Saturday, 29 September 2012

bios information

Introduction
The BIOS or Basic Input/Output System is the basic controller that allows all of the components that make up a computer system to talk to one another. But in order for this to happen, there are a number of things that the BIOS needs to know how to do. This is why the settings within the BIOS are so critical to the operation of the computer system. For about 95% of the computer users out there, they will never need to adjust the BIOS settings of their computer. However, those who have chosen to build their own computer system will need to know how to modify the settings.
Some of the critical things one will need to know are the clock settings, memory timing, boot order and drive settings. Thankfully the computer BIOS has come a long way in the past ten years where many of these settings are automatic and very little needs to be adjusted.
How to Access the BIOS
The method for accessing the BIOS is going to be dependent upon the manufacturer of the motherboard and the BIOS vender they have selected. The actual process to get to the BIOS is identical, just the key that is needed to be pressed will vary. It is important to have the user manual for the motherboard handy whenever changes will be made to the BIOS.
The first step is to look up what key needs to be pressed to enter the BIOS. Some of the common keys used to access the BIOS are F1, F2 and the Del key. Generally the motherboard will post this information when the computer first turns on, but it is best to look it up before hand. Next, power on the computer system and press the key to enter the BIOS after the beep for a clean POST is signaled. I will often press the key a couple times to make sure it registered. If the procedure has been done correctly, the BIOS screen should be displayed rather than the typical boot screen.
CPU Clock
The very first setting that needs to be made in the BIOS is to adjust the motherboard to utilizing the proper clock settings for the CPU installed in the computer. Most modern BIOS vendors can detect the type of CPU and automatically set the proper timings. Refer to the documentation from the CPU and motherboard vendor for the proper settings.
The CPU speed is comprised of two numbers, a bus speed and a multiplier. The bus speed is the tricky part because vendors may have this setting done either at the natural clock rate or at the enhanced clock rate. The natural front side bus is the more common of the two. The multiplier is then used to determine the final clock speed based on the bus speed of the processor. Set this to the appropriate multiple for the final clock speed of the processor.
For an example, if you have an AMD Athlon XP 2500+ processor that has a CPU speed of 1.82GHz clock, the proper settings for the BIOS would be a bus speed of 166MHz and a multiplier of 11. (166MHz x 11 = 1.826 GHz)
Memory Timings
The next aspect of the BIOS that needs adjusting is the memory timings. Typically it is not necessary for this to be done if the BIOS can detect the settings from the SPD on the memory modules. In fact, if the BIOS has a SPD setting for the memory, this should be used for the highest stability with the computer. Other than this, the memory bus is the setting you will likely need to set. Verifying that the memory bus is set to the appropriate speed for the memory. This may be listed as the actual MHZ speed rating or it may be a percentage of the bus speed. Check with your motherboard manual about the proper methods for setting the timings for memory.

user account window vista

How to Add a User Account in Windows Vista

Windows Vista, along with other Windows operating systems, gives its users the ability to create multiple accounts for multiple people. This allows each person to have their own programs running and access their website folders and personal email accounts. Adding a new user account in Windows Vista can be done in a matter of minutes.

Instructions

    • 1
      Click the Windows icon on your task bar (or "Start" if you're using Classic View).
    • 2
      Choose "Control Panel" and click it.
    • 3
      Click on the "User Accounts" icon.
    • 4
      Choose "Manage Another Account." If prompted, click "Continue."
    • 5
      Click "Create a New Account" in the Manage Accounts window.
    • 6
      Enter your new account name and choose whether you wish for the account to be an administrator or a standard user.
    • 7
      Click on "Create Account."
    • 8
      Access the account by exiting the Manage Accounts window and clicking "Start" (or the Windows icon) on your task bar, then clicking the arrow in the bottom right-hand corner. From the side menu, click "Log Off." Click on your new account to sign into it.

control panel xp user account

Instructions

    • 1
      Click the "Start" button. Select "Control Panel." Double click "User Accounts," and then click "Create a New Account." Click "Next."
    • 2
      Type the name for the new account and click 'Next."
    • 3
      Pick the type of account. Computer administrators can view all files, alter all the computer settings, make system-wide changes and add, delete or change user accounts. A limited user can only modify the password for that user account, pick the desktop appearance, view files created by that user or view files in the Shared Documents folder.
    • 4
      Click "Create Account." The User Account screen will reappear. The new user account will be listed on the list of accounts.
    • 5
      Choose "Change an Account" under the "Pick a Task" menu to customize the new user account. Select the new account when prompted to pick and account to change.
    • 6
      Select the option to change. Options include password creation, user name change, picture or icon change and account type change.
    • 7
      Confirm any changes to the user account. When all changes have been completed, close out of the "User Account" window by clicking the red box in the upper-right corner of the screen. The new user account will appear when the computer restarts, or when the "Switch User" command is activated at logoff.

