Showing posts with label loads. Show all posts
Showing posts with label loads. Show all posts

Saturday, 13 February 2016

How to Disable a Screen Saver Via a Command LineIn Feburary 2016 13,

In Feburary 2016 13,
Press the Windows logo key and 'R' simultaneously on your keyboard.
Type 'CMD' and press 'Enter.' This loads your Command Prompt.
Type the following command and press your 'Enter' key.REG ADD 'HKCU\Control Panel\Desktop' /v ScreenSaveActive /t REG_SZ /d 0 /fNote, do not copy and paste this command, as it will not work. To undo this change replace the '0' with a '1'.
Type 'Exit' and press 'Enter' after you see 'The operation completed successfully' message.
In Feburary 2016 13,

Tuesday, 9 February 2016

How Are Web Addresses Constructed?In Feburary 2016 09,

In Feburary 2016 09,
When a user types a web address, she may start the address with the characters 'http://' or 'https://.' These characters indicate the protocol the web browser will use to access the address following the slashes. Most web addresses use the protocol indicator http://,' which indicates that the page will be accessed with Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP); the colon and slashes serve as a separator between the protocol and the beginning of the web address. Also common on the World Wide Web, though not as common as HTTP, is 'https://' or Hypertext Transfer Protocol-Secure. Other protocol indicators might include 'ftp://' for File Transfer Protocol (FTP) or 'telnet://' for data transfer using the text-only Telnet protocol.
The Subdomain
The first several letters immediately following the protocol indicator and slashes indicates the subdomain being accessed on the web server. In most cases, the subdomain is 'www,' which loads the index page in the root directory or specified sub-directory of the server. The subdomain can be used to direct visitors to a specific application or page on the server, though, as is used by 'http://maps.google.com/' for Google Maps or 'http://messenger.yahoo.com/' for the official Yahoo! Messenger site. In some cases, the subdomain may be absent entirely (for example, someone may type http://google.com/), and this omission loads the default page a visitor would get by using the 'www' prefix.
The Domain Name
The domain name is the meat of the web address, and usually serves as a plain text indicator of the destination address. Domain names are as varied as the users who create them and may even be in a number of different languages. Some examples of familiar domain names include Google (http://www.google.com/), Yahoo (http://www.yahoo.com/) or Apple (http://www.apple.com/). This portion of the web address must be unique when combined with the domain extension, as the domain name and extension are bound to the server Internet Protocol (IP) address for proper operation of the web service.
The Extension
The final part of a web address is the extension, usually a three-letter abbreviation that indicates the type of site being accessed. The oldest and most common top-level domain extensions are .com for commercial sites, .org for non-commercial organizations and .net for miscellaneous networks. Some additional domain extensions include .mil for military organizations, .gov for government sites, .edu for schools, and .mobi for web sites designed specifically for mobile use. More than 200 international extensions also exist--including .ca for Canadian sites, .uk for British sites, .cn for Chinese sites, and .ru for Russian sites--and a special .xxx extension has even been proposed for adult-themed web sites.
In Feburary 2016 09,