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Showing posts with label Windows. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Windows. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 26, 2012

Windows和Ubuntu双系统完全独立的安装方法

http://www.ubuntuhome.com/windows-and-ubuntu-install.html
 | Ubuntu Home
Posted by Snow on 2012/06/25



安装Windows和Ubuntu双系统时,很多人喜欢先安装windows,然后安装ubuntu最后使用ubuntu自带的grub进行引导,如果重新安装windows之后则ubuntu无法启动。还要花很长时间尽心修复。
今天Ubuntu之家给大家推荐一种安装方式,将两个系统完全独立开来,无论重新安装哪个系统都不会影响另一个系统。这里有一个要求,就是windows版本要比xp高,而且不支持xp
第一步:安装windows系统。
第二步:安装liveusb-creator,并制作U盘版的ubuntu启动盘。
第三步:插入U盘安装ubuntu。
第四步:在windows启动管理器中添加ubuntu启动项。
大体分为四步,好像每个人都是这样安装。OK以本人安装的方式为例,详细说一下。
第一步安装windows,并流出30G左右的空白磁盘。(大小根据个人喜好设置,ps:分区时主分区个数不能多余4个,不然无法安装linux)
第二步可以参考http://www.ubuntuhome.com/liveusb-creator-v3-11-7-releases.html,注意必须安装到C盘,如果不是安装到C盘,可能会有问题。该软件我屡试不爽,archlinux除外。
第三步安装linux,这一步是关键我们要把grub安装到linux分区中。ubuntu各个版本下载地址:http://www.ubuntuhome.com/ubuntu-download
这里比较高级些,小心操作没有什么问题,而且还可以点击"还原"进行恢复,所以不需要担心什么。
以我的为例,我只分了两个区给ubuntu,一个根分区(/dev/sda6)和一个交换分区(/dev/sda7),安装linux必须有这两个分区。
下面有一个"安装启动引导器的设备",这个选择linux的根分区,或者boot分区(如果你有boot分区的话)。然后下一步进行安装。
安装完毕后重启,这时和没有安装ubuntu是没有任何区别的,直接进入你的windows系统。我们需要在windows启动管理器中添加ubuntu的启动项。
第四步:下载easybcd这个软件安装。
点击"1",然后在"2"中选择"grub 2",下面随便填一个你喜欢的名字,点击"3"按钮。
OK,重启windows,这时你会发现windows启动管理器中多了一项(名字在"2"处填写的),选中该项回车,这就进入了我们熟悉的grub启动管理器中。
因为grub是安装到ubuntu中,如果 windows出现问题重新安装,我们仅仅用easybcd添加下启动项即可。如果要升级ubuntu的话比较恶心了,这个东西会将grub写入mbr中,如果升级ubuntu的话必须得重新安装。我曾经从某个版本的ubuntu升级到另一个版本,发现升级的和直接安装的有区别,所以每次都是重新安装系统。

Saturday, December 31, 2011

2011 Top 5 Software Downloads

Disk Investigator 1.61 (Windows)

Disk Investigator helps you to discover all that is hidden on your computer hard disk. It can also help you to recover lost data.

HDClone Free Edition 4.1.2b (Windows)
HDClone Free Edition 4.1.2bThe Free Edition of HDClone is the ideal tool for moving or cloning contents of entire hard disks.

KeyScrambler Personal 2.9.0.1 (Windows)
KeyScrambler Personal 2.9.0.1KeyScrambler Personal is a free plug-in for your Web browser that protects everything you type from keyloggers.

Disk SpeedUp 1.4.0.888 (Windows)
Analyze, defrag and optimize disks or a single file/folder for peak computer performance.

TweakNow PowerPack 2011 3.4.7 (Windows)
TweakNow PowerPack 2011 3.4.7A fully-integrated suite of utilities that lets you fine-tune every aspect of your computer's operating system and Web browser.

