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Friday, April 17, 2009

[chottala.com] Information TEchnology | IT Tips | Download | Software | Antivirus Updates |



Saturday, 18 April 2009 in http://technologysyi.blogspot.com

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  • How to recover corrupted PowerPoint file using TEMP folder?

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    April 16, 2009

    Today tip will help you to recover the unreadable and corrupted file of Microsoft PowerPoint. Normally PowerPoint open files can become corrupted when you are trying to save it or if you were working on it and your PowerPoint application or windows crashed due to power failure. Windows saves a duplicate copy of working file as a temporary version. There is no need to use any third party software to manage these types of corrupted files, because you can recover them from TEMP folder.

    Follow the given steps to recover the corrupted files in MS PowerPoint:

    First click on Start button then click on Search option to start your search process।

    Here type the *.TMP in "All or part of the file name" box then choose the "Local Hard Drives" option in "Look in" box।

    click on Search button to start the search process of temporary files on your system local drives.

    After some time, windows locate the list to temporary files। Here arrange the all temp files as Date modified.

    open the PowerPoint and try to open these temp files or double click on that file to run in PowerPoint.

  • Windows Media Player Shortcut keys

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    April 16, 2009

    ALT+1 Adjust zoom to 50 percent

    ALT+2 Adjust zoom to 100 percent

    ALT+3 Adjust zoom to 200 percent

    ALT+ENTER Display the video in full mode

    ALT+F Go to media player File Menu

    ALT+T Go to media player Tools Menu

    ALT+V Go to media player View Menu

    ALT+P Go to media player Play Menu

    ALT+F4 Use to close media player

    CTRL+P Use to Play or Pause the item in media player

    CTRL+T Use to Repeat the items in media player

    CTRL+SHIFT+B Use to Rewind a file in media player

    CTRL+SHIFT+F Use to Fast Forward a file in media player

    CTRL+SHIFT+S Use to play items slower than a normal speed

    CTRL+SHIFT+ G Use to play items faster than a normal speed

    CTRL+SHIFT+ N Use to play items at normal speed in media player

    F8 Use to mute the volume in media player

    F9 Use to decrease the volume in media player

    F10 Use to increase the volume in media player

    CTRL+2 Display media player in skin mode

    CTRL+B Use to play the previous item in media player

    CTRL+F Use to play the next item in media player

    CTRL+E Use to Eject CD or DVD from CD or DVD drive

  • Increase the printing speed of your printer

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    April 16, 2009

    You can improve the printing speed of your printer with managing the print spooler option. Basically printer spooler holds your prints for some time then send to printer for print out. By default on most printers, printer spooler option is enabled but you turn off to specify that the file should be sending to the printer and not spooled.

    Here printer spooler option might be different location in your printer but on most printers you can turn off by going to Start, Setting then Printers. Now right click on the icon of the printer that you are using. Click Properties and select the Advanced tab. Here click on "Print directly to printer" option. This will tie up your application until the printer has all the data, but your print job should finish more quickly. Printing directly to the printer will also come in handy if your print spooler crashes and you need to print before you reboot your PC.

  • Protecting Microsoft Office Document with Password

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    April 16, 2009

    You can protect your document by applying password so that unauthorized person can not display as well as modify your document. You can apply two types of passwords:

    Password to open the document:

    If it is applied then you have to give the correct password to open the document, otherwise you cannot open the document.

    Password to modify the document:

    If it is applied then you have to give the correct password to modify the document, otherwise your document is opened but you cannot modify the document. It means that your document becomes read-only.

    To apply a password to document, follow these steps.

    * Open Save As dialog box by selecting "Save As" command from File menu.

    * Click "Tools" button of Save As dialog box and choose "General Options" from drop down menu, "Save" dialog box appears as shown in figure below.

    * Enter first password in "Password to open" text box and second password in "Password to modify" text box (if required) and click "Ok" button of dialog box. Microsoft Word will open "Confirm Password" dialog box for the confirmation of passwords. The maximum length of password is 15 characters.

