Archive for the ‘Your’ Category

Make Your Own Handwriting Fonts For Free

March 6, 2009

YourFonts.com is a FREE online font generator that allows you to create your own OpenType fonts within a couple of minutes. Go make your own handwriting as a font!
100% Free!

* Your own handwriting turned into your very own font for free
* Optionally include your signature
* You’ll have your very own font within 15 minutes
* Make as many fonts as you like
* Use your fonts on Windows, Mac OS X and Linux
* Personalize your digital scrapbook pages
* Make your own “family handwriting history”
* Use your fonts in Microsoft Word, PowerPoint and every program that you own

High Quality Personal Handwriting Fonts

YourFonts allows you to upload large templates (up to 4000 x 5000 pixels) and it has the most advanced raster to vector conversion algorithm. Together this results in unbeatable high quality personal fonts.

It’s easy and fun to digitize your handwriting, so go make your own font now!

Are you Sure your Email isn’t being Hacked?

February 19, 2009

email-trap.jpg In the interests of full disclosure, I didn’t come up with this idea. I read about it in a computer magazine a year or two back but of course when I wanted to refer to it for this article, I couldn’t find it! But someone on Digg eventually managed to find it so here is the original article if you want to see it.

As email providers give away more and more storage space, more and more personal information is being stored in those accounts. People are increasingly using their email accounts for more than just email – it has become their online document storage area with backup documents such as passwords, bank account numbers, account usernames, scans of correspondence and much more. Even if you don’t use your email for this purpose, you may still be inadvertantly revealing personal information in general conversation emails to family and close friends. A 6GB Gmail account or an unlimited space Yahoo account is potentially an information bonanza source for identity thieves who manage to figure out your email password and then go snooping.

But if someone HAS cracked your email password, it may not be apparent to you. A snooper can easily read an email then mark it as unread again. So the best thing to do would be to set up an “electronic tripwire” so if someone breaks into your account, you’ll know about it.

Here’s how to do it :

    1. Sign up for a website hit counter at www.onestatfree.com. You can leave a fake name and whatever URL you want (I used Google.com for mine).

    2. You will then receive a welcome email from OneStat with a text attachment called OneStatScript.txt. Download this attachment to your computer and then delete the email (you don’t want any email snoopers finding it later). But before deleting the email, write down your OneStat account number as you will need it later.

    3. Change the name of the text document to something that will make the email snooper salivate such as passwordlist. Also change the file format from a text document to a website page. So make it something like passwordlist.htm .

    4. Email this newly-renamed file as an attachment to the email account you want to monitor. Make sure the email subject title also lures the snooper in (maybe something like List of Passwords. You get the idea :).

    5. The trap is now set. Basically if someone opens the email and opens the attachment, OneStat will record a hit. If you then log into your OneStat account say once a day, you will see how many hits you have had to your attachment.

    onestat.png

The OneStat account page then gives you details on each “visitor” including the date and time they accessed the web document and more importantly their location and IP address!

onestatipaddress.png

So how does having this information help you? Well first of all, it will alert you to change your password to something stronger. Secondly, if you see the snooper’s location and you only know one or two people there then it narrows down your list of potential suspects.

By the way, I recommended signing up for One Stat because the author of the original idea mentioned them. But if you know of any other hit counter services that send text documents to your email address, then please mention them in the comments. I don’t have any financial advantage recommending One Stat so I am perfectly happy to consider alternative companies.

Wallpaper Slideshow LT : Automatically change your desktop wallpaper

January 31, 2009

https://i0.wp.com/www.gphotoshow.com/files/ScreenShots/wps_config.gif

Wallpaper Slideshow is a great utility for displaying your favorite photos as your desktop wallpaper. Wallpaper Slideshow offers you complete control on your wallpapers collection and allows you to easily set your favorite images (JPG, GIF, PNG, TIFF, BMP) as desktop wallpaper. Wallpaper Slideshow is simple to use, intuitive and complete with full context-sensitive help.

Features:

  • User friendly interface with full context-sensitive help
  • Displays an unlimited amount of images
  • Displays images randomly or sequentially
  • Supports JPG, GIF, PNG, TIF, BMP file formats.
  • Can change wallpaper automatically after a specified time period (e.g. every 60 minutes)
  • Can change wallpaper on every Windows startup
  • Automatically resizes images to fit your screen size
  • High quality image resize (bicubic with prefilter)
  • Can use a different background color for each wallpaper
  • Use a system tray icon for an easy control of the software
  • Ability to hide your Windows desktop icons
  • Display a preview of selected wallpapers
  • Multi monitor support. Each monitor can have a different wallpaper.
  • Easy install/uninstall

Wallpaper Slideshow LT can be used free of charge

Requirements:

Wallpaper Slideshow LT runs under Windows 98/Me/NT/2000/XP/Vista

Download:

DownloadPrimary Site

DownloadFTP Mirror

DownloadMirror on CNet

18 Health Tricks to Teach Your Body

November 19, 2008

Eating 10 hot dogs in 6 minutes and belching the national anthem may impress your friends, but neither of those feats will do much for your body—at least not much good.

Instead, why not train yourself to do something that may actually pay off?

We’re not talking bench presses and interval training (though those do help). You can teach your body to cure itself from everyday health ailments—side stitches, first-date jitters, even hands that have fallen asleep.

Just study this list, and the next time your friends challenge you to an ice cream eating contest, chow down: You know how to thaw a brain freeze—and 17 other tricks that’ll make everyone think you’re the next David Blaine. But without all that “hold your breath for 17 minutes” mess.

Control your system via email

October 30, 2008

screenshot of RemoteByMail

Certainly you’ve run into this situation before: you are over here, and your computer is over there. We’re not talking about you and your system being across the room from one another, although that might apply too. We’re thinking something more along the lines of your computer is at home in New York, but you’re at a meeting in California. Now that’s serious “over there.” Now that you and your computer are physically remote from one another, you decide that there’s something you need to do on or to get from that remote system. That’s where the trouble starts.

There are several remote control tools out there. Some of them will cost you a pretty penny. Others are available at a much more modest cost, but there may be configuration headaches involved in getting them up and running, whether it’s with the app itself, or tweaking firewalls between here and there. What if there were a solution that didn’t require any of that?

RemoteByMail is an interesting tool that lets you control your machine remotely via email. You’ve already got email on your system, and there’s no problem with its working in your computing environment. With RemoteByMail, you send an email to your computer, and within minutes, it will respond to your request. You can grab files or folders, or even run applications on your system. Did you forget an important file? No problem—it’s sent to you. Do you need to run a backup on your hard drive? Done.

RemoteByMail is a free Windows application.

Download RemoteByMail

Make Your Drawings Move!!!

October 29, 2008