Wednesday, November 27, 2013

20 Amazing Windows 7 Performance Boosting Tips In Under 10 Minutes!

20 Amazing Windows 7 Performance Boosting Tips In Under 10 Minutes! Complete Guides, Faster 7 Series, Featured, Microsoft, Operating Systems, Software Tutorials,


 Windows 7 The original series includes 32 total video tips for improving the performance of Windows 7 operating systems. For those who are interested, they can view the entire series here. The original Faster 7 series elaborates further on each tip. For those who have questions or are curious to learn more, they should view the original series in it’s entirety.

 If individuals attempting to use this faster series have questions, they should feel free to stop by the free PCMichiana Community Forum to post them there. Craig, the host, will be more than willing to help. Warning: It is the users responsibility to backup their important files before performing performance tweaks. There is very little chance these tweaks will result in system instability, but it is always good to back up your files just in case!

1. Create a System Restore Point in Windows 7:


Creating a system restore point is essential when starting to modify system settings on your computer.  This will give us added insurance when it comes undesirable issues occurring.  It is unlikely that you will need to recover from any of the steps I will be putting out in the Faster 7 series.  If any of the steps cause you problems you can typically revert them back to the old settings.
1. Right Click on ‘My Computer’
2. Select ‘System Protection’
3. At the bottom of the system protection dialogue, click ‘Create…’
4. Name the restore point “PCMichiana Faster 7 Video Series’
5. Click ‘Ok’
6. Wait for the restore point to be created.
That’s all there is to it!  As always, if you have questions feel free to swing by the forum and post them there.  Stay tuned to the Faster 7 series as it will walk you through most of the best tweaks for Windows 7 out there.
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Sunday, September 22, 2013

How to uninstall Internet Explorer 11

Internet Explorer 11 is a big step forward for the default Windows system browser. It is faster and more standards compliant than any other version of IE. That makes it a prime candidate for an update.
The final version of the browser is however only available on Windows 8.1, a free update for all systems running Windows 8. Microsoft Windows 8 ships with Internet Explorer 10, which is upgraded to IE 11 when Windows 8.1 is installed on the system.
Microsoft has made available preview versions of the browser for Windows 7 which upgrades the existing version of Internet Explorer in the process.
Windows 7, which shipped initially with Internet Explorer 8, will be the only operating system besides Windows 8 that Internet Explorer 11 is made available on.
Windows Vista and earlier systems won't get access to the new version of Internet Explorer at all.

Uninstall Internet Explorer 11

If you have upgraded Windows 8 to Windows 8.1, you will notice that you cannot uninstall Internet Explorer 11. What you can do however is turn the feature off in the operating system.
To do so tap on the Windows key to open the desktop interface. Right-click on the start menu and select Control Panel from the menu.
Here you need to click on Uninstall a program under Programs. A list of installed software is displayed on the page that opens up. Select Turn Windows features on or off located in the left sidebar.
turn off internet explorer 11
Uncheck the Internet Explorer 11 box and click on ok to complete the process. This won't uninstall the browser but will render it inoperable for the most part. Third party tools may still use the Internet Explorer rendering engine though so keep that in mind.

Uninstall Internet Explorer 11 on Windows 7

uninstall internet explorer 11
Windows 7 users can uninstall Internet Explorer 11 on their system. It needs to be noted that this restores the previous version of Internet Explorer that was installed on the system. This can be IE8,9 or 10 depending on whether the browser has been upgraded in the past.
  1. Click on the start menu and select Control Panel from the menu that opens up.
  2. Select Uninstall a program under Programs.
  3. Internet Explorer 11 is not listed in the installed programs listing. It is listed as an update, so select View installed updates from the left sidebar.
  4. The browser is listed in the Microsoft Windows group. You have two options to find it here. Either click on the first entry and type Inter in rapid succession, or sort the whole listing by date.
This removes Internet Explorer 11 from the Windows 7 system and replaces it with the version of the browser that was installed before it.
You can install the browser again at a later time by downloading the update again from the Microsoft website.
Source

Monday, September 16, 2013

7 things you need to know about Apple iOS 7

7 things you need to know about Apple iOS 7

Jony Ive’s rethink of iOS ushers in a new era for the world’s favourite mobile operating system. Here’s what’s new…

If you’ve been eyeing Apple’s creaking mobile operating system askance and thinking that the venerable old workhorse needs a total overhaul, you’re in luck.
Cupertino’s resident design guru Jony Ive has taken the wraps off a totally redesigned vision for iOS, calling it “unintrusive and deferential.” Tim Cook describes it as “the biggest change to iOS since iPhone.” Here’s what’s new.
New icons and fonts
Apple iOS 7 iconsAs expected, the icons have taken on a cleaner appearance, swapping out textured designs and drop shadows for a translucence that reacts to your movements to create layered movement for depth. The fonts too have been rejigged, with finer, larger lettering that’s reminiscent of a lighter-footed Windows 7.
Control center and true multitasking
Apple’s taken Android’s pull-down settings shortcuts for network and screen controls and reinvented it… by moving it to the bottom of the screen. It does look pretty nifty, but it’s definitely “borrowed”. iOS 7 also hands a freer rein to third-party devs, with greater access to Apple’s core functionality and data. It might take them a while to catch up to some of Apple’s own reworked apps – Safari’s got a gorgeous new Rolodex tab browser, while Weather has had a serious graphical injection. Even Calendar is starting to look hot. And everything previews in full screen when you’re flipping through your open apps.
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Thursday, May 23, 2013

Disable Bandwidth Limit In Windows 7: Speed Up Your Internet!

Did you know that Windows Vista and Windows 7 reserver 20% of your bandwidth for the system? So, if you did not disable the bandwidth limit, you should probably do so to speed up your internet during Windows updates and other Windows tasks that require bandwidth.Tip: 
A common believe is that Windows takes 20% of your bandwidth and reserves it. Of course, this is not true! Disabling the bandwidth limit will not magically speed up your internet, it will simply not allow Windows-related tasks that require bandwidth (e.g. Windows Updates) to reserve bandwidth when they need it. Let’s say you’re playing a game and you enabled automatic Windows updates, you will then suddenly experience significantly more lag when this setting is enabled.

Disable Bandwidth Limit in Windows 7 Professional / Ultimate

1. Enter GPEDIT.msc into the search field on your start menu to open the local policy editor (Important: This feature is not available on Windows 7 Home, see below for more information for Home users)
2. Uncollapse Computer Configuration, Administrative Templates, Network, QoS Packet Scheduler
Disable Bandwidth limit via QoS Packet Scheduler
3. In the right pane, double-click on Limit reservable bandwidth and select Enabled:
 Disable Bandwidth Limit Windows 7
4. Enter 0%
5. Click on Apply
6. The bandwidth limit is now disabled.

Disable Bandwidth Limit in Windows 7 Home Premium

Download the following registry tweak and double-click on it. That’s all you need to do to disable the bandwidth limit in Windows 7 Home: Download Registry Tweak: Disable Bandwidth Limit
Or copy this into a notepad, save as .reg file and execute:
Windows Registry Editor Version 5.00
[HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Policies\Microsoft\Windows\Psched]
"NonBestEffortLimit"=dword:00000000