ent got a clue
2007-10-10 22:47:25
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answer #1
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answered by mummy to 3 miracles 5
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Dr. Watson is a diagnostic tool that gathers information about your computer when a problem occurs with a program. The information gathered by Dr. Watson is called a snapshot. The snapshot includes information that:
• Identifies the program that has a problem.
• Offers a detailed description of the cause.
• May provide a resolution for the problem.
A Dr. Watson icon appears on the taskbar after you start Dr. Watson. You can create a snapshot using Dr. Watson by right-clicking the Dr. Watson icon on the taskbar, and then clicking Dr. Watson.
To start Dr. Watson, follow these steps:
1. Click Start, point to Programs, point to Accessories, point to System Tools, and then click System Information.
2. On the Tools menu, click Dr. Watson.
2007-10-10 22:53:14
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answer #2
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answered by GoreyAlan Fáilte 4
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Dr Watson was Sherlock Holmes partner/assistant.
2007-10-10 22:48:49
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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Dr John H. Watson is a fictional character, the friend, confidante and biographer of Sherlock Holmes, the fictional 19th-century detective created by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. Various (extra-canonical) sources give Watson's birth date as August 7, 1852 and his full name as Dr John Hamish Watson. In large parts of the last two decades of the 1800s, Watson shared lodgings with Holmes and soon emerged as the assistant and biographer of the great detective.
Over the years, Conan Doyle published four novels and 56 short stories about Holmes. All the novels, and 52 of the short stories, pretend to be Watson's accounts of selected cases. (As for the remaining four stories, two are supposedly written by Holmes himself, whereas two are written in the third person.)
The original stories provide no details about Watson's life after 1914 (when he assisted Holmes one last time in the story "His Last Bow"). Holmes' untiring biographer was apparently still alive in 1927, when the last story ("The Adventure of Shoscombe Old Place") appeared. According to Nicholas Meyer's revisionist novel The Seven-Per-Cent Solution, Watson was still around in 1939, but apparently died that year or shortly afterwards.
2007-10-10 22:49:12
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answer #4
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answered by Joe 3
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As I point out in my latest Sherlock Holmes novel, Dr. John Watson would not have met Holmes if Watson had not been wounded by a bullet from a muzzle-loading long arm Jezzail on 27 July 1880 at the Battle of Maiwand in the second Anglo-Afghan War, and shipped home.
Sherlock Holmes And The Mystery of Einstein's Daughter by Tim Symonds
In late 1903 Einstein's illegitimate daughter 'Lieserl' disappears without trace in Serbia aged around 21 months. As Holmes exclaims in the Mystery of Einstein's Daughter, "the most ruthless effort has been made by public officials, priests, monks, Einstein's friends, followers, relatives and relatives-by-marriage to seek out and destroy every document with Lieserl’s name on it. The question is – why?"
Publication date January 2014
‘Lieserl’s fate shadows the Einstein legend like some unsolved equation’ Scientist Frederic Golden Time Magazine
Sherlock Holmes And The Mystery of Einstein's Daughter is available at www.mxpublishing.co.uk/engine/shop/product/9781780925721 or www.amazon.co.uk/Sherlock-Holmes-Mystery-Einsteins-Daughter/dp/1780925727. Review copies contact Steve Emecz at mxpublishing@btinternet.com.
Tim Symonds was born in London. He grew up in Somerset, Dorset and Guernsey. After several years working in the Kenya Highlands and along the Zambezi River he emigrated to the United States. He studied in Germany at Göttingen and at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), where he graduated Phi Beta Kappa in Political Science. Sherlock Holmes And The Mystery Of Einstein’s Daughter was written in a converted oast house in 'Conan Doyle country', near Rudyard Kipling’s old home Bateman’s in East Sussex and in the forests and hidden valleys of the Sussex High Weald.
The author’s other detective novels include Sherlock Holmes and The Dead Boer at Scotney Castle and Sherlock Holmes and The Case of the Bulgarian Codex.
He is a Fellow of the Royal Geographical Society.
2014-01-15 08:22:17
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answer #5
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answered by Tim 1
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Dr John H. Watson is a fictional character, the friend, confidante and biographer of Sherlock Holmes, the fictional 19th-century detective created by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. Various (extra-canonical) sources give Watson's birth date as August 7, 1852 and his full name as Dr John Hamish Watson. In large parts of the last two decades of the 1800s, Watson shared lodgings with Holmes and soon emerged as the assistant and biographer of the great detective.
Over the years, Conan Doyle published four novels and 56 short stories about Holmes. All the novels, and 52 of the short stories, pretend to be Watson's accounts of selected cases. (As for the remaining four stories, two are supposedly written by Holmes himself, whereas two are written in the third person.)
The original stories provide no details about Watson's life after 1914 (when he assisted Holmes one last time in the story "His Last Bow"). Holmes' untiring biographer was apparently still alive in 1927, when the last story ("The Adventure of Shoscombe Old Place") appeared. According to Nicholas Meyer's revisionist novel The Seven-Per-Cent Solution, Watson was still around in 1939, but apparently died that year or shortly afterwards.
2007-10-10 22:48:01
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answer #6
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answered by SammDizzle 1
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Dr Watson, died in Sherlock Holmes arms.
2007-10-10 22:47:31
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answer #7
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answered by elizadushku 6
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Assistant to Sherlock Holmes.
2007-10-10 22:47:38
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answer #8
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answered by demilspencer@yahoo.com 5
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He is a Microsoft help program I think named after the Sherlock Holmes character.
2007-10-10 22:48:23
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answer #9
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answered by Anonymous
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The side kick of Sherlock Holmes.
2007-10-10 22:47:50
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answer #10
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answered by Copper 4
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Sherlock Holmes friend?
2007-10-10 22:47:32
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answer #11
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answered by coolrocksharron 3
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