Monday, 23 March 2009

Hidden & Super Hidden Files

Pernahkah anda mendapat suatu masalah seperti ini? ada folder yang memiliki beberapa file didalamnya namun ketika di buka ternyata folder itu kosong atau file-file tadi tidak ada! padahal kalau klik kanan pada folder tersebut dan “properties” folder tersebut memiliki size(ukuran) sekian Byte!

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Super Hidden Files

Cara mudah untuk membuat “Super hidden files” adalah dengan menggunakan program Attribute Changer, setelah program Attribute Changer diinstal pada komputer, Anda dapat membuat “Super Hidden Files” dengan klik kanan pada file tersebut lalu pilih “Change Attributes. . .” dan pilih opsi [Hidden] dan [System] pada menu tab "folder properties" lalu klik [OK].
Photobucket

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Hidden Files

Untuk membuat “Hidden Files” cukup dengan klik kanan pada file tersebut lalu “properties” dan pilih opsi [Hidden] pada Attributes lalu klik [OK].
Photobucket

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Sunday, 22 March 2009

Merapikan Harddisk

Harddisk merupakan gudang dari komputer anda, tempat semua file yang dibutuhkan diambil dan di kembalikan. Jadi dengan merapikan isi dari Gudang tersebut dapat meningkatkan kinerja dan kecepatan komputer semakin meningkat.



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Membersihkan Harddisk

Harddisk merupakan komponen utama dari komputer yang harus selalu dijaga agar awet dan membantu memaksimalkan kinerja komputer anda. Harddisk menyimpan file-file yang penting dan yang tidak penting.



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Saturday, 7 February 2009

Rainforests for Biodiesel?


Oil palm fruit Elaeis guineensis: It is estimated that over the next 25 years 250-300 million hectares of tropical forest are likely to be cleared for agricultural development, mostly for oil palm.

Unless demand for palm oil as a biofuel is met through oil palm grown on fallow and previously uncultivated lands, and not through clearing of valuable rainforests, palm oil as a renewable energy source is not climate-friendly, said WWF.

  1. The RSPO is an association created by various stakeholders, including environmental and social NGOs, growers and businesses in the supply chain, to promote the growth and use of sustainable palm oil through open dialogue. It was initiated by WWF and key business players.


source: www.panda.org

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Take action at home

You can help to switch off global warming and start today - by using clean energy and cutting down on wasted energy.

  1. : Buy non-polluting green electricity from your electricity company. If they don't sell it, can you change power companies to one that does? Get your school, company or community to buy renewable energy, too.
  2. Buy energy efficient appliances: If you're buying a washing machine, refrigerator, dish washer or oven, buy the most energy-efficient model you can afford. They might be more expensive but they pay for themselves through lower energy bills. The same is true for office equipment like computers, copiers, printers.
  3. Fluorescent lamps are cheaper in the long run: Replace the lights you use most with compact fluorescent lamps. They cost more than ordinary lamps but you end up saving money because they use only around one-quarter of the electricity to prove the same light. And they last four times as long as a normal light bulb!
  4. Avoid stand-by and turn off lights:Turn off televisions, videos, stereos and computers when they are not in use - they can use between 10 and 60% of the power they use when on "stand by". Turn off lights when you don't need them - it saves energy already after a minute or two. Turn off computer screens when you take a break.
  5. Wash economically: Use the washing machine or dish washer only when you have a full load. Use washing powder suitable for low temperature washes and use economy programmes.
  6. About your fridge: Don't leave fridge doors open for longer than necessary, let food cool down fully before putting it in the fridge or freezer, defrost regularly and keep at the right temperature. Where possible don't stand cookers and fridges/freezers next to each other.
  7. Getting around and on your way to work and school: When you want to make short journeys, try walking! Use a bicycle for short trips and local shopping. It keeps you fit too and is fun too! Make more use of public transport, such as buses and trains, for longer journeys. Share care journeys with work colleagues or friends - up to a third of car mileage is accounted for by the drive to work.
  8. About your car: If you have to buy a car, buy a fuel-efficient, environmentally friendly one. This will save you money and keep more CO2 from going into the atmosphere. Make sure that your tires are inflated correctly - this can save you 5% on the cost of your petrol. Turn off your engine when waiting in your car.
  9. Reduce your air travel: When you travel to your holiday destination by plane you are contributing to significant emissions of climate change causing carbon dioxide. So take vacations nearer to home, or get there by other forms of transport such as train, bus or boat. If you have to fly, consider buying carbon offsets to compensate for the emissions caused by your flight.
  10. Enjoy the sun!: Fit solar panels on the roof of your home. Turn your own home into a clean power station!

