Archive for the ‘ Tricks ’ Category

Enable facebook timeline!!!

Facebook, the famous social network with 800 million members, unveiled a major update of the profile, as everyone calls it a Facebook Timeline. Facebook Timeline is an important feature that is going to change the entire facebook experience here after.

How to enable Facebook Timeline :

Step 1: First, log in  Facebook.

Step 2:  You will need to enable developer mode if you haven’t already. Simply type “Developer” in the search box and click on the top result. Or Enable developer mode via this link.

Step 3: Click ‘Create New App‘ in the top right, provide a display name, app namespace and click “Continue”. Don’t worry, here you can provide any names.

Step 4: Now you will be taken to your app’s main settings page. On the left sidebar, click the “Open Graph” link.

You have to enter the action and object in order create a test action for your app, like “watch” a “movie” or “read” a book” or “eat” a “sandwich”.

Step 5: On the next page you’re presented with a form. Ignore all of this scroll down and click through each page.

Step 6: After processing that, Facebook will flip back to the Open Graph page but you can now ignore all of that and open a new tab and go back to your Facebook profile.

And you’re done! An invite to try Timeline should be waiting at the top of the page. Once you click on Get It Now, you will then be redirected to your new Timeline. Your Timeline is private, by default, for the time being. You can either edit it until you are ready to publish it.

Enjoy this new feature before official release.

File System You Should Use for USB Drive!!

 

It can be tough porting your videos and music to every device you use. How do you know your Mac, Xbox, and Windows Machine can read your files? Read on to find your perfect USB drive solution.

File systems are the sort of thing that many computer users take for granted. But what are they, and what system supports what? It can be confusing, and a serious headache to deal with if you’re unprepared. Read on to see what will work best for you when you have to decide how to format your usb disk.

Understanding File System Problems

 

File systems are ways of organizing data, with each various file system usually associated with a specific operating system. Since only binary data can be written to hard disks, the file systems are a key part of the translation from physical recordings on a drive to the files read by an OS. Since these file systems are key to the operating system making sense of the data, an OS cannot read data off of a hard drive without support for various file systems, i.e. without the ability to translate from where the data is physically written to the hard disk. When you choose “format” on a disk, you’re basically deciding what devices can and cannot read it or write to it.

 

There are myriad numbers of file systems,   many of them created for depreciated operating systems. Nowadays, many computer users will have multiple PCs in their home—some running Mac OS, some running Windows, perhaps even some running Linux. Because of this, it’s becoming more and more necessary to have portable disks that can move from OS to OS without issue. But to do that, we have to take a look at major issues that will cause you problems when porting drives from device to device. These are portability and file size limits.

Problem 1: Portability

The three most common file systems are NTFS (the Windows standard), HFS+ (the OS X standard), and FAT32 (an older Windows standard). You might think that modern operating systems would natively support each other’s file system, but they largely do not. Mac OS (even in Lion, the current version), will not write to an NTFS formatted hard disk. Windows 7 does not even recognize HFS+ formatted disks and either ignores them or treats them as unformatted.

Many distros of Linux (like Ubuntu) are prepared to deal with this file system problem. Moving files from one file system to another is a routine process for Linux—many modern distros natively support NFTS and HFS+ or can get support with a quick download of free software packages.

In addition to this, your home consoles (Xbox 360, Playstation 3) only provide limited support for certain filesystems, and only provide read access to the USB drives. In order to better understand the best filesystem for your needs, take a look at this helpful chart.

Windows XP Windows 7/Vista Mac OS Leopard/Snow Leopard Mac OS Lion/Snow Leopard Ubuntu Linux Playstation 3 Xbox 360
NTFS(Windows) Yes Yes Read Only Read Only Yes No No
FAT32(DOS, Windows) Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
exFAT(Windows) Yes Yes No Yes Yes,with ExFat packages No No
HFS+(Mac OS) No No Yes Yes Yes No Yes
EXT2, 3(Linux) No No No No Yes No Yes

Keep in mind that these are native abilities of the OS to read/write to these file systems. Mac OS and Windows both have downloads that will help them read unsupported formats, but this article is more about what is natively supported, not how to get that support.

FAT32 has been around for so long that many devices and operating systems support it natively, making it a strong choice for a file system on a spectrum of devices. The major problem with FAT32 is that it limits the size of individual files, as well as the size of volumes. If you have to store, write, and read huge files, FAT32 may not be the clear winner. Let’s take a look at that now.

Problem 2: File Sizes and Limits

 

FAT32 was developed many years ago and was based on older FAT filesystems meant for DOS computers. The large disk sizes of today were only theoretical in those days, so it probably seemed ridiculous to the engineers that created FAT32 that anyone would ever need a filesize larger than 4 GB. However, with today’s large filesizes of uncompressed and high-def video, many users are faced with that very challenge.

Today’s more modern file systems have upward limits that seem ridiculous by our modern standards, but one day may seem humdrum and ordinary. When stacked up against the competition, we see very quickly that FAT32 is showing its age.

