Friday 31 January 2014

Maintain your System healthy and error free


Maintaining your computer is the key to keeping it healthy and fully
working and of course, fast. Windows 95 has most of the tools for
maintaining your PC, but Windows 98 extends the possibilities and makes it
even less of a hassle.  If you follow the list below and run the programs
listed frequently, you will be guaranteed to have a maintained computer at
no extra cost. There are, however, other programs in the market with
stronger engines, but then again, they're not free (stop smiling...) 
Most of
these programs can be found under the Start, Programs,
Accessories
, System Tools folder. 

1. Disk
Defrag
: It is advisable to run Defrag under Windows 95 once a month or
when you add/remove programs. However, under Windows 98, you can run it
every week if you want because it has a new engine, which means that the
more you run it, the faster your computer will get. What happens is that
your programs are placed on your hard disk in a way so that the ones you
use most often are easier for the hard disk to find and run.  Make sure
that the 'make my programs run faster' is ticked in the 'Settings' window
in Defrag.

2.
Scandisk
: Running a thorough check is good once a month in both
Windows 95 and 98. Run this once a month if you feel that your hard disk
takes a long time to load programs.  A standard check is very fast and
checks for basic disk problems concerning files and folders and lost
fragments.  It takes an average 2 minutes to complete so try running it
often.

3. Disk
cleanup
: This one is good for seeing how much disk space is being used
up by unnecessary files that are in the recycle bin, temp folder, or in
temporary internet folders.  You can then remove them!

4.
RegClean
: A simple but effective piece of software this is. You can
download it for free from Microsoft's
web site
. It is also available on many magazine cover disks. Reg Clean
takes about a minute to check the registry. Then it asks whether you want
to clean out redundant or orphan file. This usually helps the computer to
get rid of files that have been left behind by uninstalled programs.

5.
Windows update
: It's a good idea to use Windows Update to make sure
your computer has all the latest fixes, patches and updates.  You can do
so by clicking on its icon in the Start Menu under Windows 98.
 
6.
Tweak ALL
: A very handy program that allows to change settings, which
cannot be changed using Windows alone!

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Thursday 30 January 2014

All keyboard Shortcuts

Windows Shortcuts
Shift + F10 right-clicks. 



Win + L (XP Only): Locks keyboard. Similar to Lock Workstation. 



Win + F or F3: Open Find dialog. (All Files) F3 may not work in some applications which use F3 for their own find dialogs. 



Win + Control + F: Open Find dialog. (Computers) 



Win + U: Open Utility Manager. 



Win + F1: Open Windows help. 



Win + Pause: Open System Properties dialog. 



Win + Tab: Cycle through taskbar buttons. Enter clicks, AppsKey or Shift + F10 right-clicks. 



Win + Shift + Tab: Cycle through taskbar buttons in reverse. 



Alt + Tab: Display Cool Switch. More commonly known as the AltTab dialog. 



Alt + Shift + Tab: Display Cool Switch; go in reverse. 



Alt + Escape: Send active window to the bottom of the z-order. 



Alt + Shift + Escape: Activate the window at the bottom of the z-order. 



Alt + F4: Close active window; or, if all windows are closed, open shutdown dialog. 



Shift while a CD is loading: Bypass AutoPlay. 



Shift while login: Bypass startup folder. Only those applications will be ignored which are in the startup folder, not those started from the registry (Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Run\) 



Ctrl + Alt + Delete or Ctrl + Alt + NumpadDel (Both NumLock states): Invoke the Task Manager or NT Security dialog. 



Ctrl + Shift + Escape (2000/XP ) or (Ctrl + Alt + NumpadDot) : Invoke the task manager. On earlier OSes, acts like Ctrl + Escape. 



Print screen: Copy screenshot of current screen to clipboard. 



Alt + Print screen: Copy screenshot of current active window to clipboard. 



Ctrl + Alt + Down Arrow: Invert screen. Untested on OS's other than XP. 



Ctrl + Alt + Up Arrow: Undo inversion. 



Win + B : Move focus to systray icons.
           

General


Ctrl + C or Ctrl + Insert: Copy. 



Ctrl + X or Shift + Delete: Cut. 



Ctrl + V or Shift + Insert: Paste/Move. 



Ctrl + N: New... File, Tab, Entry, etc. 



Ctrl + S: Save. 



Ctrl + O: Open... 



Ctrl + P: Print. 



Ctrl + Z: Undo. 



Ctrl + A: Select all. 



Ctrl + F: Find... 



Ctrl+W : to close the current window 



Ctrl + F4: Close tab or child window. 



F1: Open help. 



F11: Toggle full screen mode. 



Alt or F10: Activate menu bar. 



Alt + Space: Display system menu. Same as clicking the icon on the titlebar. 