"Windows 7 System Repair Disc

Important: You'll need a disc burner to create a Windows 7 System Repair Disc. A USB device is not a supported bootable media in this case.
Follow these steps to create a Windows 7 System Repair Disc:
Difficulty: Easy
Time Required: Creating a System Repair Disc in Windows 7 should only take around 5 minutes.

Here's How:

  1. Click on Start -> All Programs -> Maintenance.
  2. Click on the Create a System Repair Disc shortcut.
  3. Choose your optical disc drive from the Drive: drop-down box.
  4. Insert a blank disc in your optical drive.
    Note: An empty CD should be large enough for a System Repair Disc. I created a Windows 7 System Repair Disc on a new Windows 7 32-bit installation and it was only 145MB. If you only have a blank DVD or BD available, that's okay too of course.
  5. Click the Create disc button.
    Windows 7 will now create the System Repair Disc on the blank disc you inserted in the previous step. No special disc burning software is required.
  6. After the System Repair Disc creation is complete, Windows 7 displays a dialog box that you can close by clicking the Close button.
  7. Click the OK button back on the original Create a system repair disc window that's now showing up on your screen.
  8. Label the disc as "Windows 7 System Repair Disc" and keep it someplace safe.
    You can now boot from this disc to access System Recovery Options, the set of system recovery tools available for the Windows 7 operating system.

format c drive with xp intallion os

How to Format a Hard Drive With Windows XP

How to Format a Hard Drive With Windows XP thumbnail
Format a Hard Drive With Windows XP
If you want to format a hard drive while using or installing Windows XP, you've come to the right place. This can be very useful for clearing everything off a secondary drive or when installing a fresh copy of Windows. Formatting a computer hard drive is simple and can help eliminate viruses, storage issues and other hard-to-resolve problems.
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Instructions

  1. Preparation

    • 1
      When you format a computer hard drive you will lose everything that is on the drive. Therefore, it is very important to back up anything you might want later. Additionally, if you are going to be formatting and installing XP you need to make sure you have the discs for any applications or third party hardware you use since you will need to re-install your programs and drivers after re-installing Windows.
    • 2
      Take a moment to think of anything that you have on the computer that you wouldn't want to lose. Generally, you probably want everything in your My Documents folder, and you also want to save things like your favorites or bookmarks from your Web browser. Remember that each user on the computer has his or her own My Documents folder, Desktop items and Favorites/Bookmarks.
    • 3
      Save everything to a CD, DVD or a hard drive that you won't be formatting.

    Formatting a Secondary Hard Drive

    • 4
      Right-Click on the "My Computer" icon either on your desktop or in the Start Menu and select "Manage."
    • 5
      A new window titled "Computer Management" comes up. Select "Storage" from the left hand side by clicking it once, then select "Disk Management(local)" from the right side by double-clicking it.
    • 6
      Now in the lower part of the main frame (right side) of the window you should see a nice visual of all your hard drives. Each line is a different drive. Each box on a line (with a colored bar at the top and a size displayed in MB or GB) is a partition on the drive. Partitions are separations of space on a drive. Unless you are doing something specific that requires multiple partitions, you only want one partition per drive.
    • 7
      First you must delete any existing partitions on the drive you are going to format. Do this by right-clicking on the partition's box and selecting "Delete Partition..." Since you already know that you will be deleting everything on the drive, and have already backed everything up, you can safely say yes to any warning the computer presents you with.
    • 8
      If there are multiple partitions make sure you have saved everything off them since they might each have different drive letters (i.e. "D:" or "F:"). Then repeat the above step for each of them. If you only want to format one partition that is OK and you can continue to the next step without deleting the other partitions.
    • 9
      The box for the drive to be formatted should now have a black bar at the top of it and should say "Unallocated" under its size (see picture). Right click on it and select "New Partition..." The New Partition Wizard comes up.
    • 10
      In the New Partition Wizard click next. On the next page make sure "Primary Partition" is selected and click next. Now make the size equal to the maximum (it should already be set to it), and click next again. On the next page the computer will automatically choose the first available drive letter for the new drive. However, if you like you can choose another drive letter from the drop-down menu, and then click next.
    • 11
      Finally the New Partition Wizard asks if you would like to format the new partition and if so what format. Choose "NTFS" as it is faster and more secure. Leave the "Allocation unit size" as "Default." In the "Volume label" field enter whatever name you want the drive to have. Simple is better. Avoid using spaces. Lastly, if the drive is brand new and has never been used before check the "Perform a quick format" box. If the drive has been used before leave this box unchecked. Leave the "Enable file and folder compression" box unchecked and click next. Then on the next page click finish.
    • 12
      The wizard will now spend a little while formatting the drive. On old or large drives this may take a while. Do not close the "Computer Management" window until it finishes. You will know it is done when the word under the size of the drive changes from "Formatting" to "Healthy" and the name and drive letter you chose for the new drive show up. After it is finished you can proceed to use your newly formatted drive.

