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Archive for the ‘Older Posts’ Category

Quick Review: Bibme.org quick, easy bibliographies.

October 18th, 2009 by Severin Kempf | No Comments | Filed in Uncategorized

Hey guys I’m just posting about a website I’ve known for a while but never really got a chance to right about.

This site is bibme.org a website that let’s you enter a website URL, book name, Magazine Article, or even video archive to make an Instant citation of the media source in a wide range of formats such as the usual MLA and APA.

This Site is free to use but it asks for a donation on the main page.

I rate the site a 4/5

check out the site here.

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Download Adobe Master Collection and other trials from adobe

April 22nd, 2009 by Connor McBrine-Ellis | 2 Comments | Filed in Apps, How Tos, Non-Tech, Older Posts, Online, Reviews, Tech

There is no real link to download this on Adobe’s website, yet a link to the full trials which are hosted on Adobe’s servers has been leaked!  You will need an adobe account to do this, just create one, login, and then use these links.

Usually, the Master Collection trials are not posted on the website, yet we have the ‘secret links’!

Try it out.  Contact me at  if you’d like a key for the full version.

Master Collection

Binary
Zipped (7z)

Design Premium

Binary
Zipped (7z)

Web Premium

Binary
Zipped (7z)

Photoshop CS4

Binary
Zipped (7z)

Illustrator CS4

Binary
Zipped (7z)

InDesign CS4

Binary
Zipped (7z)

InCopy CS4

Binary
Zipped (7z)

Fireworks CS4

Binary
Zipped (7z)

After Effects CS4

Binary
Zipped (7z)

Premiere Pro CS4

Binary
Zipped (7z)

Dreamweaver CS4

Binary
Zipped (7z)

After Effects Additional Content

Binary
Zipped (7z)

Premiere Additional Content

Binary

Zipped (7z)

Photoshop Extended Content

Binary
Zipped (7z)

Enjoy the links! Feel free to comment with links and keys, etc.

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Windows 7 Requirements

March 24th, 2009 by Connor McBrine-Ellis | No Comments | Filed in Uncategorized

Thanks to consolespot.net!

Apparently, the specs were ‘leaked’ recently.  Currently, the expected release date is January 2010.  Unfortunately, Microsoft closed the Windows 7 beta downloads last month (February), but you can still get a key if one of your friends, or you managed to download it while it was available.

For the Basic Windows 7:

* 1 GHz 32-bit (x86) or 64-bit (x64) processor
* 512 MB of system memory
* 20 GB hard drive with at least 15 GB of available space
* Support for DirectX 9 graphics and 32 MB of graphics memory
* DVD-ROM drive
* Audio Output
* Internet access (fees may apply)

For the Premium Windows 7:

* 1 GHz 32-bit (x86) or 64-bit (x64) processor
* 1 GB of system memory
* 40 GB hard drive with at least 15 GB of available space
* Support for DirectX 9 graphics with:
o WDDM Driver
o 128 MB of graphics memory (minimum)
o Pixel Shader 2.0 in hardware
o 32 bits per pixel
* DVD-ROM drive
* Audio Output
* Internet access (fees may apply)

Actual requirements and product functionality may vary based on your system configuration. Windows Vista Upgrade Advisor can help you determine which features and edition of Windows Vista will run on your computer.

While all editions of Windows Vista can support multiple core CPUs, only Windows Vista Business, Ultimate, and Enterprise can support dual processors.

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The go.google.com / vundo.trojan virus and how to remove it

December 21st, 2008 by Connor McBrine-Ellis | 10 Comments | Filed in Uncategorized

Thanks to all the helpful tips found at Trouble Fixers and Precise Security that helped me make this guide.  Try one of these tips: one of them will do the trick.

  1. Try downloading Malwarebytes Anti-Malware and if the installer won’t start then try renaming the installer file.  This software is very light-weight, but still it will remove most components of the virus.
  2. This is an important step: Go to the start menu, and right click on My Computer, and click on Manage.
    Then, go to the Device Manager under System Tools.  Then go to the view menu and click on Show Hidden Devices.  Go to Non-Plug and Play Drivers and find tdssserv.sys.  Right-click on the device and click on Properties.  First of all, check the section that says Device Status.  If that box says This device is not present, is not working properly, or does not have all its drivers installed. (Code 24), then this is a good thing.  That means MBAM (Malwarebytes) removed this device’s drivers.  No matter what though, in the drop-down menu below that, click on Disable Device.  Then click on OK.
  3. Now, close Computer Management.  Head back to the start menu and click on Run.  Then, type regedit into the box and hit enter.  Then, press Ctrl+F on your keyboard and then type TDSS.  Hit enter.  Wait for a second, and then wait until it finds something.  If and when it finds a key, right click the whole Key in the left panel and delete it.  Then keep on pressing Ctrl+F until you’ve found all the keys and deleted them.  You may not be able to delete all of them.  This is ok, just try though.
  4. Go to your start menu and click on search and then click on All Files and Folders, and then type in TDSS in the search box in the All or Part of the File Name box and in the Look In drop down menu, select the hard disk windows is installed on.  Delete all the search results.
  5. Try installing AVG.  This removes lots of stuff, and has active virus prevention, so when the virus tries to launch a process, it notices immediately and helps remove the threat.  This is a good idea to use.  You can download AVG Free edition here.  If the installer will not load, then try renaming it, as we did to MBAM.  You could also try doing this after the system restore if the installer will not load.  Also, if the MBAM installer will not load no matter what, then do the system restore first.
  6. If you’re still having trouble with stuff popping up when using your internet browser, then try doing a system restore.  Go to the Start menu, click on All Programs, go to Accessories, go to System Tools and click on System Restore.  Follow the steps.  Only do this if all the other steps didn’t help get rid of the virus.

