Sunday, May 10, 2009

TIPS OF THE DAY

What Are Cookies?


"Cookies" are data that web sites send to your computer while running a web browser that can record things such as where you've visited in a site, how often you've visited the site, ..etc. While cookies normally do not associate your actual name with the places you visit, if the web site happens to pick up your name and cross-references the two pieces of information, that web site can find out a lot of things about you personally that you may not wish the web site's administrators to know.

Cookies are useful in situations where you wish a web site to remember configuration options regarding the website.

Newer web browsers have options to warn you before accepting a "cookie" from an Internet site, and there are shareware/freeware programs available to completely remove cookies from a system.

It has been suggested, if you use Netscape, to simply write-protect your "cookies.txt" file if you do not wish to receive cookies.

FREE LEARNING SECTION


Introduction into Microsoft Word


Microsoft Word is a powerful tool to create professional looking documents. This tutorial will help you get started with Microsoft Word and may solve some of your problems.

Starting Microsoft Word

Two Ways :

Double click on the Microsoft Word icon on the desktop.

Click on Start --> Programs --> Microsoft Word


Viewing the toolbars

The toolbars in Microsoft Word provide easy access and functionality to the user. There are many shortcuts that can be taken by using the toolbar. First, make sure that the proper toolbars are visible on the screen.

Click View
Select Toolbars
Select Standard, Formatting, and Drawing
Other toolbars can be selected if you wish

Name Icon Description

New Blank Document Creates a new, blank file based on the default template.
Open (File menu) Opens or finds a file.
Save (File menu) Saves the active file with its current file name, location, and file format.

Mail Recipient

Sends the contents of the document as the body of the e-mail message.
Print (File menu) Prints the active file or selected items. To select print options, on the File menu, click Print.
Print Preview (File menu) Shows how a file will look when you print it.

Spelling and Grammar

(Tools menu) Checks the active document for possible spelling, grammar, and writing style errors, and displays suggestions for correcting them. To set spelling and grammar checking options, click Options on the Tools menu, and then click the Spelling and Grammar tab.
Cut (Edit menu) Removes the selection from the active document and places it on the Clipboard.

Copy (Edit menu) Copies the selection to the Clipboard.

Paste (Edit menu) Inserts the contents of the Clipboard at the insertion point, and replaces any selection. This command is available only if you have cut or copied an object, text, or contents of a cell.

Format Painter (Standard toolbar) Copies the format from a selected object or text and applies it to the object or text you click. To copy the formatting to more than one item, double-click , and then click each item you want to format. When you are finished, press ESC or click again to turn off the Format Painter.

Undo (Edit menu) Reverses the last command or deletes the last entry you typed.

Redo (Edit menu) Reverses the action of the Undo command.

Hyperlink Inserts a new hyperlink or edits the selected hyperlink.

Tables and Borders Displays the Tables and Borders toolbar, which contains tools for creating, editing, and sorting a table and for adding or changing borders to selected text, paragraphs, cells, or objects.

Zoom Enter a magnification between 10 and 400 percent to reduce or enlarge the display of the active document.
Office Assistant The Office Assistant provides Help topics and tips to help you accomplish your tasks.


Creating A New Document

Click on File
Select New
To create a blank document, simply select Blank Document. To create a document based on one of the templates provided in Microsoft Word, select which one you would like to create and select OK

TIPS OF THE DAY


How to Clean Up Temporary Files In Windows


Every time you visit a web page, your internet browser creates a temporary copy of the page’s text and graphics. When you open the page again, your internet browser checks the web page server for changes to the page. If the page has changed, your web browser will retrieve a new version of it. If the page hasn’t changed, your browser uses the temporary files stored on your computer to display the page. However, when you view lots of web pages, over time, this temporary storage area will continue to fill up and cause problems. Therefore, this technical brief will show you how to Clean Up all Your Temporary Files.


For Windows XP


For best results reboot your computer before performing this procedure.

Begin by first clicking on your Start Button.

Then click on Search, then click on All Files and Folders.

In the Search Companion window on the left, click on the All Files and Folders option.

Ensure that the Look in: box is pointing to you C: Drive and not just a single directory.

