KoMpYuTeR...
Tuesday, September 20, 2011
Monday, October 18, 2010
FACEBOOK IN SKYPE
i was reading my mails in gmail when i suddenly saw a this message and thought yeah this is cool..so, i checked it out and voila!!!...its real, you can actually login in facebook and read your wall..how cool is that huh...
and i can actually see all my facebook friends contact detail...what else can you ask for...
just click here to get the SKYPE 5.0 Beta version..
and i can actually see all my facebook friends contact detail...what else can you ask for...
just click here to get the SKYPE 5.0 Beta version..
Thursday, October 7, 2010
10 Privacy Settings Every Facebook User Should Know
Posted by Nick O'Neill on February 2nd, 2009 11:00 AM
Everyday I receive an email from somebody about how their account was hacked, how a friend tagged them in the photo and they want a way to avoid it, as well as a number of other complications related to their privacy on Facebook. Over the weekend one individual contacted me to let me know that he would be removing me as a friend from Facebook because he was “going to make a shift with my Facebook use – going to just mostly family stuff.”
Perhaps he was tired of receiving my status updates or perhaps he didn’t want me to view photos from his personal life. Whatever the reason for ending our Facebook friendship, I figured that many people would benefit from a thorough overview on how to protect your privacy on Facebook. Below is a step by step process for protecting your privacy.
Become a fan of AllFacebook to stay up to date on the latest Facebook privacy changes.
1. Use Your Friend Lists
There are a few very important things to remember about friend lists:
- You can add each friend to more than one friend group
- Friend groups should be used like “tags” as used elsewhere around the web
- Friend Lists can have specific privacy policies applied to them
Using friend lists is also extremely useful for organizing your friends if you have a lot of them. For instance I have about 20 friend lists and I categorize people by city (New York, San Francisco, D.C., Tel Aviv, etc), where I met them (conferences, past co-workers, through this blog), and my relationship with them (professional, family, social, etc).
You can configure your friend lists by visiting the friends area of your Facebook.
2. Remove Yourself From Facebook Search Results
How to Remove Yourself From Facebook Search Results
Now that you’ve decided that you would like to remove yourself from Facebook’s search results, here’s how to do it:
- Visit your search privacy settings page
- Under “Search Visibility” select “Only Friends” (Remember, doing so will remove you from Facebook search results, so make sure you want to be removed totally. Otherwise, you can select another group, such as “My Networks and Friends” which I believe is the default.)
- Click “Save Changes”
3. Remove Yourself From Google
For some people, being displayed in the search engines is a great way to let people get in contact with you, especially if you don’t have an existing website. Facebook also tends to rank high in the search results, so if you want to be easy to find, making your search profile can be a great idea. Many people don’t want any of their information to be public though.
By visiting the same search privacy settings page listed in the previous step, you can control the visibility of your public search listing which is visible to Google and other search engines. You can turn off your public search listing by simply unchecking the box next to the phrase “Create a public search listing for me and submit it for search engine indexing” as pictured in the image below.
4. Avoid the Infamous Photo/Video Tag Mistake
At the least, a tagged photo/video can result in personal embarrassment. So how do you prevent the infamous tagged photo or video from showing up in all of your friends news feeds? It’s pretty simple. First visit your profile privacy page and modify the setting next to “Photos Tagged of You”. Select the option which says “Customize…” and a box like the one pictured below will pop up.
Select the option “Only Me” and then “None of My Networks” if you would like to keep all tagged photos private. If you’d like to make tagged photos visible to certain users you can choose to add them in the box under the “Some Friends” option. In the box that displays after you select “Some Friends” you can type either individual friends or friend lists.
5. Protect Your Albums
There is a specific Photos Privacy page from which you can manually configure the visibility of each album (as pictured below). This is an extremely useful configuration option and I highly recommend that you take advantage of it. This way you can store your photos indefinitely on Facebook yet ensure that the only people that can view your photos are the ones who you really want to see them.