    * Re-enter the password to open and password to modify and click "Ok" button of Confirm Password dialog boxes one by one.

    * Click "Save" button of Save As dialog box.

  • How to access the sharing data offline?

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    April 16, 2009

    Access the shared data offline allows you to keep using your shared files, folders and software programs when disconnected from the data server. When you reconnect to your data server, all files will be synchronized to the files on the network.

    There are two types of configurations required to set the access shared folders offline available, one for data server and other for client computer.

    Configuration on Data Server
    First locate the folders that you would like to share or make new folders then share these folders so they can be accessible to any one on the network.

    Now right click on that folder and click on the option "Sharing and security".

    A small dialog box will appear with the title "data properties". Under the "Sharing" tab, select the check box "Share this folder on the network" under the "Network sharing and security".
    Now set the share level permissions that you want to give the users on every folder. Enable cache of share folders by click on cache button (by default it will be enabled).
    Configuration on Client Computer

    On the client computer, first open My Computer then click on Tools.
    In Tools menu bar, click on Folder Options, a window will appear with the title Folder Options.

    Under the Offline File tab, check the option Enable Offline File. Here you can choose the synchronization process "Synchronize all offline files when logging on", "Synchronize all offline files before logging off" and others.
    Click on Apply button to save the settings and then Ok button to close this window.

    Now sitting on the client computer, try to access the shared folder from the data server.

    First Right click on the shared folder and Click on Make available offline.
    To synchronizing the offline work from client computer to data server, again open My Computer then click on Tools. Click on Synchronize then click on synchronizing button.
    After that down to data server and then try to access share folders by give the UNC (Universal Naming Convention) path of data server. But it will be accessible weather the server is down or up.

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Re: [chottala.com] Assistant Law Minister Mr. Kamrul Islam has told



It is the News in the Daily Amader Somoy news paper that Assistant Law Minister Mr. Kamrul Islam has told

"Madam Khalida Zia will get sufficient time to vacate the Cantonment House".

News is also that The Law Minister Barrister Shafique Ahmed has told to the reporter of Shamokal News Paper that according to the act of Cantonment Board any land or any house in the Cantonment area can not be given lease to any body Even Government can not give it.

Now according to the statement of Law Minister Mr. Barrister it can be said that The Government has no any authority to do any thing either giving or canceling of that House.

According to this circumstances it can be now said that Madam Khalida Zia has been living in this House either forcibly & illegally or illegally & UN authorized The Government had given her this House providing a registered document. 

Here either Madam Khalida or The Government had done illegal work.

In the Parliament Prime Minister & Position Parliament leader Sheik Hassina has asked the Opposition Parliament leader Madam Khalida to vacate the Cantonment House & after vacated this house she will build there apartments & will distribute these apartment house to the killed BDR Officer's family.

Now

To the Law Minister Barrister Shafique Ahmed & Assistent Law Minister 

You are all being paid from the fund of  public Tax & Vats. 

You are being some questions asked.

Do not know the honorable Position & Opposition Leaders the Ministers of Bangladesh the Government & the members of Bangladesh Parliament this rules of law?

How can the ministry Government of Bangladesh rule the country lawfully?

Are they not required for getting quality knowledge educations to learn the rules of law & lawful system of policy to rule the country lawfully??

 


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[chottala.com] Pakistan on course to become Islamist state, U.S. experts say



 

Pakistan on course to become Islamist state, U.S. experts say

By Jonathan S. Landay, McClatchy Newspapers Jonathan S. Landay, Mcclatchy Newspapers Thu Apr 16, 7:15 pm ET

WASHINGTON — A growing number of U.S. intelligence, defense and diplomatic officials have concluded that there's little hope of preventing nuclear-armed Pakistan from disintegrating into fiefdoms controlled by Islamist warlords and terrorists, posing the a greater threat to the U.S. than Afghanistan's terrorist haven did before 9/11.

