Friday, March 26, 2010

0 Linux Basic Commands

Here is a list of basic Linux commands Very usefull i suppose.

For changing directory / to /etc
[root@pc1 /]# cd /etc
 
 
One step back /etc to /
[root@pc1 etc]# cd ..
 
 
Go to previous working directory
[root@pc1 /]# cd -
 
 
Go to current login user home directory
[root@pc1 etc]# cd ~
 
 
Show the contents of /etc in single color
[root@pc1 ~]# dir /etc
 
 
Show the contents of /etc in different colors with nature of contents
[root@pc1 ~]# Ls /etc
 
 
create a folder on root partition
[root@pc1 ~]# mkdir /disk
 
 
Create a folder in /disk
[root@pc1 ~]# mkdir /disk/dir
 
 
Create multiple folder in multiple directories with single command
[root@pc1 ~]# mkdir /etc/dir1 /var/dir2 /usr/dir3
 
 
Create multiple folder in same directory
[root@pc1 ~]# mkdir dir1 dir2 dir3
 
 
Copy a file in directory
[root@pc1 disk]# cp file dir
 
 
Copy a file from /disk/file and paste it in /disk/dir/
[root@pc1 disk]# cp /disk/file /disk/dir
 
 
Copy a directory with –r option
[root@pc1 disk]# cp -r dir dir2
 
 
Copy a file from /disk/file and paste it in /etc with myfile name
[root@pc1 disk]# cp /disk/file /etc/myfile
 
 
Remove a file
[root@pc1 disk]# rm file
 
 
Remove a file with forcefully option
[root@pc1 disk]# rm –f file
 
 
Remove a directory with out –r option and you face will an error
[root@pc1 disk]# rm dir
 
 
Remove a directory with –r option
[root@pc1 disk]# rm -r /disk
 
 
Remove a directory with forcefully option
[root@pc1 disk]# rm -rf dir
 
 
Move /etc/dir1 to /disk/ with different name
[root@pc1 disk]# mv /etc/dir1 /disk/mydir
 
 
Rename the folder name mydir to dir
[root@pc1 disk]# mv /disk/mydir /disk/dir
 
 
Rename the file name with myfile
[root@pc1 disk]# mv file myfile
 
 
Read a file page by page with less command
[root@pc1 disk]# less /etc/grub.conf
 
 
Read a file page by page with more command
[root@pc1 disk]# more /etc/qrub.conf
 
 
Read first ten lines of grub.conf
[root@pc1 disk]# head /etc/grub.conf
 
 
Read last ten lings of grub.conf
[root@pc1 disk]# tail /etc/grub.conf
 
 
Read first 12 lines with –n option
[root@pc1 disk]# head -n 12 /etc/grub.conf
 
 
Read last 11 lines with –n option
[root@pc1 disk]# tail -n 11 /etc/grub.conf
 
 
Copy the contents of /etc/grub.conf in /disk/file
[root@pc1 disk]# cat /etc/grub.conf > /disk/file
 
 
Append the contents /etc/mtab in /etc/file
[root@pc1 disk]# cat /etc/mtab >> /disk/file
 
 
Merging tow commands with pipe sign output of the first command is input of second command
[root@pc1 disk]# cat /etc/squid/squid.conf I more
 
 
Count the total lines of squid.conf
[root@pc1 disk]# cat /etc/squid/squid.conf I wc -L
 
 
Show only spool words in squid.conf
[root@pc1 disk]# cat /etc/squid/squid.conf I grep spool
 
 
Flush the contents of file
[root@pc1 disk]# cat /dev/null > /var/log/messages

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Thursday, March 25, 2010

0 Yahoo! Messenger 10.0.0.1258 Final + Mega Skins Pack


Yahoo! Messenger is a popular advertisement-supported instant messaging client and associated protocol provided by Yahoo!, that allows you to see when friends come online and to send them instant messages.It also can alert you to new e-mail in your Yahoo Mail or Yahoo Personals ***s, or when you have upcoming events recorded in your Yahoo Calendar. Yahoo Messenger offers firewall support, a standby mode that minimizes the program until an Internet connection is made, the ability to save and print your conversations, and a tabbed interface that provides quick access to your favorite stocks, news, and sports scores.
Yahoo! Messenger is provided free of charge and can be downloaded and used with a generic "Yahoo! ID" which also allows access to other Yahoo! services, such as Yahoo! Mail, where users can be automatically notified when they rece
ive new email.

Yahoo! also offers PC-PC, PC-Phone and Phone-to-PC service, file transfers, webcam hosting, text messaging service, and chat rooms in various categories.