In the All or part of the file name: box, type in *.TMP

That’s the Star symbol - with a Period - followed by the TMP extension.

Then click on the Search button located in the lower left corner of the screen.

Your computer will do a search for all files that end with the .TMP file extension.

They will be listed in the right side area of the screen with their name and Folder location.

Then click on the word Edit, which is contained, in your top tool bar area.

This will pull down a menu for you to now click on Select All.

All these .TMP files on you hard drive will become highlighted.

Now simply press the delete key on your keyboard to wipe out these temporary files.

All the files formally contained in the right side area of the screen will become empty.

And Windows will state that the Search is complete. There are no results to display.

Then close the Search Results window to return back to your Windows session.


For Windows 98 And Windows Millennium


For best results reboot your computer before performing this procedure.

Begin by first clicking on your Start Button.

Then click on Search, (or Find for Windows 98) then For Files or Folders.

Ensure that the Look in: box is pointing to your C: Drive and not just a single directory.

In the Search for files or folders named: box, type in *.TMP

That’s the Star symbol - with a Period - followed by the TMP extension.

Then click on the button entitled Search Now or (or Find Now for Windows 98).

Your computer will do a search for all files that end with the .TMP file extension.

They will be listed in the right side area of the screen with their Name and Folder location.

Then click on the word Edit, which is contained in your top tool bar area.

This will pull down a menu for you to now click on Select All.

All these .TMP files on you hard drive will become highlighted.

Now simply press the delete key on your keyboard to wipe out these temporary files.

All the files formally contained in the right side area of the screen will become empty.

And Windows will state that the Search is complete. There are no results to display.

Then close the Search Results (or Find Files) window to return back to your Windows session.



The "GID" Files


Software companies now place their manuals onto the CD-Rom of their purchased software. The last version of Microsoft Office that physically contained manuals was Microsoft Office Version 4.3. If one purchases a later version of Office, they will not receive any hard copy manuals. Instead, Microsoft places the help files onto the CD Rom so that when you install the program, the main help files are also installed.

Therefore, we now refer to these help files to get our questions answered. This is fine, as your questions do get answered, but believe it or not your hard drive becomes accumulated with files that end with the extension .GID. The more you access the help files, the more accumulations your hard drive receives.

You can check this out for yourself by opening up Windows Explorer and double clicking on any help file in the C:\Windows\Help\ directory. Help files are those that end with the extension .HLP. If you double click on the file Windows.hlp, it will open up the basic Windows Help File. Now, when you close this help file, Windows will create an additional file entitled Windows.gid that will appear at the bottom of your directory.

Therefore we treat these files that end with the .GID extension the same way we treat the files that end with the .TMP extension. We enter *.GID in the steps outlined above and proceed onward.

You Can Also Automatically Clean Temporary Files By Reading: How To Clean Temporary File Folders

Saturday, April 4, 2009

Computer News


Introducing Firefox Next - Codename Namoroka (v. 3.6), Planned for 2010 Forget Firefox 3.5


Firefox 3.1 evolved into Firefox 3.5 in the move from Beta 3 to Beta 4, Mozilla is also looking ahead beyond Shiretoko, to the next iteration of its open-source browser. Firefox Next will be codenamed Namoroka and the version number for the project will be 3.6, although this will only be valid for the initial stages. Mozilla in fact refers to what will be the successor of Firefox 3.5 as Firefox.next. Namoroka will be based on the Gecko 1.9.2 rendering engine, and is currently planned for availability in the first half of 2010.


“In contrast to previous product planning exercises, which were declarative and relatively inflexible, we hope to develop this project in a highly iterative manner by which we initially declare project goals and prioritized areas of interest for investigation, and then spend time determining the exact shape and scope of feature development tasks. The outcome of these investigations will be a set of feature design documents (using a common template) which will be prioritized and constitute the final product development plan,” revealed Mike Beltzner, Director of Firefox at Mozilla Corporation.


