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Wednesday, January 11, 2012

Free Domains

Hello Pals!
If you are wondering and surfing on internet or even trying to google out that where and what are the free domain names available, then you are at the right Blog for this!

It all starts with the diffent websites. Different websites provides different sub-domain and even different services for them.

From Free domains, we meant a domain name like www.yourdomain.co.cc, which will be available for FREE! You need not to pay any single penny.

The following the some of best FrEe Domains provider. Just visit the website mentioned below:
www.dot.tk - Top Level domain .tk, URL Forwarding, DNS Records and More.
Domain: www.you.tk

Following have features like: URL Forwarding, DNS Records, Cname, TXT, A and Much More.
www.co.cc
domain: www.you.co.cc

www.nic.cz.cc
Domain: www.you.cz.cc

www.cu.cc
Domain: www.you.cu.cc

www.c-o.in
Domain: www.you.c-o.in

www.com.co.in
Domain: www.you.com.co.in

www.free-domains.ce.ms
Domain: www.you.ce.ms

www.dotfree.com
Domain: www.you.free( N/A for Now ).

Saturday, September 17, 2011

Make Windows 7 Not Require a Password on Wake

Make Windows 7 Not Require a Password on Wake

Windows 7 makes the whole thing a lot easier—just head into Power Options in Control Panel, then click the “Require a password on wakeup” on the left-hand side.



Then click the “Change settings that are currently unavailable” link…

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Then you can click the “Don’t require a password” radio button, and make sure to Save your changes.

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Monday, June 20, 2011

How Do You Make Upside Down Text?


Have you ever seen somebody use upside down text on the web? Ever wonder how to do it? Let’s take a quick look at how the characters are actually put together, and show you an easy generator that will do it for you.
Upside down text is actually just a trick that uses special Unicode symbols that appear to be upside down letters, though they really aren’t turned upside down. By replacing the regular letters with the correct upside-down letters, it appears as though you’re writing upside down.

Upside Down Example

Here’s what it looks like when you write “how-to geek” upside down using Unicode characters:
ʞǝǝƃ oʇ-ʍoɥ
In case your browser or email client can’t process Unicode properly, this is what it should look like:
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Using Unicode Characters for Upside Down Text

If you want to use upside-down text or you just want to find some interesting Unicode symbols somewhere, you’ll need to start off by finding the right characters to use. Your best bet is to check out this massive list of Unicode characters over on Wikipedia, and just search for a character name that you’re looking for.
To make upside down text, you’ll look for the letters that are either meant to represent upside down characters, or at least look like them. So for instance, you can write the T character upside down by substituting one character for another:
t = ʇ
You’ll see this character in the list over on Wikipedia, and you’ll notice that there’s a code next to it, in this case 0287 is the Unicode character code for the upside-down T.
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You can use these upside-down characters in Word or most applications that have a richedit control by entering in that code and then hitting the Alt+X key combination. Note: you should be able to use the Alt+C key combination as well, but Alt+X seems to be more compatible.
sshot-2010-09-29-1-04-09-12
Obviously this could end up being really tedious, but it’s interesting to learn how to do it, right?

Where Does This Work?

Creating upside down text on your own PC might be fun for about 10 seconds, but you’re probably wondering where you can use elsewhere. Since Unicode text is not properly supported by all applications, it’s not going to always work in your instant messenger client—though you are welcome to test it out and let us know in the comments.
Where it does work quite well is most web sites like Twitter, Facebook, etc. This is because web browsers generally support UTF-8 or Unicode natively, as the web depends on those encoding formats.
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Generate Your Own Upside Down Text

Since creating upside down text the manual way is clearly going to be very, very tedious, we’ve put together a simple generator that makes the text for you. It doesn’t work perfectly, but it does work alright. Note: the generator currently only does lower case, so it’s going to convert whatever you write into lower case before making it upside down.
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Just put your text into the box, then hit the “Make it Upside Down” button. Once you’re done, you can copy and paste the text into some web site—soon all your Facebook friends are going to be very confused.

Add Your Gmail To Windows Live Mail


The cool thing with email these days is you can pretty much use any client you want and still be able to check most of your web based accounts.  Most POP accounts such as hotmail or Gmail are able to be checked with any client.  Here we will take a look at how to get your Gmail into Windows Live Mail. 
**  Note:  This is for Windows Live Mail and not Windows Mail which replaced Outlook Express and is included in Vista.  Windows Live Mail is a separate download via Windows Live Services.
For checking a Gmail account with different clients you do need to make sure your Gmail has POP enabled.  Go into your Gmail \ Settings \ Forwarding and POP/IMAP and enable POP to for all mail which will transfer the entire inbox or just the mail you get from this point forward.  Also you can choose weather or not to keep a copy on Google’s servers.
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The first thing you will want to do is log in to your Live account if you haven’t already and click on “Add an e-mail account”.
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Next enter in the account information for the email address, password and Display Name you want include and click on Next.
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You then get a message advising you to follow instructions on setting up POP in Gmail.  Just ignore that because we already set it up at the beginning of this article.  You may want to check this account as your default however.
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After everything is set up you will start getting messages from your Gmail account.  Pretty slick!
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We have covered setting up the major email clients using either POP or IMAP for Gmail.  Here is a list so you can use your favorite client with Gmail.