Other features include the ability to create a chat room automatically, stock price alerts, the ability to send messages to friends (even if they're not online when you are), a Quick Compact mode that hides the Messenger tools to maximize your viewing area, Messenger Themes, and voice chat, which allows you to talk for free to anybody else on the Internet. It also includes Launchcast Radio, Yahoo Games, and Yahoo Audibles. Using a Webcam, you can see who you're chatting with or view the Webcam of any Yahoo member who has granted you access.

Yahoo! Messenger Mega Skins Pack
A Lil Bit Girly
Alien.rar
All American
Apollo
Aqua
Aqua Blue.rar
Atlanta Falcons.rar
Baby Blue P ink.zip
Baby Blue.zip
Baby Doll
Baby Doll.zip
Base Blue.zip
Base Faces.zip
Battleship Gray.zip
Bio Hazard
Black and White
Black Widow
Black Widow 2
Black.zip
Blue
Blue Jeans
BlueSky
Bronze
Budweiser.zip
Care Bears
Celadon
Christmas Wreath.rar
Classic Christmas.zip
Coral Blue.rar
Corona
Crimson Night
D-Devil
December.zip
Dutch Treat
ENHigh Tech.rar
Gel LED (Blue).zip
Gel LED (Green)
Google Talk
Graphite
Gray&Orange
Green Bay Packers.rar
Half Life 2
Halloween.zip
Halloweenish
Halo 2
Hannelore’s Skin
Heaven.zip
Hunter Green
Hunter Green.zip
Indigo
iTunes
iYahoo!
Jack Daniels.rar
Longhorns.rar
M&M’s
MacOS X Tiger
Mango Italiano
Maverick Blue
Mechanized.zip
Metallic Black
Old Skool
OliveXP
Orange Insanity
Pepsi.rar
Pink
Pink Lilac.zip
Pipeline
Pretty in Pink
Purple Haze.zip
Purple Passion.zip
Queeeenz Blue
Queeeenz Dusty Rose
Queeeenz Forest
Queeeenz Purple
Teck
The Victorian.zip
Toe Bee’s Dolphins
Toe Bee’s Skins
Valentine.zip
Vortex Pink
Vortex Red
Windows Media 10.zip
XBOX 360
Xminimum
Xtreme XP (Blue)
XtremeXP (Blue).rar
Y! Vista

Install the skins:

[a] if the files are ZIP-ed:

1. Open the .zip file with WinZip.

2. Extract all the files into C:\. Make sure that "Use folder names" is checked. If Yahoo! Messenger is installed on a different hard drive, replace "C:\" with the appropriate drive letter.

3. Select Change Skin... from the Messenger menu.

[b] if the file is an EXE you only have to run it :)

... after the skin is installed, you can see it and change it from Yahoo Messenger preference, Appearance --> Change Skin

DOWNLOAD
http://adf.ly/46394/ilix.in/02ebc
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Wednesday, March 24, 2010

0 How To Change The Date Or Time Of Your Recent Post In Blogger

The date and time settings for a post are beneath the post-editing field, just click the "Post Options" link:


This will reveal some more settings for your post, including the date and time, which are on the right-hand side.
Once you've selected a new date and time, be sure to publish your post.
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0 Picking of Genuine Web Hosting Company

Now a days, genuine hosting companies has the ‘ISO’ certified hosting. Before selecting one particular hosting company, First go through their website completely and check the hosting features that you needed is available in their hosting plans and server support.

1. Website ranking of the web-hosting provider.
2. Search their hosting company name in the forums / blogs / public discussion websites. Find the users experience and reviews.
3. No. of satisfied customer.
4. Location of their server resides.
5. Back-up server available or not.
6. Complete postal address / contact nos. of their company available or not.
7. Their awards and rewards.
8. Check their premium customers list.
9. Check their premium customer website, speed, downtime, options and features etc.,
10. Compare Pricing with other best hosting servers.
11. Check the support of 24/7 available or not.
12. Check customer support contact through online live chat / email / phone / fax.
13. FAQ’s available or not.
14. Easy Payment methods available or not.


So, if you are willing to host your/company website, go through the above criteria and choose the best webhosting server, without any risk to your business.
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Sunday, March 7, 2010

0 Repair Windows Xp When It Goes Down Or Corrupted

This option lets you completely andnondestructively rebuild, repair, or refre$h an existing XP
installation while leaving already-installed software alone (no
reinstallation needed!).

It also leaves user accounts, names, and passwords untouched and takes
only a fraction of the time a full, from-scratch reinstall does.

