Saturday, May 15, 2010

~*Windows Seven Installation Step by Step With Screen Shots*~

This is a screenshots of all the major elements and specific instructions on what choices to make when asked. This is as easy as it gets. If you want to install a fresh copy of Windows 7 and are looking for a step-by-step guide, complete with screenshots, you’re in the right place. Many Windows users have been waiting for Windows 7 for a while now but not everyone welcomes the installation process, however easy it may seem. So here is a step-by-step walkthrough of the installation process complete with descriptions of each step and screenshots so you can keep your bearings during the installation.


Step 1: Boot the computer from the Windows 7 installation DVD of your choice. Picking either the 32bit or 64bit depends on whether your hardware can support


Step 2: Press any key when prompted.
 
 
 
 
 
 
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------




Step 3 : Choose your preferred language from the drop-down menu.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Step 4: Click on the Install Now button unless you want to explore the other options.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Step 5: Check “I accept the license terms” box.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Step 6: Select the Custom (advanced) install option. The upgrade path is for those who want to upgrade an existing copy of Windows. You are of course free to do this, but it is much better to install a fresh copy, especially if using Windows 7 for the first time.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Step 7: So this is what you get after you click Custom on the previous screen. I suppose this could be a little confusing for the non geek installer, especially if there is a list of multiple partitions. Though by now I'm sure a lot of casual users have gotten somewhat of a grasp on what a hard drive is. I hope so anyway. I didn't go to the Advanced tab to do any partitioning or formatting, as I had one partition on this test I just clicked next.
 
 
 
 
 
Step 8: Alright, let the installation begin! Here setup copies archives over for extraction and installation on the hard drive.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Step 9:The files copied over pretty fast, now on to the extraction process. This didn't take long at all, about 6 minutes.


 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Step 10: OK, so files were extracted, now setup needs a restart to continue. No big deal, this part of the process went by quickly. Cue the boot images from the start of this blog.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Step 11: OK, so here we are, after the reboot and right back at it. Windows 7 starts services to continue installation.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Step 12: A quick glance back over to Windows 7's installation progress bar. I think really just to see the "Completing Installation" text. Cute.















Step 13: Alright, if my new Windows 7 wants a restart before it shows me my desktop goodness, then a restart it gets!

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Step 14: Right to action! I love it, at this point I can almost feel Windows 7 running through all 4GB of RAM and both cores. So here we go, lets pick a username! (and password if you want, Windows 7 is good like that)
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Step 15: A change from Vista, here on the Windows 7 installation it asks for the product after Windows is installed, for both systems though you can hit next without putting in a product key, this will install Windows 7 in a 30 day trial mode.























Step 16: It's always good to set the clock! Windows 7 needs to know what time it is! You can really leave this as anything, just set your time zone and date. Once Windows 7 loads you can click on the clock and update from the Internet. Though I'm sure most people have previously set the time on their PCs, so Windows 7 should have that here already - just might need to change the timezone

























Step 17: Picking the network location. Just as in Windows Vista, Windows 7 wants to know where you are, this determines how the OS will set file sharing and network discovery settings























Step 18: And here Windows 7 sets those settings for file sharing and network discovery. If you can remember the misery of setting up a network adapter in Windows 3.x or Windows 95, you might get a feeling of satisfaction at this screen. I know I did.

































Step 19: Cool new feature for a Home group. This feels like setting up a Media Extender. I like the idea, even more security for your networked files, and with an 1-2-3 setup like just entering a network code in to Windows 7 to automatically join together it's even easier than setting up Windows shares and editing network properties, like a workgroup.













































Step 20: At this point - I can taste it! It just feels like it's almost done and I can't wait. Windows 7 here we come!



























Step 21: Yes, Windows 7 welcomes me! I can feel it, I'm only seconds away from my full glory of Windows 7 beta 1 installed and running!





























Step 22: Nice, Thanks Windows 7 - I always like having a nice prepared desktop! (Curious though, as after Vista they did away with all the desktop icons - though most OEMs put them back. Really folks, try to get rid of the icons, you're using your desktop and don't need to minimize a window to get to something you access from the start menu - think intuitively)

































Step 23: And I'm in! Windows 7 sets up a few things super fast and...































