Monday, February 23, 2015

Sunday, September 07, 2014

Moving all Apps in to SD card WITHOUT ROOT

Many people having problems of some apps not moving to sd card.like whatsapp and some other.
but they don't have root so they can't use link2sd .
So here is tut for moving all apps in to sd card WITHOUT ROOT

What u need ?

1. PC.

2. Your device adb drivers.

3. and external SD card.

++++++ PROCESS +++++++

For this method u need android sdk .that is of 700MB,

but we can use this method without it also.

1. First Download attachment from HERE

2. Extract that ".rar" in ur desktop.

3. Now install ur device's adb drivers. If u don't have drivers,Download from ur manufacturer's site

4. Now connect your android to pc with usb cable and enable USB DEBUGGING.

[IMG]

5. Now goto tools folder,u will find cmd.exe. run it as admin

6. Now in that cmd type adb devices

if u have ur adb drivers installed then u will see list of devices and ur device.

[IMG]

if not then u need proper adb drivers.

7. Now if u got ur device then in cmd type

adb shell pm getInstallLocation

but if u have 4.0+then type

adb shell pm get-install-location

[IMG]
(my device is 2.3.6)
This results in a numerical value to state where the default install location is (0: phone, 2: external)

8. Now we change it's install location to sd card.

so in cmd type

adb shell pm setInstallLocation 2 (Android <4.0)

or for 4.0+


adb shell pm set-install-location 2 (Android 4.x)

[IMG]

so now ur default install path is sd card.

now every app u install will be installed in sd card by default.

to check that again type in cmd

adb shell pm getInstallLocation (Android <4.0)

adb shell pm get-install-location (Android 4.x)


it will show 2(external)

[IMG]




so install apps to ur device and all will e in sd card.

9. When u done installing apps in sd card,change default storage path to system again.

so in cmd type


adb shell pm setInstallLocation 0 (Android <4.0)

adb shell pm set-install-location 0 (Android 4.x)

This sets the default install location to the system storage.



Now check proofs:

before doing this process apps(like whatsapp was installing in my system(internal storage)).and i can't move it to sd card

[IMG]

but after this process,my install location changed and it installs in my sd card.

[IMG]

so my internal space saved.


and

Apps that Shouldn't be Moved to the SD Card

Widgetsno matter how menial in usefulness or design.

System toolsmany might not operate as intended without being on the phone’s storage.

Important appsyou don’t want to risk an important app becoming inaccessible when you need it.

Friday, August 15, 2014

How to Find SERIAL KEYS from Google

How to Find SERIAL KEYS from Google:

steps:-
1) go to google.com

2) write the name of the software you want key and add 94FBR at the end.

Eg :- if you want to find key of IDM then write "IDM 94FBR " (without quotes)

3) search it and you will find many sites with serial keys of that softwares

DONE !!!!

Sunday, June 22, 2014

How to Send Multiple Messages Without Showing Email Addresses Using Hotmail

How to Send Multiple Messages Without Showing Email Addresses Using Hotmail.You are the only one who knows all the message recipients.

Using the blind carbon copy feature in Hotmail, you can send email messages to several contacts without displaying the recipients' email addresses. This feature is particularly handy if you are sending an email to a long list of recipients who may not know each other. You can also use it to communicate with your employees without revealing all of their email addresses.

Step 1
 Log into your Hotmail account in your Web browser.

Step 2
Click “New” to create a new email message, then click “CC & BCC.”

Step 3
Enter the email addresses of the recipients in the “Bcc” field. Recipients in this field are not visible to other recipients.

Step 4
Enter the subject in the “Add a Subject” field. Enter the text of your message in the body of the email. Click “Send.”

Monday, June 16, 2014

How to extract all email addresses in one document with a second?

Bob works for an IT company, one day, his boss gives him a document and asks him to extract all of the email addresses in it. The fact is ,unfortunately, there are hundreds of email addresses mixed in the texts! So how can Bob complete his work? Will he check them one by one?
Of course not. Let me tell him a small trick to help.

Step1: use Ctrl+F to bring up the "Find and Replace"panel.


find-all-email-addresses-at-one-time1v

step2: enter" [A-z,0-9]{1,}\@[A-z,0-9,\.]{1,}"in Find what(not include the double quotes). Then check "Highlight all items found in", click the "more" button, check"use wildcards".


find-all-email-addresses-at-one-time2

step3: click"Find all", you will pick out all email addresses at one time.


find-all-email-addresses-at-one-time3

In this way,the work that maybe take your three days to complete can be achieved in a second,while improving your work efficiency and reducing your burden.

