Slim Devices: Broadcast your MP3’s over your Wifi to your stereo. Looking at about $200.



Slim Devices: Broadcast your MP3’s over your Wifi to your stereo. Looking at about $200.
Eliminate IE’s AutoComplete Reminder
By Neil J. Rubenking
Q: AutoComplete some people like it, some don’t. Those who don’t like it turn it off. Those of us who turned it off are now constantly being prompted to turn it on. By now, we despise it! How do we turn it off completely, with no more pop-ups asking us to turn it on?
A: It does seem that Internet Explorer really wants you to use AutoComplete. On a system with AutoComplete turned off, it will prompt you from time to time, asking to turn it on again. A Registry tweak will prevent IE’s “helpful” reminders. First, close all IE windows. Launch REGEDIT from the Start menu’s Run dialog. Navigate to the key HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Policies\Microsoft\Internet Explorer\Control Panel. Note that this key may not be present in its entirety. You may need to create the Internet Explorer and Control Panel subkeys. In the right-hand pane, look for a DWORD value named FormSuggest it will probably not be present. In that case, right-click in the right-hand pane and choose New | DWORD Value from the pop-up menu. Name the new value FormSuggest. Whether you found it or created it, double-click this value and set its data to 1. That should terminate the annoying reminder.
If you just want to find duplicate images, download Dup Detector, a free utility that compares pixels to find out if pictures look the same. If you want to delete more than duplicate pics, get Duplicate File Finder or Easy Cleaner.
BetaNews | Microsoft: SP2 Will Not Install on Pirated Copies of XP
SpywareBlaster Download – Prevent spyware from being loaded. A more realistic approach than Ad-aware.
KAP (Kite Arial Photography) Take digital photos from way above. But if you’re just into small things on ebay, read on still shots
NISCC Vulnerability Advisory 236929The vulnerability described in this advisory affects implementations of the Transmission Control Protocol (TCP) that comply with the Internet Engineering Task Force’s (IETF’s) Requests For Comments (RFCs) for TCP, including RFC 793, the original specification, and RFC 1323, TCP Extensions for High Performance.