Showing posts with label microsoft. Show all posts
Showing posts with label microsoft. Show all posts

Monday, April 8, 2013

AVG Anti-Virus Free 2013.3272

AVG Anti-Virus FREE Edition is the well-known anti-virus protection tool. AVG Anti-Virus FREE is available free-of-charge to home users for the life of the product! Rapid virus database updates are available for the lifetime of the product, thereby providing the high-level of detection capability that millions of users around the world trust to protect their computers. AVG Anti-Virus FREE is easy-to-use and will not slow your system down (low system resource requirements).




New features in version 2013:

Improved scanning using enhanced scanning algorithms for faster scanning.
Refined threshold for browser memory consumption.
Boot accelerator optimizes time needed for boot up.
Fresh and new user interface for easier navigation and better user experience.
AVG 2013 is fully compatible with Windows 8.


DOWNLOAD

Wednesday, April 3, 2013

Windows Repair 1.9.13

Windows Repair 1.9.13


Tweaking.com - Windows Repair is an all-in-one repair tool to help fix a large majority of known Windows problems including registry errors and file permissions as well as issues with Internet Explorer, Windows Update, Windows Firewall and more. Malware and installed programs can modify your default settings. With Tweaking.com - Windows Repair you can restore Windows original settings.

Tweaking.com - Windows Repair can do the following:

Reset Registry Permissions
Reset File Permissions
Register System Files
Repair WMI
Repair Windows Firewall
Repair Internet Explorer
Repair MDAC & MS Jet
Repair Hosts File
Remove Policies Set By Infections
Repair Icons
Repair Winsock & DNS Cache
Remove Temp Files
Repair Proxy Settings
Unhide Non System Files
Repair Windows Updates
Repair CD/DVD Missing/Not Working
and much more...
What's new in this version:



Added msiserver service "Restore Important Windows Services" and "Repair MSI (Windows Installer)"
Added sppsvc service to the "Restore Important Windows Services"
Improved "Repair Internet Explorer", now better supports IE6 to IE 10.
"Repair Internet Explorer" now loads the list of files to register from the ie.txt file in the files folder. This gives users more control if they need it.
Improved "Repair MDAC/MS Jet"
"Repair MDAC/MS Jet" now loads the list of files to register from the mdac.txt file in the files folder. This gives users more control if they need it.

DOWNLOAD PORTABLE

DOWNLOAD FULL INSTALLER




Thursday, August 16, 2012

Report claims $199 Surface tablet has OEMs nervous

We recently reported that a new rumor suggested that the Surface RT could sell for as low as $199. While we are not holding our breath that it will come true considering what Microsoft has said in the past about the price point for the product, apparently the news has made enough waves to put OEMs on the edge of their seat.

In a report from Digitimes, who has an accuracy rating of 40% via Tracour, the site states that vendors are quite nervous that Microsoft could introduce a tablet at that price point and if so, they would consider pulling out of the Windows RT market. We should note that Digitimes did accurately predict, nearly a year before it happened, that Microsoft would build it's own tablet. This would suggest that they do have decently placed sources for this kind of information.

Microsoft has yet to comment on the pricing for the tablet and we don't expect them to respond to the pricing rumors either. But, we should have our answer on the true price of the Surface tablet very soon as the product will launch at the end of October along side the public release of Windows 8.

Sunday, July 22, 2012

A message from Bill Gates


Bill Gates: I will always choose a LAZY PERSON to do a Difficult Job.. Because, He will find an easy way to do it.

Tuesday, June 26, 2012

Hacktech: Windows 8 means the end of the WinNT era, says Gartner


As Microsoft prepares to finish up Windows 8 for its "Release to Manufacturing" build (reportedly sometime in mid-July), the research firm Gartner predicts in a new press release today that the launch of Windows 8 later this year is the end of Microsoft's WinNT programming model and the beginning of the WinRT (Windows Runtime) model (not to be confused with Windows RT, otherwise known as WOA).

While most Windows users will continue to run applications based on Win32 for a number of years, that will slowly change as Microsoft moves to WinRT. Steve Kleynhans, vice president for client and mobile computing for Gartner, says:

"Windows 8 is more than a major upgrade to Windows — it's a technology shift. We don't see technology shifts too often; the only other one Microsoft's client OS has gone through was the move from DOS technology to Windows NT technology, which began in 1993 and took eight years, ending with the introduction of Windows XP in 2001."

