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October 9th, 2009

You are currently browsing the articles from MS Windows Vista Compatible Software written on October 9th, 2009.

Windows Tips - Automatically reopen folders when you next log on

Windows can remember which folders were left open when you logged off your computer and reopen those folders when you log on again. This helps you keep track of the tasks you were performing before you logged off and allows you to quickly start working where you left off the last time.
Although you perform the steps below using one folder on your computer, the changes will affect all folders that are open when you log off your computer.

You should be aware that turning on this feature may increase the time your computer takes to log on. If you no longer want Windows to automatically reopen your folders when you log on, you can repeat the steps below to turn off the option.

How to Enable/Disable Reopening of folders from last session on next log on
  • Open My computer
  • Select Tools > Folder Options to change your folder settings
  • Select View tab
  • Scroll down and Select > Restore previous folder windows at logon
  • Click Apply, OK to confirm your changes
Windows will now remember which folders are open when you log off your computer and reopen those folders when you log on.

Written by magakos on October 9th, 2009 with no comments.
Read more articles on Folder Options and restore folder and windows tips and otherSoftware and Tips and Windows.

Microsoft Employees Begin Hosting Windows 7 Launch Parties

Thousands of Microsoft employees have begun hosting Windows 7 Launch Parties this week. I had the pleasure of attending one last night. Microsoft employees have been given the opportunity to do “preview” Launch Parties before October 22nd to show off Windows 7 to their friends and family (public Windows 7 Launch Parties officially kick off on October 22nd).

The Launch Party I attended last night was hosted by Dana Manciagli, a General Manager on Microsoft’s US OEM Team. Her Launch Party took place at The Parlor in Bellevue and she had her friend and fellow Microsoft employee (Cedric Dahl) demonstrate 7 key Windows 7 features such as many of the Windows Taskbar enhancements, Aero Shake and Aero Snap.

The audience seemed to really like what they saw. One conversation I overheard was about how much better Windows 7’s window management is for applications. Another related to using Aero Snap to compare Excel spreadsheets.

After the demonstration, there was a trivia contest with questions relating to the Windows 7 demos. Guests who answered the questions right received some cool prizes.

Everyone who attended Dana’s Windows 7 Launch Party was asked to donate to the kids of Junior Achievement for Washington State. Dana creatively combined her Launch Party with Microsoft’s annual Giving Campaign. Matter a fact, Ina Fried from CNET posted about another effort to raise money for Microsoft’s Giving Campaign earlier today.

At the Launch Party, I got to finally meet Laura Foy from Channel 9. She has posted an awesome video from the event including several interviews. Watch the video here.

Overall, it was a fantastic event! I look forward to hearing more about people’s Windows 7 Launch Parties come October 22nd.

Digg This

Written by Brandon LeBlanc on October 9th, 2009 with no comments.
Read more articles on Aero Snap and Launch Parties and Giving Campaign and Junior Achievement and Aero Shake and Launch Party and Channel 9 and launch and windows taskbar and windows 7 and otherSoftware and Microsoft.

Teams, Processes, and Community Governance

Ubuntu operates under the famous hacker mantra of "rough consensus and running code." The project attempts to forge consensus, to make good technical decisions, and to move forward. It attempts to minimize politicization wherever possible and to distribute power to those who are best at getting good work done. Mark Shuttleworth explains, "This is not a democracy, it's a meritocracy. We try to operate more on consensus than on votes, seeking agreement from the people who will have to do the work."

The project attempts to keep disagreements from spiraling out of control by enforcing mutual respect at all times with its Code of Conduct. Disagreements, of course, are inevitable and can be technical or nontechnical in nature. The community needs to be able to deal with these and, toward that end, has created a lightweight governance system that aims to ensure that disagreements are resolved carefully and that the project always has a strong, fair, and responsive direction.

