Watch Security Cameras




What we are about so see, are unsecured cams from around the world that are interfaced with the internet.
So, how do you find such cameras? 
Just google any of the following strings and select any result.

inurl:"CgiStart?page="
inurl:/view.shtml
intitle:"Live View/ — AXIS
inurliview/view.shtml
inurl:ViewerFrame?M0de=
inurl:ViewerFrame?M0de=Refresh
inurliaxis-cgi/jpg
inurliaxis-cgi/mjpg (motion-JPEG) (disconnected)
inurl:view/indexFrame.shtml
inurliview/index.shtml
inurliview/view.shtml
liveapplet
intitle:"live view" intitle:axis
intitleiliveapplet
allintitle:"Network Camera NetworkCamera" (disconnected)
intitleiaxis intitle:"video server"
intitleiliveapplet inurl:LvAppl
intitle:"EvoCam" inurl:"webcam.html"
intitle:"Live NetSnap Cam-Server feed"
intitle:"Live View/ — AX|S"
intitle:"Live View/ — AXIS 206M"
inti’r|e"'l ive View / — AXIS 706W"
intitle:"Live View/ — AXIS 210?
inurl:indexFrame.shtml Axis
inurl1"MultiCameraFrame?Mode=Motion" (disconnected)
intitleistart inurl:cgistart
intitle:"WJ-NTI 04 Main Page"
intitleisnc-220 inurl:home/
intitleisnc-cs3 inurl:home/
intitleisnc-r230 inurl:home/
intitle:"sony network camera snc-pl ?
intitle:"sony network camera snc-ml ?
site:.viewnetcam.com -www.viewnetcam.com
intitle:"Toshiba Network Camera" user Iogin
intitle:"netcam live image" (disconnected)
intitle:"i-Catcher Console — Web Monitor"

Disable Login Screen In Windows 10


When you login to your system you have to enter the same password that could open your Hotmail/outlook email account, log you into Skype, and even buy apps from the Windows App Store. Unfortunately, that’s also the only thing preventing access to your PC. If you aren’t too bothered about securing your computer with a password, and are just plain annoyed with having to login in repeatedly, there is a simple way to disable it so that you can just dive right in and start using your PC. Here’s how.
Right-click the Start button and select the Run option. Type netplwiz and hit enter.



This will open the User Accounts window. There are other ways to open this window; you can use the Control Panel as well. The Run dialogue is the quickest way to open it. If you have several different accounts configured, choose the one that you would like to skip the whole login and password option for. Uncheck the ‘Users must enter a user name and password to use this computer’ and click Apply at the bottom.



Restart your system and you will see you no longer have to enter a password to start using it.

Features In Firefox 37 For Desktop And Android



This new version has a brand new way of getting feedback from users; a pop-up widget that will be displayed to select users once a day. Bing users will now enjoy HTTPS while searching, and for users in Turkey, the default search engine has been set to Yandex. For developers, there is a new animations tab in the Inspector panel as well as a new Security tab in the network panel. For the Android version, the new additions include an improvement to how downloads are handled and the URL bar now displays the URL instead of the page title, by default.

Firefox 37 For Desktop

Heartbeat
This is Firefox’s new way for getting feedback from users on how well the browser is performing. It seems to be enabled by default and if it gets annoying (as any pop-up can), you can disable it by going to about:config and setting the value of browser.selfsupport.url to “”




Animations Panel In Inspector
There’s a new tool for working with web animations. Developers can access it from the Inspector. It appears next to the Rules, Computed, Fonts, and Box Model tabs when you open the inspector and select an element. With it web developers can now use web technologies instead of plug-ins to create complex animations.



Security Tab In Inspect Panel
If you select the Network tab in the Inspect panel and select a request you will see a new tab in the right-side panel called Security. Developers can view information about certificates and the host from it.




Firefox For Android From The Google Play Store

There are few UI changes for Firefox for Android. Your downloads will be handled better, a few new languages have been added, and like the desktop version, the Android version has also set Yandex as the default search engine for users in Turkey. There is one UI change that’s been to the URL bar; it will now show the URL instead of the page title as it previously did (before and after shown below).

Use Google as a Proxy



We often use several internet connections, but some of them usually block access to undesired web sites. In order to access those sites you can use google translate as proxy to bypass this restrictions.

Method 1

1. Visit whatismyipaddress and note down you real Ip Address
2. Now Go to Google Translate
3. From Under Detect Language, Chose your language in my case English
4. Now type http://whatismyipaddress.com/ in text area and click on Translate
5. Now check your Ip Address, Its different from the real one.

Method 2

1. Go to link given below:
http://www.google.com/translate?langpair=es|en&u=http://synergro.blogspot.com/
2. Change http://synergro.blogspot.com/ to website you like to visit.
3. Done!

This kind of connection lets you see blacklisted pages but does not hide your IP address.

