Rogue Warrior - PC Games
Trailers for Rogue Warrior
Release: Oct. 6th, 2009
Developer: Bethesda, Zombie
Genre: Modern Tactical Shooter
Rogue Warrior - PC Games
Posted by Rajender at 8:20 PM 0 comments
Labels: G, Games, R, Rogue Warrior
Operation Flashpoint 2: Dragon Rising
Desciption :
This sequel to Codemasters' popular Cold War-themed shooter will take place in a modern setting in which tensions are high between China and Russia.
Release: Oct. 6th, 2009
Developer: Codemasters
Genre: Tactical Shooter
Trailer
Posted by Rajender at 8:09 PM 0 comments
Labels: Games, R, Risen Teaser, RolePlaying
Posted by Rajender at 7:42 PM 0 comments
On June 22, 1941 an avalanche of 153 German divisions crash into the Soviet Union and the largest military operation in history is begun: Operation Barbarossa. In this elegant turn-based strategy game, compelling gameplay combines with gripping history to create an addictive mix.
Aimed at all levels, from those who have never played a wargame before to those who know the history of World War II in detail, this is an entertaining and mentally challenging game of combined arms strategy. Your armor, infantry, artillery and air units will follow you through the most crucial battles of the Eastern Front. You will be able to choose from 47 different upgrades and improvements for your units as well as add new forces based on your success in the campaign.
Hardware Requirements
OS: Windows XP/Vista
CPU: 1.6 GHz
RAM: 512 MB
Video/Graphics: DirectX 9.0c compatible video card with 64 MB RAM
Sound: Compatible sound card
Hard disk space: 400 MB
CD-Rom: Yes, for boxed version
DirectX version: DirectX 9.0c (November 2008 or later)
Recommended:
OS: Windows XP/Vista
CPU: 2.0 GHz
RAM: 1 GB
Video/Graphics: DirectX 9.0c compatible video card with 128 MB RAM
Sound: Compatible sound card
Hard disk space: 400 MB
CD-Rom: Yes, for boxed version
DirectX version: DirectX 9.0c (November 2008 or later)
Posted by Rajender at 7:36 PM 0 comments
Posted by Rajender at 4:43 PM 0 comments
Posted by Rajender at 4:40 PM 0 comments
Labels: Leopard Os, M, Mac, OS
:: What's New? ::
- No booting text from Vista Bios emulator
- 100% faster to activate
- Automated script
- Advanced Install Script (Detects almost all problems)
- New High Quality menu
- CleanTool (Cleans all previous activation cracks)
- Lightweight and silent activation
:: Supported OS ::
- Windows Vista Ultimate
- Windows Vista Business
- Windows Vista Enterprise
- Windows Vista Home Premium
- Windows Vista Home Basic
- Windows Vista Starter
- Windows Server 2008 Standard
- Windows Server 2008 Enterprise
- Windows Server 2008 Datacenter
- Windows Server 2003 (All)
- Windows Home Server
- Windows 7 Build 7100 or later
- Windows XP Home
- Windows XP Professional
- Windows XP Media Center Edition 2002
- Windows XP Media Center Edition 2005
All Service Packs or Power Packs are supported
All OS in x32(x86)Bit and x64(x64)Bit are supported
[There is a X64 problem found in this program, so doesn't work]
Experimental for: Windows Server 2008 R2
:: Tested OS ::
- Windows Vista Ultimate SP1
- Windows Vista Enterprise SP2 x86
- Windows XP Pro SP3
- Windows Home Server PP1
- Windows 7 Build 7100 RC
- Windows Server 2008 Enteprise SP1
:: What uses this activator? ::
- Vista Loader V4.9.7
- Server 2008 OEM activator
- Windows XP ntuser crack
- Windows 7 RC activator
Download Now
Posted by Rajender at 5:04 PM 0 comments
While iPhone owners have long had a powerful Facebook app with a wide range of functionality, Google Android users have had to make do with the mobile version of the social networking site (called Facebook Lite). Not only does it offer limited features, but also it is clunky and rather difficult to navigate.