    Formatting and Installing from the Windows XP CD

    • 13
      This section explains how to reformat a drive from the Windows XP installation CD. This can be used when installing a fresh copy of Windows onto a computer. Here it is especially important to backup all of your important information because upon formatting you will lose EVERYTHING that used to be on the drive. This includes all applications and device drivers, so you must back up everything you can.
    • 14
      Insert your Windows XP installation disc into your CD drive (Home or Pro--it does not matter).
    • 15
      Now as you computer boots a little more it will say "Press any key to boot from CD.." press a key to do so.
    • 16
      The CD will load up a blue screen and then spend a while loading files it needs. When it is finished it will list a few options, mainly "Press ENTER to set up Windows XP." Press Enter or Return.
    • 17
      Now you will be at a screen to select where to install Windows to. This is where you can delete old partitions and format drives. The box in the bottom half of the screen shows all your drives and the partitions that exist on them. Use the Up and Down arrow keys to highlight your "C:" partition and press the 'D' key (if all that shows up is "Unpartitioned space" and you have no C: or D: partitions, skip this step). On the next screen press the 'L' key to finalize deleting the partition.
    • 18
      Now you are back on the screen to choose where to install Windows. The box on the lower half of the screen should no longer show a partition but simply have an entry "Unpartitioned space xxxxxMB." Select this with the arrow keys and press the 'C' key to create a partition on the drive. The next screen tells you the minimum and maximum sizes the partition can be and lets you pick the size. The default size is the maximum, but double check that the number entered is the maximum and hit enter.
    • 19
      Now you will again be back at the choose where to install Windows screen. But this time you will have a partition that looks something like this "C: Partition1 [New (Raw)]xxxxxxMB." Highlight this entry and press enter.
    • 20
      The next screen lets you choose which file system to format the drive with. Choose NTFS as it is faster and more secure. If the drive is brand new and has never been used before then use one of the options that ends in "(Quick)." Or, choose one of the lower down options. Use the arrow keys to select the proper one and press Enter or Return.
    • 21
      From here you are all set and the installation of Windows will proceed starting with a format of your drive. This will take a while (over half an hour) so you can take a little break.

Friday, 28 September 2012

Windows8Menu: Get The New Windows 8 Side

Windows8Menu: Get The New Windows 8 Side Menu And Swipeable Lock Screen Feature In Windows 7

Posted June 16, 2011 – 5:59 pm in: Windows 8 AND 7 Guides
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If you have watched the recently revealed Windows 8 preview video by Microsoft, you probably have noticed a small menu in the right-side of the screen which lets the user to quickly search, share, connect, and move to Start screen. Please watch the official preview video to have a look at the new sidebar menu.
Windows 8 Side Menu
The all new sidebar menu in the right-side of the screen in Windows 8 tablet UI is a great feature to quickly move, share, and connect with a click. If you are on Windows 7, you can now get the side menu in your Windows 7 as well.

A devinatart member, vhanla, has developed a small application which imitates the new side menu in your Windows 7. When you run the application, it adds a new Start page with date and time on the screen. Move the mouse cursor to right-side of your screen to access the side menu.
Windows 8 Menu for Windows 7
The application also adds the Windows 8 tablet UI style application switcher. The apps switcher, however, doesn’t work well now as this is an alpha release.
How to use this:
# Download and run the application to get the new lock screen.
# Left-click on the lock screen and drag it to the top (swipe up from the lower bottom of the screen) to view the all new Start page with live tiles.

Please note that the application is still in alpha stage. Compatible with both x86 and x64 versions of Windows 7.

