Friday 30 January 2015

MCENT Unlimited Recharge Trick {New User} (UPDATED)

Hello Daily World Tricks Lovers, today we are sharing an awesome Mcent Referel Trick . Its one of the biggest free recharge earning platform which is now paying Rs. 50 per refer that is highest among all app out there. So just for referring one friend you will get Rs. 50 if you refer 10 you will get Rs. 500. Great lets begin earning money online.

Mcent recharge trick

This time all you need to do is simply Follow The 11 Steps To Get Unlimited Recharge/Airtime.




Steps To Get Free Rs. 50 Per Referel:



1. Open default browser of your Android device and paste this link to download mCent http://mcent.com/ 

2. Create new mCent account

3. After downloading, signup and download any one App from mCent, otherwise 
You will not get any Referral Earnings.

2. Now goto settings and note down your referral link in notepad.

Now here comes tricky part :


3. Download Youwave ( An Android Emulator ) from Here .

4. After downloading, install it and login your gmail account for playstore.

5. Now open default browser in youwave and paste your referral link.

6. Once you paste, you will see playstore with mCent, just downlaod it.

7. Now enter your another new number (non mCent registered number) and sign up.

8. Finally download any apps and wait for few minutes.

Note : You must have to download any app, else you will not recieve your referral amount.

Done !! Now check your old account. You can see Rs.50 as a referral amount has been added in your account.

Note : After doing above steps, goto file and select Android factory reset and follow all steps again for new account creation. 

Thursday 22 January 2015

WhatsApp for Web (PC Desktop & Mac) – How to use it?

So WhatsApp is finally and officially available for Computer, till date we used to use WhatsApp on PC using BlueStacks or YouWave which is still working fine but the only problem with those methods is that they are not official one.
But now, you can officially or genuinely use WhatsApp for Web or Desktop with the new feature which the officials have added, its basically WhatsApp Web Version.
But wait, its not what you are thinking, you don’t have to download any WhatsApp messenger software into your computer, but this new feature will only work on Google Chrome and its completely web based feature which means that their is no need to download any kind of program into your PC.
whatsapp computer official
Instead, you will need to scan the QR code which is available on their official website from your WhatsApp Mobile App. Don’t worry if you are finding it confusing, I am giving you complete tutorial on how to use WhatsApp for Web or Desktop, just have a look below.

How to use WhatsApp for Web – Windows 7/8/XP Computer & Mac?

Note : For using WhatsApp on PC you will need to have WhatsApp Messenger installed and verified with SMS and phone number into your mobile phone first, so if you are thinking that you will directly be able to login into WhatsApp Desktop then its not the case, rest assured just follow the steps which I have given below.
  1. First of all upgrade your WhatsApp Messenger in your smartphone, its necessary step.
    Note : You need to have WhatsApp v2.11.498 or above, download the latest .APK file from here.
  2. Now open Google Chrome browser and go to web.whatsapp.com and you will see QR code
    Note : WhatsApp Web works only on Google Chrome and not on Mozilla, IE, etc.
    whatsapp for web
  3. Open WhatsApp Messenger in your Smartphone, go to Menu and then select “WhatsApp Web”
    whatsapp web or desktop from android
  4. Now scan the QR code which is on web.whatsapp.com from WhatsApp Web option.
    whatsapp on pc official
  5. Now click on “OK, GOT IT” and let the scanning of your QR code starts.
  6. Within few seconds you will see that you can use WhatsApp Web on Google Chrome browser.
  7. Its just the mirror image of your WhatsApp Mobile.
So, I hope you are not enjoying WhatsApp Messenger on your desktop and you found my tutorial easy to follow.

Disadvantage of WhatsApp for Web or Desktop Official Version :

Here are few of the negative points which I want to let you know, I have listed it down below, these are strong points.
  • It is not available for iPhone or iOS users, feeling bad for them.
  • Its just the mirror of your WhatsApp Messenger which is in your mobile phone.
  • The chat and messages which you are doing on your Web Desktop version, it is happening live on the spot on your WhatsApp in Smartphone.
  • Thus, WhatsApp will consume double data i.e one from web version and other from your phone.
  • It is risky to use it on public computer because if you forget to log off from that public PC then any one can see your previous messages which you have sent from mobile also and he/she can even send one from your WhatsApp.
Now, lets come to the advantages or benefits part of WhatsApp web version, you can even call it extra features, have a look below.

