You're a good soldier
Choosing your battles
Pick yourself up
And dust yourself off
And back in the saddle
You're on the frontline
Everyone's watching
You know it's serious
We're getting closer
This isnt over
The pressure is on
You feel it
But you've got it all
Believe it
When you fall get up
Oh oh...
And if you fall get up
Eh eh...
Tsamina mina
Zangalewa
Cuz this is Africa
Tsamina mina eh eh
Waka Waka eh eh
Tsamina mina
Zangalewa
This time for Africa
Listen to your god
This is our motto
Your time to shine
Dont wait in line
Y vamos por Todo
People are raising
Their Expectations
Go on and feed them
This is your moment
No hesitations
Today's your day
I feel it
You paved the way
Believe it
If you get down
Get up Oh oh...
When you get down
Get up eh eh...
Tsamina mina
Zangalewa
This time for Africa
Tsamina mina eh eh
Waka Waka eh eh
Tsamina mina
Zangalewa
Anawa aa
Tsamina mina eh eh
Waka Waka eh eh
Tsamina mina
Zangalewa
This time for Africa
Tsamina mina eh eh
Waka Waka eh eh
Tsamina mina
Zangalewa
Anawa aa
Tsamina mina eh eh
Waka Waka eh eh
Tsamina mina
Zangalewa
This time for Africa
Django eh eh
Django eh eh
Tsamina mina
Zangalewa
Anawa aa
Django eh eh
Django eh eh
Tsamina mina
Zangalewa
Anawa aa
This time for Africa
This time for Africa
Source At Lyrics.Com
Perfect Skill PC
Tuesday, April 12, 2011
Microsoft Security Essentials now available for Small Businesses
As we continue to evolve security and privacy at Microsoft, we are doing more than securing our own products and refining our own processes – we are continually responding to the growing and changing threat landscape. Despite the proliferation and increasing impact of threats in the environment, many consumers and small businesses, both in mature and emerging markets remain unprotected. There are several reasons for this:
For more information on the news, check out the Microsoft SMB Community blog and the feature story on Microsoft.com
- Performance Concerns: Customers worry that antimalware software can impact the performance of their machines and degrade their computing experience.
- Customer Confusion: Many customers are confused by trials and annual subscription renewals, in many cases believing their PCs are covered when in fact their subscriptions have expired and they are at risk.
- Payment Method Barriers: Traditional online subscription and payment models do not work in emerging markets where customer and small business credit is not always readily available.
- Cost: Many consumers and an increasing number of small businesses are either unwilling or unable to pay the ongoing subscription costs for the security suite solutions that come on their PCs.
For more information on the news, check out the Microsoft SMB Community blog and the feature story on Microsoft.com
IP6 In Windows
Did you know that on January 31, 2011, the last two large blocks of IP address space (referred to as a “Class A” or “/8”) were allocated by IANA (Internet Assigned Numbers Authority) to the Regional Internet Registry in Asia Pacific? By any measure, the Internet is rapidly running out of IP address space. Yet concern and anxiety continues to build amongst administrators and IT professionals. How did we get here? Should we fear the unknown or is the IP addressing problem really an overblown ball of hype?
IPv4 (defined in detail in RFC 791) was designed in the early 1980s. It uses 32-bit addresses, providing for almost 4.3 billion addresses across the entire range. However, some of these address ranges are reserved for special purposes, including private networks, multicast and other purposes. Many large IP address blocks were assigned to educational institutions and government agencies (e.g.: the 18.0.0.0/8 address range is designated to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology). Of course, at the time this was considered more than enough address space given the fairly limited scope of IP-based device deployment and adoption.
We all know that the world has changed over the past 30 years, so has the demand for IP addresses. IPv6 was designed to meet the ever-growing demand for IP addresses with a nearly unfathomable 128-bit address space. With approximately 3.4 x 10^38 available addresses, IPv6 is hoping to develop a new era where devices that we seldom think twice about (refrigerators, toasters, etc.) will be able to communicate with each other over IP. (That’s right; your washer will be able to send you an email when the clothes are clean!) What an exciting time to be working in IT, right?
IP address syntax looks very different in IPv6 than in IPv4; an example might look like 2001:0db8:85a3:0000:0000:8a2e:0370:7334. IPv6 addresses are divided into two sections; there is a 64 bit network prefix and a 64 bit interface identifier. There are three types of IPv6 addresses: unicast addresses (identifies each network interface), anycast addresses (identifies a group of interfaces) and multicast addresses (used to deliver one packet to many interfaces). There are also reserved IPv6 addresses for specific purposes, such as the loopback address, link-local addresses (for use in the local network only) and solicited-node multicast addresses (used to discover neighboring nodes via the Neighbor Discovery Protocol).