But that changed Tuesday when a new and long-awaited Facebook app hit the Android market. The free app offers many of the features that you've come to expect on the iPhone app and the full version of the site. You can scan your news feed, view your friends' walls and user info, comment on status updates and hit the "like" button, take and upload photos, add new friends and post status updates of your own. What's more, you can add a notification widget to your home screen and you even can shake to refresh your news feed.
Though we welcome the extra features the interface and navigation appear a bit convoluted as of now. For example, it takes a lot of clicks to get to a friend's profile and list of friends. Also, you can't get Facebook chat or access to messaging for now. We assume those features will be added soon.
It's worth noting that while Facebook is listed as the developer in the Android Market, Facebook's official Web page for the app says that it was not developed by the company. From what we hear, Google developed the app with Facebook's help.
Posted by Rajender at 1:15 PM 0 comments
Symantec is betting heavily that program behavior is the future battlefront of security and is making a big push in its 2010 security program lineup with a behavioral engine called Quorum.
Debuting Wednesday, both the basic Norton AntiVirus 2010 and the more robust Norton Internet Security 2010 will use Quorum, which Symantec is calling an advanced security network based both on traditional malware signatures and on reputation for both files and software.
The Quorum system uses the uniqueness of mutating malware against the threat itself, said Dan Nadir, director of product management for Norton AntiVirus and Norton Internet Security. Multiple variations of a single threat have become a potential risk to the efficacy of definition-based antivirus, so a system like Quorum--in which the unfamiliarity of a new threat becomes the tool by which the threat is neutralized--could drastically improve security programs.
Symantec noted that it hasn't abandoned last year's pledge to improve Norton's performance, and it is keeping the quick scan to about one minute. An in-progress scan conducted with the beta version used about 70MB of RAM, while the program used about 15.5 MB when idle. Symantec also exposes how much memory the program is using in the main pane. Symantec says that in the final version, Norton users should expect to see working memory usage at less than 10 MB, and that the "quick scan" should be completed in 64 seconds.
The Quorum technology is designed to expose system and threat-detection data, so users who want more than just "set-it-and-forget-it" information can customize Norton's responses. The Insight Network incorporates Quorum and uses statistical analysis of file attributes to judge the trustworthiness of a file. Norton Threat Insight provides information on detected threats, such as the URL of a threat. Norton System Insight uncovers system information and can be used to detect system slowdowns. Norton Download Insight uses Symantec's cloud data to determine the safety of a downloaded file before it runs.
The more robust Norton Internet Security includes new enterprise-level antispam algorithms, which Symantec says shouldn't require any "training" from users. These have been incorporated from Brightmail, a company that Symantec bought more than five years ago. Norton Internet Security also includes OnlineFamily.Norton, Symantec's new parental control system, and Norton SafeWeb, which is a search results and e-commerce rating component.
Posted by Rajender at 1:09 PM 0 comments
Intel new processor (2009/10) Named Nehalem
ntel® microarchitecture, codenamed Nehalem, offers the latest in processor innovation, including:
Posted by Rajender at 2:43 PM 0 comments
Microsoft Corp. Thursday released its first software designed specifically to manage virtual machines on a network, and tweaked licensing for its system management products to take into account virtualization.
System Center Virtual Machine Manager 2007, which has been in the works for about a year and a half, has been released to manufacturing and will be generally available in October as part of Microsoft's System Server Management Center suite of products, the company said.
The new product is built on the same architecture as other products in the enterprise version of the suite -- which include Data Protection Manager, Operations Manager and Configuration Manager -- and is aimed specifically at managing virtual machines in a data center that runs Microsoft Virtual Server 2005 R2, the current version of Microsoft's server virtualization technology, said Patrick O'Rourke, group manager of Windows Infrastructure.
"Customers now can use the same tools to manage both virtual and physical assets [on the network]," he said.
Microsoft also has changed the licensing model for its for its System Center Server Management Suite Enterprise, making it available for $860 per host server -- which means the actual server that hosts any instances of virtual software -- plus two years of Microsoft's Software Assurance plan. Previously, System Center software was licensed per device being managed in the data center, O'Rourke said. The new licensing should make managing virtualized environments with Microsoft's software more cost-effective for customers, he said.