Advantages of WhatsApp Web :

Some plus points of this new features is given below, please take a look.
  • You can obviously use WhatsApp Messenger from your Computer, we were waiting for the same from last 3 years, this is the biggest feature in itself.
  • You don’t need to scan the QR code again and again, its just the first time setup or step which you are doing, if you log off from desktop then you need to repeat it again, so its a no time waster.
  • You will be able to type in desktop with amazing speed, send images and videos at blazing fast speed
So folks, I think, WhatsApp for PC (official web desktop version) is boon for many of us who use it very much. Finally, WhatsApp on PC is available for Windows 7, Windows 8, Windows XP as well as Mac. Thanks for visiting us.

Meet WhatSim – a globe-trotting SIM for WhatsApp messaging

whatsim_sim_card_press_image.jpg


You can now buy a SIM card dedicated exclusively to chatting on WhatsApp in one of 150 countries. It’s called WhatSim and will automatically switch between a total of 400 carriers.
For a €10 a year fee text messages are free, while photo, video and voice messages are priced on a credit system.
You can pay € 5 for 1,000 credits (or up to €50 for 10,000 credits). Text messages, location and contact sharing are free, while multimedia messages are priced based on zones. You can check the WhatSim siteto see which zone each country falls into.
The cheapest rates are 5 credits for a voice message (that’s €0.025), 20 credits for a photo (€0.10) and 100 credits for a video (€0.50). Voice and video messages are capped at 10 seconds long.
Note that in some countries the yearly rate is €5 instead of €10. The WhatSim will never expire, but you’ll need to top it up with credit when you want to use it. You can buy the card preloaded with credit and by the looks of it you can have it shipped worldwide, though the official site is available only in English and Italian.
It doesn’t seem like it provides generic mobile data that can be used with other apps, but if you’re traveling abroad a lot this can be a cheap way to stay in touch. Facebook already has deals in place withits Facebook Zero initiative but this aims to expand its foothold in mobile messaging.
Update: It turns out this is from a company called ZeroMobile that is not affiliated with WhatsApp. The company has been founded by Manuel Zanella, known from I’m Watch, one of the earliest Android-powered smartwatches.
Source | Via (in Italian)|Gsm arena

Microsoft Windows 10 briefing live stream and blog: Windows 10 will be a free upgrade


Windows 10 Event

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Update 01:44pm: Microsoft HoloLens was just announced. It’s an augmented reality solution with a head-mounted display.
Update 01:28pm: Finally, we have remote play for Xbox! Windows 10 PCs and tablets will stream gameplay live from the Xbox One, and allow you to play anywhere in your house.
Update 01:00pm: Project Spartan is the new web browser for Windows 10! Windows 10 has Cortana now — even on the Desktop. Office, photos, and music all work across your Windows devices. It’s a nice deal.
Update 12:20pm: Windows 10 will be a free update for Windows 7, Windows 8.1, and Windows Phone 8.1 users for the first year. Fantastic!
Update 12:00pm: The show has begun! Follow along as we find out all about Windows 10.
Back in September, we first learned that Redmond is skipping Windows 9, and jumping right to 10. Today, the Windows team will take the stage at Microsoft’s headquarters, and give us a proper rundown of what Windows 10 is all about. Will we finally see something worth upgrading for? Is DirectX 12 going to matter? I’m not quite convinced yet, but we should hear some firm details about pricing and release dates at the very least. Check back here at 12pm EST (9am PST) for all of the latest details as they become available.

How to watch the Windows 10 event

Unless you are able to attend the event in person, in Seattle, the best way to watch the Windows 10 news will be a livestream. Microsoft will be streaming the event online so in addition to following our live blog (for the keen insights the stream will be missing!) you can watch everything as it unfolds.