And unlike a traditional full reinstall, this option doesn't leave you with two copies of XP on your hard drive.

Instead, you end up with just the original installation, but repaired, refreshed, and ready to go.

When you're facing the prospects of a total reformat/reinstall, stop!

Try the no-reformat reinstall technique i'm about to illustrate, and
you just may get your XP setup running again in no time.

The no-reformat reinstall operation starts with a normal boot from an XP setup CD

Start your PC with the setup CD in a drive, and hit a key when you see the following screen:


Boot from your XP setup CD to gain access to the no-reformat reinstall option.

If instead of booting to the CD your PC boots from the hard drive, you may need to modify your PC's "boot order."

It's easy and only takes a minute to make the change so that the PC
will check for a bootable CD before trying to boot from the hard drive.

Once your PC starts to boot from the CD, you'll see something like what's shown in Screen 2:


Let the CD boot proceed normally and automatically through "Setup is
inspecting your computer's hardware..." to the "Windows Setup" screen.

After a minute or two, you'll see the "Windows Setup/Setup is starting Windows" screen, shown in Screen Three.

Don't be alarmed:

It's still just the setup process running, and nothing's been changed on your PC yet.


The "Starting Windows" screen is a bit of an overstatement; it's just the setup process getting going.

Windows, as we normally think of it, isn't running yet, and no changes have been made to your PC.

Soon after Screen Three, you'll be presented with the normal "Welcome to Setup" screen, as shown in Screen Four.


The "Welcome to Setup" screen is poorly worded; the "Repair" option we want isn't the one explicitly offered here.

In fact, the repair option we want isn't shown at all.

See the text for full detail.

The poorly worded options in Screen Four lead many users astray.

The only mention of "Repair" here is "...repair a Windows XP
installation using Recovery Console..." but that's not the no-reformat
repair/reinstall we're seeking. (The Recovery Console Repair option is
useful in its own right for fixing relatively minor problems with the
operating system, and we fully explore it in the links listed above.)

The repair option we do want--a nondestructive, no-reformat
reinstall--is actually hidden beneath the Setup option, "To set up
Windows XP now, press ENTER."

So hit Enter, just as if you were setting up Windows afresh and from scratch.

The next screen, about licensing, gives no reassurances that you're on
the right path for a nondestructive repair/reinstall--in fact, it's the
same screen you see when you're setting XP up on a virgin hard drive.

But this is only the first of many screens that the Repair option will borrow from a full-blown setup.

Press F8 to accept the licensing terms and to go on.

Next, the XP setup process will show another screen that you may recall
from your initial setup of XP. It searches for "a previous version of
Microsoft Windows."

In our case, we're not replacing a previous version of Windows, but
rather repairing the very same version that's on the setup CD--but
that's OK; it's just another poorly worded screen.


Our intent is to repair the same version of Windows as is on the setup
CD, but another poorly worded screen makes it seem like you're
upgrading a previous version of Windows or installing one anew.

But don't let the bad wording alarm you; we're still on track for a nondestructive reinstall.

Screen Seven finally shows verbiage that's not recycled from the generic XP setup, but is specific to our Repair task.

Setup should find your damaged copy of XP and present it for repair, as shown:


At long last, Setup begins to refer to a Repair option. Here, Setup
should have found your damaged XP setup, which you can select and then
press R to start the nondestructive repair.

If your damaged copy of XP isn't highlighted in the list box, highlight
it now. When it's selected, press R to start the repair process.

The Repair process then selectively deletes system files in the
Windows folder and subfolders and copies undamaged replacement files
from the setup CD to their proper locations.


The Repair process then works on the current setup's Registry, leaving much of it intact and rebuilding the rest.


There's no fanfare, but this is one of the nicer parts of the Repair
process: Setup retains what it can in the current Registry so that
already-installed hardware and software will remain installed.

With the system files freshly copied and the Registry ready for rebuilding, the system needs to reboot.

Remove the CD from the drive so that the PC will boot to the hard drive instead of to the CD.

The first Repair reboot will take longer than normal.

Don't be alarmed. Also, don't be alarmed when Setup resumes.

Once again, it will appear that you're performing a full, from-scratch
setup; there's nothing on-screen to indicate that you're repairing an
existing version of XP.

But although the setup screens are the same as what you'd see in a full
install, it's still a repair process, as will become clearer in a
moment.

The first two of the Repair setup screens ask for your language preferences and product key.

Enter these normally.



When Setup resumes, it will appear that you're performing a full, from-scratch setup.