The Ubuntu Web site describes the goals of its community governance system as threefold:
• Ensure that a process is defined that allows people to contribute to decisions regarding the Ubuntu community and distribution

• Ensure that decisions regarding the Ubuntu distribution and community are made in a fair and transparent fashion

• Ensure that necessary decisions are actually made, even when there is no clear consensus amongst the community

With these goals in mind, Ubuntu's system is based on the delegation of decision-making power to small- and medium-sized teams. When disagreements arise, they are handled within a relevant team. When teams cannot resolve their own disagreements or when there are disagreements between teams, issues are forwarded to either the Community Council or the Technical Boarddepending on whether the issue is technical in nature. As the financier and the project's progenitor, Mark Shuttleworth sits on both boards and occupies a special position as the self-appointed benevolent dictator for life (SABDFL). Users can participate in the Ubuntu governance structure by serving on teams and by approving members of both the Community Council and the Technical Board as Ubuntu members and maintainers.



Teams
Most work in Ubuntu is delegated to a set of teams that are responsible for a particular area of work in Ubuntu. A sample of important teams (which is by no means complete) might include the marketing, documentation, kernel, server, laptop, and translation teams. Anyone with an interest in a particular aspect of the Ubuntu project can join a team's discussion and contribute to its decisions.

When a group of participants feel that a particular area is underserved, they can go ahead and build a new team by beginning work and writing up a proposal for consideration by the Community Council, which approves the creation of all new teams. Rather than catalyzing work with the creation of a team, the Community Council likes to recognize existing work with official team status. Teams should always involve the participation of several individuals. There are no one-man or one-woman teams in Ubuntu.



Local Community (LoCo) Teams
Local Community Teams, affectionately referred to as LoCo Teams in the community, are a very important type of team. Each LoCo is responsible for promoting, supporting, and representing Ubuntu in a particular locale. These locales are usually geographical and frequently countrywide, although in some situations they may overlap geographically. Ubuntu tries to encourage LoCos to work together whenever it is possible.

LoCos are like Linux User Groups (LUGs) and may often work closely with or be associated with a LUG. LoCos are often involved in localization or translations of Ubuntu into local languages and in advocacy in local schools, public administrations, and communities. The best LoCos meet regularly for social events, talks, and discussion. Often, they meet for "installfests" where team members help new users install Ubuntu onto their computers. Representatives of LoCos are asked to assist with localization matters, to speak on behalf of the Ubuntu project at local conferences and trade shows, and to organize a booth or presence at such events.

Canonical Ltd. provides each team with a mailing list and a domain name (usually in the form of ubuntu-.org where CC is the country's two-letter country code). Canonical Ltd. also is willing to host LoCo Team's Web pages, wikis, forums, Web logs, download areas, and additional mailing lists. LoCos are open to participation by anyone.



MOTU
Another very special team that deserves an in-depth description in this book is the MOTU. The MOTU are the maintainers of Ubuntu's universe repository and the phrase stands, jokingly (if not slightly embarrassingly), for Masters of the Universe. MOTUs call themselves, "the brave souls who try to keep the universe section of Ubuntu in shape."

MOTUs are package maintainers. They maintain, as a group, the vast majority of packages in the Ubuntu archive. Several of the packages that have been well maintained by the MOTU have, with time, migrated into the main component and become an official part of the Ubuntu distribution. Because Ubuntu does not make support or quality promises regarding the packages in universe, the MOTU team provides a way for maintainers to sharpen their teeth and (since it's sometimes unavoidable) make mistakes before jumping into the higher responsibility packages in main.

The roles and responsibility of the MOTU are many. Two important ones are:
• Filing and fixing bugs on Ubuntu packages using Malone
• Getting new or updated packages included in Ubuntu's universe

This work is done largely by full-fledged MOTU members who, as team members, can upload directly into Ubuntu. This group is helped by "MOTU hopefuls," who work closely with the MOTUs and whose work is then "sponsored" into Ubuntu. Many of these hopefuls graduate to full-fledged MOTUs, and many MOTUs eventually are granted full-core developer status. This three-step system is the process by which almost all new maintainers learn to maintain packages in Ubuntu and gain their stripes.