6. Prevent Stories From Showing Up in Your Friends’ News Feeds
I’ve also seen the end of marriages, as well as weekly relationship status changes as individuals try to determine where their relationship stands with their significant other. My personal policy is to not display a relationship status, but many like to make a public statement out of their relationship. For those individuals, it can be a smart move to hedge against future disasters.
There are a number of ways to control how your relationship status is displayed. The first thing that most people should do is uncheck the box next to “Remove Relationship Status” in the News Feed and Wall Privacy page. In the rare instance that a relationship does uncomfortably end, you can avoid making things more uncomfortable by avoiding a friend notification about it.
Second, your relationship status falls within your “Basic Information” section of your profile. You can control who can see your basic information next to the “Basic Information” setting on the Profile Privacy page. Keep in mind that other relevant profile information like your gender, birth date, networks, and other settings are visible within your basic information section.
Making your basic information completely invisible to friends probably isn’t a good idea, but removing the news feed stories about relationship changes most likely is.
Become a fan of AllFacebook to stay up to date on the latest Facebook privacy changes.
7. Protect Against Published Application Stories
This is surely something that none of your professional contacts if any of your contacts are interested in seeing (honestly I’m a bit confused about that application, but that’s a different story). That’s why it’s important to monitor what takes place after you install an application on Facebook. Once you install an application you should visit your profile to ensure that no embarrassing notification has been posted to your profile.
More often then not, nothing will be posted but there are many applications on the platform unfortunately that publish stories without you knowing it. There are two ways to avoid having this happen: don’t visit applications or scan your profile every time that you do. Ultimately you shouldn’t be concerned about applications that you’ve built a trusted relationship with but any new applications could potentially post embarrassing notifications.
8. Make Your Contact Information Private
I personally use Facebook for professional and personal use and it can frequently become overwhelming. That’s why I’ve taken the time to outline these ten privacy protection steps. One of the first things I did when I started approving friend requests from people that I hadn’t built a strong relationship with, was make my contact information visible only to close contacts.The contact information is my personal email and phone number. It’s a simple thing to set but many people forget to do it. Frequently people we don’t know end up contacting us and we have no idea how they got our contact information. Your contact privacy can be edited right from your profile. If you have chosen to enter this information, you should see a “Contact Information” area under the “Info” tab in your profile.
If it displays, you simply click “Edit” and then a screen like the one pictured below will show up.
As a side note, this is a great area to take advantage of friend lists. By getting in the habit of grouping your friends, you can ensure that you are navigating Facebook safely through privacy settings that are attached to your friend lists.
9. Avoid Embarrassing Wall Posts
Just because you use Facebook for business doesn’t mean your friends do. That’s why once in a while a friend of yours will come post something embarrassing or not necessarily “work friendly” and it can end up having adverse effects. That’s why Facebook has provided you with the ability to customize your wall postings visibility. You can also control which friends can post on your wall. There are two places you can control these things.Adjust Wall Posting Visibility
Control Who Can Post to Your Wall
In addition to controlling who can view wall postings published by your friends, you also want to control which friends can post on your wall. Not everybody needs to do this, but occasionally you simply want to prevent some people from posting on your page. If you visit the Profile Privacy settings page, there is a section labeled “Wall Posts”.
From this area you can completely disable your friends’ ability to post on your wall. You can also select specific friend lists that can post on your wall. Personally, I don’t really care who can post on my wall but I can understand the need to control who can see those wall postings. If you want to limit who can post wall posts on your profile, this is where you can do it.
10. Keep Your Friendships Private
While it’s fun to show off that you have hundreds or thousands of friends on Facebook, some of your friends don’t want to live public lives. That’s why it’s often a good policy to turn off your friends’ visibility to others. I’ve had a number of individuals visit my profile and then selectively pick off friends that are relevant to them for marketing purposes, or other reasons.Whatever the reason they are doing it, just know that they are … it’s part of what makes Facebook so addictive: the voyeuristic nature. Also, your friends are frequently visible to the public through search engines and exposing this information can ultimately present a security risk. To modify the visibility of your friends, visit the Profile Privacy page.
