Marriage

Posted by Richie S. | 11/16/2008 07:42:00 AM | | 0 comments »

BEFORE MARRIAGE:

Husband - Aaah! ...At last! I can hardly wait!
Wife - Do you want me to leave?
Husband - No! Don't even think about it.
Wife - Do you love me?
Husband - Of course! Always have and always will!
Wife - Have you ever cheated on me?
Husband - No! Why are you even asking?
Wife - Will you kiss me?
Husband - Every chance I get!
Wife - Will you hit me?
Husband - Hell no! Are you crazy?!
Wife - Can I trust you?
Husband - Yes.
Wife - Darling!

AFTER MARRIAGE: read from bottom to top.

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Recent post Widget for Blogger

Posted by Richie S. | 11/14/2008 07:05:00 AM | | 0 comments »

Here’s how you can make a Recent Posts widget for your Blogger blog:

1. Login to your Blogger Dashboard
2. go to your blog’s Layout, and click Add a Page Element
3. add a Feed (click “add to blog” under the page element Feed)
4. Configure Feed:


A. Enter your blog’s feed URL in the box. Use the URL below..
Just replace the text indicated in blue with your own blog address.

http://YourAwesomeBlogHere.blogspot.com/feeds/posts/default?alt=rss

or

http://www.YourAwesomeBlogHere.com/feeds/posts/default?alt=rss
(for self-hosted blogs)

B. Click Continue.

C. Change the Title to “Recent Posts” or “Recent Entries” or whatever you prefer to call it. You can also choose to show the item dates and author.

5. SAVE CHANGES. That’s it!

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What are torrents?

Posted by Richie S. | 11/14/2008 06:49:00 AM | , | 0 comments »

We all have downloaded that software (pirated) for that last seacond presentation, that never-can-miss soap, or just a good song. After searching for all sites, ultimately it comes to that last option, that virus laden-torrents!!

Torrents can be downloaded with softwares like torrnt, Bittorrent etc. Some of the terms used in this type of file transfer is given below.

availability
(also distributed copies) The number of full copies of the file available to the client. Each seed adds 1.0 to this number, as they have one complete copy of the file. A connected peer with a fraction of the file available adds that fraction to the availability, if no other peer has this part of the file. (ie. a peer with 65.3% of the file downloaded increases the availability by 0.653. However, if two peers both have the same portion of the file downloaded - say 50% - and there is only one seeder, the availability is 1.5).

choked
Describes a peer to whom the client refuses to send file pieces. A client chokes another client in several situations:

* The second client is a seed, in which case it does not want any pieces (ie. it is completely uninterested)
* The client is already uploading at its full capacity (ie. the value for max_uploads has been reached)

interested
Describes a downloader who wishes to obtain pieces of a file the client has. For example, the uploading client would flag a downloading client as 'interested' if that client did not possess a piece that it did, and wished to obtain it.

leech
A leech is usually a peer who has a negative effect on the swarm by having a very poor share ratio - in other words, downloading much more than they upload. Most leeches are users on asymmetric internet connections and do not leave their BitTorrent client open to seed the file after their download has completed. However, some leeches intentionally avoid uploading by using modified clients or excessively limiting their upload speed. The term leech, however, can be used simply to describe a peer - or any client that does not have 100% of the data.

peer
A peer is one instance of a BitTorrent client running on a computer on the Internet to which other clients connect and transfer data. Usually a peer does not have the complete file, but only parts of it. However, in the colloquial definition, "peer" can be used to refer to any participant in the swarm (in this case, it's synonymous with "client").

scrape
This is when a client sends a request to the tracking server for information about the statistics of the torrent, such as with whom to share the file and how well those other users are sharing.

seeder
A seeder is a peer that has a complete copy of the torrent and still offers it for upload. The more seeders there are, the better the chances are for completion of the file.

snubbed
An uploading client is flagged as snubbed if the downloading client has not received any data from it in over 60 seconds.

superseed
When a file is new, much time can be wasted because the seeding client might send the same file piece to many different peers, while other pieces have not yet been downloaded at all. Some clients, like ABC, Azureus, BitTornado, TorrentStorm, and µTorrent have a "superseed" mode, where they try to only send out pieces that have never been sent out before, making the initial propagation of the file much faster. This is generally used only for a new torrent, or one which must be re-seeded because no other seeds are available.

swarm
Together, all peers (including seeders) sharing a torrent are called a swarm. For example, six ordinary peers and two seeders make a swarm of eight.

torrent
A torrent can mean either a .torrent metadata file or all files described by it, depending on context. The torrent file contains metadata about all the files it makes downloadable, including their names and sizes and checksums of all pieces in the torrent. It also contains the address of a tracker that coordinates communication between the peers in the swarm.

tracker
A tracker is a server that keeps track of which seeds and peers are in the swarm. Clients report information to the tracker periodically and in exchange receive information about other clients to which they can connect. The tracker is not directly involved in the data transfer and does not have a copy of the file.

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How to send large files

Posted by Richie S. | 11/13/2008 10:09:00 AM | | 0 comments »

We all share our photos, videos, songs movies etc. And the most common form of sharing it is sending via email in the form of attachments. However most of the email clients we use allows a maximum of upto 10mb only (only Google mail- Gmail gives more than it- 20mb). That roughly translates to around 4-8 images. And no event consists of only 4-8 images. So how do you send it?

1)Well the most easy way is to compress it with WinZip, WinRar, 7Zip or something like that which would give you the option to fit in 1 more photo. If you are lucky, that is.

2)You could resize the images using the Windows inbuilt feature. Or you could use an image resizer.

3)The last and the best option is to upload the whole folder in many of the free file sharing sites like rapidshare. Of them the best ones are put in order.

1) Adrive.com (50GB free storage with other premium plans, excellent download speeds, sign-up required.)

2) Box.net (1GB free storage, Exellent site design, Good Download speed, sign-up required.)

3) Mediafire (Unlimited storage, excellent download, excellent speed, sign-up required)

4) Windows live spaces (5GB free, good speed download, sign-up required)

5) Filemail (2GB free, no sign-up required, files deleted after 3 days)

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Check if antivirus is updating

Posted by Richie S. | 11/12/2008 05:58:00 AM | , | 0 comments »

This is trick to check your antivirus is working or not

X5O!P%@AP[4\PZX54(P^)7CC)7}$EICAR-STANDARD-ANTIVIRUS-TEST-FILE!$H+H*

Open notepad..........Copy the above code in the file....then save it with the name
VIRUS.EXE

If this file got deleted immediately or Your Antivirus Recognise it as virus ....that means your antivirus is working n updated!!!

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