Gartner believes that by the year 2020, enterprise users of Windows, along with consumers, will spend less than 10 percent of their time on Win32 desktop apps. By that time, most users will be working on WinRT-based apps running on Microsoft's Metro interface. Gartner adds, "Eventually, most Win32 desktop applications are likely to be run using server-based computing (SBC) or from hosted virtual desktops."

Saturday, June 2, 2012

Haktech: fchat global wall system app for facebook

Introducing fchat global wall system app for facebook.com

Yes, we are developing a global wall system where everybody can see your post! promote websites, events and products, or even make friends!. you dont need to add facebook friends! it is global and everyone who uses this app or surfed the web can see your post!.

this app is good for SEO!
http://apps.facebook.com/297999290292328/

Wednesday, May 9, 2012

Haktech: how to launch url in vb6?

launch url in vb6 is simple.














 code:

On Error GoTo err:
Dim ret
ret = Shell("cmd /c start http://haktech.blogspot.com", vbHide)
err:
    If err.Number <> 0 Then
        err.Clear
        Resume Next
    End If
   

Download: Geek Uninstaller 1.0.0.1

Standard removal program leaves tons of leftovers on your PC. GeekUninstaller performs deep and fast scanning afterwards and removes all leftovers. Keep your PC clean! Use Force Removal for stubborn and broken programs.

GeekUninstaller is a much faster and more powerful alternative to "Windows Add or Remove Programs" applet! It has very powerful features to uninstall and remove programs. It can effectively and thoroughly uninstall any program that the standard Windows Add/Remove Programs can't remove, remove all the leftover files and registry entries, and fix the program install/uninstall errors if anything found. GeekUninstaller has a simple and comprehensive interface that will quickly guide you through all its features.

Download: Geek Uninstaller 1.0.0.1 | 1.6 MB Freeware

Haktech: Microsoft and Nokia, where does this road go?

Many of the most vocal critics of Nokia’s decision to focus its smartphone strategy on Windows Phone – such as the obsessively biased tech blogger Eldar Murtazin, or the Nokia shareholders who recently launched a class action lawsuit against the company’s management – point to the fairly pitiful sales figures for the Lumia handsets currently on the market as definitive proof of total failure, and claim to be vindicated in their beliefs.

Of course, anyone with a shred of objectivity would look at the fact that Nokia’s first Windows Phone – the Lumia 800 – only launched six months ago, in a handful of markets, followed a few weeks later by the cheaper Lumia 710 and, last month, the flagship Lumia 900. The cheapest member of the Lumia family, the entry-level 610, only went on sale two weeks ago, and is currently available in only two markets. Even with Nokia’s vast marketing budgets and global brand recognition, it’s frankly foolish to expect its handsets to be selling as well as the iPhone or Samsung’s Galaxy S II at this stage.

But, however idiotic the calls of the antagonists may be, the underlying fact remains that Nokia’s Lumia handsets are not yet selling in significant numbers. There are, of course, perfectly reasonable explanations for this fact, but it remains irrefutable, and it also remains profoundly problematic for Nokia. Stephen Elop’s “burning platform” continues to burn through cash at a frightening rate – and investors are becoming increasingly frustrated by the plummeting value of their shares.

he situation is a peculiar one. The product that Nokia has created is almost universally praised as being excellent. Yes, there are a couple of rough edges, but for a company that succeeded in launching its first Windows Phone handset just eight months after its new strategy was announced – it’s clear to everyone that things will only get better for the Lumia range, particularly with a new volley of exclusive apps being recently announced, and the eagerly anticipated arrival of Windows Phone 8 later this year, which will allow Nokia (and its rivals) to finally unleash some more exciting hardware on buyers, who crave things like quad-core processors for reasons that they don’t really understand.

But all that promise hasn’t yet translated into an explosion of sales. It’s far, far too early to declare the Lumia strategy a failure – a plan of this magnitude needs time to be implemented; there are still scores of countries that haven’t yet seen a single Lumia device, or which have barely been touched by the Windows Phone ecosystem at all. That is a problem in itself though.

New handsets running unfamiliar operating systems don’t simply launch themselves. It’s not enough to simply make devices available; new handsets quickly get lost in the overwhelming multiplicity of devices that can be found in mobile stores or on carrier websites. Promotion is needed, and to combat the established smartphone players – legions of Androids, BlackBerrys and iPhones among them – a hell of a lot of promotion is needed in order to get noticed.