Live blog

02:20pm Terry Myerson is back on stage, and promises a lot more in 2015. That’s a wrap, everyone.
02:06pm Satya Nadella is on stage wrapping things up. He wants us to love Windows. It’ll take a lot of work, Satya!
Satya Nadella
01:59pm Unsurprisingly, you look like a complete doofus interacting with things that don’t really exist.
Oof
01:56pm My biggest problem with this isn’t the core tech. It’s actually fantastic, but this should be presented as a neat side project — not a revolution in computing.
Terr Bear
HoloLens
01:49pm The HoloLens is just a pair of hefty glasses that display “holograms” onto your vision. This is just AR — not real holograms, though. It’s shipping with a CPU, GPU, and a dedicated specialty processor for dealing with the massive amounts of input data. It’s cool, but this is being oversold in a major way. AR is a fun niche, but come on. These glasses are a stepping stone at best. This isn’t a paradigm shift.
Windows Holographic
01:44pm Windows Holographic is an augmented reality solution. It’s a head-mounted display. *shrug*
Giant tablet
01:39pm Yes, yes. It’s a big tablet. You can use it for meetings. We get it, Microsoft. Zzzzzzzz.
Surface Hub
01:34pm Microsoft Surface Hub is a giant Smart TV with a touchscreen and built-in cameras. It’s basically a giant wall-mounted tablet for work and school environments. It seems okay, but it’s not particularly exciting or shockingly new.
Shipping
01:32pm Over the next few weeks, new builds will ship on PC and on phones, and upwards 25 languages will be supported.
Remote Play
01:27pm Finally, Microsoft is implementing remote play! Any Windows 10 PC or Tablet will stream Xbox One games over the network. Obviously, controllers are a must.
Streaming
01:23pm With Windows 10, cross-platform play is now easier to pull off. For example, Fable Legends on Xbox One and PC work together for multiplayer. Achievements work on Windows 10 as well — no need for GFWL.
Fable Legends
01:21pm The Unity engine will now support DirectX 12.
01:20pm DirectX 12 can improve performance on CPU-bound games by 50% on the same hardware. Meanwhile, it cuts battery usage by 50%.
01:19pm Spencer wants to give you a virus, I think. Definitely wants to increase “viralness.”
01:18pm Game DVR is now baked into Windows. You can save the last 30 seconds of gameplay on any game.
Game DVR
01:14pm The Xbox app shows all of your games, friends, messages, and cheevos. Just like we thought. Voice and text chat work as well. Nice, but not a game changer.
01:13pm Phil Spencer takes the stage. Talking about PC gaming now. Battletoads t-shirt, by the way.
Phil Spencer
Cortana Web
01:09pm Spartan uses Cortana as a smart address bar. It’ll pop up relevant info as you type — not just websites. It’s nice, but other browsers have been doing this for a long time. These features should be minor bullet points — not the major selling points. *sigh*
01:07pm Spartan is largely copying Safari here. It has a minimalist reading mode and a reading list. It has offline reading as well, so that’s pretty neat.
Reading
01:05pm Using touch or keyboards, you can mark-up web pages with notes, and share it with friends and co-workers. It’ll be good for developers, but the use case for normal users is WEAK.
Project Spartan
01:03pm Project Spartan is real. It’s a new web browser coming to all Windows 10 devices. It has a new rendering engine as well. Goodbye, IE.
01:00pm Soon, you’ll be able to store and manage your music library on OneDrive. Change playlists on any device.
Music
12:57pm The new photo app makes management easier. It sports an “Auto-enhance” mode too. It’s nothing new, but it’s a much better name that Google’s awful “Auto Awesome.”
Calendar
12:55pm The calendar syncs across devices. Shocking.
12:54pm Swipe left to remove an email, right to flag. The new Outlook is Tinder for email.
12:52pm Showing off the built-in Microsoft Word engine across different apps.
Outlook
12:51pm There’s a new, universal, version of Outlook across all Windows 10 devices.
12:50pm Office apps ship with Windows 10 on phones.
12:47pm “Nearly no compromise” sounds like “actually, a lot of compromise, Joe.
Office
12:45pm Joe B is discussing universal apps. PC, tablets, smartphones, and the Xbox One all running specially compiled versions of the same apps. Sounds like “Windows Everywhere.”
12:43pm Speech-to-text input anywhere you can type.
Speech-to-text
12:40pm Newly installed apps are now floated to the top on small devices.
New apps
12:38pm Now it’s Windows 10 on devices smaller than 8 inches. Joe B really wants us to know that this is buggy software, though.
12:37pm Cortana will be rolling out across the globe over the next few months.
12:35pm Cortana can search across all of your Windows 10 devices and in the cloud. That seems pretty useful.
12:33pm Cortana’s Notebook is basically an overview of everything this program knows about you. You can change it at will. Smart move. Maybe “Call my Master Chief” is in order.
12:30pm As you speak, Cortana will show the text as it deciphers it in real time. Pretty cool, but other speech-to-text systems have similar features.
12:28pm Doing a super goofy Cortana demo. It’s running on Windows 10. Duuuuuuuuh!
Cortana
12:27pm Now onto new features! These will be coming in the next 3-5 months.
Joe
2-in-1
12:24pm Belfiore is showing off how Windows 10 switches back and forth between touch UI and desktop-style UI. It seems decent, but I wonder if this really matters to many people. The tablet/laptop combo hasn’t exactly set the world on fire.
Demo
12:21pm Joe Belfiore is on stage giving us a demo of Windows 10. Showing off some neat UI improvements.
Upgrade pricing
12:18pm For the first year of Windows 10’s existence, it will be free for Windows 8.1 and Windows 7 users. Same for Windows Phone 8.1 as well. This is massive news. Now that’s a reason to upgrade.
12:16pm 200+ million people are on Windows 8.1 now.
12:13pm Is the stream cutting out for you? Don’t worry, you’re not missing much.
12:10pm “More personal computing” is the mantra this time around. Lots of touchy-feely talk.
12:05pm 1.7 million people have signed up to test Windows 10.
12:02pm Terry Myerson is on stage giving us a broad overview.
Bam
12:00pm Here we go.
11:50am 10 minutes to go. Everybody get hype!
Press Windows 10 event
Press
11:39am The press are in.
Windows 10 banner
11:24am It’s almost time!