Microsoft has been developing and fine-tuning its virtualization strategy over the past several years to keep up with virtualization leader VMware Inc. and others, as well as to serve the needs of large customers who increasingly are using virtualization in their data centers. However, the company's strategy has predictably hit some road bumps.
Microsoft is developing next-generation virtualization technology, code-named Viridian, that takes advantage of virtualization-optimized processors from Intel Corp. and Advanced Micro Devices Inc. and will help keep the company up to speed with competitors. However, though Viridian will be a component of Windows Server 2008, it won't be available until six months after that new operating system is released. And since Microsoft recently pushed back the release of Windows Server 2008 to the first quarter of next year, Viridian's release is nearly a year away. The company also decided earlier this year to pull out some originally planned features of Viridian because of timing concerns.
In the meantime, customers can use a combination of Microsoft's stand-alone Virtual Server and its System Center products to install and manage both virtual and physical machines in the data center. Microsoft also is planning a midmarket version of Virtual Machine Manager, called Workgroup edition, for release in January. The software will cost $499 per host server.
Microsoft also plans to extend the capabilities of the next version of Virtual Machine Manager so that it not only supports Windows Server virtualization technologies but also third-party virtualization from VMware and XenSource Inc., O'Rourke said. A beta of that software is expected to be available around the same time as Windows Server 2008, and Microsoft plans to update its road map then as well.
Posted by Rajender at 2:37 PM 0 comments
Labels: Virtual Servers, W, Windows
Microsoft Reveals New Windows Mobile 6 Smartphone Software, Improves World’s Fastest-Growing Mobile Operating System
BARCELONA, Spain — Feb. 12, 2007 — Microsoft Corp. today unveiled Windows Mobile® 6, the newest version of its mobile software platform. By improving usability and adding support for Microsoft® Office features previously available only on PCs, Microsoft Windows Mobile 6 delivers to the small screen a familiar and rich experience that meets the needs of work and life while on the go, all with a single device.
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“A work force that is both mobile and connected is becoming essential for business success,” said Steve Ballmer, CEO of Microsoft. “That’s why we’re integrating innovative mobile technologies into all our key products, with Windows Mobile as the centerpiece.”
Windows Mobile 6 delivers the ability to view e-mails in their original rich HTML format with live links to Web and SharePoint® sites, which means text and images are displayed as they would be on a PC, and are available from a corporate e-mail server such as Exchange Server 2007, from Web-based accounts such as Windows Live™ Hotmail or from a myriad of other popular service providers. Windows Mobile 6 also includes Windows Live for Windows Mobile, which provides customers with a rich set of Windows Live services. For example, now through Windows Live Messenger, people can chat with more than one person at one time, express themselves through animated figures, quickly send a file or image, or record and send voice notes.
The newest version of the platform offers the most genuine Microsoft Office system experience in the mobile versions of Office Outlook®, Office Word, Office Excel® and Office PowerPoint® by bringing capabilities once available only on the PC versions of these products to the small screen. This allows users to neatly view, navigate and edit Word documents and Excel spreadsheets in their original formatting, without affecting tables, images or text, and to view PowerPoint presentations on their device.
All Windows Mobile 6 powered devices include Direct Push Technology for up-to-date e-mail delivery and automatic synchronization of Outlook calendars, tasks and contacts through Microsoft Exchange Server. Windows Mobile 6 also offers a set of important device security and management features that include the capability to remotely wipe all data from a device should it be lost or stolen, helping ensure that confidential information remains that way.
Broad Industry Support to Result in Broader Choice of Devices
By the second quarter of this year, the world will see the first Windows Mobile 6 powered devices available on the market. In Europe, Orange plans to deliver the SPV E650 smartphone from HTC, and in Japan, SoftBank Mobile Corp. will offer new devices from Toshiba and HTC. And in the United States, the popular T-Mobile Dash will be updated with Windows Mobile 6 and be available in the coming months. Current T-Mobile Dash owners will also be able to upgrade existing devices with Windows Mobile 5.0 to Windows Mobile 6.
