p = Pipeline('clicks', parallelism=4) p.source = Source.from_kafka('clicks', serde=JSONSerde) p.source.map(lambda e: parse(e)) .filter(lambda r: r.user_id is not None) .window(size=60s, mode='sliding', slide=10s) .reduce(sum_clicks) .sink.to_kafka('click-aggregates') p.enable_checkpoint(storage='s3', prefix='prod/clicks') p.run()

Then in Program.cs :

SLIC Toolkit v3.2 aggregates several complex command-line queries into a single visual dashboard. Its feature set is divided into three core pillars: 1. Advanced ACPI Table Dumping

Upon opening, you are greeted with a clean, tabbed interface:

How does it stack up against the giants? Here is an honest comparison:

: Resides in the physical BIOS chip. It contains the OEM public key and an OS marker.

Upon launching, the tool defaults to an information screen. Switch to the tab to view your hardware parameters:

Right-click SLIC_Toolkit_v3.2.exe and select . Navigate to the Advanced tab.

The tool primarily targets the , which Microsoft utilizes for OEM Activation (OA) 2.0 and 2.1. By reading this table, the operating system can verify if the machine is legally pre-activated by an Original Equipment Manufacturer (such as Dell, HP, or Lenovo) without needing to connect to the internet. Key Specifications File Size: ~1.5 MB (Highly portable) License: Freeware

Manually install the correct manufacturer-matching certificate using the Windows Software Licensing Management Tool via the command prompt ( slmgr.vbs -ilc [certificate_name].xrm-ms ). 3. "Dump Error" or Driver Failure