Create an optimized repayment schedule.
Product Description
Credit Card Crusher 113.208a
Posted by mashwani at 12:16 AM 0 comments
Adobe Kuler Desktop
Adobe Kuler Desktop
Get an RSS feed of color themes from kuler.
Product Description
Use Adobe Kuler Desktop to get your daily color fix and a constant source of color inspiration. The Adobe Kuler Desktop displays RSS feeds of color themes from kuler, an online application to explore, create, and share color harmonies. Search thousands of themes by tag, title, or creator ID. Browse the newest, highest rated, and most popular color themes. Easily copy hex values from any theme to your clipboard.
Requirements
Adobe AIR
Posted by mashwani at 11:51 PM 0 comments
DriveInfo Gadget
The DriveInfo Windows Vista Sidebar gadget monitors the free space available on one or more of your PC's hard drives. It displays the free space in both GB and percentage. The DriveInfo gadget is very easy to configure and is an especially attractive addition to your other Vista Sidebar gadgets.
The DriveInfo gadget is available as a free download from the Windows Live Gallery. Just click Download to Sidebar and follow the instructions to add the gadget to your Windows Sidebar.
Posted by mashwani at 12:28 AM 0 comments
CPU Meter Gadget
Windows Vista gadgets can do more than show the weather and news. The Windows Vista Sidebar can also be used to install gadgets that are useful as system utilities that keep track of the resources Windows Vista is using.
The CPU Meter Windows Vista Sidebar gadget displays two dials - one that tracks your system's CPU usage and another that tracks physical memory usage, both in percentage format. This is a pretty basic Windows Vista gadget in that there are no fancy options, but it does what it does well.
The CPU Meter gadget is included with Windows Vista. Just open the Gadgets window from your Windows Sidebar and double-click on CPU Meter. It will instantly be added to your Windows Sidebar.
Posted by mashwani at 12:27 AM 0 comments
How to Automatically Log On To a User Account in Windows Vista
As long as security isn't a big concern, configuring Windows Vista to log on to your user account automatically can save you some serious time and effort when your computer is starting up. Just follow the easy steps outlined below to make Windows Vista automatically log on to your user account. After completing these steps, Windows Vista will stop prompting you for a user name and password on startup!
Difficulty: Easy
Time Required: Configuring Windows Vista to log on to a user account automatically takes less than 5 minutes
Here's How:
1. Click on Start, type the following command in the search box, and then hit the Enter key.
netplwiz
This command will load the Advanced User Accounts control panel.
2. In the Users tab, uncheck the box next to Users must enter a user name and password to use this computer.
3. Click on the Apply button at the bottom of the User Accounts window.
4. When the Automatically Log On dialog box appears, enter your password in the two fields where it's asked and then click OK.
5.
Click OK on the User Accounts window to complete the process.
Posted by mashwani at 12:27 AM 0 comments
Windows Media Player 11
Posted by mashwani at 12:26 AM 0 comments
Control Panel in Windows Vista
Let’s first get aware of new features of
The Control Panel in Windows Vista offers many new features
Ø
Ø Parental Controls: You can use Parental Controls to enable, configure, and manage the new parental controls in Windows Vista.
Ø Pen and Input Devices:You can use this feature to configure and manage alternate input devices including pens and input panels.
Ø Sidebar Properties: With this feature, you can configure and manage how the Windows Vista sidebar appears on the interface.
Ø
Ø Text to Speech: With Text to Speech, you can set up, train, and run speech recognition, and to configure and run text to speech translation.
Ø Windows Defender: With this functionality, you can check for unwanted or harmful software, scan your computer, view quarantined items, and visit the Windows Defender Web site.
Posted by mashwani at 12:25 AM 0 comments
Safeguard your data
Help keep your system safe from data loss using scheduled and network backup features, available in the Home Premium, Business, and Ultimate editions of Windows Vista. Automatically scheduled backups and your choice of backup destinations help you to recover your data in the event of hardware failure. It's easy to restore your PC or to bring a new PC to your current state using Complete PC Backup and Restore. Together, these features help safeguard every last bit of your PC settings, programs, and personal data. Complete PC Backup is part of Windows Vista Business and Windows Vista Ultimate.
Posted by mashwani at 12:25 AM 0 comments
Windows Vista’s “Snipping Tool”
Windows Vista Snipping Tool is introduced to you in this TIP! To open the Snipping Tool, go to Start, Accessories, Snipping Tool. (You can also access it by typing the word "snip" into the search box under the Start menu (non-classic Start Menu)).