What to expect at the Windows 10 briefing

If Microsoft doesn’t give us concrete details about the pricing model and release window at this event, I’ll be shocked. Whether Windows 10 will be a traditional release, a subscription service, or a free update à la OS X, it’s hard to guess where Microsoft wants to go. There are decent arguments to be made for each model, but I can’t see Microsoft launching a new OS in 2015 for $200 — especially with Chromebooks and Steam Machines breathing down its neck.
Windows 10 DesktopAs for features, we’ve heard quite a few rumors since Windows 10 was first announced. Perhaps the most contentious of which is thedeath of Internet Explorer. Sources point to a new browser codenamed “Spartan” as Windows 10’s primary browser, and good ol’ IE taking a backseat for compatibility purposes. Of course, they’ll likely both be using a version of Microsoft’s Trident rendering engine, so it’s hard to tell what difference it’ll make.
We’ve also seen builds of the Windows 10 tech preview sporting Cortana integration, a new app store, and a dedicated Xbox app. These are all sensible additions, but none of them are particularly thrilling. DirectX 12 may very well receive some attention today, but I wouldn’t expect much. After all, Microsoft has a gaming machine it would really like you to purchase instead.
Finally, we’re bound to see substantial coverage of the touchscreen-oriented features of Windows 10. Tablets and smartphones are a major part of Microsoft’s business strategy, so don’t be surprised if desktop features like “we brought back the start button, you babies” take a back seat to tapping and swiping.
source :extreme tech 

History of Ubuntu


Ubuntu has touched the lives of many among us in different ways. I can't speak for everyone here and hence I will share a few of my experiences with Ubuntu. For me, Ubuntu was the gateway to Linux and the whole open source way of thinking. Ubuntu taught me that computers are not all about Windows OS and that there are far better alternatives than the "default" Windows desktop which you have been made to see and learn from a younger age. Lets go back in time and see how Ubuntu evolved over the years to become what it is now - a totally awesome, user friendly and fast changing Linux based distro for human beings.