Escape: Remove focus from current control/menu, or close dialog box. 



          
General Navigation 


Tab: Forward one item. 



Shift + Tab: Backward one item. 



Ctrl + Tab: Cycle through tabs/child windows. 



Ctrl + Shift + Tab: Cycle backwards through tabs/child windows. 



Enter: If a button's selected, click it, otherwise, click default button. 



Space: Toggle items such as radio buttons or checkboxes. 



Alt + (Letter): Activate item corresponding to (Letter). (Letter) is the underlined letter on the item's name. 



Ctrl + Left: Move cursor to the beginning of previous word. 



Ctrl + Right: Move cursor to the beginning of next word. 



Ctrl + Up: Move cursor to beginning of previous paragraph. This and all subsequent Up/Down hotkeys in this section have only been known to work in Rich Edit controls. 



Ctrl + Down: Move cursor to beginning of next paragraph. 



Shift + Left: Highlight one character to the left. 



Shift + Right: Highlight one character to the right. 



Shift + Up: Highlight from current cursor position, to one line up. 



Shift + Down: Highlight from current cursor position, to one line down. 



Ctrl + Shift + Left: Highlight to beginning of previous word. 



Ctrl + Shift + Right: Highlight to beginning of next word. 



Ctrl + Shift + Up: Highlight to beginning of previous paragraph. 



Ctrl + Shift + Down: Highlight to beginning of next paragraph. 



Home: Move cursor to top of a scrollable control. 



End: Move cursor to bottom of a scrollable control. 


          
          
File Browser 

Arrow Keys: Navigate. 



Shift + Arrow Keys: Select multiple items. 



Ctrl + Arrow Keys: Change focus without changing selection. "Focus" is the object that will run on Enter. Space toggles selection of the focused item. 



(Letter): Select first found item that begins with (Letter). 



BackSpace: Go up one level to the parent directory. 



Alt + Left: Go back one folder. 



Alt + Right: Go forward one folder. 



Enter: Activate (Double-click) selected item(s). 



Alt + Enter: View properties for selected item. 



F2: Rename selected item(s). 



Ctrl + NumpadPlus: In a Details view, resizes all columns to fit the longest item in each one. 



Delete: Delete selected item(s). 



Shift + Delete: Delete selected item(s); bypass Recycle Bin. 



Ctrl while dragging item(s): Copy. 



Ctrl + Shift while dragging item(s): Create shortcut(s). 



In tree pane, if any: 



Left: Collapse the current selection if expanded, or select the parent folder. 



Right: Expand the current selection if collapsed, or select the first subfolder. 



Numpad Asterisk: Expand currently selected directory and all subdirectories. No undo. 



Numpad Plus: Expand currently selected directory. 



Numpad Minus: Collapse currently selected directory. 




          
Accessibility 

Right Shift for eight seconds: Toggle FilterKeys on and off. FilterKeys must be enabled. 



Left Alt + Left Shift + PrintScreen: Toggle High Contrast on and off. High Contrast must be enabled. 



Left Alt + Left Shift + NumLock: Toggle MouseKeys on and off. MouseKeys must be enabled. 



NumLock for five seconds: Toggle ToggleKeys on and off. ToggleKeys must be enabled. 



Shift five times: Toggle StickyKeys on and off. StickyKeys must be enabled. 



6.) Microsoft Natural Keyboard with IntelliType Software Installed 



Win + L: Log off Windows. 



Win + P: Open Print Manager. 



Win + C: Open control panel. 



Win + V: Open clipboard. 



Win + K: Open keyboard properties. 



Win + I: Open mouse properties. 



Win + A: Open Accessibility properties. 



Win + Space: Displays the list of Microsoft IntelliType shortcut keys. 



Win + S: Toggle CapsLock on and off. 






Remote Desktop Connection Navigation 



Ctrl + Alt + End: Open the NT Security dialog. 



Alt + PageUp: Switch between programs. 



Alt + PageDown: Switch between programs in reverse. 



Alt + Insert: Cycle through the programs in most recently used order. 



Alt + Home: Display start menu. 



Ctrl + Alt + Break: Switch the client computer between a window and a full screen. 



Alt + Delete: Display the Windows menu. 



Ctrl + Alt + NumpadMinus: Place a snapshot of the entire client window area on the Terminal server clipboard and provide the same functionality as pressing Alt + PrintScreen on a local computer. 



Ctrl + Alt + NumpadPlus: Place a snapshot of the active window in the client on the Terminal server clipboard and provide the same functionality as pressing PrintScreen on a local computer. 






Mozilla Firefox Shortcuts 

Ctrl + Tab or Ctrl + PageDown: Cycle through tabs. 