Navigate down to the setting which says “Friends” and then modify the setting to whatever is right for you.
Conclusion
These are just ten ways that you can protect your privacy on Facebook. While there are a few other small things to keep in mind, these ten settings are most important. Keep in mind that while you may have turned off the visibility of many profile sections, there is no way to prevent all photos or videos from being visible if friends of yours make the images visible.The best way to prevent embarrassing items from showing up on Facebook in the future is to not make bad judgements in your personal life. We’re all human though and being completely paranoid about every choice you make is probably not the best way to live your life. Be aware of what privacy settings are available and be conscious of what your friends may be publishing about you.
While you may not want to configure all of the privacy settings outlined, simply knowing how to do so is a great step in the right direction. By following the 10 settings listed above you are well on your way to an embarrassment free future on Facebook!
Sunday, September 5, 2010
Microsoft Security Essentials
As Freelance Computer Technician, 95% of problems I deal with are mostly due to malwares, trojans, viruses etc. A nuisance to everybody, i've read the book "A Little Blackbook on Computer Virus", i can't still grasp the logic on it why they create these organisms and release it. Well, good for me, more clients.
Anyway, just want to share to everybody that you don't have to spend a lot of money on subscription for security on your computer, if you are using a Windows Operating System you can just download Microsoft Security Essentials from this link and voila you have an all-in-one security on your computer. There is a catch though, you have to make sure that the operating system that is installed in your computer is genuine because MSE will validate your OS before installing.
I will show you how easy it is to have it:
1. Download Microsoft Security Essentials from the download link given above.
2. Install MSE.
3. Restart computer.
4. Update MSE and scan your computer.
5. And now you are PROTECTED.
I would recommend this to all who have WINDOWS OS.
Happy computing...
Anyway, just want to share to everybody that you don't have to spend a lot of money on subscription for security on your computer, if you are using a Windows Operating System you can just download Microsoft Security Essentials from this link and voila you have an all-in-one security on your computer. There is a catch though, you have to make sure that the operating system that is installed in your computer is genuine because MSE will validate your OS before installing.
I will show you how easy it is to have it:
1. Download Microsoft Security Essentials from the download link given above.
2. Install MSE.
3. Restart computer.
4. Update MSE and scan your computer.
5. And now you are PROTECTED.
I would recommend this to all who have WINDOWS OS.
Happy computing...
Tuesday, August 24, 2010
In depth: BlackBerry Torch 9800 makes 'corporate' cool
RIM's new smartphone really could cure enterprise customers of iPhone/Android envy.
By Dan Rosenbaum
August 12, 2010 06:00 AM ET
Computerworld - About nine years ago, I was walking around with a first-generation BlackBerry on my belt. That 'Berry couldn't make phone calls, it couldn't browse the Web, and it sure couldn't play music. It did just one thing: e-mail. Smartphones hadn't been invented yet, and the concept of a mobile device for sending and receiving mail was completely exotic, even in ever-compulsive New York.
The gadget world has been through a few revolutions since then, what with Sidekicks and Treos and iPhones and Droids. But one fact has remained pretty fundamental: You can have all the fun you want with that other gear, but if you're serious about e-mail -- especially corporate e-mail -- you're probably going to wind up with a BlackBerry in your pocket.Research in Motion, the Waterloo, Ontario-based company that develops and builds BlackBerries, has released a legion of the devices over the years, with each one differing from its predecessors in form and somewhat less so in features. Generally speaking, though, BlackBerries have distinctly trailed the smartphone market. They've been perfectly fine phones that were more than good enough to be corporate standard issue, but they've lacked the sexy oomph that sells gadgets to consumers. In many ways, they've been the gadget equivalent of a buzz cut: efficient, standard, corporate, boring.
BlackBerry Torch
The new operating system has a new interface, a media player, a new browser and hooks into social media, but it doesn't give you much in the way of features that you can't find in any other top-of-the-line smartphone. That may be good enough. In a world where RIM was in danger of being lapped by the competition, the Torch is a more-than-reasonable rejoinder for an enterprise manager besieged by users insisting on Android phones or iPhones.