Wednesday, October 26, 2011

[技巧]夜间智能定时关机

http://www.appinn.com/tip-schedule-task-for-auto-shutdown/
 - 小众软件


和大多数人不一样,侍其二狗有癖好,关机癖。计算机不用的时候一定要关上。这种强迫症带给二狗很好的节能习惯和更多的麻烦,他经常半夜惊醒去看看电脑有没有关机。其实,善用 Windows 自带计划任务就能实现电脑夜间只能自动关机。如果到了关机时,电脑还在使用中,也不会强制关闭,而是等到电脑完全空闲了再关机。@appinn
开始菜单 -> 所有程序 -> 附件 -> 系统工具 -> 任务计划程序。点击窗口,右上角的创建任务。

任务名称:夜间关机。关机操作需要权限,所以务必选中"使用最高权限运行"。
切换到"触发器"选项卡,点击"新建…"。
设定一个你觉得合适的每天关机时刻,例图是每天零点十分三十秒。设置为"每天",然后确定。
切换到"操作"选项卡,点"新建…"。程序或脚本 输入关机命令 shutdown,参数后面输入 /S。如果你想停止当时运行的一切程序,在 /S 后面加上/F。
切换到条件选项卡,如图设置只有在电脑空闲时才执行任务。这样避免你正在操作电脑时,电脑强制关机。
切换到设置选项卡,如图设置。如果到关机时间仍在使用电脑,计划任务会在 30 分钟后再次试图关机,如果电脑到时候仍然不空闲,计划任务再等30分钟,如此类推。
好了,现在二狗可以放心的睡觉,不用半夜爬起来看看电脑关没关了。

Friday, September 30, 2011

Canonical Releases Windows Version of Ubuntu One

http://techcrunch.com/2011/09/30/canonical-releases-windows-version-of-ubuntu-one/
 | TechCrunch


Canonical, the commercial backer behind theUbuntu Linux distribution, have been hosting a file synchronization service called Ubuntu Onefor a couple years now. A free account gets you 5GB of storage, and the client side controls have been baked into the last couple of releases of the Ubuntu distribution. It works pretty much like Dropbox or similar services, but has been — until today — Linux-only.
In an announcement late last night, Canonical has revealed that there is now a Windows client for Ubuntu One, allowing you to access all your files from either Linux or Windows computers.
We have long received feedback from Ubuntu users regarding their evolving needs to manage all their content from a single, secure place across multiple platforms and devices. We've looked at many use cases, the most common being the Ubuntu user who is using more than one device or OS. Many people have to work in Windows or Mac environments, even if they prefer to use Ubuntu as their home desktop or OS of choice. Another case is enabling more opportunities for sharing across platforms. For example families using different operating systems in one household can use Ubuntu One as their central place to store all their music, documents, photos and share them easily with each other and friends.
Ubuntu One also offers a nifty music streaming service. For $4 per month, you get 20 GB of storage and the ability to stream music files from your account to your mobile device. The Ubuntu One app is available for iOS and Android, and Android devices get the added benefit of a controllable offline cache, allowing you to listen to your cloud-stored music without requiring a network connection. Neat stuff.

Wednesday, August 31, 2011

The end of the OS is nigh

http://mybroadband.co.za/news/columns/32768-the-end-of-the-os-is-nigh.html
 « Columns « MyBroadband Tech and IT News
Alastair Otter
August 30, 2011

It's been coming for years but the operating system as we know it could heading for virtual extinction
Windows, Linux, Mac OS X – the three protagonists in a long-running battle for the hearts and minds of computer users.

Over decades of computer development these operating systems (and others) have battled for dominance, adding new features, tricks, capabilities. All in the hope of attracting new fans.

Now, the era of operating system as we know it is fast coming to a close. At least it is for me and, I suspect, many other computer users.

Although I am still a dedicated Linux user with probably more than the average mental buy-in to its success than most other OS users, I can see the signs of the decline of the OS; the small changes that are making Linux less important to me and my browser ever more important. Not because Linux is not good enough or Windows is more appealing – simply because I now value an OS that gets out of my way and lets me get on with what I want to get done.

