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April 6th, 2009

You are currently browsing the articles from MS Windows Vista Compatible Software written on April 6th, 2009.

Pirate Win 7 Theme - Free Download

Pirate Win 7 Theme
I love this pirate theme for Windows 7. There isn’t that much modified but the wallpaper itself is amazing and the awesome taskbar with small icons look great. Sometimes you don’t have to completely modify a theme to make it great. This theme even has a nifty little link monitor.

Are you still using Windows XP? If you are then visit our FAQ page to download our XP Theme Patcher. If you’re using Windows 7, you don’t need the Theme Patcher.

Title: Pirate Win 7
Author: warulez
Download: Windows 7 Pirate Win 7 Theme

Written by MyVistaThemes.com on April 6th, 2009 with no comments.
Read more articles on window 7 and pirate and 7 Skins And Themes and otherSoftware and theme.

Aero Diamond Win 7 Theme - Free Download

Aero Diamond Win 7 Theme
After trying out Windows 7 I’ve discovered that it is lightning fast. Putting on this awesome theme will makes your desktop come alive. I love the small changes that were made to the taskbar and start panel. Overall this theme is light and great to look at.

Are you still using Windows XP? If you are then visit our FAQ page to download our XP Theme Patcher. If you’re using Windows 7, you don’t need the Theme Patcher.

Title: Aero Diamond Win 7
Author: alkhan
Download: Windows 7 Aero Diamond Win 7 Theme

Written by MyVistaThemes.com on April 6th, 2009 with no comments.
Read more articles on 7 Skins And Themes and win 7 and otherSoftware and diamond and aero and theme.

Free iD Icons


Author: delacro | Website: deviantart.com

Download Here (.zip)

Written by magakos on April 6th, 2009 with no comments.
Read more articles on Desktop Icons and otherSoftware and vista icons.

Building Your Own PC vs. Buying a Dell


I first want to preface this (before I get any hate-mail from Dell or anyone else) by saying that I regard Dell PC’s, especially the Dell Precision Workstation very highly. At work, my primary machine is a Dell Precision Workstation T3400 with a E6850 Core2Duo, and I really do like that machine – it’s a good performer (I do need more RAM…hint, hint ;-) ), and Dell PC’s work well in a corporate environment. In fact, if I weren’t a “do-it-yourselfer” and I wanted to buy a PC, Dell would be my first and only stop. Seriously…

What I’m analyzing here is the cost differences between an entire system when building your own, vs. buying off-the-shelf (or even built-to-order) for a large manufacturer such as Dell. This is not an apples to apples comparison, as there weren’t any “consumer” grade video card options for the Precision, and also, there was no option for a 1TB HDD (which I couldn’t believe!).

Even though I carried my Video Card over (it’s an XFX 9600GT Alpha Dog Edition), I included the price of an eVGA Superclocked 9600GT since it was the closest equivalent currently on NewEgg in “my” build.

First the Specs and overall system price of a Dell Precision T3400 525W Workstation, and the cost of each component upgrade I chose (to get it to match my system):

Precision T3400 w/ 575W PSU with Vista Business x64:
$339 to go from E7300 to Q6600
$720 to upgrade from 1GB (2×512) to 8GB (4×2GB)
NV290 Quadra 256MB Video Card
$45 to upgrade to DVD-RW
$260 to upgrade to 160GB 10K RPM SATA
$179 for 320GB 7.2K RPM SATA
$309 for 500GB 7.2RPM SATA (No option for 1TB)
$2755 grand total for machine.

Now, here is my build:

Vista Business x64 OEM $139.99

Case (Antec 900) $109.99
PSU (Antec EA650) $99.99
Minus $40 Combo savings

Intel Core2Quad Q6600 (OEM) $184.99
Xigmatek HDT-S1293 CPU Cooler $36.99
Crossbow mounting kit for the Xigmatek cooler $9.99

Gigabyte GA-EP45-UD3R P45 Motherboard $114.99

Kingston 4GB DDR2 800 Dual Channel RAM Kit $40.99 (x2 for 8GB) $81.98

Western Digital VelociRaptor WD1500HLFS 150GB 10K RPM SATA $179.99
Western Digital Caviar WD3200AAKS 320GB 7.2K RPM SATA $54.99
Western Digital Caviar WD10EADS 1TB 7.2K RPM SATA $89.99

LG 22x DVD-RW DVD Burner SATA (OEM) $24.99

Athena 12" 8-pin CPU Power Extension Cable (b/c of bottom mounted PSU) $3.99

XFX 9600GT 512MB Video Card $99.99

$1192.85 grand total for machine

The big things that stick out at me like a big fat sore thumb in the cost are:

First: $339 to upgrade from a E7300 Core2Duo (a $120 CPU) to the Core2Quad (a $190 CPU) – by my math it should have been somewhere in the neighborhood of $70 for that upgrade – even adding a “premium” it should be $100 or less…wouldn’t you think?