Scores of additional mobile operators and device makers from around the globe, including Cingular Wireless, now the new AT&T, Chunghwa Telecom, Dopod International Corp., HP, LG Electronics, Motorola Inc., Palm Inc., Samsung, SingTel, Sprint, Telefónica, Toshiba, Verizon Wireless and Vodafone and Willcom, plan to ship Windows Mobile 6-based devices this year. Many of these partners are expanding large existing portfolios of Windows Mobile powered smartphones.
“In a highly sophisticated mobile market such as Japan, people are turning to powerful and intuitive mobile devices to stay competitive in the business world,” said Ted Matsumoto, executive vice president of technology and chief strategy officer at SoftBank. “We continue to work with Microsoft to equip SoftBank Mobile customers with the most cutting-edge tools in mobile technology and are excited that they will be able to experience the enhanced features and functionality of Windows Mobile 6 on two new smart devices from Toshiba and HTC.”
Information Management Made Easier
Users of the Microsoft Office system on the PC — of which there are nearly 400 million worldwide — will feel right at home with the new mobile versions of Outlook, Word, Excel and PowerPoint available for Windows Mobile 6 powered devices. Windows Mobile 6 addresses extensive user feedback and makes information management easier and more convenient through the following improvements:
• | Better-looking e-mail. Users view e-mail the way it was intended with its original pictures, tables and formatting, whether from a corporate e-mail server such as Exchange Server 2007, Web-based accounts such as Windows Live Hotmail or Yahoo! Mail, or a wide range of other service providers. |
• | Ease of viewing and editing of Office system documents. The new Office Mobile suite, built for all Windows Mobile powered devices, gives users a truly familiar and powerful experience with rich viewing and editing capabilities, without having to worry about the deletion of critical formatting and images. |
• | E-mail management and setup with fewer clicks. Nine new one-click options have been added, including Reply All, setting a flag, moving a message to a subfolder, and, of course, Delete. Users can set an automatic out-of-office reply while on the road when using a Windows Mobile 6 powered device and Exchange Server 2007. |
• | Synchronization with Windows Vista. Windows Vista™ and the Windows Mobile Device Center take the guesswork out of managing a device and swapping music, pictures, movies and Outlook information between PC and the device. |
• | Smart calendar bar. This innovative new feature gives users the ability to understand at a glance the day or week ahead and quickly determine open time on their schedules. With Exchange Server 2007, they can see who is attending a meeting and forward or reply to meeting requests. |
• | Web search, e-mail, instant messaging (IM) and blogging all together. Windows Live for Windows Mobile will provide customers with a rich set of services including Windows Live Hotmail, Windows Live Messenger, Live Search and Windows Live Spaces, uniquely designed to work with Windows Mobile software. Users can also find all their contacts in one unified list and see presence information on their Windows Live Messenger contacts. |
• | Contacts with context. Call history is now placed where it belongs, in each individual contact card, so people spend less time searching and more time communicating. |
“T-Mobile is excited to make it even easier for our customers to stay connected to the people that matter most with the increased functionality delivered by Microsoft Windows Mobile 6,” said Cole Brodman, senior vice president and chief development officer at T-Mobile USA. “The T-Mobile Dash is already one of our best-selling smartphones, so we’re thrilled to improve on an already great communications experience for our customers.”
Posted by Rajender at 2:36 PM 0 comments
On the war-torn planets of tomorrow, mankind’s greatest battle is about to begin. With its frontier colonies devastated by a growing insurrection, Earth dispatches its premier unit of powered-armor infantry to repel the coming onslaught. Known to their peers as Section 8, this elite unit spearheads the near-suicidal missions required to break enemy lines. Shielded by their advanced armor, these soldiers launch directly into the fray from orbital dropships.
Section 8™ is an intense first-person shooter that allows players to dynamically alter the flow of combat as they see fit. Employing strategic assets and on-demand vehicle deliveries, players are given unprecedented tactical control over epic sci-fi battlescapes. The war begins on specific next-gen consoles and the PC in 2009.
Posted by Rajender at 1:12 PM 0 comments
We’ve invested weeks and months over the years wrestling with virtualization technologies searching for the perfect fit for the Asterisk PBX platform and especially for the turnkey solutions provided by PBX in a Flash and our latest Orgasmatron V installer. Why virtualization you might be asking? As with most computer applications, it comes down to flexibility and, of course, cost savings.