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Polar Bear Tracker

"Polar bears creaking under the strain"

Eight of the 13 Canadian polar bear sub-populations are either depleted or showing significant signs of stress, and future reduction of sea-ice in the Arctic could result in a loss of two-thirds of the world's polar bears within 50 years.

These facts form the backdrop to Friday’s federal Environment Minister’s National Roundtable on Polar Bears which presents a critical opportunity to ensure that Canada implements strong new measures to protect polar bears for their long-term survival.

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Thursday, 29 January 2009

10 Simple Food Choices That Can Help Your Heart


  • Eat fruits and vegetables: Eat a variety of fruit and vegetable servings every day. Dark green, deep orange, or yellow fruits and vegetables are especially nutritious. Examples include spinach, carrots, peaches, and berries.
  • Eat a variety of grain products every day: Include whole-grain foods that have lots of fiber and nutrients. Examples of whole grains include oats, whole wheat bread, and brown rice.
  • Eat fish at least 2 times each week: Oily fish, which contain omega-3 fatty acids, are best for your heart. These fish include tuna, salmon, mackerel, lake trout, herring, and sardines.
  • Limit saturated fat and cholesterol: To limit saturated fat and cholesterol, try to choose the following foods: beans or tofuo Fish, vegetables, beans, and nuts, canola and olive oils, to replace saturated fats, such as butter.
  • Read food labels and limit the amount of trans fat you eat: Trans fat raises the levels of LDL ("bad") cholesterol and also lowers high-density lipoprotein, HDL, (or "good") cholesterol in the blood. Trans fat is found in many processed foods made with shortening or with partially hydrogenated or hydrogenated vegetable oils. These foods include cookies, crackers, chips, and many snack foods.Choose healthy fats: Unsaturated fats, such as olive, canola, corn, and sunflower oils, are part of a healthy diet. But all fats are high in calories, so watch your serving sizes.
  • Limit salt (sodium): Limit sodium intake to less than 2,300 milligrams of sodium per day (about one teaspoon). Choose and prepare foods with little or no salt. Watch for hidden sodium in foods.
  • Eat only as many calories as you need to stay at a healthy weight: Learn how much is a serving, and then check your portion sizes. Limit drinks with added sugar and high-fructose corn syrup. If you want to lose weight, increase your activity level to burn more calories than you eat.
  • If you drink alcohol, drink in moderation: Limit alcohol intake to two drinks per day for men and one drink per day for women.
  • Limit added sugar: Limit drinks and foods with added sugar.

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10 Risk Factors for Heart Disease


  • Age: More than 83% of people who die from coronary heart disease are 65 or older. Older women are more likely to die of heart attacks within a few weeks of the attack than older men.
  • Being male: Men have a greater risk of heart attack than women do, and they have attacks earlier in life. Even after menopause, when women's death rate from heart disease increases, it's not as great as men's.
  • Family history. Those with parents or close relatives with heart disease are more likely to develop it themselves.
  • Race: Heart disease risk is higher among African Americans, Mexican Americans, American Indians, native Hawaiians, and some Asian Americans compared to Caucasians.
  • Smoking: Cigarette smoking increases your risk of developing heart disease by two to four times.
  • High cholesterol: As blood cholesterol rises, so does risk of coronary heart disease.
  • High blood pressure: High blood pressure increases the heart's workload, causing the heart to thicken and become stiffer. It also increases your risk of stroke, heart attack, kidney failure, and congestive heart failure. When high blood pressure exists with obesity, smoking, high blood cholesterol levels, or diabetes, the risk of heart attack or stroke increases several times.
  • Sedentary lifestyle: Inactivity is a risk factor for coronary heart disease.
  • Excess weight: People who have excess body fat—especially if a lot of it is at the waist—are more likely to develop heart disease and stroke even if they have no other risk factors.