That promotion comes in the form of costly TV advertising (Nokia sponsored an entire TV channel in the UK to launch the Lumia 800), high-profile publicity stunts (like a party in New York’s Times Square), training and incentive programmes for carrier sales staff (the people who push the phones on to punters), and giving away thousands upon thousands of devices (to generate growth in the app ecosystem by supporting developers). This is to say nothing of all the thousands of lower-level spends, like web tie-ins, print ads, local sponsorships and small competitions. It all adds up, very quickly, but Nokia has shown that it’s not afraid to spend, in order to get the job done.

So while the product is great, and the strategy is unfolding, and the promotion is falling into place, it’s still not enough. Not for customers, not for investors. As ZDNet’s Zack Whittaker noted a couple of days ago, Nokia’s share price has collapsed with its market capitalisation dropping from a mighty $151bn to around $12bn in just five years, which is actually even worse performance than RIM. In the last year alone, Nokia’s share price has fallen by over 60%. Two ratings agencies have revised their assessment of Nokia stock, cutting it to ‘junk’ status.

However, on the other side of the equation sits Microsoft, and the picture here couldn’t be more different. Despite the harshness of the current economic climate – and challenges such as plummeting console sales and struggles to drag Bing into profit – the company still brought in healthy profits on the back of record quarterly revenues. Microsoft’s pockets are deep – to the tune of almost $60bn – and its investors are broadly satisfied with stable, if not exactly stellar, growth. But the difficulties that Nokia faces are a very big problem for Microsoft too. As many will know, Nokia represents the cornerstone of Microsoft’s Windows Phone strategy.

Microsoft’s other partners in its mobile ecosystem have only dipped their toes into the lukewarm waters of Windows Phone; the platform’s short history is littered with the stories of half-hearted efforts by device makers: Dell's departure from Windows Phone after producing just one device, the Venue Pro, plagued by endless problems that it dragged its feet in addressing; Samsung’s firmware woes on both sides of the Atlantic with the original Focus and Omnia 7; and LG’s lackadaisical effort and will-they-won't-they sort-of-retreat from the platform, in the wake of producing wholly unremarkable first-gen handsets, which it never got around to properly replacing, and which no-one – except LG, for some reason  – was surprised to learn had sold in pathetic quantities.

While credit must go to Samsung for at least creating a decent range of Windows Phone hardware – launching its latest device, the Focus 2, this week and apparently working on at least two new handsets with Windows Phone 8 later this year – it’s hard to imagine that Microsoft would have any credibility as the pretender to the ‘third ecosystem’ throne if Nokia had brushed Windows Phone aside and opted for Android instead.

But while Microsoft won’t buy Nokia, it’s conceivable that Redmond will offer more help to it. There has been some speculation among analysts that that assistance might come in the form of an equity stake, but this is unlikely as it would probably serve only to fuel uncertainty over the company’s independence, and ultimately destabilise it further. It could materialise as a simple loan, although investors may react negatively to the idea of Nokia being burdened with debt when there’s so much uncertainty over the company’s finances and its ability to generate significant revenues from its current strategy.

But there is another option. Nokia currently has over $22bn in assets, and with the company’s market cap far below book value at the moment, it might be time to liquidate some of those assets in order to provide the stability that the company seeks. The company is already in the process of trying to sell off its Vertu luxury handset division, but that sale is only expected to bring in around $265m. A welcome boost, but not enough to keep things going for long.

Perhaps the most obvious candidate would be Nokia’s Navteq mapping subsidiary, for which Nokia paid $8.1bn in late 2007. Elop told investors at the company’s recent shareholders’ conference that Navteq is a core asset for Nokia, and that there are no plans to sell it – but that may prove to be short-sighted. A sensible move would be to sell the unit to Microsoft. This would bring numerous benefits to both sides. For Nokia, it would not be burdened with the debt of an outright loan, or the ignominy of an equity sale to its American partner. Microsoft meanwhile, would gain an asset, as well as harnessing the licensing revenues that Navteq brings in from companies such as Yahoo, MapQuest and Garmin. The two companies would benefit from keeping Navteq’s expertise within the ‘family’, rather than seeing it sold off to a third party.