Windows 8 PC Settings


Windows 8 PC Settings [Complete Guide]

BY:MAYUR KHOKHAR
PC users have long been using Control Panel as the hub for controlling their system settings. With the introduction of Metro UI in Windows 8, this is going to change. While the Control Panel is still there for desktop mode, there has been a new hub introduced in Windows 8 called PC settings, that lets you change several important settings of your PC from a beautiful, streamlined, no-frills interface.
Today, with the release of Microsoft Windows 8 Release Preview, we are bringing you extensive coverage of all the new features in Microsoft’s latest operating system. This post is a part of our Windows 8 Week. To learn more, check out our complete coverage of Windows 8 Consumer Preview.
Windows-8-PC-Settings

This guide is a part of our series on detailed coverage of Windows 8 New Features and Improvements.
  1. How To Install Windows 8 On VirtualBox
  2. What’s New In Windows 8 Desktop, Start Search, And Start Menu
  3. The Complete Guide To Windows 8 Explorer, New Ribbon Tools And Options
  4. The Complete Guide To Windows 8 Task Manager, New Features And Options
  5. Windows 8 PC Settings [Complete Guide] (Currently Viewing)
  6. How To Refresh Or Reset Your Windows 8 PC [Complete Guide]
  7. All About Windows 8 FileName Collisions And Copy/Move Dialog Box
  8. The Complete Guide To Windows 8 Startup Menu
  9. Sync Windows 8 User Settings Between PCs & Tablets via Windows Live ID
  10. Quick Overview Of Windows Lock Screen 
  11. The Complete Guide To Windows 8 File History Backup 

Accessing PC Settings

PC Settings can be accessed as follows:

  1. Bring up the Charms bar on the right. This can be done on a PC by by hitting Windows key + C on the keyboard or hovering the mouse for a short while in the top-right corner. On tablets or PCs with a touch screen, just swipe your finger from the right edge leftwards.
  2. On the Charms bar, hit ‘Settings’.
  3. Now hit the ‘Change PC settings’ link that shows up at the end.

Now let’s take a look PC settings in detail.

Personalize

Windows 8 PC Settings Personalize Lock Screen
The Personalize section allows you to change settings for your Lock screen, Start screen and Account picture. Under Lock screen settings, you can change the lock screen wallpaper, select apps like Calendar, Messaging and Email to show status and notifications on lock screen, and also select other apps like Calendar to show additional, detailed information like your agenda and appointments.

Under Start screen settings, you can select a background for the Start screen and change the background color, from a pre-define set of background designs and colors available.

Finally, you can change your account picture to an existing file on your computer or SkyDrive, or directly take one from your computer’s camera for the purpose.

Users


User settings let you choose between using your Microsoft account to login to Windows, or just a local account the way it was on Windows 7. You can also change your password, create a picture password or create a 4-digit PIN for logging in. It even lets you allow your PC users to wake the PC and access the currently signed-in user without having to enter the password. If you click the Change button, it will affect all accounts on the PC. Once this setting is enabled, your PC users can access the signed-in account without entering the password. Lastly, you can add new users by clicking Add a user, and remove existing users’ accounts.

Notifications


Here, you can manage notification settings. You can turn them on or off, choose whether notifications are shown on the lock screen or not, and enable or disable notification sounds. You can also enable or disable notifications for Calendar, Internet Explorer, Mail, Messaging, Music, Store, Video and other installed metro apps.

Search


In this section, you have the options to choose whether to let Windows keep your search history or not and if history is enabled, you can also set Windows to show the apps you search most on the top of search results. Lastly, you can set which apps can be used to provide you with additional search results.

Share



Here, you can control which apps appear when you click ‘Share’ from the Charms bar, as well as the ability to organize them in the list based on frequency of use.

General


In the General section, you will find settings for your time zone, enabling/disabling app switching between recent apps, autocorrect settings, language settings, PC reset options and advanced system startup and restore settings.

Privacy

Windows 8 PC Settings Privacy
Here, you can allow or deny apps access to your personal information such as location, real name and account picture. You can also choose whether or not apps can send the links of web content that you access from the apps (including the websites you visit) to Windows Store, which (according to Microsoft) is done in order to improve Windows Store.

Devices


Here, you can manage devices connected to your computer, as well as devices present on the network. You can also choose if device driver software can be automatically downloaded or upgraded from the internet when your computer is using a metered internet connection (like 3G/4G).

Wireless


In Wireless settings, you can enable/disable all wireless communication using Airplane mode, or enable/disable individual wireless devices like Wi-Fi, 3G/4G data connection (if present) and Bluetooth.