IPv6 also implements new features that were ‘baked in’ during the design phase of the protocol, versus attempted to be bolted on later with IPv4. It provides a much simpler method of assigning addresses to client devices. IP Security (IP Sec) is now integrated into IPv6 and is mandated in the standard specifications (RFC 2401 has a great explanation of this if you’re looking to dive deeper). IPv6 deployment may eventually lead to the removal of Network Address Translation; due to the tremendous amount of IPv6 addresses available, expect industry to focus more and more on the host-based security approach (see the Jericho Forum to learn about this concept).
While IT Pros may be hesitant to look at adoption of IPv6 just yet, many network teams have already prepared the network infrastructure in organizations all over the world. In fact, the network geeks are often eager to discuss a potential migration to IPv6 on the corporate network and/or running in what’s called “dual stack” mode where devices can speak IPv6 and IPv4. So, what’s holding back adoption? Backwards compatibility and business need. In 2005 a Department of Defense mandate requiring that network equipment manufacturers support IPv6 for devices the DOD was procuring. Most relatively modern deployments of routers, switches and other networking gear in the enterprise likely support IPv6; the orchestration of configuration and deployment between teams is what’s essential to making it work effectively. Deploying a new IP protocol on a corporate network is something that hasn’t been attempted in many organizations and will require teamwork and transparency from the different teams involved.
Source At WindowsSercurity.Com
IPv4 (defined in detail in RFC 791) was designed in the early 1980s. It uses 32-bit addresses, providing for almost 4.3 billion addresses across the entire range. However, some of these address ranges are reserved for special purposes, including private networks, multicast and other purposes. Many large IP address blocks were assigned to educational institutions and government agencies (e.g.: the 18.0.0.0/8 address range is designated to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology). Of course, at the time this was considered more than enough address space given the fairly limited scope of IP-based device deployment and adoption.
We all know that the world has changed over the past 30 years, so has the demand for IP addresses. IPv6 was designed to meet the ever-growing demand for IP addresses with a nearly unfathomable 128-bit address space. With approximately 3.4 x 10^38 available addresses, IPv6 is hoping to develop a new era where devices that we seldom think twice about (refrigerators, toasters, etc.) will be able to communicate with each other over IP. (That’s right; your washer will be able to send you an email when the clothes are clean!) What an exciting time to be working in IT, right?
IP address syntax looks very different in IPv6 than in IPv4; an example might look like 2001:0db8:85a3:0000:0000:8a2e:0370:7334. IPv6 addresses are divided into two sections; there is a 64 bit network prefix and a 64 bit interface identifier. There are three types of IPv6 addresses: unicast addresses (identifies each network interface), anycast addresses (identifies a group of interfaces) and multicast addresses (used to deliver one packet to many interfaces). There are also reserved IPv6 addresses for specific purposes, such as the loopback address, link-local addresses (for use in the local network only) and solicited-node multicast addresses (used to discover neighboring nodes via the Neighbor Discovery Protocol).
IPv6 also implements new features that were ‘baked in’ during the design phase of the protocol, versus attempted to be bolted on later with IPv4. It provides a much simpler method of assigning addresses to client devices. IP Security (IP Sec) is now integrated into IPv6 and is mandated in the standard specifications (RFC 2401 has a great explanation of this if you’re looking to dive deeper). IPv6 deployment may eventually lead to the removal of Network Address Translation; due to the tremendous amount of IPv6 addresses available, expect industry to focus more and more on the host-based security approach (see the Jericho Forum to learn about this concept).
While IT Pros may be hesitant to look at adoption of IPv6 just yet, many network teams have already prepared the network infrastructure in organizations all over the world. In fact, the network geeks are often eager to discuss a potential migration to IPv6 on the corporate network and/or running in what’s called “dual stack” mode where devices can speak IPv6 and IPv4. So, what’s holding back adoption? Backwards compatibility and business need. In 2005 a Department of Defense mandate requiring that network equipment manufacturers support IPv6 for devices the DOD was procuring. Most relatively modern deployments of routers, switches and other networking gear in the enterprise likely support IPv6; the orchestration of configuration and deployment between teams is what’s essential to making it work effectively. Deploying a new IP protocol on a corporate network is something that hasn’t been attempted in many organizations and will require teamwork and transparency from the different teams involved.
Source At WindowsSercurity.Com
Aura – Get Windows 8 Aero Auto-Colorization Feature in Windows Vista and 7
“Aero Auto-Colorization” is the ability to automatically configure the color of Aero elements, like the Start Menu, Windows Explorer windows, and the taskbar based on the desktop wallpaper.