Individual File Size Limit Single Volume Size Limit
NTFS Greater than commerciallyavailable drives Huge (16EB)
FAT32 Less than 4GB Less than 8TB
exFAT Greater than commerciallyavailable drives Huge (64 ZB)
HFS+ Greater than commercially
available drives
Huge (8 EB)
EXT2, 3 16GB Large (32 TB)

Every newer file system handily whips FAT32, allowing for files sometimes ridiculously larger than 4GB. EXT, which supports 16GB files (up to 2TB files on some systems), has the second smallest individual file size on this list. The other file systems measure their maximum file sizes in Petabytes and larger, making them many thousands of times larger than FAT32.

The conclusion to draw from this is that FAT32 has its issues, and may be phased out as newer devices begin to support file systems like exFAT, Microsoft’s successor to FAT32. The basic rule of thumb is that FAT32 is the best but for most users, unless they have file sizes greater than 4GB, in which case, you have to think long and hard about what your specific needs are.

Formatting Your Drives

 

FAT32: It’s a myth that FAT32 drives are limited to ridiculously small sizes, like 32GB. Depending on the file system and software used to create the volume, you can create very large FAT32 drives, even up to several TB. Here are a few ways to format your drive with FAT32.

 

NTFS or exFAT: While it may one day eclipse FAT, exFAT is not as well supported as it could be. And NTFS is useful enough if you’re going to work only with Windows machines and Linux systems and newer versions of OS X, including a fully updated Snow Leopard with support for it.  Here’s two ways you can format NTFS or exFAT.

  • Computer Management (Windows 7): Go to your start menu and type “Computer Management” to bring up that tool. From there you can use “Disk Management” to navigate to drives and right click to format them. You should be able to choose between NTFS and exFAT. This can be useful, as uninitialized, unmounted drives appear here, when they don’t appear in “My Computer.”
  • Quick Format (Windows 7): Simply look at all the drives mounted under “My Computer,” then right click and choose “Format.” You should have the choice between NTFS and exFAT.

 

HFS+: You won’t likely need HFS+ unless you’re doing a lot of work with Macs. In that case, Mac OS’s Disk Utility will do the trick again. Simply choose “Mac OS Extended” with or without Journaling.

EXT 2 or EXT 3: In addition to offering native support for FAT32 and downloadable support for NTFS and HFS+, GParted will create and manage partitions, and is pretty much the best game in town for creating Linux EXT volumes.

EXT 4: The ext4 filesystem can support volumes with sizes up to 1 exbibyte (EiB) and files with sizes up to 16 tebibytes (TiB).The current e2fsprogs can only handle a filesystem of 16 TiB,but support for larger filesystems is under development.


That, in a nutshell, is what you should know about the most common file systems. Think, i’ve left anything important out? Feel free to tell me about it in the comments, or tell me about how you use your own USB drives.

Bypass 404 Error While Browsing Internet

Sometimes you face some error called 404 while browsing internet or like file not found as maybe its removed or page expired but that thing annoys you very much. Well we have a simple fix to that thing through which you will not get any errors in future while browsing that website.

Well this simple fix works with Firefox and its simple 404 Error Bypassing Add-On, so how this add-on works well it simply fetched that websites archived page from archive.org and show that to you instead of the original page.

Original lined written by the Add-On developer .:

Ever been annoyed by the ‘404 Error’ or a more understandable one ‘File Not Found’? Ever bookmarked your favorite page but few months later when you finally had time to read it in detail, you couldn’t find it? If a page was (re)moved and now shows ‘404 Page / File / Site Not Found’ error, this tiny extension uploads archived version of a page (IF archived page exists in wayback machine at archive.org)

So install the 404 error add-on from the official Mozilla Add-On website and browse internet error free.

How to Bypass Software Trial Period Manually in Windows

I am going to show you how you can bypass software trial period manually and use that again and again.

Follow the below steps .:

1. First you have to uninstall that application whose trial period is over and you wanna use it again.

2. Now open the “Regedit” you can open it by going to Start > Run > regedit.

3. Navigate to HK Local Machine > Software > Your Software name.

4. Now simply Delete the Key.

5. You have to do this for HK Current user if key is there too.

6. Now go to Run and Type “%temp%”.

7. Delete all files in temporary folder, these are all the files created by software temporary installation and de-installation.

8. Go to C:// Users > Username > App-data ( Check all 3 directories “Local”, “LocalLow”, “Roaming” for your software entry there might be a folder for your software, if you find one Delete that.

9.Now every main step is done you can restart your computer and then Reinstall application.

That’s it now you will get your software’s trial period back, well yes steps are long but it’s the manual way you can bypass the trial period of your software and you can perform this everytime your software expires.

Well this trick works for most of the software’s not all of them.So try the trick on them and enjoy.

How to Embed URL Address Bar in your Taskbar

How to Embed URL Address Bar in your TaskbarSo you browse internet on a daily purpose and sometimes you feel really lazy opening browser than typing a URL to open that website and than browsing that website, well what if you get a URL Address bar right in your Task Bar that will be awesome like Entering URL you wanna browse right in your Task Bar and than browsing that in a browser.

So if you are not getting what I am saying than check an example below .:

So you can see how we got an address bar to search any URL right from your Taskbar, of now you do not need any software to apply this tweak and this a inbuilt tweak given by windows so to get Address Bar in your Taskbar follow the below steps .:

1. Right Click on your Taskbar and then hover on Toolbars and choose Address like below .:

2. Now that’s it you will get Address bar Like Below, now simply enter the URL and Enjoy faster browsing from your Taskbar in this fast world.