My Windows 7 beta 1 desktop is here! Ready to go! Overall a pretty easy installation really. This would be a breeze to walk someone over the phone with, and most some-what savvy computer people can surely do this on their own. I didn't need any special computer knowledge, or really any knowledge beyond reading to understand this. A good installation in my book, even installing Linux these days is just as simple, as is OS X.








Memory Card Data Recovery

CardRecovery™ is the leading photo recovery software for memory Card used by digital camera. It can effectively recover lost, deleted, corrupted or formatted photos and video files from various memory cards.








It supports almost all memory card types including SD (Secure Digital) Card, CF (Compact Flash) Card, xD Picture Card, Memory Stick, MicroDrive, SmartMedia Card, MMC (MultiMediaCard), MicroSD, MiniSD, SDHC and more.



CardRecovery, the award-winning digital photo recovery software is the reliable solution for digital image recovery, digital picture recovery, digital media recovery, photo rescue, photo restore, data recovery, or whether files were deleted, the storage was damaged or formatted.

Our unique and exclusive SmartScan technology completes those impossible recovery tasks that other software cannot touch — SmartScan quickly locates and restores files that other recovery software could never find.



Using CardRecovery is safe and risk-free. The software performs READ-ONLY operations on your memory card. It doesn’t move, delete, and modify the data on the card to avoid causing further damage or overwriting. It recovers the photos and movie clips from the source memory card and saves them to the destination location you specify.

CardRecovery Features



• Recover deleted photos from memory cards.

• Recover lost photos from memory cards.

• Recover photos from formatted memory cards.

• Recover photos from damaged, unreadable or defective memory cards.

• Recover pictures from removable storage including floppy disks, Zip disks etc.

• Recover images, audio/video, MP3/MP4 files from cellular phones, MP3 players, PDAs.



Thursday, May 13, 2010

Award-winning system cleanup and security

Internet CleanUp Personal Edition

Privacy Software Highlights



* Expanded application cleaning

* faster and keep your privacy

* Erases tracks sites you've visited

* Removes thousands of unnecessary files

* Increases computer performance

* Securely removes files

* Highly rated by independent reviews

*Award-winning system cleanup

*Satisfaction guarantee



"An absolute must for anyone who values his or her privacy."

great software as i use and say!!


Thursday, January 28, 2010

Connect Ur Mobile through pc internet..........SCREEN SHOTS.

Hi guys.hope u are all fyn.now come on topic.

Many of us has connect internet on pc by using mobile GPRS
now we will connect internet on mobile by using pc's internet

Sounds interesting ...........Its little difficult not impossible

Things u need

* BLUETOOTH DONGLE(ANY COMPANY)
* MOBILE WITH BLUETOOTH TECHNOLOGY
* A PC WITH HIGH SPEEED INTERNET

LET START

FITST OF ALL IF U HAVE INSTALLED mROUTER THEN REMOVE ALL THE COMMUNICATION PORT FROM MROUTER AS SHOWN IN PIC BELOW....



[Java] Google Earth For Mobiles ..

What is MGMaps?






Mobile GMaps is a FREE application that displays Google Maps, Yahoo! Maps and MSN Virtual Earth maps and satellite imagery on Java J2ME-enabled mobile phones, PDAs and other devices.






Mobile GMaps is distributed under the Attribution/NonCommercial/NoDerivs Creative Commons license. You may download, use and distribute the application free of charge for non-commercial purposes. You may NOT use it for any commercial purpose.



 



Before you download and install Mobile GMaps, make sure you have support for:





J2ME (Java) on your phone — MGMaps runs on devices that support CLDC 1.0 and MIDP 1.0 or later. The vast majority of GSM phones sold in the last three years support Java/J2ME, so unless you are using an antique phone, this shouldn't be an issue. If you are not sure, you can check here and here (warning: the list may be incomplete).

Web access from Java programs running on your phone — the java program must be able to access the web in order to download map and satellite tiles. While the MIDP 1.0 standard does require HTTP support, some of the phones that only support WAP (and not regular Internet) rewrite requests and you might need to configure a proxy (Samsung X450 is such a phone)... For more information, see the documentation section and the section about proxy configuration in the FAQ.