But don't worry--you're still indeed repairing your existing version of XP.

Many of the next few Repair screens will also be familiar.

The "installing devices" screen, for example, is identical to the one you normally see during a full, from-scratch setup.

But Repair is actually retaining much of the current setup's
configuration and so will move through these steps faster than in a
full setup.


The Repair version of the setup process skips or shortens many steps
because it already has the information it needs from the existing setup.

For example, Repair's "installing devices" and the network setup steps
are both much faster and require less user input than a new setup does.

The setup screens don't reflect the fact that a Repair proceeds much
faster than a normal, full setup. In fact, the time estimates in the
setup progress bar will be way off.

You'll be done in far less time than the progress bar predicts.


Just as with "installing devices," the network setup proceeds rapidly
because Setup can re-use many of the configuration details from the
current installation.

In fact, a Repair setup takes far less time than the installation progress bar indicates.

When this portion of the Repair is done, you'll see a "completing installation" screen:


The "completing installation" screen means most of the heavy lifting is
done, and you're just minutes away from finishing the repair operation.

Setup then reboots your PC again, and this reboot will also take longer than usual. This is normal.

With the bulk of the repair work done, your PC needs to reboot once more and will do so automatically.

The reboot will take a bit longer than a standard boot, but this is normal.

After the reboot, you'll be brought to an abbreviated version of the "Welcome To Windows" setup pages.

You'll be asked if you want to register and--depending on how badly
hosed the previous installation was--you may or may not be asked to
reactivate the copy of Windows.

Next, the setup software handles the final networking details and then offers a "thank you" screen.


In most cases, the system will now reboot for a final time.

The Repair is done. It's a normal boot, bringing you to the normal choices for login.

With a final, fully normal reboot, you're done.

Your copy of XP should be as good as new, but with all your previously
installed hardware, software, and user configuration data undamaged!

If all has gone as planned, you'll find all the user accounts and
passwords intact, all the hardware devices set up as before, and all
the previously installed software still installed and configured.

In fact, if all has gone as planned, the only significant change will
be that whatever problem your copy of XP was previously experiencing
will now be gone!

You now have a range of repair tools at your disposal, ranging from
simple on-the-fly fixes such as Registry cleaning and safe Mode fixes
to Recovery Console fixes, and, now, a nondestructive, no-reformat
repair/rebuild option.

With this information, you should almost never have to face a dreaded start-over-from-scratch reformat/reinstall of XP!
Read More..

Wednesday, March 3, 2010

0 Make Shapes Heart Shape And Other With Keyboard

This should work in any Windows word processor, text editor, browser or email client.

1. Make sure your keyboard is in NumLock mode.
2. Hold down the ALT key and enter the number on the numeric keypad. (Note that many laptops have a blue FN key that changes a set of keys, also with blue numbers on them and usually in the 7-8-9-U-I-O area, into a numeric keypad.)

for
   1  
for
   2
for 
    3
for 
    4
for 
   5
for 
    6
for  •    7
for 
   8
for  ○   9
for 
   10
for 
♂  11
for 
  12
for 
   13
for 
  14
for 
15
for 
16
for 
17
for  ↕  18
for  ‼   19
for  ¶   20
for  §    21
for 
22
for  ↨    23
for  ↑  24
for  ↓  25
for  →  26
for  ←  27
for  ∟   28
for  ↔ 29
for 
30
for 
31

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0 Funny PC Errors

 

  

  

  

  

  

  

  

  

 


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Tuesday, March 2, 2010

1 Free Desktop Utility To Download And Upload Videos And Photos To Facebook

Let me share a very handy and free application to upload photos to your Facebook account. It can save lots of precious time including a big effort to use the keyboard and type a lot.

Bloom is a multi platform desktop app that let you upload your photos and videos easily and efficiently to Facebook, download albums and view your friends' photos.
You can upload photos to a new or an existing album, you can tag them and you can view your friends photos.
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0 Remotely Power On A System


With SolarWinds free Wake-On-LAN, powering up a remote PC is no longer an issue. When the remote network adapter hears a "Magic Packet" created for its unique MAC address, the network adapter alerts the computer to power up. Wake-on-LAN is one of several free network monitoring tools provided by SolarWinds to our community of network engineers.
If Wake-On-LAN is enabled in the computer's BIOS settings, then the system will start up just as if the power button has been pressed. When a device is shut down, its network interface card is still receiving power and keeps listening on the network for a magic packet to arrive – enabling Wake-On-LAN to do its magic!

Wake-On-LAN can be downloaded from here.
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