Saturday, August 2, 2008

200 zapak chips for free IN FOUR EASY STEPS

Yes you have heard me right i have found a way to get 200 zapak chips
here is the trick
1.DOWNLOAD THIS FILE ITS THE LATEST VERSION OF FLASH PLAYER
FILE:  FLASH PLAYER
2.SIGN IN TO ZAPAK WITH YOUR ID.
3.GOTO MULTIPLAYER GAMES SECTION
4.ENTER INTO ANY GAME AND GOTO THE NEW LOBBY
AND YOU WILL GET YOUR 200 CHIPS
NOW THANK ME FOR IT  BYE FOR NOW HAVE A NICE DAY

Friday, May 16, 2008

Google Desktop Search Registry Tweaks

Google Desktop Search Registry Tweaks

Desktop Search Tools from Yahoo and Microsoft let you search web favorites and browser history by name. But Google Desktop Search is the only search tool in this category that lets you search web history by actual content.

Google tracks and indexes all websites and local webpages you visit with IE or Firefox while Google Desktop is running. Google automatically stores a thumnail preview of every webpage in the browser cache and displays links to different cached versions of the same page in chronological order. Similarly with other files, Google Desktop not only indexes them, it caches file content each time you save the file. If you delete a file from the hard-disk or clear the browser history cache, it would still exist in the Google cache.

Google index size will continue to increase exponenitially and very soon, your hard-drive may no longer be able accomodate the ever-growing index. In this extreme scenario, you have a few options:

Option 1. Uninstall Google Desktop Search and Reinstall

Option 2. Selectively remove items from Google cache

Option 3. Delete Google Desktop Search Index files

> Exit Google Desktop and Open Registry editor.
> Goto HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Google\Google Desktop
> In the right-hand pane, "data_dir" contains the location of the Google Desktop index.
> Open that folder in Windows Explorer and delete it.
> This technique may require your to reinstall GDS.

Option 4. Move Google Desktop index to a different location

> Exit Google Desktop and Open Registry editor.
> Goto HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Google\Google Desktop
> In the right-hand pane, "data_dir" contains the location of the Google Desktop index.
> Open that folder in Windows Explorer and move the entire folder to a different drive.
> Change the "data_dir" value to reflect the new location of the Google Desktop index.
> Exit the Registry editor and Restart Google Desktop search.

Ideally, you should apply the above registry tweak as soon as you install GDS since Google preferences pages do not let you specifiy the location of index files.

Another variable "file_extensions_to_skip" under the same registry key lets you specify file extensions that you would like GDS to skip. If you use GDS to index GMail, your GMail account credentials will be stored in HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Google\ Google Desktop\Mailboxes\Gmail

Thursday, April 10, 2008

Customer Care in 2020 - ha ha ha

  Operator: "Thank you for calling Pizza Hut. May I have
 your..."
 Customer: "Heloo, can I order.."
 Operator: "Can I have your multi purpose card number
 first, Sir?"
 Customer: "It's eh..., hold..........on......
 889861356102049998-45-54610 "
 Operator: "OK... you' re... Mr Singh and you're calling from 17 Jalan Kayu. Your home number is 4094! 2366, your office 76452302 and your mobile is 0142662566. Which number are you calling from now Sir? "
 Customer: "Home! How did you get all my phone numbers?
 
 Operator: "We are connected to the system Sir "
 