"It's a disaster in the making on the scale of the Iranian revolution," said a U.S. intelligence official with long experience in Pakistan who requested anonymity because he wasn't authorized to speak publicly.

Pakistan's fragmentation into warlord-run fiefdoms that host al Qaida and other terrorist groups would have grave implications for the security of its nuclear arsenal; for the U.S.-led effort to pacify Afghanistan ; and for the security of India , the nearby oil-rich Persian Gulf and Central Asia , the U.S. and its allies.

" Pakistan has 173 million people and 100 nuclear weapons, an army which is bigger than the American army, and the headquarters of al Qaida sitting in two-thirds of the country which the government does not control," said David Kilcullen , a retired Australian army officer, a former State Department adviser and a counterinsurgency consultant to the Obama administration.

" Pakistan isn't Afghanistan , a backward, isolated, landlocked place that outsiders get interested in about once a century," agreed the U.S. intelligence official. "It's a developed state . . . (with) a major Indian Ocean port and ties to the outside world, especially the (Persian) Gulf, that Afghanistan and the Taliban never had."

"The implications of this are disastrous for the U.S.," he added. "The supply lines (from Karachi to U.S. bases) in Kandahar and Kabul from the south and east will be cut, or at least they'll be less secure, and probably sooner rather than later, and that will jeopardize the mission in Afghanistan , especially now that it's getting bigger."

The experts McClatchy interviewed said their views aren't a worst case scenario but a realistic expectation based on the militants' gains and the failure of Pakistan's civilian and military leadership to respond.

"The place is beyond redemption," said a Pentagon adviser who asked not to be further identified so he could speak freely. "I don't see any plausible scenario under which the present government or its most likely successor will mobilize the economic, political and security resources to push back this rising tide of violence.

"I think Pakistan is moving toward a situation where the extremists control virtually all of the countryside and the government controls only the urban centers," he continued. "If you look out 10 years, I think the government will be overrun by Islamic militants."

That pessimistic view of Pakistan's future has been bolstered by Islamabad's surrender this week for the first time of areas outside the frontier tribal region to Pakistan's Taliban movement and by a growing militant infiltration of Karachi , the nation's financial center, and the industrial and political heartland province of Punjab, in part to evade U.S. drone strikes in the tribal belt.

Civilian deaths in the drone attacks, the eight-year-old U.S. intervention in Afghanistan and U.S. support for Pakistan's former military dictatorship also have sown widespread ambivalence about the threat the insurgency poses and revulsion at fighting fellow Muslims.

"The government has to ratchet up the urgency and ratchet up the commitment of resources. This is a serious moment for Pakistan ," said Sen. John Kerry , D- Mass. , the Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chairman, on April 14 in Islamabad . "The federal government has got to . . . define this problem as Pakistan's ."

Many Pakistanis, however, dismiss such warnings as inflated. They think that the militants are open to dialogue and political accommodation to end the unrest, which many trace to the former military regime's cooperation with the U.S. after 9/11.

Ahsan Iqbal , a top aide to opposition leader and former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif , said the insurgency can be quelled if the government rebuilds the judicial system, improves law enforcement, compensates guerrillas driven to fight by relatives' deaths in security force operations and implements democratic reforms.

"It will require time," Iqbal told McClatchy reporters and editors this week. "We need a very strong resolve and internal unity."

Many U.S. officials, though, regard the civilian government of Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari as unpopular, dysfunctional and mired in infighting. It's been unable to agree on an effective counterinsurgency strategy or to address the ills that are feeding the unrest. These include ethnic and sectarian hatreds, ineffective police, broken courts, widespread corruption, endemic poverty and a deepening financial crisis, they said.

Pakistan's army, meanwhile, is hobbled by a lack of direction from the country's civilian leaders, disparaged for its repeated coups and shaken by repeated defeats by the militants. It remains fixated on India to ensure high budgets and cohesion among troops of divergent ethnic and sectarian allegiances, U.S. officials and experts said.