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Global Warming - What Can We Do


By the summer of 2050 temperatures will have risen by around 2 degrees or more in England and Wales, 1 to 2 degrees for Scotland and Northern Ireland. Just a small rise in temperature will result in more hot days in cities (temperatures over 30C).

Drier conditions are also expected, especially in the Southeast. However heavy rainfall events are likely to be more frequent. Winters are expected to be milder, so there will be a reduction in the number of frosty nights.

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How You Can Help This Planet


Even the simplest everyday activities can make a real difference to the environment. So follow these simple tips and take action for our living planet.

  1. Save water: Turn off the tap when brushing your teeth or you can collect the water used to wash vegetables and salad to water your houseplants.
  2. Call your local government to see if they have a disposal location for used car batteries and other hazardous household wastes.
  3. Recycle your paper, glass, plastics and other waste. Call your local government to find out if they offer a collection service.
  4. Use rechargeable batteries.
  5. Send e-greetings instead of paper cards.
  6. Help reduce the world's rubbish dumps - don't use "throw-away" products like paper plates and napkins, and plastic knives, forks, and cups.
  1. Look for products that have less packaging.
  2. Buy organically grown fruits, vegetables, cotton clothing, and hemp-fibre products.
  3. Don't buy bottled water if you know your tap water is safe - transporting water from its source to the supermarket shelves is an expensive waste of energy. And the plastic and glass bottles add to the already-high mountains of rubbish that we produce. Find out from your municipality about your tap water. If you do buy bottled water, buy from a local source (read the labels) and buy water that comes in recyclable glass or plastic.
  4. Choose biodegradable cleaning products so that the chemicals have fewer negative impacts on the soil and water system.
  5. Buy the most energy-efficient household appliances you can afford.
  6. Use recycled paper.
  1. Plant local species of trees.
  2. Never take plants or pick flowers from anywhere in the wild.
  3. Buy bulbs from cultivated stocks only (ask the shop or gardening center for advice).
  4. Stop using chemical pesticides - try to use natural products instead.
  5. Try to attract birds to your garden as they eat aphids and other gardeners’ pests.
  6. Use traps, parasites, and natural predators such as ladybirds.
  7. Use plants that repel insects. Some herbs and flowers - including basil, chives, mint, marigolds, and chrysanthemums - mixed in with other plants, help keep pests away.
  8. Use disease-resistant and pest-resistant plants.
  9. Use Neem oil and mix it up with some garlic oil (which you can make it home) to spray on tree trunks and diseased plants and shrubs. This works like a charm on pests, bacteria and fungus.
  10. Remove the weeds by spraying them with something to adjust the pH (acidity) in the ground around them. Perhaps use some vinegar directly on the most stubborn ones.
  11. Use organic compost and mulch to improve soil health and reduce the need for pesticides and fertilizers.
  12. Don't use peat in your flower beds and vegetable gardens (peat is taken from ancient bog land, destroying some of our most precious wildlife areas). Instead, make your own compost with grass clippings and vegetable scraps from the house.
  13. Choose drought tolerant plants like Nepeta Six Hills Giant (Cat mint). It looks like huge lavender flowers but uses very little water.
  14. Pick only drought or Xeriscape friendly grass seeds that don't require as much as water to maintain.
  15. Don't use electrical equipment like leaf-blowers as they consume so much energy for so little gain. Use a rake instead - it's better for your health too!
  16. Never pour antifreeze, oil or other chemicals on the ground, into storm sewers or down the drain. Take these toxic substances to your local waste disposal facility.
  17. Don't buy garden furniture or decking made of tropical hard wood - mahogany for example - unless it's got a Forest Stewardship Council label (the "tick" tree).
  18. Take time out to sit out in your backyard with friends and family, and appreciate the beauty of nature!