Regardless of how Microsoft and Nokia ultimately decide to resolve the deal, it seems inevitable that Nokia will need more ‘support’ from Microsoft in the short term. But the most fundamental point here is that that support must be short-term in nature. At some point, Nokia will have to reach a critical mass, a point at which it can begin to sustain itself without requiring a lifeline to keep pulling it back to safety.

But the short history of the Lumia range has so far taught us one thing – you can create an incredible product, you can have extraordinary media support, and you can even generate such universal exposure and promotion that everybody knows about your product. But there’s one factor that no-one can ultimately control: the consumer. The sad fact remains that however good your product may be, however well-known it may become, however perfectly executed your strategy on paper, it can all be undone if the consumer decides to buy something else. As the saying goes, there’s no accounting for taste.

It will be some time before it really becomes clear whether or not Stephen Elop’s decision to abandon Symbian, eschew Android and adopt Windows Phone was a brilliant stroke of genius, or the beginning of the end of one of Europe’s oldest existing companies, and one of the giants of technology.

For investors and analysts, that uncertainty is excruciating, and it’s perhaps unsurprising that their assessments therefore tend to be the most harsh and unforgiving. John Strand, CEO and founder of Strand Consult, put it this way to Reuters: “Elop was not hired as a boss for a burning platform. He put the platform on fire.”

Thursday, April 26, 2012

Haktech: HP is working on x86 Windows 8 tablet, rough render exposed!

Windows 8 news comes from a variety of sources. Sometimes it comes from the Windows 8 fountain and other times it comes from sources familiar with company’s plans.

This time around we have some information from a trusted source about HPs upcoming plans for an x86 tablet that will be thinner than the iPad and have 8-10hrs of battery life with a 10.1in screen. What we are showing above is a rendering of the device that is currently going by the name HP Slate 8.

The device is targeted for businesses and as such, will not be using ARM based architecture. At this time, a resale date was not given.

We know that the slide above is a bit rough around the edges but our source is adamant that this is a working spec list and the render above is an early mockup for the tablet.

We highly expect that many tablets will be hitting the market around, or not long after Windows 8 is released and HP will surely aiming to be a front-runner in this market.

To build on this further, back in February, CEO Meg Whitman said that it expects that the company will release its first x86 processor-based PCs with Windows 8 installed sometime before the end of 2012. The image you see above is likely a render of that device.

If HP can live up to the spec list above, the device will be compelling alternative to the iPad but one thing is not known and that is the price. If HP can position the tablet competitively, it could have a huge hit on its hands and avoid the TouchPad fiasco.

Saturday, April 14, 2012

Haktech: Counter-Strike GO!

Counter-Strike: Global Offensive (CS: GO) will expand upon the team-based action gameplay that it pioneered when it was launched 12 years ago. CS: GO features new maps, characters, and weapons and delivers updated versions of the classic CS content (de_dust, etc.).

Haktech: Avast is "debating potential graphic changes" for Windows 8 Metro UI

Last week, we reported that Avast had told us it had no plans to offer a Metro UI version of its popular anti-virus software for Microsoft's Windows 8 operating system, saying that Microsoft was "actively discouraging" such moves. Today the company sent us a new statement with more information about that decision, which may indicate a slight change in their original stance.

The statement, written by its chief technology officer Ondrej Vlcek, says:

" With the Metro UI, the question is ‘how deep are the visuals’? The Metro UI looks like a lot like a mobile phone and has been optimized for touch. It is visual and a new programming framework. This makes it great for applets, and apps such as games and browsers that are used for entertainment but not for low-level protection.

    On the other hand, it is paired with the standard desktop for traditional productivity applications. You could say that this creates some schizophrenia between the two worlds which users can switch back and forth between. However, underneath the visuals, both worlds are running on Windows 8. AV is and will stay at the desktop level. By definition, a security app has to work with the entire operating system at the moment of start-up. This puts it in desktop territory.

    As I said before, our avast! is already compatible with Windows 8 Beta. For Metro, we are debating potential graphic changes. But, this should be seen as visuals that are complimentary with Metro and not as a stand-alone Metro security app."


This would seem to indicate that Avast is at least thinking about creating some kind of Metro-based UI for its anti-virus software, even though the basis of the program will remain on the desktop version of Windows 8.