In the flexibility department, VoIP virtualization lets you choose options such as Cloud Computing and hosted solutions from various providers. It also provides a terrific training platform as well as your own managed Cloud Computing solution. You can build and host a dozen or more virtual Asterisk systems on a single $500 to $1,000 server and have a transportable solution ready to deploy in a couple of hours. And then there are those of us in the technology business that need to test all sorts of new operating systems and applications without having to dedicate a standalone machine to each experiment.
As far as cost savings, $500 to $1,000 says it all. When you can run a dozen dedicated systems on such a hardware platform, it reduces the individual cost of each turnkey system deployment to well under $100. And the performance penalty for implementing this multitasking solution is only a 1 to 3 per cent performance hit compared to using comparable standalone systems for similar computing tasks. Om Malik recently noted that:
More than half of new servers in 2009 will be virtualized, compared with 30 percent in 2008, according to a new survey by TheInfoPro.”
Comparing 2009 to 2008 deployments, that’s a 70% increase in just one year. When there is comparable performance, 90% cost savings, and greatly enhanced deployment flexibility, you have to ask yourself why wouldn’t you deploy virtualized solutions. With the solution we’re providing today, you get some other benefits as well: snapshot backups and cluster computing, both of which actually work. And the cost of this virtualization technology… it’s FREE!
Hardware Requirements. For full KVM virtualization support, you’ll need either an Intel VT or AMD-V capable CPU/Mainboard. Also strongly recommended are a multi-core CPU and as much RAM as your budget can afford. Our favorites (primarily because of cost) are the Dell T105 (with either dual or quad core AMD Athlon processor) or the Dell T300 (with quad core Intel Xeon processor). Both are on sale for the next few days starting at $249 up to about $1,000 with $350-$549 off the retail prices. You can save more by using our Dell coupon in the right margin. We recommend purchasing larger hard disks from other suppliers so stick with the default setup in drives. Dell has gotten more competitive on RAM pricing so that’s your call. For a point of reference, a dual core AMD with 8GB of RAM can support about 8 simultaneous Asterisk servers.
Posted by Rajender at 8:43 PM 0 comments
AsSkype for terisk integrates with the Skype community. There is no secondary piece of hardware to manage as Skype for Asterisk will run directly from an Asterisk-based PBX.
Accidentally deleted an important file? Lost something important when your computer crashed? No problem! Recuva recovers files deleted from your Windows computer, Recycle Bin, digital camera card, or MP3 player. And it's free!
Posted by Rajender at 9:13 AM 0 comments
Labels: File Recovery, R
CCleaner is a freeware system optimization, privacy and cleaning tool. It removes unused files from your system - allowing Windows to run faster and freeing up valuable hard disk space. It also cleans traces of your online activities such as your Internet history. Additionally it contains a fully featured registry cleaner. But the best part is that it's fast (normally taking less than a second to run) and contains NO Spyware or Adware.
Company: | Piriform Ltd. |
---|---|
Version: | 2.23.993 |
Date added: | August 28, 2009 |
File size: | 950 Kb |
Approx. download time: | 2.3 min @ 56 kbps |
Downloads: | 21 |
License: | Freeware |
Minimum requirements: | Windows 2000/XP/2003/ |
Posted by Rajender at 8:12 AM 0 comments
Labels: Ccleaner, Temp files cleaner
Virtual CloneDrive works and behaves just like a physical CD/DVD drive, however it exists only virtually. Image files generated with CloneDVD or CloneCD can be mounted onto a virtual drive from your hard-disk or from a network drive and used in the same manner as inserting them into a normal CD/DVD drive.
Posted by Rajender at 9:47 PM 0 comments
Labels: DVD, VIdeo/Audio
PowerDVD is a software DVD player that offers the solution to enjoy personalized DVD entertainment on the PC. Its high quality video and audio playback has made it one of the most reliable.
The system requirements for CyberLink PowerDVD vary depending on the operating system installed on your machine (Windows 7, Vista or XP). Please consult the system requirements below that match your version of Windows.