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Tips to Fight Global Warming


The recent hot and muggy weather has us all thinking about how to take the temperature down a notch. With that in mind, we've culled the top ten ways consumers can cut into the 22 tons of carbon dioxide each of us produces in the United States.

Take these small and not-so-small steps and you'll help ensure a more comfortable future for us all (all carbon savings are annual averages).

  1. Instead of short haul flights of 500 miles or so, take the train and bypass 310 pounds of CO2.
  2. Sure it may be hot, but get a fan, set your thermostat to 75 degrees and blow away 363 pounds of CO2.
  3. Replace refrigerators more than 10 years old with today's more energy-efficient Energy Star models and save more than 500 pounds of CO2.
  4. Shave your eight-minute shower to five minutes for a savings of 513 pounds.
  5. Caulk, weather-strip and insulate your home. If you rely on natural gas heating, you'll stop 639 pounds of CO2 from entering the atmosphere (472 pounds for electric heating). And this summer, you'll save 226 pounds from AC use.
  6. Whenever possible, dry your clothes on a line outside or a rack indoors. If you air dry half your loads, you'll dispense with 723 pounds of CO2.
  7. Trim down on the red meat. Since it takes more fossil fuels to produce red meat than fish, eggs and poultry, switching to these foods will slim your CO2 emissions by 950 pounds.
  8. Leave the car at home and take public transportation to work. Taking the average U.S. commute of twelve miles by light rail will leave you 1,366 pounds of CO2 lighter than driving. The standard, diesel-powered city bus can save 804 pounds, while heavy rail subway users save 288.

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Meat, Fish, Eggs and Alternative Sources of Protein.

Why is protein important?? From hair to fingernails, protein is a major functional and structural component of all our cells. Protein provides the body with roughly 10% to 15% of its dietary energy, and is needed for growth and repair.

Proteins are large molecules made up of long chains of amino acid subunits. Some of these amino acids are nutritionally essential as they cannot be made or stored within the body and so must come from foods in our daily diet.
Although all animal and plant cells contain some protein, the amount and quality of this protein can vary widely.

  • 100g boneless poultry (e.g chicken or turkey breast)
  • 100g fish (e.g salmon, sardines or tuna)
  • 2 medium eggs
  • 3 tablespoons of seeds (e.g sunflower or pumpkin seeds)
  • 3 tablespoons of nuts (e.g almonds or walnuts)
  • Keep cholesterol low
  • Minimize the risk of developing cardiovascular disease and other related disorders

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Global Navigation Satellite System


Global Navigation Satellite System (GNSS) is the standard generic term for satellite navigation systems that provide autonomous geo-spatial positioning with global coverage.

A GNSS allows small electronic receivers to determine their location (longitude, latitude, and altitude) to within a few meters using time signals transmitted along a line of sight by radio from satellites. Receivers on the ground with a fixed position can also be used to calculate the precise time as a reference for scientific experiments.