Until about a year ago every new iteration of Ubuntu was a source of excitement. The new features, the shiny new icons, the ever-improving user experience was a thing of beauty, one to be looked forward to eagerly. In most cases I jumped on the bandwagon as soon as the first beta of any new Ubuntu release hit the web, mostly rewarded with six hours of frustration with not-yet-complete features, but addicted to the promise of something new. I was hooked into OpenOffice.org for documents, wedded to Evolution for e-mail, manacled to Ubuntu for all of my computing needs.
Then at some point in the past year, I started drifting away. Perhaps it was the first Galaxy Tab, or the HTC Desire phone I had started using. Suddenly I was checking my e-mail on my phone, tablet PC and on my desktop. The idea of having my e-mail locked into one application on my desktop was ludicrous and counter-productive. The idea of storing my documents on a hard disk tied to one computer was unthinkable. Indeed, even having to rely on a any particular application for word processing or basic spreadsheets was becoming unthinkable.
Fortunately, today it's possible to use a range of online services to replace many, if not all, of the applications on the standard desktop, and with many hardware makers now moving towards system-on-a-chip processors, the centrality of the operating system is being undermined.
Of course the operating system will never completely disappear but it will be reduced over time to the status of "plumbing"; the bits that make all the others bits work. In many ways the operating system will simply be the first application to load when booting up. All the the other applications will use it to launch, and from there on they will run the show (and many of the applications).
Already the likes of Google's Chrome browser are doing this with HTML5-based applications as well as its new Native Client framework. Native Client allows programs developed in C and C+ to be run directly from the Chrome browser. It's still in early development but the objective is clear: by making it possible to develop rich C+ applications once and run those in any Chrome browser, on any platform it becomes possible to service all platforms in one go. It also potentially sidelines the operating system and makes the browser the hub of our world. So long as users have a browser they can use an application on a desktop, a laptop, a tablet PC or even a smartphone.
Chrome is not the only example of this strategy but is among the most active. As a user I am increasingly uninterested in how it all works and more concerned that my e-mail, my documents, my photos are available to me, wherever I am. It's becoming less about the operating system and more about how I ensure this access across all platforms.
Disclaimer: The opinions expressed in this article are those of the columnist and do not represent those of MyBroadband.

Tuesday, July 12, 2011

BootMed Teaches You How to Save Ailing PCs

http://www.pcworld.com/article/235074/bootmed_teaches_you_how_to_save_ailing_pcs.html
 | PCWorld


BootMed is not a program, it's an Ubuntu-based boot disc tailored (or "remixed," in BootMed jargon) with the idea of recovering failed or malware-infected Windows PC installations. More than that, it's also aimed at helping less tech-savvy users through the process. The first thing BootMed (free/donationware) does after booting is open Firefox and browse to the BootMed site to display help and advice on recovery operations. It has versions for 32-bit and 64-bit PCs.
BootMed screenshotA stark representation of the Ubuntu desktop highlights the handy BootMed recovery tool collection.I'm sure the idea of using Linux to help teach Windows users how to recover their files has invoked a few chuckles amongst the Linux community as well as grimaces from Microsoft, though it's nothing radically new: I use Slax and Parted Magic all the time to recover data from Windows PCs. BootMed is not dead-simple--you must at least understand the concepts involved and be fairly proficient at navigating a file system--but it's a boon for less experienced users that want to learn the basic processes of recovery and of course, recover things.
I'm definitely adding BootMed to my bag of tools for no other reason than that it presents a small but very useful array of tools on an uncluttered desktop. Said tools include the GParted partition manager as well as WINE, which allows you to run Windows programs such as the included McAfee Stinger and ClamWin to remove viruses and other malware. Also on hand are the PhotoRec file recovery tool and the TestDiskpartition recovery and boot doctor.
One other nice BootMed touch is the Computer icon, which will be familiar to Windows users, and jumps right to the file system. It allows you to copy off files just as you would with Windows Explorer. For those who understand Linux commands, there's also a terminal icon (the equivalent of CMD in Windows).
It's a large download, but BootMed is worth it. It's a handy recovery as well as learning tool. BootMed is free, but author/maintainer Jake Teater accepts donations.

Tuesday, April 19, 2011

Top MP3 Players to Look At

http://www.windows7news.com/2011/04/18/top-mp3-players/
| Windows 7 News

MP3 players allow users to play music. It is a means of compressing a sound sequence into a very small file, used as a way of downloading audio files from the Internet. It was developed in the 1980′s and brought to the Internet in 1997. The developers were Fraunhoffer-Gessellshaft and Thompson Multimedia. MP3 was developed to compress WAV files which were typically very large. A file in MP3 format will be 10 to 12 times smaller. MP3 is very popular because it can make your PC into a juke Box to play many different songs.

