Showing posts with label Tips and Tricks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tips and Tricks. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 20, 2013

Kata i1 Registry Windows How To Prevent Access Into Drive C ?

Generally drive C of the computer usually contains system files that are used for the operating system works. sometimes you do not want the drive is accessed by others, to do so you can use the command gpedit. but what if you are not an administrator? which is managed on a computer, only the administrator can open gpedit.

You can do it through the computer hacking windows registry editor, of course, you can hack it, if it is not in the registry editor disabled by administrator, by :
  • Open the registry editor.
  • access to HKEY_CURRENT_USER \ SOFTWARE \ MICROSOFT \ WINDOWS \ CurrentVersion \ Policies \ EXPLORER.
  • FOR VALUE DWORD, called NoViewOnDrive. make sure the file does not exist, you just need to modify it.
  • Change the value to 4
  • Click OK
To see the results you have to restart your computer first. after restart the computer, open Windows Explorer and click on the C drive icon then you will see the results.

Tuesday, March 19, 2013

Technology : Lenovo Ditches Windows 8 For 7 For The Enterprise - Abtech-yogyakarta.com

Lenovo is one of the stable powerhouses in the PC market, catering well for both enterprise customers and consumers. Just how well are they catering for the enterprise? Well as it turns out, rather than subjecting customers to the difficulty of learning a new operating system (Windows 8, that is), Lenovo is shipping Windows 7 on new enterprise-designated orders as they recognize the official Windows 8-to-7 downgrade can be tricky.



If you do happen to want Windows 8 on your enterprise machine, you'll have to install it through the discreetly bundled Windows 8 disc, which even includes software that brings back the Start menu if you so choose to install it. Lenovo's strategy seems to be doing quite well so far, as they continue to report growth each quarter, although it's not a good sign for the uptake of Windows 8.

That said, Lenovo's choice to downgrade machines to Windows 7 by default is probably saving businesses a large amount of time, as many companies would be unwilling to deploy a new operating system this early into its life cycle, and would simply downgrade to Windows 7 anyway. UK Lenovo boss did mention to The Register that enterprises were "interested in testing Windows 8-powered touchscreen devices in-house", but wouldn't elaborate on the ratio of Windows 7 to Windows 8 device shipments.

Monday, March 18, 2013

Online Marketing Tips : Top Secret Ways To Market Your Small Business Online

  1. Press releases still work. Granted a submission to PRWeb or a Vocus account make the pickup and link benefit much easier, but those cost dollars – so for this article lets reiterate the best free press release sources:
  2. Send the press release to your local media outlets, or any niche media outlets that may be interested in what you do.
  3. Claim, verify, and update your Google Local Business listing. This is extremely important. Google Local Listings have been absorbed into Google+, so be sure to check out this great resource over at Blumenthals.com to keep up to date on how to manage your Google Local Listing.
  4. Find a niche social media site that pertains to your exact business and participate. Be helpful, provide relevant and useful information, and your word of mouth advertising will grow from that engagement.
  5. Build a Google+ page for your business and follow businesses that are related to your product or service niche. Share informative and relative content and link to your profile from your website. You should also consider allowing users to +1 your content on a page by page basis.
  6. Setting up joint benefit with local businesses or others in your niche can help you reach eyes you never did before. Be sure to answer the question "Will my user find this information beneficial as they shop and purchase?" every time you link to a resource, or request a link or listing on another site.
  7. Comment and offer original, well thought out, sensible information, opinion and help on blogs that are relevant to your website's topic and be sure to leave your URL. Even if a nofollow tag is attached, you could gain a bit of traffic and some credibility as an authority on the subject matter. This is not blog comment spamming, this is engaging in a conversation relevant to your website's topic.
  8. Set up and verify a Webmaster Central Account at Google.
  9. Set up a Bing Webmaster Tools account and verify it.
  10. Update or create your XML sitemap and upload it to Google Webmaster Tools and Bing Webmaster Tools.
  11. Write a "how-to" article that addresses your niche for Wikihow.com or Answers.com. This is kind of fun and a good resource for getting mentions and links. Looking at your product or service in a step-by-step manner is often enlightening in several ways. It can help you better explain your products and services on your own website. I will say I don’t know why some of these sites still rank well, many of them are junk. I do like most of the answers on the two sites mentioned above. Be picky with where you participate.
  12. Write unique HTML page titles for all of your pages. This is still extremely important, don’t skimp on this one.
  13. Share your photos at Flickr – get a profile, write descriptions, and link to your website. Don't share photos you don't own or have permission to use.
  14. Start a blog. There's nothing wrong with getting the basics of blogging down by using a free service from Blogger or WordPress.
  15. Make sure your Bing and Yahoo Local listings are up to date.
  16. Update and optimize your description and URL at YP.com. They'll try to get you to spend money on an upgraded listing or some other search marketing options. Don't bother with that, but make sure the information is accurate and fresh.
  17. Use your Bing Webmaster Tools account to look at your incoming links. How do they look? Are all of the sites relevant and on-topic? If not, reevaluate your link building practices and start contacting any of the irrelevant sites you can and ask them to take down your link. A clean and relevant incoming link profile is important; cleaning up bad links is a necessity until we can tell Google and Bing which links we want them to ignore.
  18. Make a slideshow of your products or record an original how-to video and upload to YouTube. Be sure to optimize your title and descriptions. Once it's uploaded, write a new page and embed the video on your own Web site. Add a transcription of the video if possible.
  19. Try a new free keyword tool for researching website optimization, then see #20.
  20. Add a page to your site focused on a top keyword phrase you found in #19.
  21. Build a Facebook Page and work to engage those that are interested in your product or service. Facebook is so much more robust than it ever was! Create groups, events, and photo albums. Link to your Facebook profile from your site and allow visitors to your site to like and share your content.
  22. Install Google Analytics if you don’t have any tracking software. The program is pretty amazing and it's free. You need to do this if you haven’t already. It's that important.
  23. Start Twittering or start doing it much better than you are now – it's a great way to network with like-minded individuals.
  24. Pinterest is hot right now. If you have visually stimulating content that is relevant to the site's demographic, you can find great success right now. Be sure you're using solid practices for marketing on Pinterest as you get started.
  25. Create a new list in Twitter and follow profiles of industry experts you know and trust. Use this as your modern feed reader. I don’t use RSS feed readers anymore. I like content that has been vetted by my peers and is worthy of a tweet or two.
  26. Try a new way to write an ad for a struggling PPC ad group or campaign.
  27. Review your Google Analytics In-Page insights and take note of how users are interacting with your page. Where to they click, what is getting ignored. Make changes based on this knowledge.
  28. Set up a Google Content Experiment through your Analytics account and test with the information you obtained and changes you made in number 27.
  29. Build a map at Google Maps and add descriptions for your storefront, locations, and nearby useful points of interest. Make your map public and embed it on your own website. Add links back to relevant content on your site if possible to each point of interest.
  30. Keep reading Search Engine Watch for more free tips and tricks.