 Customer: "May I order your Seafood Pizza... "
 Operator: "That' s not a good idea Sir"
 Customer: " How come?"
 Operator: " According to your medical records, you have high blood pressure and even higher cholesterol level Sir"
 Customer: "What?... What do you recommend then?"
 Operator: "Try our Low Fat Hokkien Mee Pizza. You'll like it "
 Customer: "How do you know for sure? "
 Operator: "You borrowed a book entitled "Popular Hokkien Dishes" from the National Library last week Sir "
 Customer: "OK I give up... Give me three family size ones then, how much will that cost? "
 Operator: "That should be enough for your family of 10, Sir. The total is $49.99 "
 Customer: "Can I pay by! Credit card? "
 Operator: "I 'm afraid you have to pay us cash, Sir. Your credit card is over the limit and you owe your bank
 $3, 720.55 since October last year. That 's not including the late payment charges on your housing loan, Sir."
 Customer: "I guess I have to run to the neighbourhood ATM and withdraw some cash before your guy arrives"
 Operator: "You can't Sir. Based on the records, you 've reached your daily limit on machine withdrawal today"
 Customer: "Never mind just send the pizzas; I'll have the cash ready. How long is it gonna take anyway? "
 Operator: "About 45 minutes Sir, but if you can 't wait you can always come and collect it on your motorcycle..."
 Customer: "What!
 Operator: "According to the details in system, you own a Scooter,...registration number 1123..."
 Customer: " ????"
 Operator: "Is there anything else Sir?"
 Customer: "Nothing... by the way... aren't you giving me that 3 free bottles of cola as advertised? "
 Operator: "We normally would Sir, but based on your records you 're also diabetic....... "
 Customer: #$$^%&$@$%^
 Operator: "Better watch your language Sir. Remember on 15th July 1987 you were convicted of using abusive language
 on a policeman...? "
 Customer: [Faints]

Increase your Bandwidth by 20%

Increase your Bandwidth by 20%
 
 
 Windows uses 20% of your bandwidth! Get it back
 
 A nice little tweak for XP. M*crosoft reserve 20% of your available bandwidth for their own purposes (suspect for updates and interrogating your machine etc..)
 
 Here's how to get it back:
 
 Click Start-->Run-->type "gpedit.msc" without the "
 
 This opens the group policy editor. Then go to:
 
 Local Computer Policy-->Computer Configuration-->Administrative Templates-->Network-->QOS Packet Scheduler-->Limit Reservable Bandwidth
 
 Double click on Limit Reservable bandwidth. It will say it is not configured, but the truth is under the 'Explain' tab :
 
 "By default, the Packet Scheduler limits the system to 20 percent of the bandwidth of a connection, but you can use this setting to override the default."
 
 So the trick is to ENABLE reservable bandwidth, then set it to ZERO. This will allow the system to reserve nothing, rather than the default 20%.
 __________________

Thursday, March 6, 2008

Speed up your internet by changing your dns

DNS servers live on the Internet, and your computer contacts them with the request to do that translation, which is commonly called name resolution. When you use an ISP, your
computer will automatically use the default DNS servers specified by your ISP; you typically don't need to set up DNS in any way. If you're on a corporate network, your
systems administrator may have set you up to use specific DNS servers.

If there's a delay in contacting the DNS server, or if the DNS server takes too much time resolving the address, you'll face a delay in getting to a Web site. So even if
you've got the world's fattest pipe, your Web surfing will be slowed down.

If you could speed up the name resolution in some way, you'd be able to speed up your Web surfing. And that's exactly what I'll show you how to do.




--=[Speed up Web browsing with OpenDNS

Here's the simplest way to hack DNS to speed up your Web browsing: Use free, superfast DNS servers run by the OpenDNS service instead of your ISP's DNS servers. OpenDNS
has a monstrously big DNS cache, with DNS servers around the world, so you'll be able to retrieve IP addresses from it more quickly than from your ISP's DNS servers.

The addresses of the OpenDNS servers are 208.67.222.222 for a primary DNS server and 208.67.220.220 for a secondary server.

To use the OpenDNS servers, you'll have to tell your computer to use them. If you have Windows XP, first select Control Panel --> Network and Internet Connections -->
Network Connections, right-click your network connection from the Network Connections window, and select Properties. A dialog box like that shown below appears.

Scroll down to the Internet Protocol (TCP/IP) listing and select Properties. At the bottom of the screen, select "Use the following DNS server addresses." For the
Preferred DNS server, enter this address: 208.67.222.222. For the Alternative DNS server, enter this address: 208.67.220.220. Click OK, and then click Close and Close again.
Restart your PC in order for the settings to take effect. The figure below shows the screen filled out properly.

If you're using Windows Vista, select Control Panel --> Network and Internet --> Network and Sharing Center. Click the View Status link on the right side of the screen.

bye

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