1by1

Here is a small but handy audio player which provides a smart and versatile environment to handle your file collection and listen to your tracks ; you don't need for playlists or databases. Here are some of its features: With the Directory Player, you directly play your folder contents. With Full Resume play the program remembers the last track and position. The supported decoders are ACM (mp3), mpglib (mp2, mp3) and it has Winamp 2.x input plugin support. Listeners will also appreciate gapless play · simple crossfading and an Audio enhancer plus many more options. But most importantly, or not to be left out is the fact that it has a very small size · so it has a low resource usage.

1by1 mp3 player 400x293 Top MP3 Players to Look At

[Download Link]

K-Lite Codec Pack

Here"s a situation that you may have run into. You download a file but the version you have won't play on your existing codecs. Well, that is where K-lite codec pack comes in. This pack has about 99% of all the audio and video codecs you will ever need. Just install this pack, and you will be able to play just about any media file out there. It includes DivX, Xvid, x264, MPEG 1/2,MP3, Monkey`s Audio,Media Player Classic, On2 V6/V7 and many others. You can even select which codecs to install or let the default profile install all of them for you.

klite 400x284 Top MP3 Players to Look At

[Download Link]

Media Jukebox

Two things you want from an mp3 player, and one obviously is the ability to play music and the other is to have it organized in a way that is easy to find the music you want. Media Jukebox is a music player and organizer that offers many options for playing, managing, or creating digital music on your PC. For example, it offers file organization, helping you find, store and play music and video, as well as CD ripping, CD burning, visual displays, CD-quality encoding to MP3, WMA, OGG and APE.

mjukebox 400x333 Top MP3 Players to Look At

[Download Link]

Summary

These freeware programs can bring a new musical experience to listeners. 1BY1 lets you listen to your tracks with out a playlist. The K-Lite Code pack provides a large number of codec's to play almost any format. And Media Jukebox can help you organize yor music library.


Top Free Graphics Management Tools To Look At

http://www.windows7news.com/2011/04/17/top-free-graphics-management-tools/
| Windows 7 News

Today's computers have access to numerous pictures, videos, and graphics. Keeping track of them can be a chore, so here are some Graphics Management Tools that will help you manage your pictures.

FotoBounce

Fotobounce is a FREE photo organizer that utilizes advanced face recognition technology to speed up the tagging and organizing of your photos. It also enables private peer networks for sharing. When you create an album, you can easily share that with your friends and family including all people tags. Email photos from your cell phone to Fotobounce directly via Fotomail. Two-way connections with Facebook, Flickr and AirSet. Remote browsing from smartphone via Fotomobile. Here are some of the other things that you can do. Create private photo sharing networks. Transfer full resolution photo images. Identify and tag family & friends. Organize your photos by People and view photos from your mobile device.

FotoBounce Top Free Graphics Management Tools To Look At

[Download Link]

Duplicate Finder

This is a free powerful program, that helps you to find and remove duplicate photos on your PC. With this program you can easily clean up your photo collection from duplicates or even similar images. This program is easy to use. Using just a couple of mouse clicks you can do all you need to fine duplicate photos. This program is able to compare pictures that was resized or pictures with corrected colors (black and white photos etc.). It supports all major image types: JPG, BMP, GIF, PNG.

duplicate Finder 400x308 Top Free Graphics Management Tools To Look At

[Download Link]

FrameSize

There are many different ways to format digital photos. But they often come in widescreen (16:9) sizes, which is ideal for movies, but not so much for digital photos which are commonly taken by digital cameras in a non-widescreen format (usually 4:3). This results in the photo frame having to display the image matted with ugly black bars down the sides, or cropped by losing the top and bottom of the picture. So is there a fix to this problem? Yes. FrameSize is an application that allows you to quickly deal with these limitations and produce high quality images from your digital photographs that are formatted properly and perfectly optimized for your digital photo frame.

venicesunset framesize fs Top Free Graphics Management Tools To Look At

[Download Link]

Summary

By looking at these Graphics Management Tools you can add new perspective to the picture sources and modify or edit the pictures to meet your picture standards or requirements.

