Selasa, 08 Maret 2011

PC Mechanic, New Article

PC Mechanic, New Article


6 Mobile Web Sites That Let You Get Stuff Done Faster

Posted: 08 Mar 2011 03:00 AM PST

Hyperspace_falconMobile sites aren’t just for mobile devices like smartphones and tablets as many of them can be accessed on desktop computers easily.

Why use any of these?

It’s an unfortunate truth that many of us spend a lot of time waiting for stuff to load because of heavy web site scripting. Mobile sites are very light and load very fast. While it’s true they don’t have the full feature set of the "normal" site, the time spent waiting for stuff to load is decreased by well more than half. This is especially useful if you happen to be on a slow and/or flaky internet connection.

Facebook: http://m.facebook.com

Gmail: http://m.gmail.com

Yahoo! Mail: http://m.yahoo.com/w/ygo-mail

Scroogle Scraper: http://www.scroogle.org/scraper.html (not a mobile-specific site but a very barebones fast way of searching Google)

Bing search: http://m.bing.com/

PCMech: http://m.facebook.com/pcmech (very basic but very fast)

Post from: PCMech. Helping Normal People Get Their Geek On And Live The Digital Lifestyle.

6 Mobile Web Sites That Let You Get Stuff Done Faster

Where Are Themes Stored In Windows?

Posted: 07 Mar 2011 07:00 AM PST

Windows Themes are easy to work with but a pain to find the actual files for. The .theme file itself is actually nothing more than plain text settings, similar to an .ini file.

What does a .theme file contain?

Theme settings for fonts, window control sizes, colors, what screen saver is selected, sounds selected, mouse pointers selected, and so on.

What doesn’t a .theme file contain?

Anything that is not bundled with a standard Windows installation. This includes custom wallpaper, custom sound files, custom screen saver and so on. Basically put, if it didn’t come with Windows, the theme won’t contain it.

This is actually important to know this, and you’ll understand why in a moment.

What good is knowing where .theme files are?

Many people these days have more than one computer, and in true ‘vanilla’ fashion, computer geeks usually like all of their Windows PCs to look and feel exactly the same whether the theme used is simple or complicated.

The good thing about knowing how to get to your .theme file is that you can copy it to another Windows computer, double-click it and now that computer looks and feels identical to the one it came from.

Locating a theme, copying it elsewhere

Windows XP:

This is located in Display Properties, Themes tab. Make the modifications you want, then click the Save As… button.

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The great thing about the way XP does this is that you can save your .theme file anywhere you want. If you wanted to save the file to the Desktop and then email it somewhere or copy it to a USB stick, no problem.

If however you want to get to where all your themes are stored, the location is:

%WINDIR%\Resources\Themes

You can access this directly by clicking Start / Run and typing in the location like this:

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…clicking OK, and an Explorer window will launch in that location, showing all .theme files.

Windows 7:

This Windows environment only allows you to save themes in a deep directory, so you have to know where it is to retrieve custom .theme files.

The path for custom saved themes is:

%USERPROFILE%\AppData\Local\Microsoft\Windows\Themes

You can access this by Windows Logo / Run, typing in the location:

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…and clicking OK to open an Explorer window to see your custom theme files.

Important note: If you haven’t saved any custom themes previously, there will be nothing there. You have to save at least one custom theme. To do this, go to Personalization and click the "Save Theme" link to create one:

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Anything listed under "My Themes" will be in the folder mentioned above.

How to enable a copied theme on another Windows PC?

Copy it to the destination computer, then double-click it.

Yes, it’s that easy.

Important notes about trading themes between Windows PCs

Like-Windows Only

XP themes only work correctly on XP-loaded computers, Win7 themes only work on Win7 computers and so on. The settings per each version of Windows differ, so you’ll need to stay in like-Windows territory when trading themes between Windows PCs.

Any custom sounds/fonts/wallpaper/mouse pointers/etc. the theme uses must be copied with the theme and put in the exact same location

If for example you have a theme that calls for a wallpaper image from c:\pics\wallpaper.bmp, any computer you copy the theme to must also have that exact same file in the exact same location.

You can avoid all this copy-everything crapola by specifically using sounds/fonts/pointers/etc. that come bundled with a standard installation of Windows.

Post from: PCMech. Helping Normal People Get Their Geek On And Live The Digital Lifestyle.

Where Are Themes Stored In Windows?

How To Create A Slipstreamed Windows 7 Service Pack 1 Installation Disc

Posted: 07 Mar 2011 05:00 AM PST

For those of you who do a lot of Windows 7 installations, creating a slipstreamed installation disc with the newly released service pack 1 already included can really save you a bunch of time. The process of actually creating a slipstreamed disc is very easy and for step-by-step instructions, check out this article.

To get started, you will first need to create an ISO of your existing Windows 7 install disc which can easily be done using a freely available tool such as ImgBurn. Once you have the ISO file created, just follow the steps on the article linked above and you will have an updated installation disc which includes SP1.

Of course, you can always download and install SP1 via Windows Update, but having all the patches included as part of your install can easily save you hours of extra download and wait time.

Post from: PCMech. Helping Normal People Get Their Geek On And Live The Digital Lifestyle.

How To Create A Slipstreamed Windows 7 Service Pack 1 Installation Disc

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