Ctrl + Shift + Tab or Ctrl + PageUp: Cycle through tabs in reverse. 



Ctrl + (1-9): Switch to tab corresponding to number. 



Ctrl + N: New window. 



Ctrl + T: New tab. 



Ctrl + L or Alt + D or F6: Switch focus to location bar. 



Ctrl + Enter: Open location in new tab. 



Shift + Enter: Open location in new window. 



Ctrl + K or Ctrl + E: Switch focus to search bar. 



Ctrl + O: Open a local file. 



Ctrl + W: Close tab, or window if there's only one tab open. 



Ctrl + Shift + W: Close window. 



Ctrl + S: Save page as a local file. 



Ctrl + P: Print page. 



Ctrl + F or F3: Open find toolbar. 



Ctrl + G or F3: Find next... 



Ctrl + Shift + G or Shift + F3: Find previous... 



Ctrl + B or Ctrl + I: Open Bookmarks sidebar. 



Ctrl + H: Open History sidebar. 



Escape: Stop loading page. 



Ctrl + R or F5: Reload current page. 



Ctrl + Shift + R or Ctrl + F5: Reload current page; bypass cache. 



Ctrl + U: View page source. 



Ctrl + D: Bookmark current page. 



Ctrl + NumpadPlus or Ctrl + Equals (+/=): Increase text size. 



Ctrl + NumpadMinus or Ctrl + Minus: Decrease text size. 



Ctrl + Numpad0 or Ctrl + 0: Set text size to default. 



Alt + Left or Backspace: Back. 



Alt + Right or Shift + Backspace: Forward. 



Alt + Home: Open home page. 



Ctrl + M: Open new message in integrated mail client. 



Ctrl + J: Open Downloads dialog. 



F6: Switch to next frame. You must have selected something on the page already, e.g. by use of Tab. 



Shift + F6: Switch to previous frame. 



Apostrophe ('): Find link as you type. 



Slash (/): Find text as you type. 






Gmail Shortcuts 

Note: Must have "keyboard shortcuts" on in settings. 



C: Compose new message. 



Shift + C: Open new window to compose new message. 



Slash (/): Switch focus to search box. 



K: Switch focus to the next most recent email. Enter or "O" opens focused email. 



J: Switch focus to the next oldest email. 



N: Switch focus to the next message in the "conversation." Enter or "O" expands/collapses messages. 



P: Switch focus to the previous message. 



U: Takes you back to the inbox and checks for new mail. 



Y: Various actions depending on current view: 



Has no effect in "Sent" and "All Mail" views. 



Inbox: Archive email or message. 



Starred: Unstar email or message. 



Spam: Unmark as spam and move back to "Inbox." 



Trash: Move back to "Inbox." 



Any label: Remove the label. 



X: "Check" an email. Various actions can be performed against all checked emails. 



S: "Star" an email. Identical to the more familiar term, "flagging." 



R: Reply to the email. 



A: Reply to all recipients of the email. 



F: Forward an email. 



Shift + R: Reply to the email in a new window. 



Shift + A: Reply to all recipients of the email in a new window. 



Shift + F: Forward an email in a new window. 



Shift + 1 (!): Mark an email as spam and remove it from the inbox. 



G then I: Switch to "Inbox" view. 



G then S: Switch to "Starred" view. 



G then A: Switch to "All Mail" view. 



G then C: Switch to "Contacts" view. 



G then S: Switch to "Drafts" view. 






List of F1-F9 Key Commands for the Command Prompt 



F1 / right arrow: Repeats the letters of the last command line, one by one. 



F2: Displays a dialog asking user to "enter the char to copy up to" of the last command line 



F3: Repeats the last command line 



F4: Displays a dialog asking user to "enter the char to delete up to" of the last command line 



F5: Goes back one command line 



F6: Enters the traditional CTRL+Z (^z) 



F7: Displays a menu with the command line history 



F8: Cycles back through previous command lines (beginning with most recent) 



F9: Displays a dialog asking user to enter a command number, where 0 is for first command line entered. 



Alt+Enter: toggle full Screen mode. 



up/down: scroll thru/repeat previous entries 



Esc: delete line 



Note: The buffer allows a maximum of 50 command lines. After this number is reached, the first line will be replaced in sequence. 