Thursday, November 25, 2010

Rainmeter is a fully customizable resource monitor for Windows


Rainmeter is a fully customizable resource monitor that allows you to monitor vital system information including memory usage, disk usage and utilization, network traffic, uptime and many other details. You can also choose to monitor weather conditions, RSS feeds, Twitter activity, Gmail and various other online resources. Rainmeter is highly customizable and can be configured to display as much or as little information as you want, however it requires you to tinker with .ini files and tons of individual settings, so it may not be for everyone.

What is Rainmeter?

Rainmeter is an application which will allow you to place what are called "Skins" on your desktop. These skins can measure and display a wide variety of information. Some examples of things you can display are:

  • System Information - CPU, RAM, Network, Drive Space, you name it...
  • Launchers and Docks - Be creative and create your own RocketDock or launcher
  • Music and more - Interfaces for WinAmp, iTunes, and more
  • Web-based content - Weather, GMail inbox, RSS feeds. Just about anything you can parse from the web

Skins are fully customizable by you. They are primarily just .ini text files with simple commands that say "Measure this, and display it here looking like this". We will get into customizing skins more later, but you can use all your creativity and very simple Rainmeter statements to really make your desktop your own!

What isn't Rainmeter?

  • Rainmeter is not WindowBlinds(tm). It does not have any ability to change in any way your Start Menu, Taskbar, Notification Area (artist formerly known as System Tray) or any other Windows elements.
  • Rainmeter does not manage your Desktop Background (Wallpaper). All those cool skins you see on DeviantArt or Customize.org may or may not come with the displayed wallpaper in the download, but in any case it is up to you to load them with the normal Windows routines. Rainmeter is not Display Fusion.

Installing

Download the latest release or beta version from Rainmeter.net. You may download and run the installer (.exe) version or manually install with the "portable" (.zip) version.

Rainmeter is fully Windows Vista / Windows 7 compatible. The file which Rainmeter uses to keep track of the skins you have loaded and how they are configured (Rainmeter.ini) is now in your "Application Data" folder, and all Rainmeter "skins" are stored in your "My Documents" folder. This means that you do not have to run Rainmeter as an "Administrator" or worry about conflicts with UAC (User Account Control).

Rainmeter automatically installs the suite of skins "Enigma" by Kaelri as well as the "RainBrowser" skin manager and "RainThemes" themes manager by JSMorley.

Default file locations:

The Program:
Windows XP: C:\Program Files\Rainmeter
Windows Vista & Win7: C:\Program Files\Rainmeter

Your "Skin" files
Windows XP: C:\Documents and Settings\YourName\My Documents\Rainmeter\Skins
Windows Vista & Win7: C:\Users\YourName\My Documents\Rainmeter\Skins

Rainmeter.ini and your "Themes"
Windows XP: C:\Documents and Settings\YourName\Application Data\Rainmeter
Windows Vista & Win7: C:\Users\YourName\Appdata\Roaming\Rainmeter

More information on installing Rainmeter is available in the Rainmeter Manual at Rainmeter Installation

Rainmeter Terminology - An Overview

Let's talk a bit about how the terminology for the various components of Rainmeter should be referred to. Truth be known, there is no one perfect way, as different folks using Rainmeter for any length of time have evolved their own ways of referring to things, and there is no "set in concrete glossary" for Rainmeter. However it does help, especially when asking for help on the forums, to have a common understanding of what things mean.

The organization is defined by these somewhat hierarchical terms:

->Suite
-->Config
--->Skin
---->Variant

Suite
A set of configs, normally in a single folder and many subfolders under \Skins, which have a single author and a common theme or style.

Config
A folder, which may or may not have subfolders, under \Skins which contains one or more skins.

The only real difference between a "suite" and a "config" is that normally a suite is by one author, has a common style, and may include shared variables or even a tool to help user set attributes common to all the skins in the suite. A config is a folder of skins. It's how Rainmeter organizes things on the context menu.

Skin
The contents of a single folder, which has one or more .ini "skin" files. For all practical purposes, when you say "skin" you generally mean "a .ini file".

