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Q: What is the civil service pay amount for paygrade NT-3?
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What does NT3 mean in car auctions?

NT3 = new title within 30 days. means someone registered this car less than 30 days ago and want to sell it. not a good sign.


What are gpo in Active Directory?

Group Policy Objects (GPOs) are collections of settings for Windows operating systems. In general terms, they are created for two reasons: to control the look and feel of the operating system and its functionality (the "user experience") or to govern the way the system works such as its security and operation. Administrators have been able to apply policies to machines since Windows 9x/NT3 but with the advent of Active Directory in Windows 2000, GPOs have allowed a granular centralised control mechanism for domain members ranging across almost all aspects of the OS and many of the Microsoft products (primarily Internet Explorer and the Office suite, although customisation allows virtually any application to be controlled). Group Policy settings can apply either to the machine itself (and consequently apply to all users of that machine) or to groups of users of the machine. They grant the ability to standardise an estate. In large organisations, they are used to control password policies, logon rights, privileges, permissions, registry settings, the desktop and the underlying security of the infrastructure. They are vital in maintaining control and governance. As examples of their capabilities, you can set all machines to have the same colour scheme, screensaver, minimum password length/complexity, or any of the thousands of options available. They can be used to roll out software, fire startup and logon scripts, and enable/disable services, etc.


Does Windows 7 have DOS?

Windows 7 has a command prompt, which looks similar to the interface of MS-DOS. However, only text-mode DOS programs can be run in the command prompt (and none at all on 64-bit systems). The files to create an MS-DOS boot disk are still present in Windows 7, but they are not used or needed for running Windows 7.


What is the schwa sound?

The schwa sound is a mid-central vowel which sounds like a grunt. It is the default sound for unaccented vowels in English.In RP English in England the schwa sound is the same as the vowel sound in 'fir' or 'birch', or the /er/ in herd. In these combinations with "R" the schwa is an accented vowel. A word like "return" is another example. In English pronunciations both vowels are schwas.There is a very similar vowel which is more a back vowel represented by the upside down V, (ʌ) sometimes called a pup tent, caret, or circumflex. Words beginning with an unaccented "a" like above, ago, or amount may start with this sound rather than a schwa depending on your regional dialect.In most English accents unaccented syllables tend to move towards a schwa sound, no matter what their orthography. The "o" in memory, the first "e" in return, and the "i" in pencil are all pronounced as schwas.* Scroll down to related links and look at "Schwa sound - Wikipedia". You will be able to hear a recording of what the sound sounds like.* To get an idea of how a schwa sound is created, you can try to pronounce the letters BM as a word, making a B sound followed by an M sound. The slight unstressed exhalation is the usual sound associated with the schwa. In practice, it can sound anywhere from eh to ih to uh.