You can choose which type of shot you'd like to do. The choices are: Free-form snip, rectangular snip, window snip or full-screen snip. When you've decided which one you want to do, focus in on what you want to capture. To snip, just drag your mouse until you've captured what you want. Once you've got it snipped, you can choose from different customizing options to add certain things to your image. For example, you can use a highlighter to highlight certain things in whatever color you'd like to use. You can use the pen tool, eraser tool. When you're done with your screenshot, you can either save it or you can even send it to someone in an e-mail. So, NO need to open Paint separately.
Posted by mashwani at 12:24 AM 0 comments
Network Access Protection in Vista
Feature Description
Windows Vista includes an agent that can prevent a Windows Vista-based client from connecting to your private network if it lacks current security updates or lacks virus signatures. Network Access Protection can be used to protect your network from remote access clients as well as local area network (LAN) clients. The agent reports Windows Vista client health status, such as having current updates and up-to-date virus signatures installed, to a server-based Network Access Protection enforcement service. A Network Access Protection infrastructure, included with Windows Server Code Name Longhorn, determines whether to grant the client access to your private network or to a restricted network.
Benefits
Network Access Protection can enforce health requirements for mobile computers, remote computers, and computers directly connected to your private network. Often, users who travel with their computers are unable to connect to your private network for weeks at a time. When they do connect, their connections might be so brief that their computers do not have time to download the latest updates, security configuration settings, and virus signatures. Therefore, mobile computers are often in a less-healthy state than other computers. Network Access Protection improves the security of these mobile computers by ensuring that the latest updates are installed before users connect to your private network.
Posted by mashwani at 12:23 AM 0 comments
Secrets of Microsoft Windows Vista Ultimate
Where did the Menu Bars go?
Notice anything missing in your Explorer folders? The menu bar (File, Edit, View…) is missing from those windows. It seems that MS decided to save you a little space for the windows. Though as most things happen to be in Windows Vista you can customize the windows and bring them back!
If you want to bring them back quickly for a single window, here is what to do. First lets look at what we are missing:
Now all you have to do is hit the Alt or F10 key to make them magically appear:

Now the Menu Bar is back where it belongs!
If you want to have all windows display the menu bar permanently do the following:
In the window click on Organize, Layout and Menu Bar:
The menus will now stay in all the windows permanently until you do the same command to remove it. Posted by mashwani at 12:19 AM 1 comments
Customizing Vista's Taskbar and Start Menu
Getting started
You can access the Taskbar and Start Menu Properties dialog box in Windows Vista using the same methods that you do in Windows XP. You can right-click on the Start button or the Taskbar and select the Properties command or you can open the Control Panel, select Appearance and Personalization, and then click the Taskbar and Start Menu icon.
Either way you access it, you'll see the new Taskbar and Start Menu Properties dialog box shown in Figure A. Right off the bat, you'll notice that the new Taskbar and Start Menu Properties dialog box has four tabs rather than two.
Figure A |
![]() |
| Windows Vista's Taskbar and Start Menu Properties dialog box has four tabs instead of two. |
Keep in mind that, just like in Windows XP, selecting the Properties command from the Start button will open the dialog box with the Start menu tab showing while selecting the Properties command from the Taskbar or clicking the Taskbar and Start Menu icon in the Control Panel will open the dialog box with the Taskbar tab showing.
The Taskbar tab
As you can see, the Taskbar tab is straightforward and contains just six check boxes. (The Notification area, which used to be on this bottom portion of the tab, now has its own tab.) The first five configuration options, and their corresponding actions, are identical to those in Windows XP. The new option, titled Show Window Previews (Thumbnails), allows you to disable the live Taskbar thumbnails feature, which of course is one of the new Aero features that displays thumbnail images of running applications as you hover your mouse pointer over any button on the Taskbar.
Since the thumbnails are very helpful in quickly identifying active tasks and will actually show live operations, such as a download in progress, I'm not sure what advantage disabling it will have. However, some folks may not like the additional graphics overhead and clearing the Show Window Previews (Thumbnails) check box will revert the Taskbar back to the way it worked in Windows XP--it simply displays the title of running applications as you hover your mouse pointer over the button on the Taskbar.
Alteration advantage
Even though hiding the Taskbar will give you more screen real estate, I was reluctant to do so in Windows XP because I always needed the Taskbar not only to switch tasks, but also to see the time; however, I've discovered that in Windows Vista I don't have to permanently keep the Taskbar on the screen because of Flip 3D.
If you enable the Auto-Hide The Taskbar option and disable the Keep the Taskbar On Top Of Other Windows option, you'll not only increase your screen real estate, but you'll begin to really appreciate the elegance of using Flip 3D as your main task switching mechanism. Furthermore, having the Clock gadget on the desktop’s Windows Sidebar further does away with the need to have the Taskbar visible in order to see the time.