CyberLink PowerDVD optimizes performance by selecting the appropriate video de-interlacing algorithm for the available processing power. CyberLink PowerDVD maintains its support for processors below 1.6 GHz by ensuring that TrueTheater Lighting technology will be turned off by default. CyberLink PowerDVD's advanced audio and video technologies function better when used with processors above 2.4 GHz.
CPU Minimum RequirementsIntel
Recommended
AMD
Recommended
System Memory (RAM)
Disc Drive
| Graphics Cards (GPU)Intel
NVIDIA
ATI
Note: we strongly recommend that you update your graphics card driver to the latest version. Display Devices
|
CPUIntel
AMD
System Memory (RAM)
Display Devices
| Disc Drive
Graphic Card (GPU)
Note: we strongly recommend that you update your graphics card driver to the latest version. |
Posted by Rajender at 9:38 PM 0 comments
Labels: DVD, Multimedia, VIdeo/Audio
Try Windows 7 for Free Through a Tweak
1) Extract all contents of the ISO to a folder on the deskop. I recommend using 7-Zip to open the ISO up.
2) Browse into the folder where you extracted all the files to and open up the /sources/ folder and locate ei.cfg.
3) At this point, you have two options:
Delete: If you delete this file, it will give you options on which version you want to install during installation.
Edit: If you edit this file, you can set which version of Windows you want it to install automatically.
If you chose to EDIT the file, just open the ei.cfg file in notepad and edit:
Change the word to Ultimate or any other version you would like to install.
Ultimate
Professional
HomePremium
HomeBasic
Starter
Posted by Rajender at 9:36 PM 0 comments
Key Features | Windows 7 Starter | Windows 7 Home Basic | Windows 7 Home Premium | Windows 7 Professional | Windows 7 Enterprise / Ultimate |
Improved Windows Taskbar and Jumplists | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
Windows Search | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
Join a Homegroup | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
Windows Media Player | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
Back-up & Restore | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
Action Center | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
Device Stage | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
Enhanced home media streaming, including Play To | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
Application Capabilities | Unlimited | Unlimited | Unlimited | Unlimited | Unlimited |
Live Thumbnail Previews from Taskbar | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | |
Fast User Switching | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | |
Create ad-hoc wireless networks | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | |
Internet Connection Sharing | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | |
Aero Glass & advanced Window navigation | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ||
Windows Touch (Multi-touch and handwriting support) | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ||
Create a Homegroup | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ||
Windows Media Center | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ||
DVD Video Playback and authoring | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ||
Location aware printing | ✓ | ✓ | |||
Domain Join & Group Policy Controls | ✓ | ✓ | |||
Remote Desktop Host | ✓ | ✓ | |||
Advanced Back-up (Network & Group Policy) | ✓ | ✓ | |||
Encrypting File System | ✓ | ✓ | |||
BitLocker & Bitlocker To Go | ✓ | ||||
AppLocker | ✓ | ||||
DirectAccess | ✓ | ||||
BranchCache | ✓ | ||||
MUI Language Packs |
Posted by Rajender at 9:33 PM 0 comments
Thanks to Top Sites, you can enjoy a stunning, at-a-glance preview of your favorite websites without lifting a finger. Safari 4 tracks the sites you browse and ranks your favorites, presenting up to 24 thumbnails on a single page. You can even customize the display by pinning a favorite site to a specific location in the grid. That locks it into position, so you know just where to find it every time you open Top Sites.
Wonder which sites have changed since your last visit? Sites with a star in the upper-right corner have new content. A single click opens the page and updates its thumbnail. Whenever you want to return to your ever-evolving Top Sites page, just click the new Top Sites button in the bookmarks bar.
New to Safari, Cover Flow offers a highly visual way of reviewing your site history and bookmarked sites, presenting full-page previews of the websites that look exactly as they did when you last visited them.
One look is all you need to recognize the site you want to visit. Simply flip through website previews in Cover Flow the same way you flip through album art in iTunes. Directional arrows let you browse forward and back. Or you can quickly flip through multiple sites using the slider. And when you find the site you want, simply click to open it.