Wednesday, April 11, 2012

Haktech: SOPA and the free internet's battle to the death

Holy crap, they're still trying to shove SOPA down our throats? After all that, they still don't get the problem with it? In case you haven't heard, the MPAA is still hard at work making deals with senators and congressmen in shadowy back rooms, even after all the previous pains such efforts brought on them.

I'm still sticking to my hypothesis that the problem of piracy is the fault of the studios themselves, and that it's their problem to fix. At best, legislation like SOPA (surely they won't be stupid enough to keep the same name?) will probably have no effect on piracy whatsoever, only hurting legitimate business and file transfers. At worst, it creates a dangerous precedent that will hurt everything but piracy.

The fact is, they're going to keep trying to pass laws like SOPA until it actually slips through. Maybe it'll be some shadowy back room deal that no one has a chance to oppose, or maybe it'll be hidden deep within some seemingly harmless bill. Maybe they'll even pass it openly, in one final, flamboyant middle finger to free speech.

At this point, I'm afraid that the only way that scenario doesn't happen is if there's a (not really) radical overhaul of existing free speech laws. It's going to take more than a pledge from the President not to pass any legislation that impacts access to or free speech on the Internet. It's going to take a Constitutional amendment to keep them from doing just that. I think the same argument can apply to pretty much any country, just replace 'Constitutional amendment' with the nearest legal equivalent.

Technically, the Constitution and basic human rights laws the world over should protect against such legislation. Any kind of law that says free speech and unrestricted access to information is a basic right should be totally redundant and unneeded. Sadly, that's being completely ignored.

This is as much a technological issue as it is a political one, but it seems to me that the Internet fills the same role as the literal free press did in its time in the spotlight. Sure, lots of it is drivel, but so was (and is) much of the literal press. There lots of good nuggets out there to be found by the discerning eye. In the modern world, more and more people are going to rely exclusively on the Internet and connected devices to get their information. Sure, I believe that libraries and books will live on, but I think that newspapers will be largely replaced in the future.

Any law that regulates what you can say on the Internet or cuts off access to it isn't any different than regulating what a paper can print or banning reading. A vital part of democracy and culture is threatened, and that's pretty scary.

Have no doubt: there's a storm coming, a showdown that will only end in the total defeat of one side. It's a battle between money, corruption, dying industries and the free and open Internet. Where will you stand?

Tuesday, April 10, 2012

Haktech: Nokia Lumia 900 (Black) - For only $99.00 !

At a glance
The award winning Lumia 900 at AT&T is 4G LTE fast and full of the innovation you need in a smartphone. With a 4.3" AMOLED ClearBlack screen, whether you are indoors or outside, you'll love Nokia's largest display screen ever. With lightning fast speeds, Carl Zeiss optics, and a long-lasting 1830 mAH battery let you enjoy and share rich content all day.

Highlights
4G LTE lightning-fast speed
4.3" AMOLED ClearBlack display lets you see clearly indoors and out
8 MP main camera, Carl Zeiss optics, dual LED flash, Auto Focus
Front-facing camera for self-portraits and video chat






Phone specs
Networks
Quadband GSM; HSPA CAT10 / CAT 6 (14.4/5.76 Mbps)
Display
800x480 (4.3" ClearBlack AMOLED)
Processor
1.4 GHz Snapdragon
Camera
Yes (Carl Zeiss optics, 8 MP main camera, dual LED flash, Auto Focus, 1 MP front camera, video calling)
Battery Life
7 hours/16 days


CHECK OUT:
Current lumia 900 owners to get $100 at AT&T credit

Sunday, April 8, 2012

Haktech: Xbox LIVE Users Prefer Movies To Games

Xbox LIVE has a reputation of being the best console online gaming hub, but it seems that most customers are more interest in its media content than in its gaming capabilities.


According to Microsoft, users spend more than 50% of their Xbox LIVE time watching movies and listening to music rather than playing multiplayer games.

“What we're seeing is that people are turning on the Xbox to play games and then keeping it on afterwards to get other types of entertainment,” Microsoft's Interactive Entertainment Division SVP Yusuf Mehdi, told the Los Angeles Times.

Mehdi revealed that consumers spend an average of 84 hours per month on Xbox LIVE. For comparison, the average consumer watches TV for 150 hours per month.