Tuesday, June 10, 2014

How to copy a table from a PDF into Word

Easy! Easy! … for beginners

So the source document for your translation is a PDF – and it contains some complex tables! You just want to copy and paste them directly into your Word document so you can overtype the text with your translation… Right?
Well, if you have the professional version of Adobe Acrobat, then you’re in luck [1]. But if you only have the free reader, like most people, then you are going to have to use your wits if want to avoid retyping all the data…
The skills needed to pull the data out of a complex table in a PDF and make it spring back to life in a Word document are actually very basic. What can look like a complex task can be done with a few simple tricks.
Here we break down the problem into a series of really simple steps. While each step seems to throw up yet another problem to be solved, each fix only ever requires really simple skills like Copy & Paste, Find & Replace… If you have mastered these simple skills, you don’t have to remember any correct “sequence” to do the job – just solve each little problem step by step until you have achieved your goal!
1 Copy the table in the PDF, and paste the data into Word
Select all the text of the table, copy it and paste it directly into Word. The result may not be a pretty sight!

Most of the formatting in the table will be lost – you’ll just have plain data.
It will look a terrible mess as the columns will have disappeared! In the example above, the words in each of the column headings appear to be muddled up. Rather than wrapping within each cell, the words on each line run into the words of the next column.
But don’t worry about it! It’s easy to fix…

It’s not such a big problem to untangle this apparent mess.
2 Click the Show/Hide button

Make sure you have the formatting marks visible so you can see what is going on, and how the data in the table is structured.
The columns of data are clearly separated by spaces. We can use these spaces to reconstruct the columns. But the words in the column headings are also separated by spaces. Sometimes these spaces show where the columns are supposed to be and sometimes they are just ordinary “spaces between words”. Figuring out which is which is the only part of this job which requires a little human intelligence. This is your job!
Leave the spaces which are supposed to be spaces as spaces, and change the spaces which are meant to show where the columns are into something else.
Easy!
Let’s use tabs to mark where the columns are supposed to be.
3 Spaces to tabs
  • Although there are 7 columns of data in my example table, there are only two column headings in the top row. So in this row we only need to change one space to a tab to separate the two pieces of text. Select the space which separates the two headings, and hit the Tab button:

  • We now do the same for the 7 column headings. Remember you just have to decide whether it’s a “real space” or not. You don’t need to line everything up and it doesn’t matter too much if you make a few mistakes – you can fix these up later once the table has been made (when you’ll be able to see what you’re doing!). In the figure below, the blue circle show a “real” space, the red circle shows a space replaced with a tab.

Now we have to do the same with the data in the body of the table. In my example table, there are only letters and numbers in the data – there are no “real spaces” separating words. All the spaces mark where the data is to be separated into columns. Instead of changing them to tabs one by one, we can simplify the task by changing all of them in one hit using Find & Replace:
  • Select all the data;
  • Open the Find & Replace dialog box;
  • Type a space into the Find what field;
  • Type Word’s code for a tab (^t) into the Replace what field;
  • Hit Replace All.

All the text and the data should now have tabs to mark the columns (and spaces to mark the real spaces).
4 Now make the table
As we now have tabs marking where the columns are supposed to be, we can use Word’s Convert text to Table function to reconstruct a simple, regular table. (We can sort out the irregularities later.)
  • Select all the text & data that are to go into the table;
  • Go to Insert|Table|Convert text to Table;

  • Word has correctly guessed that this is a 7-column table from the highest number of tabs you’ve put into any line, and that you are going to use these tabs to set up the columns.
  • Click OK.
Magic!
We are almost there. There’s only a bit of tidying up to do!

5 Fix the top row.
We’ve now got a nice regular 7-column table, but there are some minor irregularities to deal with. The column headings in the top row are not only in the wrong place, but they are also supposed to span several columns.
Easily fixed!
  • Just select the text and drag it to the right place;
  • Then select the cells the text is supposed to span;
  • Right click the selected cells and click Merge Cells.

6 Fix the column headings
Look at the words in the 7 column headings. The PDF inconveniently split them up over three rows rather than wrapping them within a single cell.
We want all the words to all be in a single cell at the top of each column. Easily fixed! We just need to merge these cells vertically.
  • Select the cells containing the text for each column heading;
  • Right click and select Merge Cells;
  • Do the same for the other columns (or to do it more quickly select the cells and type Ctrl + Y - this repeats the last thing you did).

Each of the column headings is now in its own separate cell. But as you can see in the red circle above, we have another small problem to deal with – the words are separated by unnecessary paragraph markers. We need to get rid of these and replace them with ordinary spaces. You could just delete them one by one, but here’s a quicker way using Find & Replace:
  • Select all the column headings right across the table;
  • Do a Find & Replace. Type the code for a paragraph marker (^p) in the Find what field;
  • Type a space in the Replace with field:
  • Click Replace All.
With the extra paragraph marks gone, each column heading will wrap normally within its own cell.
(Now is a good time to do a quick proofread of the column headings. Now that the data is in a table and we can see what we’re doing, it’s easy to move any words which have ended up in the wrong column. Just select any misplaced words and drag them to the right spot.)
7 Final tidy up
You should now have a table with everything in the right place. It just needs a cosmetic make-over to make it look like the original:
  • Select all the text in the table and click the “Centre button” to centre the text in the columns [2];
  • Adjust the font, point size, paragraph and line spacing;
  • Select the whole table [2] and get rid of all the borders; then
  • Reinstate just those borders you need to match the original.
8 One last problem
My table is pretty much the same as the original in the PDF.
But wait! My column headings don’t line up horizontally …

We need to adjust the table property which controls how the text sits in each cell. Select the offending row, right-click and select Cell Alignment|Align top Centre.