The codename for Firefox.next has been borrowed from the Namoroka National Park (the Tsingy de Namoroka National Park) in Madagascar. According to Mozilla, there will be a total of four focus areas with the development of Namoroka, namely Performance, Personalization & Customization, Task Based Navigation, and Web Application Support. At the same time, Mozilla plans to integrate the browser seamlessly into the underlying operating system, also in terms of the graphical user interface, including Windows Vista's and Windows 7's Aero Glass.


Firefox Namoroka should deliver “observable improvements in user-perceptible performance metrics such as startup, time to open a new tab, and responsiveness when interacting with the user interface. Common user tasks should feel faster and more responsive,” Mozilla explained. In addition, Firefox codename Namoroka will be designed to deliver streamlined browser customization and to kick extensions to the next level. This will be valid for a variety of developer and user tasks including the building, discovery, deployment and management of personalization components and add-ons.


Furthermore, Mozilla aims to “allow users to organize their tabs, history, downloaded files, and other resources according to the task they were attempting to accomplish. Provide support for executing common web-based tasks, mash-up style, without having to visit a website. [But also to] Blur the distinction between web and desktop applications, providing web developers with the tools required to create rich application experiences for a user who is connected or disconnected from the Internet. Act as the intermediary between web applications and the user's OS desktop.”


Firefox codename Namoroka will get kicked off with an exploration and prototyping phase that is scheduled to last some two months. The next iteration of the Mozilla open-source browser, or should I say the next next iteration, since Firefox 3.5 is the upcoming version, will spend no less than five months in actual development, which includes all the alpha versions, and the first Beta build. In the next three months, Firefox Namoroka should be taken out of the Beta testing process.

JOKES FOR YOU


Right Click


Tech Support: "I need you to right-click on the Desktop.

"
Customer: "Ok."

Tech Support: "Did you get a pop-up menu?"


Customer: "No."


Tech Support: "Ok. Right click again. Do you see a pop-up menu?"


Customer: "No."

Tech Support: "Ok, sir. Can you tell me what you have done up until this point?"

Customer: "Sure, you told me to write 'click' and I wrote click'."

FREE LEARNING SECTION

Change icon of a folder

How to change icon of a folder?

Changing icons of folder is a fun. You can change your favorite icon of any folder and can show color full icons.

Follow the steps to change icons.

* Right click on folder and click on Properties.
* Click on Customize tab.
* Click on Change Icon button.
* Select your favorite icon and click on OK

See Screen Shot here
after using the steps above icon of folder will change.

Note: You can also use your customized icons instead of Windows own icons.

Tips of the day

Acrobat Reader shortcut keys with detail


Uses of Function keys in Acrobat Reader


Function keys -- Action

F1 -- Use to give the help of any windows panel

F3 -- Use to Find next search result

F5 -- Apply to select the document list panel

F6 -- Use to open/close the document list panel

F8 -- use to view/close main tools bar list

F9 -- use to view/close main menu bar

F10 -- Use to select the main menu bar

Ctrl+F4 -- Use to close the current file

Ctrl+F6 -- Move through next open document

Ctrl+ Shift -- Move back to open document

Shift+F3 -- Use to Find previous search result

Shift+F6 -- Select the previous open page

Shift+F8 -- Use to select main tools bar list

Shift+F10 -- Press keys to open context menu



Shortcut keys -- Action

Up Arrow Button -- Scroll up the active document

Down Arrow button -- Scroll down the active document

Ctrl+Hyphen -- Use to Zoom out the active page

Ctrl+equal sign (=) -- Use to Zoom in the active page

Alt+Right Arrow button -- Use to Next view

Alt+Left Arrow button -- Use to previous view

Right Arrow button -- Move to next page in active document

Left Arrow button -- Move to back page in active document

Page Up -- Move to the previous screen

Page Down -- Move to the next screen

Ctrl+Shift -- Apply to close all open windows

Ctrl+Spacebar+click on active page -- Zoom the active page for temporarily

Ctrl+Home -- Go to home page of document

Ctrl+End -- Go to last page of document

Ctrl+A -- Use to select the all pages

Ctrl+Shift+A -- Use to deselect the all pages

Enter -- Scroll down the pages

Ctrl+0 -- Use to adjust the document

Ctrl+1 -- Use to view actual document size

Ctrl+Q -- Quit the active document

Ctrl+L -- To view the document in full view

Ctrl+Shift++ -- Move the page clockwise

Ctrl+Shift+- -- Move the page counter clockwise

JOKES FOR YOU

Nine Type Of Users


El Explicito

"I tried the thing, ya know, and it worked, ya know, but now it doesn't, ya know?"

