There’s been a lot of talk about Windows 7 since it’s launch, most everything has been positive (which certainly wasn’t the case after Windows Vista launched). In this tough economic client people are asking themselves, “Why should I upgrade and what benefits will I see if you do?” I’ve been running Windows 7 since August with their Release Candidate and installed the full version as soon as Technet offered it and I’ve found many improvements over previous versions.
(Be warned, this is a long post. I wanted to get as much information in as possible. The short story is if you’re getting a new computer definitely get it with Windows 7, if your computer is less than 2 or 3 years old I would recommend the upgrade).
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The other day I came across a site that I haven’t visited in quite some time. I’m actually very grateful for the site since some one took the time and effort to write out guides for default services settings in different windows programs.
http://www.blackviper.com/WinXP/registry.htm
Generally if you like to tweak with your services and/or registry , you can sometimes forget to set them back. Or if things really go off kilter , you can just set them right back. Of course you are making backups of anything you change first …right? Generally I have used it when a computer has been hit by a Trojan. The new ones will disable as much as possible , creating havoc for any administrator to get the system back up and running. I am also of the mindset that formatting is not necessary …..most of the time.
What is the registry-
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Microsoft put out a series of patches today for all versions of Internet Explorer from 5 to 8 for every operating system from Windows 2000 to Windows 7 to address a huge security vulnerability .
The vulnerability was used in the cyber attacks against Google, yahoo and others over the last couple weeks. If you’re running any versions of Internet Explorer please install any updates from Windows Update that are pending on your system or grab the update manually from Microsoft’s site.
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Like many people, you may have received a new computer for the holidays. If you’re already an avid user you know how to set it up, install your favorite apps and get to work/play. But if you’ve just moved to a new operating system (Windows 7, OS X or even Linux) you may be a little lost as to the new functionality in your new toy. Luckily lifehacker has put together a great list of tips and tools for whatever system you’re baffled over. Take a look at this list and let me know if you have another cool trick you’d like to share.
image from bolti22 on flickr
If you’re like me you have a ton of icons on your desktop, but they’re all over the place and sometimes difficult to keep track of. There’s a great free application that you can use on any version of Windows XP and up (XP, Vista and 7) called Fences by Stardock.
Fences allows you to group your icons within individual…well…fences. Each fence is re-sizable, movable as a group of icons and has it’s own label. All you need to do to create a fence is right click and hold and drag a box around the icons you wish to group together, like in the video below.
The free version allows for an unlimited number of fences, quick hide abilities, auto scaling of fences for when you change resolutions and the ability to save configurations before you makes changes and revert if you don’t like your new setup. They offer a paid version that gives you the ability to automatically grab files by extension, date, name, etc, set different opacity levels for different fences.
One of the worst things about starting fresh with a new reinstall of Windows (or a new computer) is that you have to hunt down updated installers for the software that you use. I just stumbled across this great site which streamlines looking for software and installing it into one super quick process.
There’s really not too much to say about it honestly. You go to their website, put a check mark next to the applications you want to install, hit the “get installer” button and then a small app runs (doesn’t even install itself on your computer)

If you’re like me you use the built-in functionality of your web browser to save and manage your passwords to various online sites. If you’re being careful and protecting your passwords from prying eyes you’re using a master password to protect your password list. What happens if you forget your master password? Before now you were kind of stuck. Your passwords would remain safe but inaccessible, rendering them useless. Now a recovery tool called FireMaster that can help you recover your passwords.
Before I go any further I’d like to remind everyone that these tools can be used for both good and evil. Please use this to recover a lost password for yourself or someone that asks you, don’t use this to snoop on someone else’s online business. These tools are a godsend for tech guys, but if people misuse them it just makes it harder for legitimate users to get their hands on them.
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For the longest time I used to use NERO burning rom, I used to be able to edit music , burn cd’s of all types of formats. It was my goto app for when I needed to place data on cd’s and dvd’s. Things started to go wrong around version 7.5. It was no longer the sleek fast and all around awesome application I had grown to love. It was re-coded to look shiny and nice, and started using microsoft .net libraries. So I started looking for alternatives , and the best that I have found is imgburn.com.
ImgBurn supports multiple formats (bin, cue, iso, nrg), multiple audio formats (AAC, APE, FLAC, M4A, MP3, OGG, PCM, WAV), and the new version will even let you burn HD DVD’s and BlueRay Video disks if you have the capable hardware.
It will run on all these platforms: Windows 95, 98, Me, NT4, 2000, XP, 2003, Vista, 2008 and 7 (including the 64 bit versions)