PDF to Word… The job is done!


[1] How to copy and paste data and tables without the loss of formatting with the professional version of Adobe Acrobat: http://www.wikihow.com/Copy-and-Paste-PDF-Content-Into-a-New-File
[2] Note the difference between “select the table” and “select all the text in the table”. If you “select the table” and hit the “Centre” button, the whole table will move into the centre of the page. If you just “select  all the text” the text in the table will be centred within each cell. To tell the difference look at the very right-hand side of the table:

[3] Some PDF to Word converters are worth trying. I tried this one (using the example tables in this post) with some success: http://www.pdfonline.com/pdf2word/index.asp.
[4] The examples in this post were illustrated using Microsoft Word 2007 and Adobe Reader X.

Saturday, May 24, 2014

want to remove spaces between lines on microsoft word

This depends on whether those are really empty lines or your line spacing is set to 2. Try this (with Word XP (2002) and the adjacent versions. Word Vista probably has something similar):

1. Select all the text with CTRL/A.
2. Right-click in the text and select Paragraph.
3. Under Spacing, make sure Before and After have zeroes and Line Spacing has "Single" with At blank.
4. Click OK.

If this fixes your problem, your spacing was double spacing. If it doesn't fix the problem, do this:

1. On the menu bar, click the button that looks like ¶. This will turn on hidden formatting characters. The ¶'s that appear show the ends of each paragraph. If there are extras between your lines, you can do a mass delete them this way:
2. Press CTRL/H to bring up the Find and Replace dialog box.
3. In the Find what, put ^p^p
This represents two adjacent paragraph marks.
4. In the Replace With, put a single ^p
5. Click the Replace All button.

6. Click the ¶ button again to turn off the hidden characters.

Sunday, May 18, 2014

How to Get Java on Android


Java is a programming language that can be used to develop Android apps. If you want to get Java on your Android for development or any other reason, you can download an app for that.

Steps


Get Java on Android Step 1.jpg

1. Search for "Java" in the Play Store app.
 
Get Java on Android Step 2.jpg

2.Select the "Android Java IDE" app from the list.


Get Java on Android Step 3.jpg

3.Make sure there's room on your phone and then install the Java app with the "install" button. Click "Open" to open the app.


Get Java on Android Step 4.jpg

4.Name your app and click "Create" to create a new app project in the "create new app" Java screen.

JAR files on Android Install java apps on Android

Yes we can install java apps on our android phone & it is possible with the application JBED.

What is JBED?

JBED is an .apk Android application which Run
Java Games and Apps on our Android Device.
JBED is a Java Android Java Emulator, by using
this application we can install .JAR/.JAD/Java/
J2ME/MIDP games on Android phones. Now
We can use all of our favorite .JAR
application in our phones.


Steps to Install Jar on Android:

1. Download JBEDhttp://forum.xda-developers.com/atta...5&d=1319050135

2. Download lib jbedvm .so www.4shared.com/file/laOKHPjO/libjbedvm.htm

place it in system\lib
folder

3. Install the JBED.apk application and don’t play
it.

4. Restart the phone

5. Launch JBED application. Press menu button
and choose SD card.

6. Select your .JAR/.JAD file that you want to
install and run.

7. Now install the chosen application through
JBED.

6. Now open the installed java application to run.

Thats all

Thanks to the Brilliant Dev who created the app JBED

How To Backup & Restore a Nandroid Backup on Android Devices

cwm touch
Procedure to create NANDROID Backup and Restore:
  • First up, you need to make sure that your device is rooted and installed with some custom recovery image. To check on whether your device is rooted or not, download “Root Checker” app and for custom recovery installation you need to make sure that you have installed “ROM Manager” app from Google PLAY Store.
  • Reboot your device in the recovery mode to see the option as “Backup” to back up all the data present in your device including the firmware of your device. Make sure that you are following all the on screen instructions for selecting which all data needs to be backed up.
  • Depending upon the data, the device will take time for backing up all the data present in your phone. Also, you need to make sure that you have rebooted the device. Device reboot will take longer time than expected in some cases.
  • To restore, reboot your device in the recovery mode and select the option of “Restore” and then choose from the NANDROID recovery image which had been backed up in the earlier step.
So next time when you are about to install the custom ROM firmware, don’t forget to create the NANDROID backup of the existing ROM/ firmware.
Disclaimer: We should not be held responsible in any manner for any damage happened to your device in the process of NANDROID backup.
So there you go, you have now successfully learnt on how you can create the backup of NANDROID recovery image in your device and restore the same. Do let us know in the comments section just in case if you face any issues in the process of NANDROID backup.

Note:

To see the other posts of the categories plzz press the older posts to see the next article