Jun 05

By Keznews Members for Keznews Members

This is the first article that is part of the mini series “By Keznews Members for Keznews Members” using my blog as platform to introduce software, themes, tutorials, applications, AIOs and other work created by Keznews/forum members.

In our forum we have some very active and creative minds which work on their own projects, some do skins & designs, others create applications, some simple batch files, and others are creating cracks etc. A lot of things going on and most members don’t know about it.

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Jun 04

Without any tweaking you can boost your XP or Vista start up time and overall system speed. Take a look at your notification area (on your desktop right side bottom) and you see most of the application that start during Windows Startup. How many of them do you use daily? Does Quick Time and Acrobat Reader need to search for updates daily?. Do you need Messenger right after start up?,…. More items you see there, slower your startup gets! Some items do not even have a try icon they run in the background and use your system resources without any reason.

I will present you 3 freeware applications that can help you to handle the start up items. All of them do use very less resources and have a big impact on your overall system speed. I have used them with XP and I am using them now with Vista. The first two, Autoruns and System Control Panel were designed for XP, however both run under Vista.

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Jun 04

Vista Certificate of Authenticity (COA)
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A Certificate of Authenticity (COA) is a label that helps you identify genuine Microsoft software. A COA is not a software license – it is a visual identifier that assists in determining whether or not the Microsoft software you are running is genuine.
However, without it, you will not have a legal license to run Microsoft software. A COA should never be purchased by itself without the software it authenticates.

COA Variations:

To help you verify the authenticity of the Microsoft software you acquired, be sure that your software came with one of the following COAs (or a previous version) and that the COA includes the advanced anti-counterfeiting features described.

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Jun 04

For a few days now, Microsoft has release their latest Windows Live Betas, such as Windows Live Mail, Windows Live Messenger 8.5 and Windows Live Writer. If you follow the latest IT news you will most probably have read about it already. With this article, would like to introduce the new releases and features plus one or two tips to fix some of the installation bugs i did encounter.

I’m running the trio of Live Writer, Live Mail and Live Messenger for a couple of days now and I enjoy it! Just to get them starting the first time, took me some time which I will explain further in this article too.

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Jun 01

By: Marius Oiaga, Technology News Editor

Windows Vista delivers an impressive line up of network tools that can be used to keep the operating system connectivity on a short leash. The total of 12 command-line tools can be used to manage all aspects of Vista networking. Users will be able not only to closely monitor the networking activity of the platform, but also repair network connections. The utilities are not new to Windows Vista, having survived in the operating system from previous Windows versions. Here is the complete list in alphabetical order:

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Jun 01

By: Marius Oiaga, Technology News Editor

Windows Vista features an overhauled networking infrastructure, a completely revamped network protocol stack and IPv6 as the default protocol moving ahead from IPv4, but the operating system also includes old trusted networking tools from previous Windows platforms. IPCONFIG.EXE or simply Ipconfig and just “ipconfig” in a command prompt window is a command line tool designed to deliver TCP/IP network configuration diagnostic capabilities.

Ipconfig has survived into Windows Vista and in order to access the utility all you have to do is type “cmd” in the Search Box under the Vista Start Menu and press Ctrl + Shift + Enter in order to launch the command prompt administrative privileges. If you enter the “ipconfig” command, the utility will display all the Windows Vista IP configuration information. By default, Ipconfig will only publish the IP address, subnet mask, and default gateway according to all adapters.

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Jun 01

by Scott Colvey

Thinking of buying a top-of-the-range Windows Vista PC with loads of Ram? Then just be sure that “loads” is no more than 3GB: you could be throwing away anything from £50 upwards.

Buy a PC with 4GB of Ram, and you can wave goodbye the last gigabyte. The reason is the memory-mapped input-output (MMIO) method - the system by which PCs communicate with installed devices, such as graphics cards.

A computer’s internal devices may require their own allocation of Ram to be mapped into the main system Ram. But 32-bit computers, most of which run XP or Vista, are limited to a maximum addressable memory of 4GB.

A machine fitted with, say, a 512MB graphics card must find mapping space for that half-gigabyte in the computer’s memory address book - even though the device will use its own memory during operation. However, Ram allocated for device-mapping is not available to applications. This is not a Microsoft-specific quirk; it affects any 32-bit system, including those running Linux.

The problem is that memory-mapping of devices takes place in the addressable area above 2GB, traditionally considered a “safe zone” because consumer PCs tended not to have more memory than this. With the arrival of Vista, though, computer buyers are ramping up their Ram requests.

Paul, a retired senior police officer, says: “I consider myself fairly knowledgeable about computers, but I didn’t know about Ram limitations. I bought a 2GB PC and later added more memory. Before doing so I checked the supplier’s website and the Ram options went to 4GB - so there appeared no reason not to purchase a further two 1GB sticks. That’s where the fun started.” Thanks to MMIO, his PC’s 512MB graphics card and other devices lopped a gigabyte off what he expected to be 4GB of memory available for applications.

The Guardian has found many PC manufacturers offering upgrades to 4GB. Dell, for example, sells PCs with 32-bit editions of Windows pre-configured with up to 2GB of memory. But the option to go to 4GB is available and would-be buyers are told: “Upgrading your memory is one of the most cost-effective ways to supercharge performance.” True, so long as you stop at 3GB.

The Guardian asked Dell why it actively promotes 4GB in machines that can only provide 3GB of usable memory. Dell responded: “Whilst Dell does not call out this restriction on its website it does clearly state the reduction in capacity in its legal birdseed [smallprint] that appears on advertisements.”

But Gareth Odgen, editor of Custom PC magazine, says that shoppers should simply not bother with 4GB PCs: “There’s not much point putting 4GB in a 32-bit system.”

source:

http://technology.guardian.co.uk/weekly/story/0,,2091227,00.html

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