Keyboard conundrum
The Torch's 3.2-inch touch screen is a bit of a departure from earlier BlackBerries, except the Storm. But where the Storm has only a soft on-screen keyboard, the new Torch also includes a slide-down hard QWERTY keyboard. This will be a great relief to longtime tappers. Also, the BlackBerry's hard trackpad makes a welcome return to the middle of the row of function keys.But as welcome as the hard keyboard is, it presents something of a user interface conundrum. Between the touch screen and the keyboard, there are several different ways to perform the same function on the Torch. You can see your e-mail, for instance, by tapping in a "quick access" area at the top of the screen, by tapping or clicking on an application icon, or by using the trackpad to click on either. That's not necessarily a bad thing. It is, however, unusual and a point of possible confusion.
The phone, when closed, is a tiny bit narrower and shorter than an iPhone 4, though at 0.57 inches thick and about 5.7 ounces, it's half again as thick as an iPhone and nearly a full ounce heavier. Blame the hard keyboard. Extending the keyboard adds 1.4 inches to the length. The back is rubberized plastic, and the phone has a generally solid, substantial, well-balanced feel.
There is 512MB of flash memory and 4GB of general on-board memory built in, and a 4GB microSD card is included. The phone supports quad-band GSM and HSPDA, and RIM says it supports 802.11 b/g/n Wi-Fi connectivity. Unfortunately, although I have no reason to doubt that the phone supports 802.11n, I was unable to get it to connect to an up-to-date Apple Airport Express router.
The built-in flash camera takes 5-megapixel pictures and shoots videos with continuous autofocus. In practice, the camera was just OK, but -- in what is an unusual feature for a smartphone -- it offers the ability to select from among 10 "scenes" with preset settings, such as "face detection," "party," "beach" and so on. This can make things easy for novice photographers.
RIM claims that the Torch's battery supports about 5.5 hours of talk time, 30 hours of audio playback and six hours of video playback. The screen is crisp and clear, although it's no rival to a Droid X's Super AMOLED. The screen supports multitouch input, recognizing taps, pinches and slides. The display also rotates between landscape and portrait mode as you reorient the phone with the keyboard stowed, but it does not go to landscape if you have the keyboard open.
Setup, as one would hope for a corporate-oriented phone, was quick, smooth, and trivial -- particularly the e-mail and Exchange parts. The e-mail applications were exactly what one would expect from a BlackBerry, with mailbox sync, message filtering and display by thread (or not). If you've hardwired your fingers to the BlackBerry interface over the years, you won't be disrupted.
BlackBerry 6
The BlackBerry 6 user interface feels a lot like Android's. The home screen is initially clear except for your wallpaper, but you bring up screens of applications with an upward flick of a finger and page through them by flicking up and down or left and right. The interface supports folders, so you can group applications together, but it took some fumbling to understand that the "Back" button below the screen is how you move upward through the file structure to the home screen.In general, when using BB6 it's not always clear what you can do through a touch and what needs a click -- and whether the click should come from the trackpad, the BlackBerry button or the Back button. In the time that I worked with it, I didn't detect a consistent pattern of behavior; it may well become clearer with practice and familiarity.
As with any contemporary smartphone platform, there's an online store where you can download apps for the Torch; it's called BlackBerry App World. Don't expect the breadth of offerings available at either Apple's App Store or the Android Store -- certainly not right away. But it wouldn't surprise me in the least if developers came up with some highly useful corporate apps for the Torch in short order.
You can search for apps or browse by category and then scroll through using the trackpad. Unsurprisingly, you need to sign up for an account, but that's quick and painless, aside from the two unconscionably long license pages whose terms you need to agree to en route.
The phone comes with a 3-inch CD containing BlackBerry Desktop Software, which lets you load music onto the Torch through a USB connection; it also helps you sync notes, contacts and calendars with your desktop software if you don't do it wirelessly through the cloud. (If you've got a computer -- like a MacBook -- with a slot-loading drive, a 3-inch CD is useless. Fortunately, the software is also downloadable from RIM's site.)