Internet or WAP enabled with your carrier provider — WAP access is usually cheaper but does not work for some phone/provider combinations. For optimum performance, a broadband connection, like EDGE or 3G (WCDMA) is recommended. See the configuration section for more info.





Download and Install

Installation instructions:





Visit the WAP site from your mobile phone. This is the recommended way of installing Mobile GMaps.

If the above does not work for some reason (e.g. your phone does not support WAP 2.0), you will have to take the longer path. You'll have to download the JAD and JAR file(s) on your computer, upload them to your phone (using bluetooth, infrared, or serial/USB cable), then install the application. This may not work for some phones that only allow J2ME installations over WAP.

If the installation is successful, you should find MGMaps in the list of installed Java applications for most phones, in the main menu for Symbian phones, or in the "Java Games" menu for some Samsung phones. You should read the Getting started section before starting to use the program
 
 

Google Chrome Operating System

Google's blog announces a natural extension of the Chrome project: an operating system for netbooks. "Google Chrome OS is an open source, lightweight operating system that will initially be targeted at netbooks. Later this year we will open-source its code, and netbooks running Google Chrome OS will be available for consumers in the second half of 2010. (...) Google Chrome OS will run on both x86 as well as ARM chips and we are working with multiple OEMs to bring a number of netbooks to market next year. The software architecture is simple — Google Chrome running within a new windowing system on top of a Linux kernel."






As people use more and more web applications, the operating system becomes less important and it makes no sense to pay for it. The desktop mail client could be replaced by Gmail, the calendaring application could be replaced by Google Calendar, the office suite has lightweight alternatives: Google Docs and Zoho, it makes more sense to use an online feed reader like Google Reader, your scientific calculator is less powerful than Wolfram Alpha and you'll rarely need a video player when you have YouTube, Hulu and other video sites.



This idea is not new and there are already operating systems optimized for the browser. For example, Good OS announced last year Cloud, an operating system that "integrates a web browser with a compressed Linux operating system kernel for immediate access to Internet, integration of browser and rich client applications, and full control of the computer from inside the browser". If Google manages to create a great user interface, the new operating system could be very successful.
 
Download

Wednesday, January 27, 2010

DDR1 vs DDR2

Memory Speed and overheating






There are a number of upgrades that come with the new DDR2 technology over DDR1 memory. DDR2 memory is of course faster, and will ultimately reach clock speeds of 667MHz or higher as opposed to the top functional speed of DDR1 at 400MHz. The higher speeds of DDR 2 memory allow it to have up to 10.6GB per seconds of throughput - quite a bit more than DDR1 memory which maxed at 6.4GB per second. The feature that makes these higher speeds practical is the reduced power consumption of DDR2, which runs at only 1.8 volts. Heat is one of the real banes of IC's, and the faster you try and clock a chip the hotter it runs and the less reliable it gets. One of the speed limitations of DDR1 was that at 2.5 volts created too much heat and was simply too hot to run consistently at speeds greater than 400MHz. DDR2's 1.8 volts combined with a much smaller (FBGA) chip package goes a long way towards solving the heat issue at higher speeds.



Cas Latency issues



DDR2 is also reversing the trend of faster and faster CAS Latency. SDRAM was originally CAS 3 though CAS 2 became popular later on with PC100 and in some PC133 modules. The problem with putting the burst cycles so close together is that the faster you push the chips, the more unstable they become. This is why, after moving to CAS 2 in a lot of PC100 components, the standard for PC133 reverted to CAS 3. DDR1 came out with two different speeds CAS 2 and CAS 2.5, though there were some chips that were available with 3-3-3 timing as well. There were some problems when DDR was released getting the modules to work consistently, and when DDR 400 started becoming available there were problems again, some of them related to Latency. The industry seems to have recognized this, and the JEDEC standard for DDR 2 is CAS 3 and even CAS 4 in some cases. This will go a long way towards making the modules more stable. There will be a small decrease in number of functions a stick will be able to perform per second, but the decrease will be so minor as to be unnoticeable and will be more than made up for in dramatically increased stability