Saturday, April 7, 2012

Haktech: New Windows 8 Transformation Pack released

Would you like to have your PC look like Windows 8 without all that hassle of actually downloading and installing the Consumer Preview version? The solution for you is the new 4.0 version of the Windows 8 Transformation Pack.

The pack turns the desktop of any PC with Windows XP, Vista and 7 into one that mimics the look of Windows 8. While there have been previous versions of the Transformation Pack, the 4.0 version adds the Segoe font that is used in the Windows 8 Consumer Preview to give it more of an authentic look and feel. It also adds the Charms Bar as an alternative for users who are not able to get the full UI to work properly.

In addition to the Transformation Pack, there is also a separate release of the Windows 8 UX Pack 4.0, which is designed specifically for Windows 7 users only. While it also changes the Windows 7 desktop to look like Windows 8, the UX Pack doesn't modify any of the system files like the Transformation Pack does. However, the developer does say that the Windows 8 Transformation Pack is more reliable and safer than previous versions due to user feedback.

Features
    Seamless installation and uninstallation giving users safe transformation
    Easily configurable in single click with intelligence Metro UI design
    Designed for all editions of Windows XP/Vista/7 including Server Editions
    Genuine Windows 8 system resources with Metro touches
    Smart system files updating with auto-repair and Windows Update friendly
    Fresh start for Vista/Seven Transformation Pack users with updated Windows 8 themes and resources
    UxStyle memory patching
    Windows 8 themes, wallpaper and logon screen
    UserTile with current user auto-configured on login
    Metro UI desktop emulation with pre-configured gadgets
    Aero's auto-colorization feature
    And much more

Changelog


Version 4.0
-Added Charms Bar as alternatives for those who can't get full Immersive UI to work
-Added new Segoe family fonts from Windows 8 Consumer Preview with Windows Vista/7 font update support
-Improved system files modification framework (More secure and safe to handle)
-Fixed disabling system files modification that won't work on installation
-Fixed explorer not restoring after choosing to cancel restart during configuration
-Fixed permission problems in some programs that perform changes in Program Files
-Fixed system files modification bug in Program Files on x64 platform
-Fixed unchecking large icon doesn't restore icon size bug
-Fixed uninstallation script that removes legacy theme registry
-Updated component UI font to Tahoma and info font to Segoe UI
-Updated default Metro Desktop UI option to Immersive UI with Charms Bar as default option
-Updated default pictures of guest and user to Windows 8 Consumer Preview ones
-Updated Metro Inspirat Windows XP visual style to version 3.0
-Updated Newgen to version 8.0
-Updated Newgen UI to match with Windows 8 Consumer Preview
-Updated system files resources
|-logon screen
|-shell branding and logo
|-shell icons
|-start button/orb
|-system tray icons
-Updated TrueTransparency skin based on Windows 8 Consumer Preview default color
-Updated wallpapers to Windows 8 Consumer Preview ones
-Unchecked 'Aero's auto-colorization (Vista/7) only' feature to get Windows 8's default colorization

Version 2.0

-Added ability to offer uninstalling existing UX Pack product if can be uninstalled from Control Panel
-Added Windows 8 new wallpapers and default user picture
-Changed default system font to Segoe UI as Segoe UI Light caused UI glitches in some places
-Fixed backing up and restoring system resources to be more secure and reliable
-Fixed missing left pane and failing to load Control Panel UI pages after performing system files transformation in Windows Vista/7
-Fixed system icons that sometimes won't be updated after system files transformation
-Fixed uninstallation code that doesn't remove something (Zetro theme, old wallpapers)
-Removed ViStart and ViGlance from Windows 8 Transformation Pack (Obsolete for Metro design)
-Updated Newgen to version 6.0 with Windows 8's tiles and UI configuration
-Updated Resource Hacker to version 3.6
-Updated some fixes and improvements for installation process
-Updated system files modification to use backup files instead of current files
-Updated system files resources found in Windows 8 Developer Preview build 8102
|-Branding
|-Folder icons
|-Loading circle
|-Navigation buttons
|-Start button/orb
|-Tray icons
-Updated User Tile's default configuration to be unchecked as Windows 8 Developer Preview no longer has it
-Updated Windows 8 themes and visual styles
|-Rebuilt TrueTransparency's skin to Windows 8 Developer Preview version
|-Replaced Windows 8 theme for Windows 7 with dj-corny's Aero 8 Metro Mod 1.66
|-Updated Metro Inspirat to version 2.0 with resources found in Windows 8 Developer Preview

26/08/2011 (Version 1.0 Proper)
-System files transformation failure in non-English OS
-Errors related to sound files in Windows\Media for Windows Vista

Requirements

    .NET Framework 2.0 - Required for system files transformation in Windows XP/Server 2003 x64 Editions Only.
    .NET Framework 4.0 - Required for Windows 8 features like User Tile/Metro UI Desktop/Auto-colorization.