Ease of Access

Windows 8 PC Settings Ease of Access
Here, you can manage accessibility settings like high contrast, large text, caret browsing, narration, notification display time, cursor thickness etc.

Sync your settings

Windows 8 PC Settings Sync
Under sync settings, you can select the settings you want to sync with Microsoft account, and manage how Windows syncs all the PC settings.

HomeGroup

Windows 8 PC Settings HomeGroup
The HomeGroup section lets you join a HomeGroup for easily sharing documents, music, pictures, videos, printer and devices with other computers on the same HomeGroup. You can also create your own HomeGroup here, which generates a password that you can use on other computers in order to join it.

Windows Update



Lastly, the Windows Update section helps you check for important updates and install them if available.

That’s pretty much it for Windows 8 PC Settings. Stay tuned for more of our Windows 8 coverage.

window 8 new feature

Windows 8 – New Features Exposed

Codrut Nistor September 21, 2011 2
Windows 8 may not be available for the average Jane/Joe yet, but a lot of people are already talking about the new features it’s going to have, not to mention those brave enough to take it for a spin already  if you think you’re up to the task, but didn’t hear about the Windows 8 download freely available so far) and experience some of those features by themselves. As you probably know already, I’m one of those who likes to watch new Windows versions and only try them after the final release, sometimes waiting for the first service pack to arrive, too, before considering that OS worthy of having me as its user.


Today, we’ll just check some of those features that make a lot of people go “WoW!” and also add a few thoughts for each of them. While others talk about up to one hundred such things, I’ll keep it short and simple, as usual – 15 is more than enough, if you ask me. What about the rest? Nothing but minor improvements that people like to call “major inovations” and, in most cases, have been used for quite some time by various products – for example, its “specially designed” touch interface or Task Manager’s split into App Monitor and Process Monitor. L-A-M-E!!! 1. Antivirus included right inside the kernel of the operating system, so the system won’t even boot if an infected USB drive is plugged, for example! In theory, it sounds great. We only need to see how it stands the test of time after Windows 8 is finally released to manufacturing and more and more users adopt it…
2. Metro UI and the conventional Windows Desktop Interface, both available in the same system. Hmmm… Windows Media Center, anyone? I think they’d better offer one version just for tablets and one for desktop computers/”old school” laptops. Just my 5 cents…
3. Incredibly fast boot up time – at the Build Windows 8 conference, a three-year old laptop managed to boot Windows 8 in less than 10 seconds! Another one that sounds great at this time, but I want to see it happening with the final release, too. ;)
4. Drive encryption capability for tablets – if you’re crazy about keeping your data secured, this surely sounds like a good one!
5. Hardware acceleration available by default for all applications, no extra efforts needed. Add a bunch of cross-platform tools to that, so you can easily write apps for all hardware – if using Visual Studio on a tablet sounds normal to you… ;)
6. Two versions of IE 10, one of them being specifically designed for tablets and Metro UI. Just great – so we should expect another IE version that doesn’t work on Windows XP, right? I think I’ll swtich to Linux for good one of these days…
7. Finally, Microsoft decided to offer native support for ISO and VHD files in an operating system. About a decade later than it should have, but still a good idea…
8. 128-bit display and native support for USB 3.0 look great, too!
9. Windows 8′s disk defragmenter is – finally – able to take care of your SSD drives and performing the TRIM command is easier than in Windows 7. I don’t know about you, but this still sounds like “our defragmenter sucks, get a third party solution, there are dozens of good ones” to me…
10. A lot of sources claim that Windows 8 will offer an improved gaming platform and, more than just that, future may bring integration of Xbox Live. I just hope it doesn’t offer an improved gaming platform the same way Windows 7 did…
11. “History vault” is a new feature that will provide automatic backup and only noobs will use. For serious users, there are always a lot of free and paid excellent backup solutions! ;)
12. On the other hand, Portable Workspace sounds great – if you got any external drive with at least 16 GB of free space, you can easily create a portable image, a clone or a whole system backup. Awesome!
13. Genuine Center is another feature that sounds good in theory – it will allow you to enter or change your license key, as well as to view the genuine/pirated status of your license. In practice, I don’t think this will stop people from using pirated versions… only that it will help some of those who pay for pirated software to realize that they didn’t get what they thought they would.
14. Same system requirements as Windows 7 – sounds good, in theory. On the other hand, I think some tablets that are currently running Android 3.0 like a charm surely can’t run Windows 7, so my guess is that Windows 8 tablets will be more expensive than the competitors, probably even than Apple’s iPad. Sure, I may be wrong – we just need to wait and see what’s what…
15. New keyboard shortcuts, mouse-only mode, a lot of interface tweaks. Some may love them, but I think that old things that work should stay. That’s one of the reasons that still keeps a lot of people away from Windows 7 and Microsoft simply doesn’t get it – or doesn’t want to…
I guess that’s all for today, but if you think I missed something, please go ahead and let the world know – is there any Windows 8 feature worth checking out that I didn’t mention above? Thank you in advance for your time!