History of ubuntu

[image via ubuntu wallpapers]

A Brief History of Ubuntu
A new version of Ubuntu is released every 6 months and as of Oct 2010, a total of 15 stable releases of Ubuntu has happened. Each release also has a specific code name which are made using an adjective and an animal with the same first letter (e.g. Hardy Heron, Maverick Meerkat). We will have a brief overview of each one of them below. Read on.

Ubuntu 4.10 (Warty Warthog)

evolution of Ubuntu
Ubuntu 4.10 codenamed "Warty Warthog" marked the beginning of a new kid in the block, the first and foremost release of Ubuntu by Canonical foundation. This new Linux distro was based on Debian and aimed at giving new users a trouble free experience of Linux. This release also crucially brought the Ubuntu shipitfeature where by users could get Ubuntu installation CD's mailed to their homes for free through a simple signup. Shipit was one of those important features that augmented the widespread adoption of Ubuntu.

Ubuntu 5.04 (Hoary Hedgehog)

Ubuntu History

Ubuntu 5.04 codenamed "Hoary Hedgehog" was released on 8 April 2005. From this second release onwards, massive changes started to trickle in. Ubuntu 5.04 added many new features including an update manager, upgrade notifier, readahead and grepmap, suspend, hibernate and standby support, dynamic frequency scaling for processors among many other major improvements. Ubuntu 5.04 even introduced support for installation from USB devices. 

Ubuntu 5.10 (Breezy Badger)

Ubuntu 5.10 (Breezy Badger)

Ubuntu 5.10 codenamed "Breezy Badger" was released on 12 October 2005, the third stable release of Ubuntu by Canonical. Ubuntu 5.10 added several new features including a graphical bootloader (Usplash), an Add/Remove Applications tool, a menu editor, an easy language selector, crucial logical volume management support, full Hewlett-Packard printer support, OEM installer support among others. More importantly, this release also brought in Launchpad integration for bug reporting and software development.

Ubuntu 6.06 LTS (Dapper Drake)

Ubuntu 6.06 LTS Dapper Drake

Ubuntu 6.06 LTS codenamed "Dapper Drake" was released on 1 June 2006. It was also the first Long Term Support(LTS) release. This was also the only time when the Ubuntu release cycle was slightly pushed forward by 2 months owing to all sorts of delays. Many new features were introduced including having the Live CD and Install CD merged onto one disc, a graphical installer on Live CD, a network manager for easy switching of multiple wired and wireless connections, implementation of Humanlooks theme among other improvements.

Ubuntu 6.10 (Edgy Eft)

Ubuntu 6.10 (Edgy Eft)
Ubuntu 6.10 codenamed "Edgy Eft" was released on 26 October 2006, Canonical's fifth Ubuntu release. Tomboy and F-Spot became the new default applications for Ubuntu. Human theme also went through heavy modifications.

Ubuntu 7.04 (Feisty Fawn)

Ubuntu 7.04 (Feisty Fawn)

Ubuntu 7.04 codenamed "Feisty Fawn" was released on 19 April 2007. This release has a very special significance as far as I am concerned. Well, this was my first ever Ubuntu. I was a complete noob to the whole Linux way of life then and barely installed Ubuntu in my laptop with the help of friends and Ubuntu Forums. And the primary reason for trying out Ubuntu was Compiz to be frank. In those clogged XP-Vista days, Compiz was(and it still is) a breath of fresh air. Meanwhile, check out these stunning Compiz Experimental Plugins for a change.

Ubuntu 7.10 (Gutsy Gibbon)

Ubuntu 7.10 (Gutsy Gibbon)

Ubuntu 7.10 codenamed "Gutsy Gibbon" released on 18 October 2007. Ubuntu 7.10 introduced Compiz Fusion as a default feature. This seventh release of Ubuntu also marked the introduction of full NTFS support.

