cryptosystems.
Description: File tcsd_win32.exe is located in a subfolder of "C:\Program Files". The file size on Windows XP is 180224 bytes.
The program has no file description. The program is not visible. tcsd_win32.exe is not a Windows system file. The application can be uninstalled in the Control Panel. Program uses ports to connect to LAN or Internet. Therefore the technical security rating is 59% dangerous.
Important: Some malware camouflage themselves as tcsd_win32.exe, particularly if they are located in c:\windows or c:\windows\system32 folder. Thus check the tcsd_win32.exe process on your pc whether it is pest. We recommend Security Task Manager for verifying your computer's security. It is one of the Top Download Picks of 2005 of The Washington Post and PC World.
http://www.file.net/process/tcsd_win32.exe.html
and this
Best Answer - Chosen by Asker
In the Run Command type msconfig. In the start up tab look for this file tcsd.. in thecolumn under the command. Uncheck the mark in front of it. Click apply and close the window
Update ur antivirus,
Reboot ur system into the safe mode. Scan ur system. any file that comes up in the scanning delte that.. if that didnt come up look for the location of that file (whe nu are unchecking the box in the start up tab , u can note down its location.)
Delete it from that location. (Use shift+del)
If u need the updated Antivirus u can get Norton 2005 SE free download from here
www.i-search.co.in
and also Lavasoft;s Famous antispyware Ad-Aware.
Best of Luck!!!
Source(s):
www.i-search.co.in
and this
http://www.liutilities.com/products/wint...ary/tcsd_win32/
http://www.forums.dfwmiata.com/showthrea...lastpost&t=6306
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Windows Error tcsd_win32.exe - Tech Support Forums - TechIMO.com on 2009-10-09
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<!-- google_ad_section_start -->tcsd_win32.exe error<!-- google_ad_section_end -->
<!-- google_ad_section_start --><!-- google_ad_section_end -->
I had this message. It's something to do with the Trusted Platform Modulesoftware installed on the machines. I uninstalled the software, in this case Embassy Trust Suite from Wave Systems and this stopped the error. Hope this helps or points someone in the right direction! -
getting rid of tcsd_win32.exe<!-- google_ad_section_end -->
<!-- google_ad_section_start -->
Getting rid of TCSD_WIN32.exe
1.Click on start button on the taskbar
2.Click on RUN
3. Box will pop up, type in msconfig
4. System Configuration Utility will pop up, click on the STARTUP tab
5. scroll down the list and find theprogram tcsd_win32.exe and uncheck the box
6. get back out to thedesktop and restart the computer.
7. now go into your C Drive and find the directory named Program Files.
8. once in program files, find the directory called NRTU and delete it.
After you do this you can repeat steps 1-5 and look for the tcsd_win32.exe file again. It shouldn't show up on the list again, if it does, it should have already been unclicked.
I've noticed this problem pops up after a specific windows update is applied, I haven't figured out which one yet, just dont have the time. If you have the time, complain to dell. Like that would work.
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Diet Fads | Caremark Health Resources on 2009-10-08
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Another strange obesity cure that was popular among physicians for a time was human chorionic gonadotropin (HCG), a type of growth hormone that was injected into patients. This treatment became popular in 1957, when Harper's Bazaar printed a diet -- "Slimming: A Roman Doctor's Treatment" -- that consisted of 500 calories a day for up to forty days, plus daily hormone injections. In the article, the physician, British endocrinologist A.T.W. Simeons, claimed his patients weren't hungry as long as they took shots of HCG, which is produced by the placenta and derived from the urine of pregnant women (variations on this treatment used the urine of pregnant rabbits and mares). It's the very hormone, in fact, that turns the stick blue on a home pregnancy test.
Human chorionic gonadotropin was legitimately used at the time to treat a condition called Fröhlich's syndrome, a hormonal imbalance that affects young boys, disturbing their sexual development, appetite, and sleep, and causing them to accumulate fat on the hips, buttocks, and thighs. Simeons reasoned that if the drug worked to melt away the fat on those boys with a rare genetic disorder, then it ought to do the same thing on normal, healthy women. The hormone, he wrote, would cause a "normal distribution" of fat on the body and would correct a "basic disorder in the brain." His diet book -- Pounds and Inches: A New Approach to Obesity -- included other gems of pseudo-medical advice, warning readers to eat no breakfast whatsoever, except for coffee, and to abstain from using any cosmetics or lotion on the body because it will be absorbed and added to the existing fat deposits in the body.
Simeon's treatment became all the rage; for a time, it was the most widespread medication given in the United States to lose weight, and was the main treatment used in eighty Weight Reduction Medical Clinics in California. Unfortunately, it didn't work: None of the mainly female patients seeking treatment, it turned out, were suffering from Fröhlich's syndrome. The medical establishment only started to become suspicious of the drug when reports surfaced that part-time doctors were being offered as much as $100,000 a year by weight-loss clinics to spend one afternoon a week sitting and writing pads of prescriptions for the drug.
In 1962, the Journal of the American Medical Association warned against the Simeons diet, saying "continued adherence to such a drastic regimen is potentially more hazardous to the patient's health than continued obesity." In 1974, the Food and Drug Adminstration required producers of HCG to label the drug with a warning against using it for weight loss or fat redistribution. In Canada, the Task Force on the Treatment of Obesity warned that the use of the hormone "touches on possible malpractice." Nevertheless, a few diet doctors continued with the treatment -- it is legal, after all, for physicians to prescribe medications for purposes that are not approved by the FDA -- often handing the patients the drugs and injection equipment so they could administer it themselves.
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