Download Youtube Videos Without Using Software



1. Go to Youtube Homepage and select the video you want to download, like for example:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NDPCmCOGVW8

2. Add save or ss or kick before youtube and press enter

3. After adding any of the above keywords the link will become:

http://www.saveyoutube.com/watch?v=NDPCmCOGVW8
Or
http://www.ssyoutube.com/watch?v=NDPCmCOGVW8
Or
http://www.kickyoutube.com/watch?v=NDPCmCOGVW8

4. Now you'll be redirected to a new page from where you can download youtube videos in any format of your choice.

How To Save a Web Page To PDF File



1. Open the Google Chrome Browser on your PC or MAC
2. Go to the web page that you want to convert as a PDF.
3. Press Ctrl+P on Windows PC or Command+P if you are on a Mac to Open the the Print dialog on Chrome Browser.
4. Change the destination to “Save As PDF” and hit the save button.
5. The current web page will instantly be downloaded as a PDF document.

SSD - Solid State Drives



Compared to hard drives, SSDs are much faster, completely silent and have no fragile moving parts--actually they have no moving parts whatsoever, unless electrons count.


In terms of behavior, consumer SSDs mimic hard drives in almost every way--the same interface is used (S-ATA and sometimes P-ATA) and the physical formats: 1.8, 2.5 or 3.5-inch equivalents of hard disk casings. Any operating system that wouldn't otherwise recognize an SSD can just treat it as a hard drive. (On a side note, there are also DRAM-based variants, PCI Express cards and more, but in the foreseeable future those will remain niche products).

It's What's Inside That Counts

On the inside, however, a solid state drive has very little in common with a hard disk Most SSDs are built with a technique called NAND Flash (NAND being derived from the Boolean function "Not AND"). Flash memory is composed of transistor arrays, where each bit typically consists of a transistor called FGMOS, short for floating gate MOSFET. Mosfet in turn means Metal Oxide Semiconductor Field Effect Transistor, which is the most common type of transistor in electronics but has been modified in this case.

The floating gate part of FGMOS refers to a component in the transistor that is not conductive with the outside, but can be written to using a principle known as quantum tunneling, or tunnel injection. This means that an electron can penetrate the insulation to charge the transistor. Every cell that is written to then retains its charge until it is intentionally released using a "flash" of current (hence the name Flash memory).

A downside is that erasing NAND flash - in a process called tunnel release - is not as precise. The current in the transistors can't be erased on an individual basis, but needs to be cleared in 64, 128 or 256 kilobyte blocks. The extremely fast SSD access times compared to hard drives really help out here, and the problem can be mitigated further with various commands such as "garbage collection".

SLC vs. MLC SSDs

To make matters only slightly more complicated, there are two types of NAND memory chip technologies to keep track of - SLC (Single-Level Cell) and MLC (Multi-Level Cell). SLC-based drives are generally both faster, more reliable and much more expensive. However MLC drives have improved greatly over the last couple of years--especially in terms of read performance, but also durability.


The difference is actually pretty straightforward - an SLC can only exist in one of two states, low or high voltage. Consequently it can only hold one bit of data, a 1 or a 0. An MLC has more stages (usually four) and voltage can be increased gradually. In real-world usage, this means that an MLC-based drive can store data more densely (allowing for more storage space), but it also reduces performance because it's much more complicated to read and write to a multi-level cell compared to just the ones and zeros in a single-level cell.

The more complex a technology is on the component level, the greater the error rate in data management. Therefore, MLC needs more error handling built-in compared to SLC. Almost all flash drives have a full set of error-correcting techniques, and the more complex it is - the greater the performance reduction.

Wear Leveling and Durability


All solid state drives have a limited life cycle--a limited number of times that data can be written to it before it wears out. SLC drives have a distinct advantage here because the design itself limits the wear and tear on the cells, i.e., less current has to pass through when writing or erasing and less error correction is required. For this reason an SLC drive may have up to ten times the life expectancy of its MLC counterpart. With that in mind it's no surprise that most professionals prefer the former for heavy-duty uses like server storage.

To increase the life expectancy and reduce unnecessary wear, all SSDs have a feature called wear leveling. This is meant to reduce the number of times any single cell is written to by spreading out data across the drive. It's sort of like the opposite of defragmentation in hard drives and the reason why you must never, ever defragment an SSD. The only thing defragmentation does for an SSDs is reduce its performance and life span. New operating systems will disable defragmentation automatically, but older ones will not.

MLC Wins the Race

For the practical purpose of using an SSD in a normal laptop or desktop PC, there's really no reason to worry about its limited life span--especially when you consider that a hard drive is nearly always the first component to go in a computer. There's a good chance that the SSD will outlive your other computer parts by a fair margin. The vast majority of SSDs aimed at consumers today are MLC drives, and for good reason.

Despite all the mentioned disadvantages, it looks like MLC is the future of SSD technology. This is partly due to the fact that they cost less and store more data, but it's also thanks to massive improvements in manufacturing technology, new firmware and new features that make them both increasingly faster (the fastest SSD is MLC-based) and more reliable. Another recent addition is the TRIM command that solves the problem with performance deteriorating over time.