Thursday, 10 October 2013

Block Website without any software

How to Block Websites without using any Software.





Want to block a website on your computer, then you just follow the simple step which is shown below. In this article you have to learn how to block any website with-out any software.

Follow the steps:

Step-1:  
At first Open “Run” from the start menu or press WinKey + R. Just copy paste the following path and press ENTER.
notepad %windir%\system32\drivers\etc\hosts
or
 Go to C:\Windows\System32\Drivers\Etc and find the file “hosts”. Then open with notepad file.
Step-2:  
When this hosts file is opened in Notepad, at the end of the file you will see something like “127.0.0.1 localhost”.

Step-3:  
Under “127.0.0.1 localhost” just add another website URL that you want to block.
For Example:-
127.0.0.1 localhost
127.0.0.2 www.youtube.com
127.0.0.3 www.allgovtjobs.in



Step-4:  
Make sure every time you add another website, the last digit of the address 127.0.0.x should not be the same.

Step-5:  
Save the file and exit.

So, here you go. Restart your browser if it is opened and changes will take place immediately.
The good thing is that no message, no pop ups nothing will be displayed when someone tries to open a blocked website. Your browser will just fail to open those websites without any error messages.

Tuesday, 26 February 2013

Google + Email Trick

Gmail Trick: Use multiple email addresses for your single Gmail account

gmail




You know those situations where you’ve got a system in place with a few test accounts on it and each account requires a unique email address?  You then spend ages creating lots of Google email addresses or using every variation of your work email address until you run out.  Well, no longer.  There is a way you can use one Google email address in many variations and still receive all the emails into the one mailbox.

You can use multiple email addresses with your single Gmail account.
or first.name.last.name@gmail.com
Suppose, you have your Gmail account as: firstname.lastname@gmail.com
With Gmail, you can also use it as: firstnamelastname@gmail.com or first.name.lastname@gmail.com 

Gmail doesn’t recognize dots as characters within usernames. Email sent to all of these email addresses will go to your original Gmail account, that is: firstname.lastname@gmail.com

Here is what google has to say about this:-
"Sometimes you may receive a message sent to an address that looks like yours but has a different number or arrangement of periods. While we know it might be unnerving if you think someone else’s mail is being routed to your account, don’t worry: both of these addresses are yours."
Here is another trick  to use a plus sign next to the @ sign in your gmail or googlemail address.  Say, for example, your email address was myemail@gmail.com.  You’ve set up your account on… let’s say Moodle… to use this email address.  The next account you set up on Moodle insists that you provide a unique email address.  No problem.  Add a + sign within your email just after the name of the email account and put anything you wish after it.  So you could use myemail+1@gmail.com or myemail+sue@gmail.com or myemail+asmanyvariationsasIwish@gmail.com.  All these addresses will work and you’ll receive the email into your mailbox for myemail@gmail.com
When you receive the email into your email account, it does show the original email address (the one with the +), so this should, although I haven’t tried it yet, make it possible to filter emails using an email rule.  So if you know that your Twitter account uses the email address myemail+twitter@gmail.com, then you could automatically filter anything that comes into your email box using this address into a Twitter folder.  This trick also means that you can set up multiple Twitter accounts with one email address.

So, a useful way to create as many email addresses as possible and to manage your inbox, all with one little trick.  Brilliant.