Many officers and politicians also oppose fighting the Islamist groups that Pakistan nurtured to fight proxy wars in Afghanistan and Kashmir , and because they think the U.S. is secretly conspiring with India to destabilize their country.

Alarm rose in Washington this week after the parliament and Zardari agreed to impose Islamic law in the Swat district, where extremists have repelled several army offensives; closed girls' schools; and beheaded, hanged and lashed opponents and alleged criminals.

The government's capitulation handed the militants their first refuge outside the remote tribal area bordering Afghanistan , and less than 100 miles north of Islamabad . Taliban fighters also advanced virtually unopposed from Swat into the Buner district, 60 miles north of Islamabad .

Buner is close to a key hydroelectric dam and to the highways that link Pakistan to China , and Islamabad to Peshawar , the capital of the North West Frontier Province , much of which is already under Taliban sway.

Many U.S. officials and other experts expect the militants to continue advancing.

The Taliban "have now become a self-sustaining force," author Ahmed Rashid , an expert on the insurgency, told a conference in Washington on Wednesday. "They have an agenda for Pakistan , and that agenda is no less than to topple the government of Pakistan and 'Talibanizing' the entire country."

Iqbal, the adviser to Sharif, disagreed. While militants will overrun small pockets, most Pakistanis embrace democracy and will resist living under the Taliban's harsh interpretation of Islam, he said.

"The psychology, the temperament, the mood of the Pakistani nation does not subscribe to these extremist views," Iqbal said.

The U.S. intelligence official, however, said that Pakistan's elite, dominated since the country's independence in 1947 by politicians, bureaucrats and military officers from Punjab, have failed to recognize the seriousness of the situation.

"The Punjabi elite has already lost control of Pakistan , but neither they nor the Obama administration realize that," the official said. " Pakistan will be an Islamist state — or maybe a collection of four Islamic states, probably within a few years. There's no civilian leadership in Islamabad that can stop this, and so far, there hasn't been any that's been willing to try."

Several U.S. officials said that the Afghanistan - Pakistan strategy that President Barack Obama unveiled last month is being called into question by the accelerating rate at which the insurgency in Pakistan is expanding.

The plan hinges on the Pakistani army's willingness to put aside its obsession with Hindu-dominated India and focus on fighting the Islamist insurgency. It also presupposes, despite doubts held by some U.S. officials, that sympathetic Pakistani military and intelligence officers will sever their links with militant groups.

MORE FROM MCCLATCHY

Pakistan agrees to Islamic law in Swat, bolstering extremists

Do U.S. drone kill Pakistani extremists or recruit them?

Floggings, stoning could begin in Pakistan's scenic Swat valley

Afghan- Pakistan situation dire; more troops may be needed

Cato expert looks at the Afghanistan strategy

Asheville Citizen-Times - ‎Apr 15, 2009‎
And recently he confidently promised that the US will "disrupt, dismantle and defeat al-Qaida in Pakistan and Afghanistan." We wish the president lots of ...

Pakistan on course to become Islamist state, US experts say

McClatchy Washington Bureau - ‎13 hours ago‎
"Pakistan will be an Islamist state — or maybe a collection of four Islamic states, probably within a few years. There's no civilian leadership in Islamabad ...

A state within a state

Chandigarh Tribune - ‎Apr 15, 2009‎
by G. Parthasarathy THE US Special Representative for "AfPak" (an acronym for Afghanistan and Pakistan), Mr Richard Holbrooke, while expressing appreciation ...
The Warriors of Allah Frontier India Defence and Strategic News

Germany Prepares for Homegrown Terror Trial

Spiegel Online - ‎Apr 16, 2009‎
They won't be allowed to wear Islamic knit caps when they see each other again, that much is clear. They will also not be able to perform all their daily ...



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[FutureOfBangladesh] No More Godfather



 
see the link
 



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....we must use caution and restraint in our language.  No personal attacks, address the issues, avoid inflammatory rhetoric, do not suggest or infer violence and be able to back up any statements or facts with a credible web site link....