Advantages: Provides interesting communication challenges.

Disadvantages: So do chimps.

Symptoms: Complete inability to use proper nouns

Real Case: One user walked up to a certain Armenian pod manager and said, "I can't get what I want!" The pod manager leaned back, put his hands on his belt-buckle, and said, "Well, ma'am, you've come to the right place."

Mad Bomber

"Well, I hit ALT-f6, shift-f8, CNTRL-f10, f4, and f9, and now it looks all weird."

Advantages: Will try to find own solution to problems.

Disadvantages: User might have translated document to Navajo without meaning to.

Symptoms: More than six stopped jobs in UNIX, a 2:1 code-to-letter ratio in WordPerfect

Real Case: One user came in complaining that his WordPerfect document was underlined. When I used reveal codes on it, I found that he'd set and unset underline more than fifty times in his document.

Frying Pan/Fire Tactician

"It didn't work with the data set we had, so I fed in my aunt's recipe for key lime pie."

Advantages: Will usually fix error.

Disadvantages: 'Fix' is defined VERY loosely here.

Symptoms: A tendency to delete lines that get errors instead of fixing them.

Real Case: One user complained that their program executed, but didn't do anything. The scon looked at it for twenty minutes before realizing that they'd commented out EVERY LINE. The user said, "Well, that was the only way I could get it to compile."

Shaman

"Last week, when the moon was full, the clouds were thick, and formahaut was above the horizon, I typed f77, and lo, it did compile."

Advantages: Gives insight into primitive mythology.

Disadvantages: Few scon are anthropology majors.

Symptoms: Frequent questions about irrelevant objects.

Real Case: One user complained that all information on one of their disks got erased (as Norton Utilities showed nothing but empty sectors, I suspect nothing had ever been on it). Reasoning that the deleted information went *somewhere*, they wouldn't shut up until the scon checked four different disks for the missing information.

X-user

"Will you look at those. . .um, that resolution, quite impressive, really."

Advantages: Using the cutting-edge in graphics technology.

Disadvantages: Has little or no idea how to use the cutting-edge in graphics technology.

Symptoms: Fuzzy hands, blindness

Real Case: When I was off duty, two users sat down in front of me at DEC station 5000/200s that systems was reconfiguring. I suppressed my laughter while, for twenty minutes, they sat down and did their best to act like they were doing exactly what they wanted to do, even though they couldn't log in.

Miracle Worker

"But it read a file from it yesterday!" 'Sir, at a guess, this disk has been swallowed and regurgitated.' "But I did that a month ago, and it read a file from it yesterday!"

Advantages: Apparently has remarkable luck when you aren't around.

Disadvantages: People complain when scon actually use the word 'horse-puckey'.

Symptoms: Loses all ability to do impossible when you're around. Must be the kryptonite in your pocket.

Real Case: At least three users have claimed that they've loaded IBM WordPerfect from Macintosh disks.

Taskmaster

"Well, this is a file in MacWrite. Do you know how I can upload it to MUSIC, transfer it over to UNIX from there, download it onto an IBM, convert it to WordPerfect, and put it in three-column format?"

Advantages: Bold new challenges.

Disadvantages: Makes one wish to be a garbage collector.

Symptoms: An inability to keep quiet. Strong tendencies to make machines do things they don't want to do.

Real Case: One user tried to get a scon to find out what another person's E-mail address was even though the user didn't know his target's home system, account name, or real name.

Maestro

"Well, first I sat down, like this. Then I logged on, like this, and after that, I typed in my password, like this, and after that I edited my file, like this, and after that I went to this line here, like this, and after that I picked my nose, like this."

Advantages: Willing to show you exactly what they did to get an error.

Disadvantages: For as long as five or six hours.