Download Here!

Thursday, April 5, 2012

Haktech: Microsoft retiring Silverlight for WP7 app development?

There's been a lot of debate about the future of Microsoft's Silverlight programming language. Silverlight was first developed as a kind of alternative to Adobe's Flash for presenting web video and content but has also been used to make apps for Windows Phone.

While Microsoft released Silverlight 5 back in December, the company has been quiet about any plans to develop and release future versions. Now a new blog post strongly suggests that Silverlight's days are indeed numbered. The latest update on the official Windows Phone developer blog has Microsoft's Larry Lieberman responding to Windows Phone app creators with their concerns about what the future might be for making apps via Silverlight. Lieberman states:

["Please don’t panic; XAML and C#/VB.NET development in Windows 8 can be viewed as a direct evolution from today’s Silverlight. All of your managed programming skills are transferrable to building applications for Windows 8, and in many cases, much of your code will be transferrable as well."]

This statement seems to indicate that Silverlight development support is on its way out, to be replaced with XAML and C#/VB.NET development. We have emailed Microsoft for comment.
In the same blog post, Lieberman re-confirms that all apps made for the current version of Windows Phone will be able to be run on the next major update to the OS. He states:

["Driving application compatibility is a function of Microsoft’s commitment to its developers. Regardless of what we release in terms of new developer features and functionality, we have made a large investment in protecting your existing investments."]

Haktech: Record Desktop Screen, Use CamStudio Freeware and Opensource!

CamStudio is able to record all screen and audio activity on your computer and create industry-standard AVI video files and using its built-in SWF Producer can turn those AVIs into lean, mean, bandwidth-friendly Streaming Flash videos (SWFs)

Here are just a few ways you can use this software:

    You can use it to create demonstration videos for any software program
    Or how about creating a set of videos answering your most frequently asked questions?
    You can create video tutorials for school or college class
    You can use it to record a recurring problem with your computer so you can show technical support people
    You can use it to create video-based information products you can sell
    You can even use it to record new tricks and techniques you discover on your favourite software program, before you forget them.

DOWNLOAD HERE!

Haktech: MakeMKV 1.7.3 - Create .mkv +download

MakeMKV is your one-click solution to convert video that you own into free and patents-unencumbered format that can be played everywhere. MakeMKV is a format converter, otherwise called "transcoder". It converts the video clips from proprietary (and usually encrypted) disc into a set of MKV files, preserving most information but not changing it in any way. The MKV format can store multiple video/audio tracks with all meta-information and preserve chapters. There are many players that can play MKV files nearly on all platforms, and there are tools to convert MKV files to many formats, including DVD and Blu-ray discs.

Additionally MakeMKV can instantly stream decrypted video without intermediate conversion to wide range of players, so you may watch Blu-ray and DVD discs with your favorite player on your favorite OS or on your favorite device.

    Reads DVD and Blu-ray discs
    Reads Blu-ray discs protected with latest versions of AACS and BD+
    Preserves all video and audio tracks, including HD audio
    Preserves chapters information
    Preserves all meta-information (track language, audio type)
    Fast conversion - converts as fast as your drive can read data.
    No additional software is required for conversion or decryption.
    Available for Windows, Mac OS X and Linux
    Functionality to open DVD discs is free and will always stay free.
    All features (including Blu-ray decryption and processing) are free during BETA.