Community Council
The Community Council and the Technical Board are the highest level governance structures within Ubuntu. The Community Council, as it pertains to all Ubuntu members and activities, is arguably the most powerful team within the Ubuntu project. The Community Council is charged with supervising the social structures, venues, and processes of the project.


The Community Council's day-to-day work involves five major areas in Ubuntu. The first, and the most straightforward, is the maintenance of the Ubuntu Code of Conduct. The Community Council is the only body that can approve revisions to the code. Because the Community Council does not ask each member to "re-agree" to the code when it is changed, each of these revisions must be fully within the spirit of the previous drafts.
The second charge of the Community Council is the arbitration of disputes that cannot be handled within a particular team or that arise between teams. Very frequently, these are disputes about the Code of Conduct that may require clarification of a part of the Code of Conduct or a description of whether any of the code was in fact violated by a particular action or behavior. However, the Community Council's purview is not limited to Code of Conduct violations, and the Community Council is available to handle disputes in any nontechnical situation. In most situations, the Community Council does not take action against individuals but, rather, helps groups come to agreement or consensus among themselves. If this fails, the Community Council can ask a maintainer or other member of the community to apologize and refrain from particular behavior or to leave the community. The council promises that nobody will be asked to leave without a substantial review and opportunity to defend themselves.
A third area of council work is the creation and dissolution of teams and the appointment of team leaders. New teams are proposed to the Community Council in the manner described above in the section on teams, and the Community Council either approves the request or asks the proposer to wait. Defunct or inactive teams can similarly be dissolved by the Community Council. In cases where team leadership is requested, the Community Council can appoint leaders of teams or shift leadership to different team members. In most situations, the appointment of team leaders is an internal team matter but, when requested, the Community Council is available to intervene.

Fourth, the Community Council is responsible for approving and welcoming new members to the project. This will be described in more depth in the subsequent section on membership. Finally, the Community Council is responsible for all community-related structures and processes. New types of teams, requirements for membership, and core philosophical documents should first be approved by the Community Council. Community members who wish to suggest new structures or processes can submit their proposal to the Community Council for discussion and approval.

The Community Council meets every two weeks on IRC. Any community participant can submit an item or proposal for discussion by the Community Council. Meetings are open to the community, but the Council only seeks consensus or votes from Council membersalthough it consults representatives from the team that submitted the proposal and other community members. If an open meeting becomes too noisy, the Council reserves the right to move to a private channel for the duration of the meeting. To date, this has never happened. In all situations, full transcripts of meetings are published immediately following a Community Council meeting. The Community Council at the time of this writing consists of Benjamin Mako Hill, Mark Shuttleworth, Colin Watson, and James Troup. Appointments to the board are made by Mark Shuttleworth and subject to confirmation by a vote among all members. Appointments are for a period of two years.



Technical Board
The Ubuntu Technical Board is responsible for the Ubuntu project's technical direction. By handling all technical matters the Technical Board complements the Community Council as Ubuntu's highest rung of project governance. In particular, the Technical Board is responsible for three major areas of Ubuntu policy: package policy, release feature goals, and package selection. Additionally, the Technical Board is available to arbitrate any technical disagreements or issues within or between teams in a manner similar to the one described above in relation to the Community Council.

The Technical Board's first responsibility is Ubuntu's Package Policy. The Technical Board maintains the policy document which describe the processes and standards to which all Ubuntu packages are held. Since the policy is constantly evolving, each Ubuntu release is associated with a specific version of the Ubuntu package policy as determined by the Technical Board. Any suggestions or proposals about policy are suggested to and considered by the Technical Board.

Additionally, the Technical Board is responsible for maintaining Ubuntu's feature goals for each release. During each release cycle, there is a date defined as "Feature Freeze" after which no new features are added. The Technical Board is the body that sets these dates and decides when and if the rules can be bent for a particular feature or piece of software.

