Windows XP+SP2 operating system attribute fraud principle

  
        Let's take a look at the picture: This picture is the system attribute on my C4 2.4/256 machine, not the picture modification. Modification method: (This article uses XP+SP2 as an example. Other system methods are similar.) 1. The system file corresponding to the system property is system32\\sysdm.cpl. We first back it up and open it with exescope. 2, the corresponding form in the Resource> Dialog 101 is what we want to change. My approach is to hide several lines of information from the display system and replace them with OEM information in the same location. 3, specifically to change a few Link Window attributes: remove the 4th and 5th Visible, from the first to the third and the sixth to the ninth, the link window coordinates are changed to (129, 137); 141, 163); (141, 149); sixth (141, 177); then change Caption = "3.60 GHz, 512 MB of memory"; (141, 229); (141, 241); (141, 253); 4, the system32\\dllcache\\sysdm.cpl deleted or renamed, and then changed the sysdm.cpl instead of system32, the system will have file protection tips to cancel. (KEY) 5, create oeminfo.ini under system32, the content is [General] Manufacturer=computer: Model=Pentium4(R) CPU 3.60GHz This modification is basically completed, other applications are: modify the information in Dxdiag (not Less customers like to use this watcher configuration) and the graphics card memory size in the display properties. For win98, WINHEX can be used to directly modify the text information in the sysdm.cpl file. Other parts of the information (such as the size of the memory, the CD-ROM model in the hardware device, etc.) can be modified in the registry. If you add some of these changes (modify the BiOS information of the motherboard and graphics card, and then match the special system disk and drive disk), it is enough to be fake. Therefore, everyone has to be careful about buying.
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