Ubuntu 8.04 LTS (Hardy Heron)

Ubuntu 8.04 LTS (Hardy Heron)

Ubuntu 8.04 codenamed "Hardy Heron" was released on 24 April 2008. This was the second LTS version of Ubuntu. In my opinion, this release had one of the best designed Ubuntu wallpaper as default. Brasero disc burner and transmissionbit torrent client were introduced during this release. Controversial Pulse Audio became the new default system sound server. This release also introduced Wubi installer using which you can install Ubuntu inside Windows without repartitioning the disk.

Ubuntu 8.10 (Intrepid Ibex)

Ubuntu 8.10 (Intrepid Ibex)

Ubuntu 8.10 codenamed Intrepid Ibex was released on 30 October 2008. It was the ninth Ubuntu release and it was also one of my favorite releases. This release introduced useful Ubuntu Live USB creator application. Guest session functionality was also introduced during Intrepid Ibex release.

Ubuntu 9.04 (Jaunty Jackalope)

Ubuntu 9.04 (Jaunty Jackalope)

Ubuntu 9.04 "Jaunty Jackalope" was released on 23 April 2009. This release marked the first time that all of Ubuntu's core development moved to the Bazaar distributed revision control system which is designed to make it easier for anyone to contribute to free and open source software projects. Faster boot time was another major achievement of this release.

Ubuntu 9.10 (Karmic Koala)

Ubuntu 9.10 (Karmic Koala)

Ubuntu 9.10 codenamed "Karmic Koala" released on 29 October 2009. From this release onwards, Ubuntu slowly started to shift gears. A slew of changes started to flood Ubuntu. During Ubuntu Karmic's release cycle, Canonical introduced the One Hundred Paper Cuts project, focusing developers to fix minor usability issues. This was a major move and it helped bring a lot of polish for Ubuntu in the latter releases. This release also introduced Ubuntu Software Center which went on to become the application that received enormous amount of attention later on.

Ubuntu 10.04 LTS (Lucid Lynx)

Ubuntu 10.04 LTS (Lucid Lynx)

Ubuntu 10.04 codenamed "Lucid Lynx" was released on 29 April 2010. Ubuntu 10.04 "Lucid Lynx" is my favorite release to date and it brought about the biggest amount of changes ever. Ubuntu had a complete branding makeover during this release cycle. Even the brown theme was ditched for the first time for a more bright and pleasant looking "Light" inspired theme. Browse through the amount of changes Ubuntu 10.04 Lucid Lynx went through.

Ubuntu 10.10 (Maverick Meerkat)

Ubuntu 10.10 (Maverick Meerkat)

Ubuntu 10.10 codenamed "Maverick Meerkat" was released on 10 October 2010 (10.10.10) at around 10:10 UTC. Close to the heels of Ubuntu Lucid release, Ubuntu Maverick was also packed with new features and improvements. Ubuntu Software Center became one of the applications that received maximum amount of attention. Canonical's attention to detail started showing up big time during Ubuntu 10.10 release cycle.

Ubuntu 11.04 (Natty Narwhal)

ubuntu natty

Ubuntu 11.04 "Natty Narwhal" was perhaps *the* most controversial Ubuntu release ever. Canonical introduced Unity shell with Ubuntu 11.04 which created quite a furore among its vast user base. Unity was Ubuntu's answer to GNOME 3.0's GNOME Shell desktop, though Ubuntu 11.04 was still based on previous GNOME 2.x.

Reactions from users was not really what Canonical would have hoped for. Unity was far less customisable when compared to good old GNOME 2.x based desktops and that was simply unacceptable to many long-term Ubuntu users.

Ubuntu 11.10 (Oneiric Ocelot)

Ubuntu 11.10

Ubuntu 11.10 codenamed "Oneiric Ocelot" was the first GNOME 3.0 based Ubuntu release. Oneiric did not brought in sweeping changes like its predecessor did. But it does brought in a lot of polish to the controversial Unity UI. LightDM replaced GDM as Ubuntu's new default login screen. Classic Gnome Desktop was completely ditched in favor of Unity 2D during this release cycle. If you are interested, here is a quick screenshot tour of Ubuntu 11.10 Oneiric Ocelot.

Ubuntu 12.04 LTS (Precise Pangolin)

Ubuntu 12.04 LTS 
  
Ubuntu 12.10(Quantal Quetzal)   


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