Finally, the Technical Board is responsible for maintaining the list of pieces of software (i.e., packages) in Ubuntu. In this capacity, the Technical Board determines which software is installed in the default desktop installation and which packages qualify for full support as part of the main component of Ubuntu. Users and developers can propose a particular piece of software for inclusion in main, the base install, or in a desktop install. In all cases, the ultimate decision will be made by the Technical Board.

Like the Community Council, the Technical Board meets at least every two weeks on IRC. Also like the Community Council, any user can submit an item or proposal for discussion by the Technical Board ahead of the meeting. Meetings are open to all interested parties, although decision-making and voting is restricted to Technical Board members. Full transcripts and rules about noise, as they pertain to the Community Council, also apply to the Technical Board. The Technical Board at the time of this writing comprises Matt Zimmerman as board chair, Scott James Remnant, Mark Shuttleworth, and Matthew Garrett. Nominations for the Technical Board are considered at the beginning of each release cycle. Like the Community Council, appointments are made by Mark Shuttleworth but are subject to confirmation by a vote among the maintainers instead of all members. Appointments are made for a period of one year.



SABDFL
Mark Shuttleworth jokingly refers to himself as Ubuntu's SABDFL"self-appointed benevolent dictator for life." Mark plays an admittedly undemocratic role as the sponsor of the Ubuntu project and the sole owner of Canonical Ltd. Shuttleworth has the ability, with regard to Canonical Ltd. employees, to ask people to work on specific projects, feature goals, and bugs. He does exactly this.

Mark also maintains a tie-breaking vote on the Technical Board and Community Council but has never used this power and has publicly said that he will not use it lightly. In situations where the boards are split and there is no one "right" answer, the SABDFL will provide a decision instead of more debate. The SABDFL exists to provide clear leadership on difficult issues and to set the pace and direction for the project. In exchange for this power, he has the responsibility to listen to the community and to understand that the use of his SABDFL authority can weaken the project.



Ubunteros and Ubuntu Members
Membership in the Ubuntu project is one official way that the project recognizes sustained and significant contributions. The first level of membership in Ubuntu is as an Ubuntero (formerly, the name was "Ubuntite"). Ubunteros are "Ubuntu activists" and can be any person in the Ubuntu community who has explicitly committed to observe the Ubuntu Code of Conduct. Ubunteros are self-nominated and self-confirmed. Using Launchpad, participants can generate a GPG encryption key and "sign" the Code of Conduct as a way of pledging to uphold it within the Ubuntu community. By doing so, that participant automatically gains status as an Ubuntero.

The next, more significant, step is official membership. Official membership is available to any Ubuntero who has demonstrated a significant and sustained set of contributions to the Ubuntu community. These contributions can be of any kindtechnical or nontechnicalbut need to be of a form that can be represented to the Community Council, which will consider each application individually. A full list of types of contributions that qualify can be found in the following section on getting involved. The Community Council tries to be flexible in the variety of different types of contributions that it accepts in consideration of membership.

Members are responsible for confirming, by voting, all nominations to the Ubuntu Community Council. They also may be asked by the Community Council to vote on resolutions put to the general membership. In exchange, members gain the right to an e-mail address @ubuntu.com and the right to carry Ubuntu business cards. Membership lasts for two years and is renewable. Members who fail to renew their membership will be marked as inactive but, with renewed activity and a simple procedure that involves approval of the Community Council, can be easily reactivated.

The process to become a member is relatively straightforward and is documented in-depth on the Ubuntu Web site. Most important, it requires that users document their contributions on a wiki page that includes links to code, mailing list messages, documentation, or other relevant material. Additionally, membership applications should also include testimonials on work and involvement in Ubuntu from current Ubuntu members.

Source of Information : The Official Ubuntu Book

Written by magakos on October 9th, 2009 with no comments.
Read more articles on Ubuntu Linux and otherSoftware.

