Thursday, August 11, 2011
15 Firefox Tricks
Posted by
Ani Online
at
9:36 PM
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comments
1) More screen space. Make your icons small. Go to View - Toolbars - Customize and check the “Use small icons” box.
2) Smart keywords. If there’s a search you use a lot (let’s say IMDB.com’s people search), this is an awesome tool that not many people use. Right-click on the search box, select “Add a Keyword for this search”, give the keyword a name and an easy-to-type and easy-to-remember shortcut name (let’s say “actor”) and save it. Now, when you want to do an actor search, go to Firefox’s address bar, type “actor” and the name of the actor and press return. Instant search! You can do this with any search box.
F1 through F12 keys
Posted by
Ani Online
at
6:45 PM
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Commonly known as "function keys", F1 through F12 may have a variety of different uses or no use at all. Depending on the installed operating system and the software program currently open will change how each of these keys operate. A program is capable of not only using each of the function keys, but also combining the function keys with the ALT or CTRL key, for example, Microsoft Windows users can press ALT + F4 to close the program currently active.
Tuesday, August 2, 2011
Utorrent settings for bsnl dataone users (other client users can aslo follow this)
Posted by
Ani Online
at
12:35 AM
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if u got any problems by the following steps we are not responsible for ur damage...this is written purely for bsnl dataone users to improve their torrent speed.
1. First download this file for windows xp servicepack2 or servicepack3 which ur using...( ur anti-virus detect this as virus because it is windows half open tcp connection modification file. so u can ignore this)
Friday, June 17, 2011
Comparison between IPv4 and IPv6
Posted by
Ani Online
at
6:18 PM
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IPv6 is based on IPv4, it is an evolution of IPv4. So many things that we find with IPv6 are familiar to us. The main differences are:
1.Simplified header format. IPv6 has a fixed length header, which does not include most of the options an IPv4 header can include. Even though the IPv6 header contains two 128 bit addresses (source and destination IP address) the whole header has a fixed length of 40 bytes only. This allows for faster processing.
Options are dealt with in extension headers, which are only inserted after the IPv6 header if needed. So for instance if a packet needs to be fragmented, the fragmentation header is inserted after the IPv6 header. The basic set of extension headers is defined in RFC 2460.
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