Marketing : How To Market My Small Business Online

The Republican House Budget Committee chairman proposes cutting $4.6 trillion over 10 years. The Democratic Senate Budget Committee chairman offers a plan combining spending cuts and tax increases. This chart compares the proposals. Cullen Roche believes that government deficits have been driving corporate profits. Here are five scenes from a sequestered America. Small businesses in military towns are bracing for a hit, but so far the sequester is having little impact on ports. Questions are raised about how the Federal Reserve can withdraw its monetary stimulus without stoking inflation. At least the Twinkie is coming back.

The Economy: Competitive Vigor

Small-business confidence is on the rise, but this chart shows that small businesses are not helping the jobs recovery. Why not? Owners say they can’t find qualified workers. The Employment Trends Index is up, however, and a new report finds that more than 110,000 clean energy jobs were created in 2012. Tracey Schelmetic thinks that big companies may be the answer to small-business growth. Gasoline pushes up producer prices. Manufacturing technology orders are off to a slow start this year, but Joseph G. Carson reports that manufacturing is restoring its competitive vigor. Retail sales increased in February, and many companies increased their restocking in January. Companies are sending a record amount of cash back to their investors, and Lance Roberts explains what the markets and Taylor Swift have in common.

Your People: Nap Time
 
A new employee tip jar takes credit cards. More employers are setting up nap rooms for weary workers. Kevin Herring shares some advice for getting more production out of low performers. Here are three reasons your tech person may leave. Rick Hampson digs further into the work-from-home tug of war. Shane J. Lopez says that hopeful employees are more engaged and more productive. This company’s ultimate value is making its employees happy. Intuit and LinkedIn team up to help small businesses “hire smart.” Beverly Flaxington lists seven steps for hiring and retaining the right person.

Finance: Surviving ‘Shark Tank

An uptick is reported in small-business loans from big banks, and a lender to small businesses expands to cover 25 states. Karl Stark and Bill Stewart give advice for surviving “Shark Tank,” including: “Show vulnerability.” Here are five nontraditional ways to access capital in 2013. And here are five tips for getting Esther Dyson’s money. Eileen Fisher invites socially conscious women entrepreneurs to apply to its annual business grant program.
Start-Up: Ask Yourself 10 Questions
Catherine Alford has a few ideas for making money extremely fast and easy. The number of start-ups has nearly doubled over the last two decades in New York, particularly in the Bronx. A start-up chief executive’s advice is to “flame out hard.” Alina Dizik wants you to ask yourself 10 questions before quitting a job to start a business.

Management: Incredibly Aberrant

Intacct’s Robert Reid shares his thoughts on building a cloud business. This video explains how to be a boss. Sheryl Sandberg is pushing women to “lean in,” but Penelope Trunk thinks Ms. Sandberg is “an incredibly aberrant example of women at work.” Dennis Crowley talks about Foursquare’s biggest mistake. Pete Leibman says there are ways to become an expert on anything. Mehdi Maghsoodnia believes that in order to grow, you sometimes need to partner with your competition. Dawn Fotopulos says there are six tactics for winning negotiations. Dan Norris shares five sobering truths about small-business analytics.