Variant
As only one .ini file per folder can be loaded by Rainmeter at a time, a folder containing two or more .ini files is considered one "skin", with some number of "variants". An example is a clock config folder with "Clock12Hr.ini" and "Clock24hr.ini" where loading one unloads the other automatically.

What about Themes?
"Themes" are not a part of the Rainmeter application proper, but are a term used by the addon application RainThemes, which is installed as a part of the Rainmeter installation. What RainThemes does is allow you to save your current Rainmeter setup; the skins, their locations and settings, and even your current wallpaper, in a text file (really just a copy of Rainmeter.ini) which can be loaded if you want to get back to a particular setup on your system. A "Theme" does not actually contain the skins or in fact any files at all, it is just a way to tell your copy of Rainmeter to put things back to a saved state.

Friday, November 5, 2010

Create A Bootable Windows 7 USB Drive From Linux (Ubuntu)

http://www.webupd8.org/2010/10/create-bootable-windows-7-usb-drive.html
(I followed this and everything OK, HL 20101105)

I recently had to create a Windows 7 bootable USB flash drive for my girlfriend because she doesn't have a DVD-ROM, and I had to do it from Ubuntu as I don't have Windows (neither at work or at home).

What I ended up on using is the good old (just a figure of speech) UNetbootin which is available for both Windows and Linux. It's in the Ubuntu repositories so to install it, search for it in the Ubuntu Software Center. For Windows and other Linux distributions, get it from HERE.

At first I didn't think it'll work since you can't choose Windows from the UNetbooting options, but it actually works and I've successfully installed Windows 7 on my girlfriend's computer using UNetbootin. Here's what I did:


Firstly, make sure you have a Windows 7 .ISO file (you can create it from the DVD) and a 4GB USB flash drive (or larger).


1. Install Gparted and format the USB drive to NTFS. In Ubuntu, use the following command to install Gparted:
 sudo apt-get install gparted

Gparted screenshot

To format the USB drive as NTFS, open Gparted via the System > Administration > GParted Partition Editor. Then select your USB drive from the top right drop-down. If you only have one hard disk, your USB drive should be "sdb". Now right click your USB drive in GParted and select "Unmount" and you'll then be able to select Partition > Format > ntfs. The drive will be formatted to NTFS in a few seconds.

I'm not sure if UNetbootin will mark the drive as bootable as my USB drive already had the "boot" flag enabled from Gparted, so you may want to enable it too: right click the USB drive and select "Manage flags", then check the "boot" flag.

Then you'll have to mount the USB drive back. You can do it from the command line or Disk Utility (System > Administration > Disk Utility) but to keep things simple, you can just unplug the USB flash drive and plug it back in to the computer.

2. Open UNetbootin, select "Diskimage" and then browse for your Windows 7 ISO file.

Unetbootin screenshot

Now at the bottom, check the "Show all Drives" box and then select your USB drive. For me, that's "/dev/sdb1" but it might be different for you (you should know this from Gparted which you've used to format the USB drive under step 1. Important: if your USB drive is "dev/sdb", then you'll have to select "/dev/sdb1" in UNetbootin!). Do not select / check anything else!

Now simply click the "OK" button and wait for the files to be copied to the USB drive.

Tuesday, October 26, 2010

How to Fix a Windows Infection Using Linux

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/10/25/AR2010102503988_pf.html

Katherine Noyes
PC World
Tuesday, October 26, 2010; 12:19 AM

If you use Linux on your company's desktop or server computers, you're already familiar with many of the security advantages the open source operating system offers over its Windows and Mac rivals. What many people don't realize, however, is that Linux can also be used to rescue a computer that has been crippled by malware.

Malware is a frequent occurrence in the Windows world, in particular, and it can be devastating. When a Windows virus strikes, not only can it become difficult or even impossible to continue using the affected machine, but it can be dangerous as well, since prolonged use can further the infection.

That's where Linux can be a life-saver. Without ever having to install the free alternative, you can still use it temporarily on a PC to get rid of any infection. Here's how.

LiveCDs and USBs are a wonderful thing in the Linux world because they let you boot a machine directly from the CD or USB stick without ever having to access the computer's boot records. Not only are they a great way to take Linux for a test-drive, but they can also be put to work when Windows can't.