Symptoms: Selective deafness to the phrases, "Right, right, okay, but what was the ERROR?", and a strong fondness for the phrase, "Well, I'm getting to that."

Real Case: I once had to spend half an hour looking over a user's shoulder while they continuously retrieved a document into itself and denied that they did it (the user was complaining that their document was 87 copies of the same thing).

Princess (unfair, perhaps, as these tend, overwhelmingly, to be males)

"I need a Mac, and someone's got the one I like reserved, would you please garrote him and put him in the paper recycling bin?"

Advantages: Flatters you with their high standards for your service.

Disadvantages: Impresses you with their obliviousness to other people on this planet.

Symptoms: Inability to communicate except by complaining.

Real Case: One asked a scon to remove the message of the day because he (the user) didn't like it.

Tips of the day

Hide or Show File Search Command in Start Menu


Hide/Show File Search in Start Menu

Hiding or Showing Windows File Search Command in Start Menu is easy as ABC. You can do this by using Registry Editor. First of all open Registry Editor by typing "regedit" in Run Command or Creating short cut on Desktop using "regedit" command line.

Open this key if you want to hide Search File Command for current logged user only.
HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Policies\Explorer

Open this key if you want to hide Search File Command for every user of Windows.
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Policies\Explorer

After opening this key in Registry Editor. Create new key "NoFind" as String value and enter value 1 in it.

After adding this key Log Off or restart your windows. If you are using Microsoft Windows 9x then you should restart your windows and open Start Menu. You can not see File Search command any more. File search command is hidden now.

If you want to show again File Search Command then delete key from Registry which you created above.

Monday, March 30, 2009

Tips of the day

Work with mouse


If your keyboard is damage or not fit for use, you can do your work by mouse at Windows Xp.


Start > Programs > Accessories > Accessibility > On-Screen keyboard.


A keyboard window is open. Now click keys and work.

Saturday, March 28, 2009

www.alertpay.com

www.alertpay.com


It is a free online account. It is a great things for online money deposit, send & others.

You have need for working Boodaq, cashmails or other sites. So it is essential for all.


Open an account for free

More ways to deposit money

Send money from 192 countries

Military grade security

Monday, March 23, 2009

Computer Viruses

A long, long time ago in computer years, like five, most viruses were comprised of a similar breed. They entered your computer perhaps through an email attachment or a floppy disk (remember those?). Then they attached themselves to one of your files, say your Microsoft Word program.

When you opened your Microsoft Word program, the virus replicated and attached itself to other files. These could be other random files on your hard drive, the files furthest away from your Microsoft Word program, or other files, depending on how the virus writer wanted the virus to behave.

This virus code could contain hundreds or thousands of instructions. When it replicates it inserts those instructions, into the files it infects, said Carey Nachenberg, Chief Architect at Symantec Research Labs, an arm of anti-virus software-maker Symantec. Corp.

Because so many other types of viruses exist now, the kind just described is called a classic virus. Classic viruses still exist but they’re not quite as prevalent as they used to be. (Perhaps we could put classic viruses on the shelf with Hemingway and Dickens. )

These days, in the modern era, viruses are known to spread through vulnerabilities in web browsers, files shared over the internet, emails themselves, and computer networks.

As far as web browsers are concerned, Microsoft’s Internet Explorer takes most of the heat for spreading viruses because it’s used by more people for web surfing than any other browser.

Nevertheless, “Any web browser potentially has vulnerabilities,” Nachenberg said.

For instance, let’s say you go to a website in IE you have every reason to think is safe, Nachenberg said.

But unfortunately it isn’t. It has virus code hidden in its background that IE isn’t protecting you from. While you’re looking at the site, the virus is downloaded onto your computer, he said. That’s one way of catching a nasty virus.

During the past two years, another prevalent way to catch a virus has been through downloads computer users share with one another, mostly on music sharing sites, Kuo said. On Limewire or Kazaa, for instance, teenagers or other music enthusiasts might think they’re downloading that latest Justin Timberlake song, when in reality they’re downloading a virus straight into their computer. It’s easy for a virus writer to put a download with a virus on one of these sites because everyone’s sharing with everyone else anyway.