7 Search Tips You Probably Don’t Know About


Not a day passes by without doing an online search. You may know of basic search operators like AND, OR, etc. but an increasing number of web applications support even more keywords that’ll help you fine tune your search to the core. Here are some you may have never heard of.
1. Google: Use AROUND(n) for proximity search
Chances are you’ve never heard of Google’s AROUND(n) search operator. Using the AROUND(n) operator, you can specify the distance between two search terms.
For example, searching for obama AROUND(5) osama will return only those web pages that contain both these terms at a distance of five words. Could come in handy when you’re searching for name aliases, among other things. If you’re interested, check out this list containing relatively lesser known Google search operators.

2. Gmail: Search super-starred emails

Starring emails is one indispensable feature in Gmail and you’ve probably enabled Superstars labs addon. This feature gives you additional star icons to mark your messages so that you can differentiate important emails.
What many people don’t know is that you can search and find messages that have been marked by a specific star. For example, has:blue-info will restrict search results to those emails that are marked with a blue info star and not others.
Here are other search operators that you can use to find super-starred emails in Gmail:
has:yellow-star (or l:^ss_sy)
has:blue-star (or l:^ss_sb)
has:red-star (or l:^ss_sr)
has:orange-star (or l:^ss_so)
has:green-star (or l:^ss_sg)
has:purple-star (or l:^ss_sp)
has:red-bang (or l:^ss_cr)
has:yellow-bang (or l:^ss_cy)
has:blue-info (or l:^ss_cb)
has:orange-guillemet (or l:^ss_co)
has:green-check (or l:^ss_cg)
has:purple-question (or l:^ss_cp)
You really should thank the Google Operating System blog for bring these to light.

3. Gmail: Add Instant Search with CloudMagic

Gmail search simply leaves a lot to be desired. At least, in terms of speed. It’s pretty slow, especially if you have archived plenty of messages in your Gmail account. Enter CloudMagic – an addon for Firefox and Chrome that adds an instant search bar to Gmail.
Give your Gmail account credentials (don’t worry, they’re stored locally) and then click Ctrl + / to put the focus on the CloudMagic search bar. Start typing. Matching emails show up instantly as you type. If you live and die by Gmail, you gotta have CloudMagic installed. No excuse!

4. Bing: Find a new wallpaper in seconds

Google lets you use the imagesize operator to specify a resolution for image search results. You might have used this operator to search for wallpapers that satisfy your screen resolution. For example, searching for [nature imagesize:1366x768] will return pictures that are of that size.
Bing fares better in this arena. Just visit bing.com/images, type in your search term and choose Size > Wallpapers from the left panel. Bing will now show pictures that match your screen resolution. You needn’t explicitly specify it. One caveat: it doesn’t work if you have dual monitors. Hat tip: Labnol.

5. Evernote: Search notes based on the source they came from

If you’re an Evernote junkie, chances are you use it to dump stuff from a multitude of applications. What if you want to restrict searches to notes from a particular source? It’s easy, thanks to the built-in source operator.
For instance, source:mobile.* matches notes that were created in any mobile client and source:ms.app.* matches notes that were pasted into Evernote from a Microsoft application like Word, Excel, etc. Check out more advanced Evernote search parameters here.

6. Trunk.ly: Search the links you share across social networks

Do you share a dozen links on Twitter and Facebook every week and find it pretty hard to trace and find that particular article you shared even a week ago? Trunk.ly can help you find one link in seconds.
Go to www.trunk.ly and connect your Facebook and Twitter accounts. The app then indexes the links you’ve shared and makes them all searchable. You needn’t pull your hair to find that article you shared some time ago – just type a few words you remember about it and Trunk.ly will bring it up in seconds.
There’s support for Delicious, Instapaper, RSS feeds, Pinboard besides just Twitter and Facebook. If you’re a social media junkie, you definitely need to have a Trunk.ly account.

7. Windows: Exclude files and search only for folder names

The default Windows search feature is pretty good at finding your cluttered files across partitions. You might frequently use it to do searches if you often forget where you save your files. What if you want to restrict searches to only folder names?
It’s pretty easy, thanks to the in-built kind: operator. The next time you search for mp3 kind:folder, Windows will show only those folders that have mp3 in their names. Files will not appear in search results, even if they contain mp3 in their name.