Now you can get the same functionality in Windows Vista and 7 using a freeware “Aura“.
Aura is an excellent program developer by Stealth2010 which calculates average color of desktop background image or active window icon and sets it as Aero Glass color. It works like color hot-track in Windows 7 taskbar.
http://soft4all.info/download/Aura.rar
Source At Soft4All.com
Now you can get the same functionality in Windows Vista and 7 using a freeware “Aura“.
Aura is an excellent program developer by Stealth2010 which calculates average color of desktop background image or active window icon and sets it as Aero Glass color. It works like color hot-track in Windows 7 taskbar.
http://soft4all.info/download/Aura.rar
Source At Soft4All.com
As Long As You Love Me lyrics
Although loneliness has always been a friend of mine
I'm leaving my life in your hands
People say I'm crazy and that I am blind
Risking it all in a glance
And how you got me blind is still a mystery
I can't get you out of my head
Don't care what is written in your history
As long as you're here with me
Chorus:
I don't care who you are
Where you're from
What you did
As long as you love me
Who you are
Where you're from
Don't care what you did
As long as you love me
Every little thing that you have said and done
Feels like it's deep within me
Doesn't really matter if you're on the run
It seems like we're meant to be
Chorus
Bridge:
I've tried to hide it so that no one knows
But I guess it shows
When you look into my eyes
What you did and where you are comin' from
I don't care, as long as you love me, baby.
Chorus
Who you are
Where you're from
Don't care what you did
As long as you love me
(Repeat to fade)
Source At http://www.lyrics007.com/
I'm leaving my life in your hands
People say I'm crazy and that I am blind
Risking it all in a glance
And how you got me blind is still a mystery
I can't get you out of my head
Don't care what is written in your history
As long as you're here with me
Chorus:
I don't care who you are
Where you're from
What you did
As long as you love me
Who you are
Where you're from
Don't care what you did
As long as you love me
Every little thing that you have said and done
Feels like it's deep within me
Doesn't really matter if you're on the run
It seems like we're meant to be
Chorus
Bridge:
I've tried to hide it so that no one knows
But I guess it shows
When you look into my eyes
What you did and where you are comin' from
I don't care, as long as you love me, baby.
Chorus
Who you are
Where you're from
Don't care what you did
As long as you love me
(Repeat to fade)
Source At http://www.lyrics007.com/
DriverMax PRO free for 61 days
DriveMax is a small freeware that helps you to update your system drivers which can increase your system performance . As I said before the DriveMax is the best freeware utility when you compared with other System drivers updating software. But the only drawback is it allows you to download only 2 drivers or updates per day.
So to bypass this limit you need DriverMax PRO account, with Pro account you can download and update unlimited number of drivers. Also another Pro feature is you can download the drivers updates instantly from the interface itself without going to DriveMax webpage.
DriveMax Pro provides updates to almost all manufacturers, not only it provides driver updates, but also it allows you to back up your windows drivers and restore them after reinstalling Windows
Download DriverMax v 5.8(3.7 MB), install it and run the software.
Now under Online account Menu click ‘Driver max settings’, then select ‘I already have an account‘ and enter your account details
DriveMax Pro provides updates to almost all manufacturers, not only it provides driver updates, but also it allows you to back up your windows drivers and restore them after reinstalling Windows
DriverMax PRO free for 61 days :
- Just visit this Giveawaypage, then enter your email address, password (twice) to create DriverMax Pro account and click “Activate full version” button,
- If you had created new account you will receive an Activation mail, click the link and activate your account.
Source At Techo360.Com
Transform Windows XP to Windows 7 with Seven Skin Pack 2.0 Ultimate
After Microsoft launched Windows Vista first thing MS Style Developers did was designing Vista Transformation Pack for Windows XP which lets you to transform windows xp to windows vista. Now after Microsoft has announced about windows 7 and precisely when Windows 7 beta 1 leaked on internet more and more users expecting to have Windows 7 Transformation pack for Windows XP and Vista.
Since not all users are going to install Beta version of Windows 7 the only solution left to enjoy Windows 7 look and feel on Windows XP is to have Windows 7 Transformation Pack. For all those egger users who want enjoy windows 7 look and feel here is Seven Skin Pack 2.0 Ultimate. Seven Skin Pack 2.0 Ultimate will transform your windows xp to windows 7 look and feel.
Screenshot of Seven Skin Pack 2.0 Ultimate –Transform Windows XP to Windows 7
Seven Skin Pack 2.0 Ultimate is complete pack for transforming Windows XP to Windows 7, No need to download any thing else.
Download Seven Skin Pack 2.0 Ultimate and Transform Windows XP to Windows 7.
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