By far the fastest way to get a LiveCD or USB is to download the .iso file of the Linux distribution you'd like to use and then burn it onto a CD or USB stick. Since Ubuntu is the most popular distribution out there, I'll go with Maverick Meerkat--the latest version of the software--for this example.

Ubuntu can be downloaded from the project's Website for use on a LiveCD or USB; download links for other distributions can be found listed onFrozenTech. UNetbootin is another nice option if you want to go the USB route, which tends to run much faster.

Of course, to take either of these options you'll have to have a working, Internet-connected computer. If you don't, or if your Internet connection is slow, you may want to order a LiveCD or USB via snail mail. OSDisc and LinuxCD both offer a variety of options; pricing is about $2.

Once you're equipped with a Linux LiveCD or USB, you'll need to make sure the infected computer is turned off, and then turn it on again with the CD or USB installed. This will boot the computer into Linux, completely bypassing Windows and its infection. Again, nothing has been installed -- you're simply using Linux to get the machine running reliably again.

Next it's time to get the Linux-based ammunition you'll need to wipe out the malware: antivirus software. I'm going to use ClamAV, my favorite, via ClamTK, which provides a nice graphical front end.

From the main Ubuntu desktop, then, go to "Applications" and then "Ubuntu Software Center." Choose "Edit" and then "Software Sources." You'll be presented with a box entitled, "Downloadable from the Internet," and you should be sure all four boxes are checked before you click on "Close."

Next, from the main Ubuntu Software Center page, click on the "Accessories" icon and type ClamTK into the search box. It will be shown as "Virus Scanner," but if you click on "More Info" you can verify it's the right package. Click "Install" and wait for it to download.

Once installation is finished, you should launch ClamTK by going to "Applications" in Ubuntu's main menu, then "Accessories" and "Virus Scanner," which is how the software will still be shown.

When the ClamTK window opens, click on the "Scan" tab and select the option for a Recursive Scan. Next, you'll need to tell the software which drive you want to check for viruses, which in this case is the one that includes Windows. Scanning may take some time, but once the infection is found you'll get the usual options for what to do with it, including quarantine and removal.

Assuming the infection has now been removed, your computer should be clean once again, making it safe to remove the LiveCD or USB and boot back into Windows as usual. As you enjoy your malware-free machine once again, remember that it's all thanks to Linux. It's also not a bad idea to keep your LiveCD or USB handy so you'll be ready for the next time.

Follow Katherine Noyes on Twitter: @Noyesk.

Monday, October 11, 2010

Gain Administrator Access Without a Password

http://www.pcworld.com/article/206809/gain_administrator_access_without_a_password.html?tk=hp_new

Lincoln Spector, PCWorld

Oct 11, 2010 7:36 am




Alexleonardme acquired a used PC but doesn't have an administrator password. He asked the Windows forum for help.

There are a number of ways to gain access to a password-protected administrator account. I'll offer two.

The first one is quick and easy, but only works in XP. If the used PC runs Vista or Windows 7, skip the next three paragraphs.

XP contains a backdoor entrance to administrator control. The following will only work if the previous owner didn't know enough to close the backdoor.

First, boot into Safe Mode: Start your PC, and press F5before the Windows logo appears. (It may take a few tries to get the timing right.) From the resulting Boot menu, select Safe Mode. When the logon screen appears, it will probably contain a user you've never seen before, Administrator, that does not have a password. Thus, you can enter Windows as an administrator-level user.

Once inside Windows, you can use Control Panel's User Accounts applet to change the password on the other administrator account or create a new one for yourself. And while you're there, you might also want to add a password to the Administrator account in order to close the backdoor. But that's probably the case.

If you're using Vista or Windows 7, or if someone closed that backdoor already, you can remove the administrator password with Ubuntu Linux. This gets a little complicated, so follow it closely.

If you don't already have a live Ubuntu Linux CD, download the current version. Double-click the just-downloaded .iso file. Windows might start a program that burns your Ubuntu CD. If it doesn't, download and install ISO Recorder, then try again. Simply copying the .iso file to a CD won't work.

The instructions below are based on Ubuntu version 10.04.1 LTS--the most current version as I write this.

Once you've created the disc, boot off the CD. When asked, click the Try Ubuntu button.