Sales And Marketing: A Lesson From Dave Matthews

A webinar on March 26 will help you understand two marketing roles your company needs to fill. Jim Connolly says there are three things to focus on if you want to see amazing marketing results. Andrea Johnson suggests three steps to help sales-and-marketing people improve their productivity. Brad Smith explains what the Dave Matthews Band’s new CD can teach you about business follow-up. Billy Joel stuns Vanderbilt with a once-in-a-lifetime answer to a student’s question. Art Sobczak wants you to discover what’s missing in this cold-call opening statement.

Cash Flow: Money on the Table

Investing in a surge protector is just one of 10 things Adam Gottlieb says you should be doing to lower utility bills. Jeff Mathers offers a few tips to cut operating costs in 2013. John Stow explains why the details are so important when you’re buying. Here are a few examples of how you’re leaving money on the table.
Customer Service: What Would Mum Do?

If you want to improve your customer service, ask what Mum would do. Don’t forget that “customers are human, not C.R.M. entries” — one of Pratik Dholakiya’s nine principles of entrepreneurship. Kelly Gregorio says customers are one of four groups you must always make time for. Jim Smith says customer loyalty is one of six opportunities to grow your business in 2013.

Mobile: ‘mCommerce Monsters’

Here are 10 mobile apps no conference attendee should be without. This is how Google makes money from mobile. A new study concludes that college students are “mCommerce monsters.” Martin Michalik explains why mobile marketing should be integrated into every campaign. Sprint offers special discounts to spur the growth of small businesses and reduce their wireless costs. Baseball fans can now upgrade their tickets midgame.

Online: Marketplace Fairness

New research shows more than 60 percent of small- and mid-size businesses are unaware of new Internet domain extensions. This is what online sellers need to know about the Marketplace Fairness Act. Three nasty landing-page habits may be driving your prospects away. Microsoft’s Outlook and Hotmail go down for a while. Here are the five pages you must have on your business Web site. Forrester predicts that online retail sales will hit $370 billion by 2017.

Social Media: Tips From Dr. Suess

Here are 15 social media tips from Dr. Suess, and these are the pitfalls to avoid on social media. Pinterest introduces a new analytic tool for businesses. Vistaprint announces a new tool to help small-business owners find, create and post content. Kerry Gorgone warns against creeping people out.

Red Tape: Tax Tips

The 2013 Federal Register has surpassed 15,000 pages. Here are a few tax-preparation basics and 10 tax tips for small-business owners, and the important federal tax dates for 2013. Applying for health insurance may not be easy for your employees. These online calculators can help you understand and comply with the new requirements of the Affordable Care Act. Some small businesses are casting a wary eye on minimum-wage legislation, and Bryan Caplan believes “it is a symbol of larger evils.”

Around the Country: B.B.B. Gives Itself an F

At SXSW in Austin last week, there were fewer start-ups (but more marketers and media). This 12-year-old was pitching his app at the event. A coming awards ceremony in St. Louis celebrates the spirit of innovation, collaboration and imagination in microbusinesses. A program from a utility company will provide $30 million in grants to residents and businesses in three New York boroughs hit by Hurricane Sandy. A Mississippi father gets the best obituary ever. North Dakota’s oil and gas industry just keeps growing. The Small Business Administration kicks off a young entrepreneur series with events in five cities. The UPS Store is hoping to help small businesses score during March Madness. The University of Texas is investing in student start-ups. The Better Business Bureau in Los Angeles gives itself an F.

Around the World: Valley of Death

China’s steel production gains but a professor of economics says the country’s debt is exploding. Here are 30 young entrepreneurial disruptors in China. Thousands of Chinese students get pumped for exams, while the government tells people to ignore the dead pigs and drink the water. Japan’s machinery orders fall 13 percent. Thirty children from around the world share their favorite toys for the camera. Although some feel the United Kingdom is one of the hottest landing spots for overseas companies that want to make an entrance into the European Union, the country flirts with another recession (could this be related to its “valley of death?”). Nineteen high-impact entrepreneurs from around the world join a network that is leading a global movement to catalyze long-term economic growth. The Reserve Bank of Australia gets hacked. Apple stores in France are banned from forcing employees to work late. And is this what Americans look like to North Koreans?

Technology: Google Glass Banned

Will computers be controlled with a wave of your hand? Google Glass is banned by a bar in Seattle. Meanwhile, there is a Google Glass app that recognizes people from what they’re wearing. Jeff Gordon takes a test drive in this new Pepsi Max commercial. This photo sums up 25 years of storage. A study finds that only 16 percent of users will retry a malfunctioning app. Here are five free apps for the out-of-office entrepreneur, and here are five ways to increase the security on your point-of-sale system. Here is the ultimate Linux starter kit for small businesses. Melissa Riofrio spent some time in Chromebook exile and found her life got simpler: “I’m not ready to surrender all my content to the cloud, but it’s certainly handy for day-to-day use.” The personal information for a bunch of celebrities is hacked. PCMag offers a new tool to check your Internet speed. PJ Gupta says that having a bring-your-own-device policy is a win for everyone.

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