With Full History Search and Cover Flow, what you see is where you went. Safari introduces a dramatic new way to revisit sites, letting you flip through full-page previews of the sites you visited in the past. You may not have total recall, but Safari does, automatically storing all the text and a thumbnail of every page in your history. That makes it easy for Safari to get results even if you remember little about the site you’re searching for.
Just type a word or phrase in the History Search field in Top Sites, and Safari quickly presents you with a list of possibilities. In fact, you can search for anything that was on a page you visited, even photo captions. To jog your memory, Safari presents the sites it finds in Cover Flow, giving you the opportunity to spot the right site on sight.
Still the world’s fastest web browser, Safari outraces Firefox, Internet Explorer, and Chrome. On even the most demanding Web 2.0 applications, Safari delivers blazingly fast performance thanks to the industry’s most advanced rendering technologies.
Using the new Nitro Engine, for example, Safari executes JavaScript nearly 8 times faster than Internet Explorer 8 and more than 4 times faster than Firefox 3 based on performance in leading industry benchmark tests: iBench and SunSpider.
In addition to superior JavaScript performance, Safari offers top-flight HTML performance — the best on any platform — loading pages 3 times faster than Internet Explorer 8 and Firefox 3.
If you’re using Safari on a PC with Windows Vista or Windows XP, you’ll feel right at home. That’s because Safari features a native look — just like other Windows applications — including a native title bar, borders, and toolbars. To provide a consistent Windows experience, Safari now uses Windows standard fonts, but you can choose to use Apple’s crisp anti-aliased fonts if you prefer. Of course, Safari for Windows delivers the same lightning-fast performance provided by the Mac version.
In Safari, developers will find the best set of development tools ever included in a browser. Just turn them on in Safari preferences and use them to examine the structure of a page, debug JavaScript, optimize performance and compatibility, inspect offline databases, or test experimental pieces of code on the fly. For more specific information about each of the development tools, visit the Safari Dev Center page.
Posted by Rajender at 9:06 AM 0 comments
Ctrl+N | Opens a new window. |
Ctrl+T | Opens a new tab. |
Ctrl+Shift+N | Opens a new window in incognito mode. |
Press Ctrl+O, then select file. | Opens a file from your computer in Google Chrome. |
Press Ctrl and click a link. Or click a link with your middle mouse button (or mousewheel). | Opens the link in a new tab in the background . |
Press Ctrl+Shift and click a link. Or press Shift and click a link with your middle mouse button (or mousewheel). | Opens the link in a new tab and switches to the newly opened tab. |
Press Shift and click a link. | Opens the link in a new window. |
Ctrl+Shift+T | Reopens the last tab you've closed. Google Chrome remembers the last 10 tabs you've closed. |
Drag a link to a tab. | Opens the link in the tab. |
Drag a link to a blank area on the tab strip. | Opens the link in a new tab. |
Drag a tab out of the tab strip. | Opens the tab in a new window. |
Drag a tab out of the tab strip and into an existing window. | Opens the tab in the existing window. |
Press Esc while dragging a tab. | Returns the tab to its orginal position. |
Ctrl+1 through Ctrl+8 | Switches to the tab at the specified position number on the tab strip. |
Ctrl+9 | Switches to the last tab. |
Ctrl+Tab or Ctrl+PgDown | Switches to the next tab. |
Ctrl+Shift+Tab or Ctrl+PgUp | Switches to the previous tab. |
Alt+F4 | Closes the current window. |
Ctrl+W or Ctrl+F4 | Closes the current tab or pop-up. |
Click a tab with your middle mouse button (or mousewheel). | Closes the tab you clicked. |
Right-click, or click and hold either the Back or Forward arrow in the browser toolbar. | Displays your browsing history in the tab. |
Press Backspace, or Alt and the left arrow together. | Goes to the previous page in your browsing history for the tab. |
Press Shift+Backspace, or Alt and the right arrow together. | Goes to the next page in your browsing history for the tab. |