windows 8 feature

mayur khokhar softwere enginier

Windows 8 Features

Codrut Nistor June 20, 2011 2
Someone at Microsoft should step forward and make one thing clear: Windows 8 should have a serious nickname. While the “Windows 2000 Millennium Edition” moniker sounded much better to me than the product was (I know, I know – the product was a pretty big failure), I think Windows 8 should be advertised as “Windows 8 Doomsday Edition” or at least “Windows 2012: The End of the World,” don’t you think? Well, now that we got through this, let’s move to those Windows 8 features already announced – or at least rumored, shall we?


Since there have been rumors regarding a lot of Windows 8 features we should expect, I’ll quickly go through all of them, pointing out their highs and lows, finally closing the article with my personal thoughts regarding the future of Microsoft’s flagship product. Ready or not, here we go… 1. Cloud integration – a feature that looks great in theory, surely not something people with secrets would enjoy; the good part is that ISPs will surely get much more people changing their subscriptions to faster plans, while the bad part is that no serious power user will trust Microsoft’s remote storage. I wouldn’t be amazed to see Microsoft offering various storage plans for a price, either…
2. Silly Improved user interface – I’ve seen a few screenshots, and it seems Microsoft is going to target tablets and other similar devices, too – I wouldn’t be amazed to see Windows 8 powering GPSs, PMPs and other touch-screen gadgets. The only problem is that Android is doing pretty well and I think that using Android on desktop computers or laptops is just as hilarious as the UI Windows 8 is expected to get (the screenshots look like Microsoft is trying to release an OS for kids…).
3. Networking, core/performance, virtualization improvements – aren’t they always saying a lot of things got improved? Nothing special here, I would really like to see it in action, then we’ll talk – I’m not expecting Windows 8 to beat Mac OS X or Linux in any area, when it comes to performance. Do you? ;)
4. Kinect built-in – another way to push hardware upgrades up our throats. Some will surely say that this is the way of the future, but I think I’ll stay with my old mouse & keyboard. I bet I won’t be the only one.
5. A new Windows Explorer – I’m not expecting anything from it. Really, they should allow you to choose one of the many decent free or commercial file managers out there right from the start, instead of forcing that piece of s&*t file manager wannabe up your throat. :|
6. Windows Marketplace with Xbox – too little, too late, but surely a not-so-bad idea. On the other hand, I must say I enjoy searching for software by myself instead of being fed pieces of code “approved by Microsoft.” Again, I’m sure I’m not the only one feeling this way…
7. Energy efficiency improvements – instant on, improved sleep/resume operations, lower power usage. Great, awesome, bring them on!
Other than the above, I don’t know what else I should add, except the fact that I think Windows 8 could be Microsoft’s greatest hit so far… or its greatest miss. Speaking for myself, I think I’ll stick to my good old Windows XP for as long as possible, then switch to my Windows 7 laptop, then… probably get a Mac or switch to Linux. What do you think, sounds like a good plan? :)

wab sites block

Block Time-Wasting & Adult Websites Without Software

mayur khokhar trick

Does your kid spend too much time on a certain website like Facebook? Have you discovered porn sites in the history of your browser after your kid has been on the computer? Nowadays the users of the internet vary from kids, teenagers to adults. You can’t ask your kid to stop using internet but you can control what they can see on the internet.
In a previous article I explained How to Block Inappropriate Videos on YouTube, today I’ll show you How to Block Time-Wasting and Adult Websites without software. In 4 simple steps you can block as many websites as you desire.
Let’s start:
1- Click “Start”>Run, type the Following path “C:/Windows/System32/drivers/etc/hosts” without quotes, open it using notepad (or any other desired editor).
2- Notepad will pop up (If you chose to open the file using notepad), lookup for “127.0.0.1 localhost”
3- After “127.0.0.1 localhost” type the website that you want to block in the following format “127.0.0.1 webaddress.com”, e.g. I want to block google.com “127.0.0.1 google.com”
You can add as many websites as you want, just make sure that you enter one website per line, if you want to unblock specific website just remove it.