Keep in mind that hiding the taskbar and primarily using Flip 3D to task switch doesn’t negate the usefulness of the Taskbar. It will still appear and can be used when you press the [Windows] key or when you hover your mouse pointer at the bottom of the screen.
The Start Menu tab
When you first open the Start menu tab, you'll notice that it no longer contains a miniature image of the Start Menu, as shown in Figure B. You'll also notice that it contains a new panel titled Privacy that provide you with two check boxes to remove the Recent menu from the Start Menu and disable the list of recently opened programs that automatically accumulate on the main section of the Start Menu.
Figure B |
![]() |
| The Start Menu tab no longer contains a miniature image of the Start Menu. |
While Microsoft has greatly enhanced the way that Windows Vista's Start Menu works, you can still select the Classic Start Menu radio button, click Apply, and revert back to a Windows 2000 style Start menu. If you then click the adjacent Customize button, you'll discover that the Customize Classic Start Menu dialog box is almost identical to the same dialog box in Windows XP.
If you are using the Vista Start Menu, you may want to click the adjacent Customize button and investigate the plethora of options on the Customize Start Menu dialog box, as shown in Figure C. Rather than two tabs, this newly designed dialog box only has one tab and a host of configuration options now appear in the scrolling outline box.
Figure C |
![]() |
| The Customize Start Menu dialog box now only has one tab and a host of configuration options appear in the scrolling outline box. |
Alteration advantage
You can put the main area of the Start Menu to much better use if you configure it as a launching area for all the programs you use most often. To do so, clear the Store And Display A List Of Recently Opened Programs check box in the Privacy panel. Then, access the Customize Start Menu dialog box and clear the Internet Link check box--an Internet Explorer icon already appears on the Quick Launch menu. You may want to clear the E-mail Link check box as well--especially if you have a shortcut to your E-mail application in the Startup folder so that it starts each time you log on or if you launch it once and then leave it running all the time.
Once you clear up that space on the Start Menu, access the All Programs submenu, right-click on a shortcut to a program you use most often, and select the Pin To Start Menu command. You can add between 15 and 30 shortcuts to your most often used programs to the Start Menu. (The number of shortcuts you can add will depend on your screen resolution setting.)
The Notification Area tab
On the Notification tab, shown in Figure D, you'll find that the Hide Inactive Icons check box and Customize button work exactly like they do in Windows XP. However, you'll notice that in the System Icons panel you can add and remove not only the Clock, but also the Volume, Network, and if you're using a laptop, the Power icon.
Figure D |
![]() |
| The System Icons panel on the Notification Area tab provides you with a quick stop place to add icons to the Notification area. |
Alteration advantage
If you configure the Taskbar with the Auto-Hide setting and rely on the Clock and Calendar gadgets on the desktop's Windows Sidebar for the time and date, you can then clear the Clock check box in order to enlarge the space available to the Taskbar and provide more room in the Notification Area.
The Toolbars tab
The Toolbars tab, shown in Figure E, is completely new to the Taskbar and Start Menu Properties dialog box, and displays the same list of toolbars that you can see by right-clicking on the Taskbar itself and selecting the Toolbars submenu from the context menu. And while you can easily enable and disable the various toolbars from the Toolbars tab, you can't add new toolbars. To do that, you still have to go to the Toolbars submenu on the Taskbar.
Figure E |
![]() |
| Unfortunately, the Toolbars tab is missing the ability to add new toolbars to the taskbar. |
Conclusion
Windows Vista's Taskbar and Start Menu Properties dialog box has received a fair amount of reorganization and fine tuning yet is still familiar when it comes to customizing the Taskbar and Start Menu. If you have comments or information to share about Taskbar and Start Menu Properties dialog box, please take a moment to drop by the Discussion area and let us hear.
Posted by mashwani at 12:47 AM 0 comments
Windows Vista How-Tos
This list contains all of the articles written about Windows Vista. If you can't find a topic in here, try the search.
* Desktop Customization
* Managing Files and Folders
* Network and Internet
* Security
* System Administration
* Windows Aero Glass
* Tips and Tweaks
- Disable Shortcut Icon Arrow Overlay in Windows Vista
- Dual Monitors: Use a Different Wallpaper on Each Desktop in Vista or XP
- Setting up Gmail IMAP Support for Windows Vista Mail
- Disable Flip3D in Windows Vista
- Remove Optional and Probably Unnecessary Windows Vista Components
- What is svchost.exe And Why Is It Running?
- What is jusched.exe And Why Is It Running?
- What is ctfmon.exe And Why Is It Running?
Posted by mashwani at 11:37 PM 0 comments