Remove Antivirus - Antivirus Removal Information

Nowadays, the need in good antispyware programs has grown up and become the most of every user who wants to keep his PC in safe. There tons of different applications that specialize on protecting our computers from the danger coming out the world-web, the Internet. Unfortunately, there are also such types of a antispyware programs that works like an ordinary antivirus, but will never help you. Those applications are called rogue or fake. Antivirus is such type of badwares that were created to steal money and any of privat information from the ordinary citizens. Once inside your machine, Antivirus starts scanning the system and will always give the same result: computer is infected and it is highly recommended to clean them up very soon. It also offers you to purchase the license from the official web-site Antivirus gives you, either way you will not be able to remove those threats with the help of Antivirus. Unfortunately, for a not cheap price you are going to have really cheap help. No profits at all, we would have say. That is why, using Antivirus as the computer protector, you risk to loose a lot of time and money. Moreover, after couple days being inside your PC, Antivirus will download more and more malware, and that is the time the big troubles begin. Everything has been said: don’t let Antivirus be your protection, because you are going to get none of help you need. We highly recommend you to get rid of Antivirus and all of its products and files on your beloved computer as soon as possible.

Type: Rogue Anti-Spyware
Malware Author: Unknown
Threat Level: Critical
Screenshot:

Antivirus Automatical Removal Tool

How to remove Antivirus manually:
It's possible to remove Antivirus manually, but you have to be very experienced in dealing with registry entries, program files and .dll files.

The files to be deleted:

c:\Documents and Settings\All Users\Desktop\Antivirus.lnk
c:\Documents and Settings\All Users\Start Menu\Programs\Antivirus
c:\Documents and Settings\All Users\Start Menu\Programs\Antivirus\Antivirus.lnk
c:\Documents and Settings\All Users\Start Menu\Programs\Antivirus\Uninstall.lnk
%AppData%\Microsoft\Internet Explorer\Quick Launch\Antivirus.lnk
%Temp%\winupd64x.exe
c:\Program Files\Antivirus
c:\Program Files\Antivirus\Antivirus.exe
c:\Program Files\Antivirus\AvBho.dll
c:\Program Files\Antivirus\Uninstall.exe
c:\Program Files\Antivirus\wscsvc32.exe


Remove registry entries:

HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\AvBho.AvBhoApp
HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\AvBho.AvBhoApp.1
HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\CLSID\{9d541c6a-573b-4888-b35e-6816e68c3620}
HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\Interface\{967A494A-6AEC-4555-9CAF-FA6EB00ACF91}
HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\Interface\{9692BE2F-EB8F-49D9-A11C-C24C1EF734D5}
HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\TypeLib\{65DA0CE6-30D1-4144-A0B6-59BD01372E26}
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Antivirus
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Explorer\Browser Helper Objects\{9d541c6a-573b-4888-b35e-6816e68c3620}
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Uninstall\Antivirus
HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Run "Antivirus.exe"
HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Run "wscsvc32.exe"


Please be careful because manual removal of Antivirus may seriously damage operational system and sensitive data. Also there is a big possibility of incomplete removal, because some files could be hidden and program could re-install itself after you delete files and registry entries. So we strongly recommend you to use automatical removal tool.

Written by admin on October 9th, 2009 with no comments.
Read more articles on rogue antispyware and fake warnings and removal tool and commander and AntiSpyware and Adware and antivirus and malware and otherSoftware and Security.

Free 50 50 Amazing Psychedelic Vector Wallpapers

http://www.kingpic.net/uploads/500yq.jpg

50 Amazing Psychedelic Wallpapers
JPG | 50 Pics | 1920x1200 | 21,3 mb

Download

Depositfiles | Uploading | Rapidshare

Written by magakos on October 9th, 2009 with no comments.
Read more articles on HD HQ Wallpapers and Vector Wallpapers and otherSoftware and Wallpapers.

Free 25 Hologram Icon Set

Hologram Icons

25 ICO | 25 PNG | 256?256 | 6,6 Mb

Download


Written by magakos on October 9th, 2009 with no comments.
Read more articles on Dock Icons and Desktop Icons and otherSoftware.

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