<span>A profile is made the first occasion when that a client sign on
to a Windows XP, Windows 2000, or Windows NT® Workstation–based PC. A client
profile is a gathering of settings and documents that characterizes the
condition that the framework loads when a client sign on. It incorporates all
the client arrangement settings, for example, program things, screen hues,
organize associations, printer associations, mouse settings, and window size
and position. Profiles are not client arrangements and the client has a profile
regardless of the possibility that you don't utilize Group Policy.</span>
I believe its "Thinking Universe"
<span>!UML (all of them)
2.Flowchart (more for understanding a real world process of some kind; like a business process)
3.Data model including Bachman (if you don't need to at least understand your data, how it is stored versus a model, i.e., Bachman then you are doing it wrong and your schema could be simplistic)
This is 3 different examples</span>
The answer is F7. When you click F7 it highlights key words.<span />