Second: $720 to upgrade from 2×512MB Sticks of DDR2 800 RAM (1GB Total) to 4×2GB Sticks of DDR2 800 RAM (8GB  Total). On Newegg right now, a 2×512 Kit of Kingston Value RAM can be purchased for $19.99 – I paid $81.98 for my 2 4GB Kits for a total of 8GB. Again, according to my math around a $60-70 upgrade max!

Some others:

$260 to upgrade to a 10K Boot drive, $179 for a $60 320GB drive, and $309 for a 500GB drive when I paid $90 for a 1TB!

Now – there are some things you get for that ~$1500.00 cost difference – you get someone else to do the work of putting it all together and loading up the OS, and you also get (a limited amount of) support, and a warranty on the entire unit as itself.

However, with the built PC, you still get a warranty on each part, and you have to keep track of that yourself, and you do have to put it all together (or pay the gamer kid next door $25 to do it for you) and load the OS yourself. But you also get peace of mind knowing you selected all quality parts, you’ll have better cooling, likely a better motherboard (I doubt the Dell motherboard has a nice heatpipe cooling system or all solid capacitors – I know my T3400 at work doesn’t), and you have more options in the BIOS to really tweak it for performance (for example, I can’t disable C1E on my Precision at work – it spends most of it’s time at 2GHz).

The video card was the real wildcard here – I couldn’t even get close to apples-to-apples because I am not familiar enough with all of the Quadro and/or FireGL cards to get something even roughly equivalent to the Nvidia 9600GT I have – I *do* know that NVS290 isn’t it – my work system has that card and it gets a 3.5/4.0 graphics rating in Vista, and my 9600GT gets a 5.9/5.9 rating.

So, sure, there are trade-offs either way, but which is really the better deal?

You tell me, I’d really like to hear your opinions!

Written by jaysonrowe on April 6th, 2009 with no comments.
Read more articles on otherSoftware and Computing.

Understanding Windows 7 Libraries

This is the second post in a series of posts about Windows 7 Libraries. This post describes some of the rationale that drove Windows 7 Libraries functionality, and explores the new features and opportunities we, as developers, have with Windows 7 Libraries.

What Libraries mean for users in Windows 7?

To better understand the concept of Libraries in Windows 7, we need to look back to the time before Windows 7. Earlier version of Windows like Windows Vista and XP, included sets of special folders for storing user’s content such as “My Documents” and “My Pictures.” In Windows Vista, these special folders where automatically indexed to allow users to perform faster more efficient searches on their content. Even so, many users, me included, store their files, music, and pictures all over the PC in various folders like c:\temp, d:\Birthday2008\pictures, or even in remote storage. We refer to this as storing data outside the user’s profile storage space. This affects the indexing and therefore the entire search experience, and often sends the user on a small quest to try to find their content.

So, in Windows 7, Libraries tries to address the problem of users' content stored all over the PC by allowing users to have full control over their “Documents Library” folder structure. Meaning that in Windows 7, users can define which folders to include in the Documents Library. This is true for any Library. Therefore, we can say that Libraries are user-defined collections of content. By including folders in Libraries, the user is telling Windows where his important data is located. The system will index folders, to enable fast searching and stacking based on file properties.

In Windows 7, users will go to Libraries in order to manage their documents, music, pictures, and other files. As you can see in Windows Explorer and the Common File Dialog, Libraries are an integral part of the Windows Shell. This integration is very important because it enables users to browse their files the same way they would in a folder, which means there is no new behavior to learn. Clicking on the Documents Library shows you your documents. Moreover, due to the fact that libraries are integrated into the Windows Shell, users can perform searches and filter results by properties like date, type, and author in both Windows Explorer and the Common File Dialog. In other words, by using libraries, users get to enjoy storage that is both flexible and indexed. The following image displays the integration of several folders into a single library view and the rich search and pivots  of Windows Explorer in Windows 7.

Win7_libraries

So what is a library?

In many ways, a Library is similar to a folder. As we mentioned before, when users open a Library, they can see one or more files or folders. However, unlike a folder, a Library can display files that are stored in several folders at the same time. This is a subtle, but important, difference. Libraries don't actually store items. They monitor folders that contain a user’s items, and provide a single access point and rich view pivots (by file Type, date or author) of this aggregated content. Libraries promote a user’s data and let the file system fade into the background.

The Windows 7 default Libraries setting has one main Library called “Libraries” that contains four predefined default Libraries: Documents, Music, Pictures, and Videos. Users can save and copy files directly to a library, even if we said that libraries are not file system folders, since every library has a default save location to send these files to. Each library contains two physical file locations, the user's personal folder (this is the default Known Folder that is included in a library, for example, My Documents in the Documents Library), and the public folder For custom categories, the default save location is the first folder added. Users may change the default save location of a library at any point, but if they remove the default save location, the system selects the next folder in the library as the new save location. In addition, users can save to any folder they have permissions to that are included in a library.