Hope you fix your virus problems!!!!

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MXR Phase 90 – My New Guitar Pedal

June 4th, 2008 by Connor McBrine-Ellis | 6 Comments | Filed in Non-Tech, Older Posts, Reviews

Hey everybody!!! I am really excited because I just got a brand new guitar pedal!!!

It is an MXR Phase 90 by Dunlop. (Or MXR, Dunlop makes MXR). MXR is a very nice and reliable brand, and the sound is AMAZING!!! This pedal retains all of the tone of your guitar and amp, and just adds this watery, warbley, crisp sounding effect. Plus I mix this pedal with my Palomino V16 Class A Tube Amp (With Groove Tubes) and the sound is like you hear off of some Van Halen and Pink Floyd recordings!

This pedal has only one knob, to adjust for speed, but seriously, this is all it needs! It is a very simple set up, in a very sturdy metal box. It is a very impressive stomp-box, and when you adjust the settings on your amp, and your guitar, you can make this thing really sing.

I seriously would recommend to any who play guitar (or bass, or vocals, because this pedal sounds amazing with those too!) to check it out and buy it! Its usual price is around $80, but I got it for a sweet deal for only $68! MXR is an awesome brand with pedals that retain the sound of your amp, and not make it sound like something it’s not. I will be getting many more MXR pedals in the future. IT ROCKS!!!

(Also, this pedal is great for solos, especially when you turn on distortion and reverb, and you can sound like “Aint Talkin’ Bout Love” and “Eruption” and even great tones like “Speak to Me/Breathe” and “Wish You Were Here”) (Turn down the speed on this pedal and it makes chords awesome! Perfect for rhythm guitar as well!)

Check this pedal out at these websites!

http://www.jimdunlop.com/index.php?page=products/pip&id=243&pmh=products/p_and_e_detail

http://www.music123.com/MXR-M-101-Phase-90-Pedal-Refurb-151100-i1124431.Music123 (I did not get the refurbished pedal off of this website for $69.99, I got my pedal in Guitar Center for a great deal of $68, and it wasn’t refurbished. It was brand new.)

Rock on!

(Credit to Craig McBrine)

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Transfer Files Easily Using BitTorrent

April 29th, 2008 by Connor McBrine-Ellis | 5 Comments | Filed in Uncategorized
BitTorrent is a wonderful protocol that makes transfer of big files simple. Have you ever wanted to send a huge file to your friend (such as the ISO image of that wedding DVD you can’t mail to your friend)? Well, here’s the answer. Download a program called uTorrent at www.utorrent.com and install it. Now, open it (it will probably open by itself once you’re done installing it). Then click on the file menu, and click on Create New Torrent (or press “Ctrl + N”). A window will pop up. In “Select Source” click either on Select File (if it’s only one file you’re making the torrent of), or click on Add Directory to add a whole folder of files to the torrent you’re going to distribute. Once you’re done that, click on the “trackers” field and paste this in:

http://www.torrent-downloads.to:2710/announce

http://denis.stalker.h3q.com:6969/announce

udp://denis.stalker.h3q.com:6969/announce

http://www.sumotracker.com/announce

These servers track the downloading and uploading from the peers.
Type in a comment for your downloaders in the “comment” section.

Check the “start seeding” checkbox but leave the “private torrent” box alone.

Click on “Create and Save As”. Save that file in “My Documents”, and send that file to any people who want to download the file. Then leave uTorrent open for a long long time, and when you are leaving it open, you are sending the file to the people who are going to recieve it. Tell them to leave uTorrent open for a long time too, so everybody gets a chance to get the file. If you want to publicly share your torrent, go to http://www.mininova.org/upload and upload it for the whole world to see!

Hope this will help!

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Validate Windows Media Player – Without Having To!

