Friday 30 September 2016

How to Set a Temporary Facebook Profile Picture or Frame

With Facebook’s temporary profile picture feature, you no longer have to remember to switch your profile picture back after a holiday or observance–they’ll do it automatically for you.

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Source: How-To Geek

How to Use Twitter on the Amazon Echo

You can already do a whole lot with your Amazon Echo, but now you can have Alexa read out tweets from your Twitter timeline and more. Here’s how to use Twitter on the Amazon Echo.

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Source: How-To Geek

Geek Trivia: The Most Common Source Of “Hay Fever” Is?

The Most Common Source Of “Hay Fever” Is?

  1. Animal Dander
  2. Ragweed Pollen
  3. Mold Spores
  4. Hay Particulate

Think you know the answer?



Source: How-To Geek

How to Fix Kodi’s YouTube “Quota Exceeded” Problem

Are you sick of Kodi’s YouTube plugin constantly crashing, and giving you cryptic error messages like “Exception in ContentProvider” and “Quota Exceeded”? Here’s how to fix that problem with just a few minutes of work.

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Source: How-To Geek

How to Turn Any Web Page Into a Web App on a Chromebook

Chrome OS has long been more than “just a browser.” Since it essentially requires an active internet connection for most activity, web apps are the backbone of the Chrome OS ecosystem—but did you know that you can actually turn any page into a its own web app, launchable from the taskbar? Here’s how.

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Source: How-To Geek

The Fastest Ways to Rename files on macOS

Most people rename files by clicking on a file, waiting, and clicking on the file name again. But macOS has quite a few great ways to rename files, some of which are even faster.

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Source: How-To Geek

How to Use Scribble to Write Messages on Your Apple Watch

In the earlier days of the Apple Watch, when you needed to enter text, you had to either use a canned response, an emoji, a doodle, or speak your message aloud and hope the watch would transcribe it correctly. However, that has changed with watchOS 3.

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Source: How-To Geek

How to Stop Apple Pay from Opening on Your iPhone All the Time

If you don’t use Apple Pay, there’s no reason you should have to see it on your iPhone’s lock screen every time you accidentally double-click the Home button. Here’s how to turn that shortcut off, while still allowing access to Apple Pay when you need to.

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Source: How-To Geek

Uninstalling Fonts Probably Won’t Speed Up Your PC or Mac

You’ve seen it on plenty of PC help sites. “Uninstall fonts to speed up your computer!” Don’t follow this advice–it’s a myth. Uninstalling fonts is a troubleshooting tip for fixing a specific problem, not a general performance tip for speeding up your computer.

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Source: How-To Geek

Thursday 29 September 2016

How Do You Change Windows’ Default Download Path?

The default download location on our Windows systems works well enough most of the time without a problem, but what if you want or need to change the location at the system level? With that in mind, today’s SuperUser Q&A post has some helpful advice for a frustrated reader.

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Source: How-To Geek

How to Change the Video Quality of the SkyBell HD Doorbell

The SkyBell HD is a video doorbell that lets you see a live video view of who’s at your door, and even chat with them through the speaker. But if your internet connection isn’t that great here’s how to optimize the video quality so the stream is more bearable.

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Source: How-To Geek

Geek Trivia: The Only Moon Phase That Can Produce A Solar Eclipse Is?

The Only Moon Phase That Can Produce A Solar Eclipse Is?

  1. Waning Crescent
  2. New Moon
  3. Full Moon
  4. Waxing Gibbous

Think you know the answer?



Source: How-To Geek

How to Reset Any Mac App to Its Default Settings

You were messing around with the settings for a Mac app, and now that app won’t load. Is there some way to reset the application, start fresh, and get things working properly again?

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Source: How-To Geek

How to Change the Windows 10 Logoff, Logon, and Shutdown Sounds in Windows 10

Before Windows 10 came along, we were free to change the sounds that played when we shut down, logged off, or logged on to Windows. For some reason, Microsoft hid those sound actions from being modified in Windows 10. Here’s how to get them back.

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Source: How-To Geek

How to Change the Alignment of the Numbers in a Numbered List in Microsoft Word

By default, the numbers on numbered lists are left-aligned in the space allotted for the numbering. However, aligning them to the center or the right (pictured on the right above) is easy, and we’ll show you how.

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Source: How-To Geek

How to Manage, Customize, and Block Notifications in Android Lollipop and Marshmallow

Android has always done notifications consistently well over its various iterations. In Android Lollipop and Marshmallow, notifications have gotten even better, giving users specific, granular control over notifications for every application installed on your device.

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Source: How-To Geek

Why You Shouldn’t Use “Anti-Spying” Tools for Windows 10

Since Windows 10’s release and the privacy controversy that followed, many “anti-spying” apps have sprung up. They promise to keep Windows 10 from tracking you–but often, they can cause more problems than they solve.

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Source: How-To Geek

Wednesday 28 September 2016

How to Set Your Google Account to Automatically Delete (or Share) Upon Your Death

Want to share your family photos after your death, but take your search history to the grave? All that and more is possible with Google’s Inactive Account Manager. Let’s take a look at how you can put your Google account on autopilot when you’re no longer at the wheel.

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Source: How-To Geek

Why Does My Smart Thermostat Keep Turning the A/C Off?

If you recently installed a smart thermostat and discovered that it randomly turns the air conditioning or heat off, it probably isn’t broken. It’s just using a “smart” feature that, frankly, isn’t very smart.

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Source: How-To Geek

Geek Trivia: What Do Pedologists Study?

What Do Pedologists Study?

  1. Feet
  2. Animal Pedigrees
  3. Pediatric Viruses
  4. Soil

Think you know the answer?



Source: How-To Geek

Teach Quick Look to Preview Unsupported Videos and Other Files on Your Mac

Quick look is one of the best unsung features in macOS. Select a file in Finder, hit “Space”, and you get a quick preview. This works great for images, videos, and documents, but doesn’t support every file type under the sun.

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Source: How-To Geek

How to Change the Volume of Your TV Using the Apple TV Siri Remote

The new Siri Remote that comes with the Apple TV 4 is definitely a step up from the previous generation, complete with a trackpad and motion tracking. The remote also comes with dedicated volume buttons that allow you to control your TV, soundbar, or audio receiver’s volume–no need for a second remote.

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Source: How-To Geek

How to Block Notifications from Any App in Android

Android’s notification system is easily one of its most powerful features. But with great power comes great responsibility, and some apps choose to abuse this. If you’re sick of constant notifications from specific apps, here’s how to completely disable them.

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Source: How-To Geek

How to Make a New Directory and Change to It with a Single Command in Linux

If you spend any time in the Terminal at all, you probably use the mkdir command to create a directory, and then the cd command to change to that directory right after. However, there is a way to do both of those actions with one command.

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Source: How-To Geek