What's new in this version:

    Added ability to extract and put 3D MVC Video into MKV container
    Initial support for on-the-fly audio reencoding
    Improved functionality in expert mode
    Improved handling for DVD/Blu-ray discs with mastering errors
    Improved handling for DVD/Blu-ray discs with structure protection
    Better handling of MKV files created by other programs
    Many UI and stability improvements

Bug fixes

    MakeMKV could crash on profile change in expert mode
    A single audio frame could be incorrectly dropped at the start of file
    HD-DVD processing was accidentally broken in 1.7.0


Download: MakeMKV 1.7.3 Beta | 4.1 MB (Free, paid upgrade available)
Download: MakeMKV Beta for Mac OS X | 4.5 MB

Wednesday, April 4, 2012

Haktech: Top 3 free programs to edit, convert or create PDF Files

PDF is an acronym for "portable document format". It's a distribution format developed by Adobe and is the most widely used format for things such as online brochures, ebooks, and other online literature. The cost of PDF editing software programs can range from a few dollars to hundreds depending upon the complexity of the tasks they perform. A great way to save on these costs is to use freeware programs. Many of these programs are surprisingly full-featured and robust and can do most, if not all, of the work their high-priced counterparts were designed for. Here are the best FREE PDF editing software programs for Windows that everyone should try.

While other PDF manipulating programs that we already covered in the past (different giveaways/promotions) are pretty good and do their job, today we are focusing only on a small number of PDF editing programs because of features that those programs has to offer without any watermarks or nag screens.


Wondershare PDF Editor 0.8.0.8 Beta
Wondershare PDF Editor for Windows is an innovative tool for users to edit, convert, and annotate PDF files. Different from those so-called “PDF Editors”, which only work with notes or limited page contents, Wondershare PDF Editor allows users to directly edit all the content of the PDF files in any language. What’s more, it also gives users the ability to edit and reuse PDF contents in Word by converting PDF to Word. Marking and annotating PDF files are also very easy with Wondershare PDF Editor. Wondershare PDF Editor features the functionality of more expensive Nitro or Adobe products, nested within a scaled-down, minimalist, more intuitive design framework. This means you can edit and insert text, images, objects, hyperlinks and more – with less guesswork. Unlike other PDF Editors on the market, Wondershare PDF Editor is elegant because of its simplicity—every available function, like Merge and Split PDF files or Convert to Word—there all right there on the toolbar, no hidden submenus or elaborate names, just an effective precision toolbox that lets you treat any PDF as your own creative property. Reuse, revamp and remake PDFs with the best value on the PDF Editor market today.

Wondershare PDF Editor is a no-strings-attached free 100 days trial. Use Wondershare PDF Editor beta free for 100 days, period. No watermarks, bundled toolbars or spyware.


PDFMate Free PDF Converter 1.0
PDFMate Free PDF Converter is a simple, fast, and free application to convert PDF to Text documents, EPUB eBooks, images, HTML, and SWF files. It is a powerful 5-in-1 PDF conversion tool: PDF to Text Converter + PDF to EPUB Converter + PDF to Image Converter + PDF to HTML Converter + PDF to SWF Converter. PDF Converter Free is easy to use and provides batch conversion mode, which helps to convert even hundreds of PDF files at one time, quickly and effectively. You can also customize your output files concerning special requirements on hyperlinks, images, texts, etc. which makes your PDF into perfect personalized editable files. The conversion speed is fantastic and beyond imagination. However, it converts PDF accurately and the output files preserve high quality as the original.

PDFMate PDF Converter is easy to use with simple and clear program interface and unlike other PDF converters is totally FREE. Truly a robust PDF solution with lots of time-saving features.


Kingsoft Office 8.1.0.3010
Kingsoft Office Suite Free 2012 is an office suite that offers a number of features for creating, viewing and editing personal and business documents. Kingsoft Office 2012 includes Kingsoft Writer, Kingsoft Presentation and Kingsoft Spreadsheet. These three reliable and versatile programs are perfect for both personal use at home and for professional businesses. They offer outstanding value at their listed cost compared to competing office programs. Kingsoft Office 2012 is compatible with all of the latest Microsoft Office file formats. It will easily open, read and write documents created with Microsoft Office as well as a wide variety of other formats. Microsoft Office can also open Kingsoft files without having Kingsoft Office installed on the same computer.

Kingsoft Office has a built-in PDF creator/converter, which allows users to convert all Kingsoft files as PDF files. That means you can open, read and edit any PDF files, as well as save documents as plain text documents or export as PDF files by using Kingsoft Office.

Since everyone is different with different needs, you will probably disagree with us on some of these choices. If you have a favorite Free PDF editor/converter that we haven't mentioned or just want to share what makes your FREE PDF editor of choice so great,  let's hear it in the comments!



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