For folders to be successfully added to a library, they must be capable of being indexed on the local machine, indexed on a remote Windows machine, or on a server with files indexed by Windows Search. In order to maintain the high standards for the Windows Shell search experience, users can’t add folders that are not indexed into a folder.

What more do developers need to know about Libraries?

After understanding what Libraries are, developers need to understand how they can support and use Libraries in their applications. This is important because by using Libraries, users inform Windows where their important data is. This allows you, as developer, to access a user's Library and consume its contents, removing the need maintain your own set of data storage for your application.

You can also use the new IShellLibrary API to empower your applications to manipulate libraries. This can help ensure that applications remain in sync with user files and Windows since any change made to a library structure will be reflected in the application that is monitoring that library – giving us developers great power and great responsibility.

In the next post, we will cover the underlying architecture of libraries and dive deeper into the API.

Written by Yochay Kiriaty on April 6th, 2009 with no comments.
Read more articles on Libraries and Windows 7 for Developers Blog and otherSoftware and windows 7 and Developers and Microsoft.

Manual Removal of W32/OnLineGames.TBMA Trojan

Manual Removal of W32/OnLineGames.TBMA Trojan
W32/OnLineGames.TBMA is a trojan. The trojan will infect Windows systems.
his trojan information updated on April 6, 2009.
Other names of W32/OnLineGames.TBMA Trojan:
This trojan is also known as Trojan-GameThief.Win32.OnLineGames.tbma, TROJ_GAMETHI.AWO, Worm:Win32/Taterf.B.

Damage Level : Medium/High
Distribution Level:
Medium
No Removal Tool for W32/OnLineGames.TBMA Trojan
W32/OnLineGames.TBMA Trojan Manual Removal Instructions
Recommend Removal from Safe Mode:

How to Start in Safe mode:
Restart your Computer, Press F8 Repeatedly, when your Screen turns on, Select Safe mode, press enter.
The Infected Files Can be Seen in these folders and names also Running in Tasks
End the Following Active Process Before Removal
  • [ Kill the Process, Use Killbox if your Access Denied ]
Download W32/OnLineGames.TBMA Trojan Known File Removal Tool

[In Windows Vista Run As Administrator, After Execution System Will Restart]

  • %Windows\System\ckvo.exe
  • %Windows\System\ckvo0.dll
  • %Windows\System\olhrwef.exe
  • %Windows\System\nmdfgds0.dll
  • %Root of Windows Installed Drive\0bcobed.exe
  • %Root of Windows Installed Drive\rs.cmd
    [ No Exact Information about Files, search above related files in Program files Folder ]
    If you have any of these files in running process from task manger, end the process before removal.
    Note: if task manager is disabled, Download the following file, Click to Download - Enable Registry.reg [ Right Click - Save Target As/Linked Content As ]
    Open it with Regedit.exe [%system32\regedit.exe], then it Confirms Add to registry Yes or No, Confirm Yes, then click Ok.
W32/OnLineGames.TBMA Trojan Entries Manual Removal From Registry
Click Start, Run,Type regedit,Click OK.

Note: If the registry editor fails to open the threat may have modified the registry to prevent access to the registry editor.
  • Download this UnHookExec.inf, [ Right Click - Save Target As/Linked Content As ]
    and then continue with the removal. Save it to your Windows desktop. Do not run it at this time, download it only.
  • After booting into the Safe Mode or VGA Mode
  • Right-click the UnHookExec.inf file and click Install. [This is a small file. It does not display any notice or boxes when you run it.]
The W32/OnLineGames.TBMA Trojan modifies registry at the following locations to ensure its automatic execution at every system startup:

Delete The Entries
HKEY_USER\S-1-5-21-XXXXXXXXXX-XXXXXXXXXX-XXXXXXXXX-XXXX\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Run
Delete file entry from right side
Search Registry For W32/OnLineGames.TBMA Trojan File Names listed above to remove completely,
Edit Menu - Find
, enter Keyword and remove all value that find in search.

Exit the Registry Editor,
Restart your Computer.

Recommended Removal Tools:
Kaspersky Antivirus or Internet Security (Shareware)
Spyware Doctor (Shareware)
AVG Antivirus (Freeware)
Killbox (Freeware)
Ultimate Links PC Tips

Written by FireFly on April 6th, 2009 with no comments.
Read more articles on W32/OnLineGames.TOB and W32/Onlinegames.Isb.PSW and olhrwef.exe and ckvo.exe and W32/Onlinegames.Lov.PSW and W32/OnLineGames.TRQA and otherSoftware and removal of trojan and manual removal and W32/OnLineGames.TBRQ and Windows.

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