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[chottala.com] International donors pledge $5 billion to stabilize Pakistan



Donors pledge $5 billion to stabilize Pakistan

AP

TOKYO – International donors, led by the United States and Japan, pledged more than $5 billion Friday to stabilize Pakistan's troubled economy and fight the spread of terrorism in the Islamic nation and neighboring Afghanistan.

The U.S. and Japan started off the one-day conference by pledging $1 billion each. Saudi Arabia added $700 million and the EU $640 million. The total pledged was $5.28 billion, according to Pakistan's foreign minister.

"There is a desire to help Pakistan," Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari said, but he added that the international community is still trying to grasp the implications of the problems his country faces.

"I still fear that the understanding of the danger that Pakistan faces still does not register fully in the minds of the world," he said. "If we lose, you lose. If we lose, the world loses."

The donors said their contributions would be focused on improving the economic climate in Pakistan through infrastructure and other projects, and stressed that stability in Pakistan is key to averting the growth of terrorism throughout the region.

The total fell short of Zardari's hope of as much as $6 billion in pledges. The conference's Japanese hosts had said they expected a figure closer to $4 billion.

"We have demonstrated our clear determination to face the issues," said Japanese Foreign Minister Hirofumi Nakasone.

Both Japan and the U.S. will make their contributions over the next two years, and neither represented a dramatic change in their current pattern of donations. Saudi Arabia's pledge would also be disbursed over the next two years, and the EU's over the next four years.

The U.S. said in a statement it would contribute $1 billion as a "down payment" on aid it has already announced.

Pakistan Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi called the conference a success.

"I am more than satisfied with the successful conclusion of today's conference," he said. "In fact, I am delighted."

Though focused on Pakistan, the conference also discussed related issues in neighboring Afghanistan.

"Without stability in Pakistan, there is no stability in Afghanistan," Japanese Prime Minister Taro Aso said in a speech opening the conference. "Stability in border areas is a key and I want to stress that the international community supports comprehensive strategies by the two nations."

The conference, supported by the World Bank, was attended by 31 countries and 18 international organizations.

Japan provided Pakistan with 48 billion yen ($480 million) in development assistance in 2008.

The U.S. contribution will go toward Washington's previously announced plans to give Pakistan $1.5 billion in aid each year for the next five years. Separately, a $7.6 billion bailout has been granted by the International Monetary Fund to avert the country's most recent balance-of-payments crisis.

As part of the IMF deal, Pakistan has been asked to reduce its fiscal deficit and to tighten its monetary policy.

Pakistan's leaders have said they do not want the international community to "micromanage" its economy, but the central bank forecast this month that economic growth for the year through June will slump to between 2.5 percent and 3.5 percent, far below the 5.5 percent the government has projected — and too low to create enough jobs for its fast-growing population of about 170 million people.

In response, the government has had to slash its development budget but is resisting calls to tax the narrow landowning elite that dominates its politics. Industry is also hampered by severe power shortages that are not expected to ease until next year at the earliest.

___

Associated Press writer Shino Yuasa contributed to this report.

International donors pledge $5 billion to Pakistan

英文中國郵報 - ‎2 hours ago‎
TOKYO — International donors led by the United States and Japan pledged more than $5 billion Friday to stabilize Pakistan's troubled economy and fight the ...

Pakistan Aid Effort Hits Saudi Hurdle

Wall Street Journal - ‎Apr 14, 2009‎
By JAY SOLOMON WASHINGTON -- The Obama administration is seeking to help Pakistan raise $4 billion to $5 billion at an international aid conference in Tokyo ...

Donors Pledge More Than $5 Billion For Pakistan

FXstreet.com The Foreign Exchange Market - ‎2 hours ago‎
TOKYO (AFP)--International donors pledged more than $5 billion Friday to stabilize strife-torn Pakistan, aid conference co-chairs Japan and the World Bank ...

 



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