Helpful accessibility keyboard shortcuts 

Switch FilterKeys on and off. Right SHIFT for eight seconds



Switch High Contrast on and off. Left ALT +left SHIFT +PRINT SCREEN



Switch MouseKeys on and off. Left ALT +left SHIFT +NUM LOCK



Switch StickyKeys on and off. SHIFT five times




Switch ToggleKeys on and off. NUM LOCK for five seconds

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Wednesday 29 January 2014

Trick To Make Your Firefox Fast

This Firefox tricks will improve the speed & load time of firefox. And you
      will be able to surf faster.
Type about:config in the address bar, Then look for the following entries, and make the corresponding changes.
network.http.max-connections-per-server =32 
network.http.max-persistent-connections-per-proxy =16
network.http.max-connections = 64
network.http.max-persistent-connections-per-server = 10
network.http.pipelining = true
network.http.pipelining.maxrequests = 200
network.http.request.max-start-delay = 0
network.http.proxy.pipelining = true
network.http.proxy.version = 1.0 

Lastly right-click anywhere and select New- Integer. Name it nglayout.initialpaint.delay and set its value to 0. This value is the amount of time the browser waits before it acts on information it receives. Enjoy!!

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Sunday 26 January 2014

How To use Blogger API v3 to use Blogger content in Client Applications?

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www.hackserialkey.com

Are you a developer who likes to blog? You can use the Google Blogger API to create amazing Blogger client applications of your own! The Blogger API v3 allows external applications to view and update Blogger content. Your client application can use Blogger API v3 to create new blog posts, edit or delete existing posts, and query for posts that match particular criteria. You can use this API to create desktop and browser apps and create a whole new user-base of your own.



What is the Blogger API and what can you do with it?

An API, or Application Package Interface is a set of commands you can call, or interface with, from an external application. The developers of an application provides APIs if they want other developer to create apps and interact with their own.

Similarly, the Blogger team has created an API of its own that allows external developers to interact with the Blogger content management system. With this API, you can;
  • Add posts, pages and comments from your Blogger blog to a non-blogger website
  • Create desktop software that allows users to create or edit Blogger posts from their desktop computers
  • Create browser and mobile-based apps that serve the same purpose as above

Basics

First, you need to know some of the basics of objects and resources available in the API. There are five types of resources currently available.
  • Blogs - A blog resource represents a full Blogger blog. A user may have more than one Blogger blogs, so the control of multiple blogs is handled by the blogs resource. You can use it to list all the blogs a user has access to, or get a single blog by its ID.
  • Posts - A post resource represents a post on a blog, and each is a child of the blog resource. A posts collection contains all the post resources within a blog resource.
  • Comments - A comment resource represents a comment on a blog post, and is logically a child object of the respective post resource. A comments collection is a list of all comments under a posts (parent) resource.
  • Pages - A blog has static pages which inherit from the blog (as child objects).
  • Users - A user resource represents a non-anonymous user, and is used to identify the author of a blog post, page, or comment. A users collection is a list of all the (global) user resources on Blogger. For privacy reasons, a list of all the users on Blogger cannot be listed. However, you can retrieve your own user resource by your unique ID (or by using the self identifier)
Blogger resource hierarchy

API Reference

Here is a list of methods as described in the Blogger API v3 reference.

OperationDescriptionREST HTTP mappings
listLists all resources within a collectionGET on a collection URI
getGets a specific resourceGET on a resource URI
getByUrlGets a resource, looking it up by URLGET with the URL passed in as a parameter
getByPathGets a resource by looking it up by its pathGET with the Path passed in as a parameter
listByUserLists resources owned by a UserGET on a user owned collection
searchSearch for resources, based on a query parameterGET on a Search URL, with the query passed in as a parameter
insertCreate a resource in a collectionPOST on a collection URI
deleteDeletes a resourceDELETE on a resource URI
patchUpdate a resource, using Patch semanticsPATCH on a resource URI
updateUpdate a resourcePUT on a resource URI

The following table matches the resource types in the API (which we discussed earlier) with the methods they support.

Resource TypeSupported Methods
listgetgetByUrlgetByPathlistByUsersearchinsertdeletepatchupdate
Blogs
Posts
Comments
Pages
Users

You can use these methods to develop a fully functional Blogger app. There are various ways of invoking these methods. You can use HTTP client-side commands, or from JavaScript. You can also develop using client libraries on any one of the following platforms.

  • .NET
  • Java
  • PHP
  • Python
  • Ruby
  • Go
  • GWT
  • JavaScript
  • Node.js
  • Objective-C

We will talk more about these client libraries, and calling methods in a future post. In the meantime, if you have any questions regarding the functionality of this API or its methods, please feel free to ask in the comments section below. Cheers :)
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::By:-SJSM -THE HARYANVI

Wednesday 1 January 2014

How To Optimize Blog Post Title For Better SEO In Blogspot (Hackserialkey.com)

Press CTRL+F search <data:blog.pageTitle/>  paste code in the below

<data:blog.pageName/> - <data:blog.title/>
Better SEO by www.hackserialkey.com
www.hackserialkey.com
For More Info and ask questions at   www.facebook.com/hackserialkey