Here’s one you might not have thought of. If you use Outlook or Outlook Express to send and receive email, do you have a preview pane below your list of emails that shows the contents of the email you have highlighted? If so, you may be putting yourself at risk.

Some viruses, though a small percentage according to Nachenberg, are inserted straight into emails themselves.

Forget opening the attachment. All you have to do is view the email to potentially get a virus, Kuo added. For instance, have you ever opened or viewed an email that states it’s “loading”? Well, once everything is “loaded,” a virus in the email might just load onto your computer.

So if I were you, I’d click on View on the toolbar in your Outlook or Outlook Express and close the preview pane. (You have to click on View and then Layout in Outlook Express. )

On a network at work? You could get a virus that way. Worms are viruses that come into your computer via networks, Kuo said. They travel from machine to machine and, unlike, the classic viruses, they attack the machine itself rather than individual files.

Worms sit in your working memory, or RAM, Nachenberg said.

OK, so we’ve talked about how the viruses get into a computer. How do they cause so much damage once they’re there?

Let’s say you’ve caught a classic virus, one that replicates and attacks various files on your computer. Let’s go back to the example of the virus that initially infects your Microsoft Word program.

Well, it might eventually cause that program to crash, Nachenberg said. It also might cause damage to your computer as it looks for new targets to infect.

This process of infecting targets and looking for new ones could eventually use up your computer’s ability to function, he said.

Often the destruction a virus causes is pegged to a certain event or date and time, called a trigger. For instance, a virus could be programmed to lay dormant until January 28. When that date rolls around, though, it may be programmed to do something as innocuous but annoying as splash popups on your screen, or something as severe as reformat your computer’s hard drive, Nachenberg said.

There are other potential reasons, though, for a virus to cause your computer to be acting slow or in weird ways. And that leads us to a new segment – the reason virus writers would want to waste their time creating viruses in the first place.

The majority of viruses are still written by teenagers looking for some notoriety, Nachenberg said. But a growing segment of the virus-writing population has other intentions in mind.

For these other intentions, we first need to explain the “backdoor” concept.

The sole purpose of some viruses is to create a vulnerability in your computer. Once it creates this hole of sorts, or backdoor, it signals home to mama or dada virus writer (kind of like in E. T. ). Once the virus writer receives the signal, they can use and abuse your computer to their own likings.

Trojans are sometimes used to open backdoors. In fact that is usually their sole purpose, Kuo said.

Trojans are pieces of code you might download onto your computer, say, from a newsgroup. As in the Trojan War they are named after, they are usually disguised as innocuous pieces of code. But Trojans aren’t considered viruses because they don’t replicate.

Now back to the real viruses. Let’s say we have Joe Shmo virus writer. He sends out a virus that ends up infecting a thousand machines. But he doesn’t want the feds on his case. So he instructs the viruses on the various machines to send their signals, not of course to his computer, but to a place that can’t be traced. Hotmail email happens to be an example of one such place, Kuo said.

OK, so the virus writers now control these computers. What will they use them for?

One use is to send spam. Once that backdoor is open, they bounce spam off of those computers and send it to other machines, Nachenberg said.

That’s right. Some spam you have in your email right now may have been originally sent to other innocent computers before it came to yours so that it could remain in disguise. If the authorities could track down the original senders of spam, they could crack down on spam itself. Spam senders don’t want that.

Ever heard of phishing emails? Those are the ones that purport to be from your internet service provider or bank. They typically request some information from you, like your credit card number. The problem is, they’re NOT from your internet service provider or your bank. They’re from evil people after your credit card number! Well, these emails are often sent the same way spam is sent, by sending them via innocent computers.

Of course makers of anti-virus software use a variety of methods to combat the onslaught of viruses. Norton, for instance, uses signature scanning, Nachenberg said.

Signature scanning is similar to the process of looking for DNA fingerprints, he said. Norton examines programming code to find what viruses are made of. It adds those bad instructions it finds to it code in it with similar code in your computer. When it finds such virus code, it lets you knows large database of other bad code. Then it uses this vast database to seek out and match the!

Sunday, March 22, 2009

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Saturday, March 21, 2009

Online Earning

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