Press Ctrl and click either the Back arrow, Forward arrow, or Go button in the toolbar. Or click either button with your middle mouse button (or mousewheel). | Opens the button destination in a new tab in the background. |
Double-click the blank area on the tab strip. | Maximizes the window. |
Alt+Home | Opens your homepage in your current window. |
Ctrl+B | Toggles the bookmarks bar on and off. |
Ctrl+Shift+B | Opens the Bookmark manager. |
Ctrl+H | Opens the History page. |
Ctrl+J | Opens the Downloads page. |
Shift+Esc | Opens the Task Manager. |
Shift+Alt+T | Sets the focus on the browser toolbar. Use right and left arrows on the keyboard to navigate to different buttons on the toolbar. |
Ctrl+Shift+J | Opens Developer Tools. |
Ctrl+Shift+Delete | Opens the Clear Browsing Data dialog. |
F1 | Opens the Help Center in a new tab (our favorite). |
Use the following shortcuts in the address bar:
Type a search term, then press Enter. | Performs a search using your default search engine. |
Type a search engine keyword, press Space, then Tab when prompted, type a search term, and press Enter. | Performs a search using the search engine associated with the keyword. |
Type a search engine URL, press Tab when prompted, type a search term, and press Enter. | Performs a search using the search engine associated with the URL. |
Type the part of a URL between 'www.' and '.com', then press Ctrl+Enter. | Adds www. and .com to your input and open the resulting URL. |
Type a URL, then press Alt+Enter. | Opens the URL in a new tab. |
F6 or Ctrl+L or Alt+D | Highlights the URL. |
Ctrl+K or Ctrl+E | Places a '?' in the address bar. Type a search term after the question mark to perform a search using your default search engine. |
Click the address bar, then press Ctrl and the left arrow together. | Moves your cursor to the preceding key term in the address bar |
Click the address bar, then press Ctrl and the right arrow together. | Moves your cursor to the next key term in the address bar |
Click the address bar, then press Ctrl+Backspace. | Deletes the key term that precedes your cursor in the address bar |
Select an entry in the address bar drop-down menu with your keyboard arrows, then press Shift+Delete. | Deletes the entry from your browsing history, if possible. |
Click an entry in the address bar drop-down menu with your middle mouse button (or mousewheel). | Opens the entry in a new tab in the background. |
Press Page Up or Page Down when the address bar drop-down menu is visible. | Selects the first or last entry in the drop-down menu. |
Ctrl+P | Prints your current page. |
Ctrl+S | Saves your current page. |
F5 or Ctrl+R | Reloads your current page. |
Esc | Stops the loading of your current page. |
Ctrl+F | Opens the find bar. |
Ctrl+G or F3 | Finds the next match for your input in the find bar. |
Ctrl+Shift+G, Shift+F3, or Shift+Enter | Finds the previous match for your input in the find bar. |
Click the middle mouse button (or mousewheel). | Activates auto-scrolling. As you move your mouse, the page automatically scrolls according to the direction of the mouse. |
Ctrl+F5 or Shift+F5 | Reloads your current page, ignoring cached content. |
Press Alt and click a link. | Downloads the target of the link. |
Ctrl+U | Opens the source of your current page. |
Drag a link to bookmarks bar | Bookmarks the link. |
Ctrl+D | Bookmarks your current webpage. |
F11 | Opens your page in full-screen mode. Press F11 again to exit full-screen. |
Ctrl and +, or press Ctrl and scroll your mousewheel up. | Enlarges everything on the page. |
Ctrl and -, or press Ctrl and scroll your mousewheel down. | Makes everything on the page smaller. |
Ctrl+0 | Returns everything on the page to normal size. |
Space bar | Scrolls down the web page. |
Home | Goes to the top of the page. |
End | Goes to the bottom of the page. |
Press Shift and scroll your mousewheel. | Scrolls horizontally on the page. |
Highlight content, then press Ctrl+C. | Copies content to the clipboard. |
Place your cursor in a text field, then press Ctrl+V or Shift+Insert. | Pastes content from the clipboard. |
Place your cursor in a text field, then press Ctrl+Shift+V. | Paste content from the clipboard without formatting. |
Highlight content in a text field, then press Ctrl+X or Shift+Delete. | Deletes the content and copies it to the clipboard. |
Posted by Rajender at 8:55 AM 0 comments