  1. GNSS-2 is the second generation of systems that independently provides a full civilian satellite navigation system, exemplified by the European Galileo positioning system. These systems will provide the accuracy and integrity monitoring necessary for civil navigation. This system consists of L1 and L2 frequencies for civil use and L5 for system integrity. Development is also in progress to provide GPS with civil use L2 and L5 frequencies, making it a GNSS-2 system.
  2. Core Satellite navigation systems, currently GPS, Galileo and GLONASS.
  3. Global Satellite Based Augmentation Systems (SBAS) such as Omnistar and StarFire.
  4. Regional SBAS including WAAS(US), EGNOS (EU), MSAS (Japan) and GAGAN (India).
  5. Regional Satellite Navigation Systems such a QZSS (Japan), IRNSS (India) and Beidou (China).
  6. Continental scale Ground Based Augmentation Systems (GBAS) for example the Australian GRAS and the US Department of Transportation National Differential GPS (DGPS) service.
  7. Regional scale GBAS such as CORS networks.
  8. Local GBAS typified by a single GPS reference station operating Real Time Kinematic (RTK) corrections.
  • Time transfer and synchronization
  • Location-based services such as enhanced 911
  • Surveying
  • Entering data into a geographic information system
  • Search and rescue
  • Geophysical Sciences
  • Tracking devices used in wildlife management
  • Asset Tracking, as in trucking fleet management
  • Road Pricing
  • Location-based media

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Internet Protocol

The Internet Protocol (IP) is a protocol used for communicating data across a packet-switched internetwork using the Internet Protocol Suite, also referred to as TCP/IP.

IP is the primary protocol in the Internet Layer of the Internet Protocol Suite and has the task of delivering distinguished protocol datagrams (packets) from the source host to the destination host solely based on their addresses.
For this purpose the Internet Protocol defines addressing methods and structures for datagram encapsulation.

  • lost data packets
  • duplicate arrival
  • out-of-order packet delivery; meaning, if packet 'A' is sent before packet 'B', packet 'B' may arrive before packet 'A'. Since routing is dynamic and there is no memory in the network about the path of prior packets, it is possible that the first packet sent takes a longer path to its destination.

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Web Browser

A Web browser is a software application which enables a user to display and interact with text, images, videos, music, games and other information typically located on a Web page at a Web site on the World Wide Web or a local area network.

Text and images on a Web page can contain hyperlinks to other Web pages at the same or different Web site. Web browsers allow a user to quickly and easily access information provided on many Web pages at many Web sites by traversing these links. Web browsers format HTML information for display, so the appearance of a Web page may differ between browsers.

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Web Portal

A web portal presents information from diverse sources in a unified way. Apart from the search engine standard, web portals offer other services such as e-mail, news, stock prices, infotainment, and other features.

Portals provide a way for enterprises to provide a consistent look and feel with access control and procedures for multiple applications, which otherwise would have been different entities altogether. An example of a web portal is MSN.

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Website

A web site is a collection of Web pages, images, videos or other digital assets that is hosted on one or more web servers, usually accessible via the Internet.

A Web page is a document, typically written in (X)HTML, that is almost always accessible via HTTP, a protocol that transfers information from the Web server to display in the user's Web browser.

  • a commercial website
  • a government website
  • a non-profit organization website
  • WYSIWYG offline editors, such as Microsoft FrontPage and Adobe Dreamweaver (previously Macromedia Dreamweaver), where the site is edited using a GUI interface and the underlying HTML is generated automatically by the editor software
  • WYSIWYG Online editors, where the any media rich online presentation like websites, widgets, intro, blogs etc. are created on a flash based platform.
  • Template-based editors, such as Rapidweaver and iWeb, which allow users to quickly create and upload websites to a web server without having to know anything about HTML, as they just pick a suitable template from a palette and add pictures and text to it in a DTP-like fashion without ever having to see any HTML code.
  1. Product or service based sites

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Wednesday, 28 January 2009

Computer Network

A computer network is a group of interconnected computers. Networks may be classified according to a wide variety of characteristics. This article provides a general overview of some types and categories and also presents the basic components of a network.

A network is a collection of computers connected to each other. The network allows computers to communicate with each other and share resources and information.

  • Internet
  1. Remote bridges: Can be used to create a wide area network (WAN) link between LANs. Remote bridges, where the connecting link is slower than the end networks, largely have been replaced by routers.
  2. Wireless bridges: Can be used to join LANs or connect remote stations to LANs.

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