You'll first need to install the software: From the menus in the top-right corner of the screen, select System, Administration, Software Sources.

In the resulting window, check the two options not yet checked: Community-maintained Open Source software (universe) and Softrware restricted by copyright or legal issues (multiverse). Click Close, then Reload.

After the program is done processing, select System, Administration, and Synaptic Package Manager from the top-right corner menus.

In the resulting window's Search field, enter chntpw. A program with that name should appear in the list of packages below. Click it and select Mark for installation. Click theApply toolbar icon. Click Apply, and wait until the installation is complete.

Now mount your drive: From the top menus, select Places, then your internal hard drive or Windows partition. When it's mounted, a File Browser window (much like Windows Explorer) will appear.

By double-clicking the folder icons, go to the Windows drive's Windows\system32\config folder. Leave this window up.

Now you can remove the password.

From the top menus, select Applications, Accessories, Terminal. This brings up a black window similar to Windows' command line (or the DOS box for you old-timers).

Arrange these two windows so that you can see the top section of the File Browser window behind the Terminal window.

In the Terminal command line window, type cd /media/(note the SPACE after cd) and the path to your config folder, using the folder names at the top as a guide. I wish I could simply tell you to type "cd /media/windows/system32/config", but unlike the Windows command line, Ubuntu's Terminal is case sensitive. Depending on what version of Windows you're trying to reclaim, it may be windows/system32 or Windows/System32, and Ubuntu won't see it if you get the case wrong.

When it's typed, press ENTER.

Now type sudo chntpw -u logon SAM, where logon is the logon name for the administrator account. For instance, if you're trying to take over my account, you'd entersudo chntpw -u Lincoln SAM. Remember, everything here is case sensitive, including the logon name.

After you hit ENTER, a lot of text will scroll up very quickly. If you entered the text correctly, the last section will begin ". . . . User Edit Menu:"

Now press 1 (the number, not lower-case L), then ENTER.

At the resulting question, press y.

When the program is done, click the power button logo in the upper-right corner and reboot into Windows. The account in question will no longer require a password.

Read the original forum discussion.

Add your comments to this article below. If you have other tech questions, email them to me at answer@pcworld.com, or post them to a community of helpful folks on the PCW Answer Line forum.

Saturday, October 9, 2010

Speccy - Show your System Information

http://www.piriform.com/speccy

Piriform products

CCleaner - Optimization and Cleaning
Defraggler - Disk Defragmentation
Recuva - File Recovery
Speccy - System Information







What's in your computer? If you're like most of us, you can probably name the processor (Intel or AMD, Celeron or Pentium), maybe how much RAM it has, and maybe how big the hard drive is.

When you go to a computer store and see all the bright shiny PCs laid out next to each other, most will have tags or stickers indicating the:

  • Processor brand and model
  • Hard drive size and speed
  • Amount of memory (RAM)
  • Graphics card
  • Operating system

Two or three years later, when it comes time to upgrade your computer, that tag or sticker may be long gone. Speccy was designed as a free electronic "what's inside" sticker for your PC.

Isn't this information in Windows?

Yes and no. Some of the basic information can be found by right-clicking My Computer and then clicking Properties. The General tab lists some statistics, and the Device Manager on the Hardware tab lists all of the hardware you've got installed. But it misses out lots of information that you need.

Speccy will give you detailed statistics on every piece of hardware in your computer. Including CPU, Motherboard, RAM, Graphics Cards, Hard Disks, Optical Drives, Audio support. Additionally Speccy adds the temperatures of your different components, so you can easily see if there's a problem!

Why do I need Speccy?

At first glance, Speccy may seem like an application for system administrators and power users. It certainly is, but Speccy can also help normal users, in everyday computing life.

If you need to add more memory to your system, for example, you can check how many memory slots your computer has and what memory's already installed. Then you can go out and buy the right type of memory to add on or replace what you've already got.

If you're going to be selling your PC, you can use Speccy to quickly list out the components. Or, if you're buying a PC, you can use Speccy to check that the computer has what the label says it has.

Also, Speccy comes in handy for support. If you're on the phone with technical support and they want to know what video card you have installed, there's no need to hunt around Windows. Speccy has all the information on one easy-to-understand screen.

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