"The Persistent System Timestamp allows the system to detect the time of unexpected shutdowns by writing the current time to disk on a schedule controlled by the Timestamp Interval. If you enable this setting, the Persistent System Timestamp will be refreshed according to the Timestamp Interval. If you disable this setting, the Persistent System Timestamp will be turned off and the timing of unexpected shutdowns will not be detected. If you do not configure this setting, the default behavior will occur. Note: By default, the Persistent System Timestamp is refreshed every 60 seconds on the Windows Server 2003 family. This feature may interfere with power configuration settings that turn off hard disks after a period of inactivity. These power settings may be accessed in the Power Options Control Panel."
The permissions for the selected group or user cannot be displayed because they do not correspond to standard NTFS permissions. ...
The permissions on %1 are incorrectly ordered, which may cause some entries to be ineffective. Press OK to continue and sort ...
The Persistent property determines whether this connection will be reconnected automatically by the operating system on the ...
The persistent storage file cannot be saved. Make sure that this file (located in %SystemRoot%\System32\RemoteStorage directory) ...
The Persistent System Timestamp allows the system to detect the time of unexpected shutdowns by writing the current time ...
The person or conference you are trying to call requires different security settings than what you have configured. Change ...
The person who is trying to contact you may not be running a compatible program. Check that the person who is trying to contact ...
The person you are trying to contact may not be running a compatible program. Check that the person you are trying to contact ...
The person you are using Remote Assistance with has tried to start a voice connection with you. Remote Assistance does not ...