March 15th, 2008 by Connor McBrine-Ellis | 36 Comments | Filed in How Tos, Offline, Older Posts, Tech

I just installed XP onto my laptop and so now that I have my dual-boot set up, I wanted to upgrade me Windows Media Player installation. The problem is, when I finally installed it, the Genuine Activator thing wouldn’t work. So I peeked into the Program Files/Windows Media Player folder, and saw a .DLL called LegitLibM.dll (clearly a Genuine Advantage DLL), so I deleted it, and then ran Windows Media Player again. This time, the whole thing worked, and when I clicked on “Validate” (I think that was what it said), it said that there was a problem with the Validation, and then because of that, I think it bypassed the whole thing! This is a very useful trick for people who have trouble with the stupid WGA. I really hope Microsoft goes the Linux path soon :p !

Hope it helped!

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Software You Should Get!

March 15th, 2008 by Connor McBrine-Ellis | No Comments | Filed in Uncategorized

Sorry I haven’t been posting recently – I’ve been on march break!

Here is some software that just about anybody should have:

Hope you enjoyed it! I’ll make part two another time.

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Dual-Boot your Computer! – *The Video*

February 25th, 2008 by Connor McBrine-Ellis | No Comments | Filed in Uncategorized

OK, so everybody here can download my new fully-released step-by-step guide on how to dual-boot your computer. It’s about half an hour long, and it’s a bit lengthy, so you may want to skip some parts that you already understand, but it’s great for beginners who have no idea what they’re doing too.

It follows the same basic instructions as my “Dual-Boot your Computer!” post, so you can follow along the video with that post.

The video is available for download in a BitTorrent file, because I didn’t feel like uploading such a hefty file to a server. In case you’re wondering, BitTorrent is a protocol for downloading files, and to download files through BitTorrent, you need a Torrent client, and I feel that uTorrent does this job wonderfully, so download that and install it, and you’re all set.

After installing uTorrent, or if you’re using your already-installed uTorrent or some other Torrent client like the one that LimeWire has built in, you can use the *.torrent file that you’re about to download, and open it up in one of those programs, and then set a place to download the file into, and then start downloading. Once you’re done downloading, please leave uTorrent or Limewire or whatever torrent client you’re using open, so that other people can download the files too – once you’re done downloading, your bittorrent client should automatically begin ‘seeding’ the file, or, in other words, uploading it to the other peers who are downloading it too.

Download the *.Torrent file now!

Please notify me if the link becomes broken!

I hope you enjoy my video!

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Dual-Boot your Computer!

February 19th, 2008 by Connor McBrine-Ellis | 14 Comments | Filed in Uncategorized

Are you ever tired of Windows Vista’s “Antics”??? Well, here’s what you should do if you have a spare windows XP cd, or your friend had an old one that he never used.

I’ve been researching this quite a bit, and I was asking this question on PCWorld.com forums. My thread’s here: http://forums.pcworld.com/thread/27512?tstart=0. Here’s what you need to do based on the wonderful directions at apcmag: http://apcmag.com/5485/dualbooting_vista_and_xp.

  1. First, we have to create a place for you to install XP, so in Vista, click on Start, and right click on Computer, and click on Manage.  Remember, you must be an administrator to do this.  
  2. Click on continue if an User Account Control dialog box pops up, and the Computer Management window will appear.  
  3. Under the Storage Category in the left panel of the window (there is three panels), click on the Disk Management icon.  
  4. Right-click on either your C: drive or your D: drive (which ever has more free space) in the middle panel of the window, and in the menu that pops up, click on `shrink volume`.
  5. In the dialog box that pops up, leave all the settings alone (unless you know what you`re doing – in that case, you can decrease the amount you shrink your volume by, so as to leave some free space for more stuff), and then click Shrink.  Now you will have a new partition available to install XP on.
  6. Since you have the XP disks, install XP into the unpartitioned space you just created.  
  7. Obviously now you can’t boot into the Windows Vista Partition, or in human terms, section of the hard drive that is devoted to one filesystem or another, that you originally wanted to boot into.  After XP`s installed, boot into it!
  8. Now, download this iso file: http://neosmart.net/blog/2008/windows-vista-recovery-disc-download/ and burn it with a program like MagicISO or Roxio, and then reboot with the disk in your drive and select the recovery option, and repair Vista’s Master Boot Record (click on startup repair).
  9. Now you can boot into vista. now for the dualboot part of this: download easybcd. Then to the following steps after installing:
  10. Launch the app and go to Add/Remove Entries.
  11. Under “Add an Entry” and under the Windows tab and select in the Version drop-down list “Windows NT/2k/XP/2k3”.
  12. Change the Drive to E:\ and the name to “Windows XP”, then click “Add Entry” and “Save”.

Now when you restart you should see both Vista and XP in your OS List.


I REALLY hope this helps, and me finding all this information out is all because of ages and ages of searching online and doing research and because of apcmag.com’s dual-booting guides!

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Thanks to APCMAG.COM for the images!

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