Conclusions
As with any BlackBerry, e-mail is at the core of the Torch 9800's functionality. But instead of a corporate buzz cut, the Torch is more like a mullet: business in front, party in the back. That's not a bad thing. It allows for excellent enterprise functionality but has room to let people have some fun.Sunday, November 8, 2009
installing windows xp using a flash drive
this tutorial is useful for netbooks...
To complete this tutorial you need a 32bit version of Windows XP or Windows Vista installed on your home PC.
What you'll need:
USB_PREP8 (alternative download)
PeToUSB (alternative download)
Bootsect.exe (alternative download)
Special Note: If you use the program Nlite be sure to keep the manual installation files as the USB_prep8 script relies on these files.
Extract the files in Bootsect.zip
The next step is to extract USB_prep8 and PeToUSB.
Next copy the PeToUSB executable into the USB_prep8 folder.
Inside of the USB_prep8 folder double click the executable named usb_prep8.cmd.
The window that opens will look like this:
Press any key to continue
You next window will look like this:
These settings are preconfigured for you all you need to do now is click start.
Once the format is complete DO NOT close the window just leave everything as it is and open a command prompt from your start menu (type cmd in the search bar or run box depending on your version of windows.).
Inside of the command windows go to the directory you have bootsect.exe saved.
(use the cd directoryname command to switch folders)
Now type "bootsect.exe /nt52 R:" NOTE R: is the drive letter for my USB stick if yours is different you need to change it accordingly. What this part does is write the correct boot sector to your USB stick, this allows your PC to boot from the USB stick without it nothing works.
Please note: When running the bootsect.exe command you cannot have any windows open displaying the content of your USB stick, if you have a window open bootsect.exe will be unable to lock the drive and write the bootsector correctly.
If all went well you should see "Bootcode was successfully updated on all targeted volumes."
Now you can close this command prompt (don't close the usbprep8 one by mistake) and the petousb window.
You window you see now should look like this:
If it doesn't try pressing enter.
Now you need to enter the correct information for numbers 1-3.
Press 1 and then enter. A folder browse window will open for you to browse to the location of you XP setup files (aka your cdrom drive with xp cd in)
Press 2 and enter a letter not currently assigned to a drive on your PC
Press 3 and enter the drive letter of your USB stick
Press 4 to start the process.
The script will ask you if its ok to format drive T:. This is just a temp drive the program creates to cache the windows installation files. Press Y then enter.
Once it's done formating press enter to continue again, you can now see the program copying files to the temp drive it created. Once this is done press enter to continue again.
Next you will see a box pop up asking you to copy the files to USB drive yes/no you want to click yes.
Once the script has completed copy files a popup window asking if you would like to USB drive to be preferred boot drive U: select YES on this window.
Now select yes to unmount the virtual drive.
Ok we are done the hard part, close the usbprep8 window.
Now make sure your EEE pc is configured with USB as the primary boot device.
Insert your USB drive and boot up the EEE.
On the startup menu you have two options, select option number 2 for text mode setup.
From this point on it is just like any other windows XP installation delete/recreate the primary partition on your EEE pc and format it using NTFS. Make sure you delete ALL partitions and recreate a single partition or you will get the hal.dll error message.
Once the text mode portion of setup is complete it will boot into the GUI mode (you can press enter after the reboot if your too excited to wait the 30 seconds)
Once the GUI portion of setup is complete you will again have to boot into GUI mode this will complete the XP installation and you will end up at you XP desktop. It is very important that you DO NOT REMOVE THE USB STICK before this point. Once you can see your start menu it is safe to remove the usb stick and reboot your pc to make sure everything worked.
This method has advantages over all current no cdrom methods of installing XP to the EEE. You do not have to copy setup files in DOS to the SSD and install from there. It gives you access to the recovery console by booting into text mode setup, and it gives you the ability to run repair installations of XP if you have problems later on.
Canon Printer Ink Cartridges
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