博文

目前显示的是 十二月, 2016的博文

#Report# How to add a web site to your Android home screen with Chrome

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If there’s a website you visit several times a day, there’s no reason to take the slow lane to get there. You can add a button to your home screen that looks just like an app icon and will launch that webpage directly in Chrome. To do this, first navigate to the site that you want quick access to (you know, like Greenbot). Then touch the overflow button (three vertical dots) and select Add to Home Screen. All you have to do is touch Add and the site will join your other apps and widgets. One recommendation: you can customize the text below the icon, Just touch the text inside of the Add to Home Screen box and change it up.  In our example, I removed the site description so that just Greenbot appears with the icon. While this type of functionality goes all the way back to the days of the original iPhone, it’s still useful for quick access to a site you visit with great regularity. This story, "How to add a web site to your Android home screen with

#Report# 3 pre-Windows 10 tricks worth revisiting

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Yes, Windows 10 is great, but there are some tips and tricks from older versions of Windows that are still plenty useful. Windows 10 may have all the modern conveniences, like Cortana, multiple desktops, and app notifications. But that doesn't make some of the old-fashioned Windows tricks from previous versions any less useful. Here are three Windows golden oldies worth remembering. Desktop shake Sometimes you have too many windows open and it's difficult to focus on that spreadsheet in front of you, or just to stay organized. That's when it's handy to know about desktop shake, which first appeared in Windows 7. All you have to do is click and hold the top of a program window, and start shaking your mouse (and thus the window) back and forth. After a few shakes, all open windows on your desktop will disappear save the one you're shaking. More Send To options If you wish there were more Send To options when you right-click a folder, try th

#Report#How to install (or replace) a case fan

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To install a case fan, hold the fan in place with one hand and tighten the four screws with the other. Many of the chips inside a typical PC generate a lot of heat and require some form of active cooling to remain stable. System builders usually rely on heatsinks and fans to manage the heat within a PC. If you’re upgrading or building a new PC—or your PC is overheating—you may need to install new or additional fans.  Here’s how to identify when you need to replace a fan and how to do it yourself. Identifying Faulty Fans Often, a fan will start to emit strange grinding noises or vibrations in its last death throws. Sometimes there is no warning at all, and a fan will silently come to a stop. Open up the computer’s case, turn it on, and look around with a flashlight (but try not to touch anything while the computer is on). In all but the lowest-power, passively cooled systems, you’ll likely find at least four fans: an intake fan, an exhaust fan, a CPU cooli

#Report#5 ways to stop spam from invading your email

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Frank Miller (and no, I don’t know if he’s that Frank Miller) asked if there was “a way to stop or reduce the spam mail that I receive?” Short of cutting yourself off from the Internet, there’s no way to eliminate spam entirely. The best you can do is filter out most of it, and even that has some unfortunate consequences. Your email client (the local program or cloud-based service you use to access and send email) almost certainly filters spam, moving suspicious messages to a separate folder. But it’s not perfect. Some spam tricks the filter and ends up in your inbox. And some legitimate messages, called false positives, end up in the spam folder. While we can’t remove these errors entirely, we can reduce them. [Have a tech question? Ask PCWorld Contributing Editor Lincoln Spector. Send your query to answer@pcworld.com.] 1. Train your filter When you find spam in your inbox, don’t just delete it. Select it, and tell your mail client that this particular message is spam.

#Report#1 Reason Not To Go Online If You Live In The US

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If you live in the US and have a computer, tablet or smartphone connected to the internet, then this may be the most important news you read all year. Earlier this month we saw thousands of people across the US get their hands on the the latest Online ID protection from SaferWeb, after yet another increase in identity theft and web-history monitoring. We have however been advised that because of its unexpected popularity, availability is very limited and is now on a first come first serve basis. Experts Are Now Calling SaferWeb, “A Game Changer For Internet Users” As part of the special promotion due to end July 7, 2016, a group of Engineers teamed up with innovative new software provider SaferWeb, to provide the latest ID Protection thats just gone viral. If you have a desktop, laptop, tablet or smartphone connected to the internet, your activities could be monitored and private information collected when you’re Internet shopping or banking. Even just browsing onlin

#Report#Cortana for iOS, Android new features quick access to common actions

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A Microsoft illustration shows the Quick Actions menu in the Cortana app on Android. Credit: Microsoft Microsoft's Cortana virtual assistant is getting a facelift on iOS and Android aimed at making it more useful for users, and also bringing a bit of brightness to what's currently a rather dour interface. The app's biggest change is the launch of a button that lets users quickly choose between a suite of common actions, like viewing their calendar at a glance, checking reminders, or getting a weather forecast. The app itself looks friendlier, with a purple gradient background replacing a stark black, white, and blue color scheme. On top of that, Microsoft also announced on Thursday that the iOS and Android versions of Cortana are coming to the U.K., so that Brits will be able to use the virtual assistant. Microsoft has been slow to expand Cortana's geographic reach until the assistant has been set up to work with local social norms and other expectations.

#Report#HTTPS errors: What to do when your PC freaks out

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The other day a curious thing happened to me. I booted up my PC as usual, fired up my browser, and tried to login to Gmail. Instead of looking at my inbox, I saw a warning that my attempt at an HTTPS secure Internet connection had failed. It wasn’t just a single browser or website problem either. Every browser on my system was affected—even the Dropbox and OneDrive desktop utilities wouldn’t connect. Uh-oh! Was I being targeted by bad guys or government snoops? Of course not. This problem is quite common and can usually be fixed with a few simple strategies. If it ever affects you, or is affecting you right now, here’s what to do. Reboot The first thing you should always do when faced with an intractable PC problem is reboot and see if that fixes it. Because gremlins. Check your system time This is an important one with the bi-annual time switch coming up. If your system time is incorrect then the date and time on the SSL certificate from the server won’t match up with the t

#Report#How to password protect a PDF before sending it by email

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A reader asks: “Is there any way to password-protect and lock a sensitive PDF file before sending it as an attachment through email? I cannot afford Adobe Acrobat Pro and free primopdf didn’t work for me. Any help will be appreciated!” The quickest way to do this is to ZIP the PDF file and protect the ZIP file, or use Microsoft Office’s built-in encryption tools to create a password. If you use Outlook, you can use Adobe Acrobat IX to password protect PDFs. You can also try programs like NitroPDF and PDF Encrypt to set the password protection to your PDF file without Acrobat. For more on PDF and document encryption: How to encrypt sensitive data? Put it in an encrypted container How to remove encryption from a PDF file How to encrypt and password-protect ZIP files the right way #By Michael Connell#

#Report#How to install two or more operating systems on one PC

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Chidi Okwara asked "Can one run several operating systems in one computer?" Not only can you do it, but it's reasonably easy. Of course, all of the operating systems must be compatible with your hardware. Assuming your PC is less than five years old, it should be able to take Windows 7 and 8, along with almost any type of Linux. Just remember that you'll need paid-for licenses for each version of Windows you install (not an issue with free Linux). I'll walk you through installing Windows 8 onto a Windows 7 PC. With minor differences, this should work with other operating systems, as well. But first, you need to protect your system by creating an image backup--either with Windows' own tools or a third-party backup program. Don't follow any of the directions below until you've created that backup. Once the backup is complete, create a new partition on your drive. According to Microsoft, you'll need at least 20GB on the new partiti