Tuesday, February 21, 2012
Saturday, February 18, 2012
Friday, January 13, 2012
How to Burn ISO Files to DVD
An ISO image is a disc image (or archive file) of an optical disc that has an .iso file extension. The file perfectly mimics the data stored on an original, physical disc. For example, when an ISO image of a software program is burned to a DVD, the DVD will function the same as the original software disc. Linux, for one, is commonly distributed in an ISO image. Users are able to download the ISO image, burn it to a disc, and use it like traditional, physical, software. This article will walk you through the process of burning ISO files to a DVD.
Steps
Burning ISO Files (Windows)
- 1Obtain either a blank single-layer or a dual-layer DVD. Be sure the DVD has enough memory to fit your .iso image. Note: a dual-layer DVD typically stores approximately 8GB of data.
- 2Go to the ImgBurn website and click one of the mirror links to download the free ImgBurn software. Note: there are several applications that provide the same service.
- Double-click the “SetupImgBurn_2.5.5.0.exe” you downloaded from the ImgBurn website and follow the onscreen instructions to install the software.
- Double-click the “SetupImgBurn_2.5.5.0.exe” you downloaded from the ImgBurn website and follow the onscreen instructions to install the software.
- 3Insert your DVD into your DVD drive or DVD writer. Note: If your DVD drive is a burner it should have the marking “DVD-RW” on the front of the disc tray. You can also check by right-clicking “My Computer”>”Properties” from the context menu>”Hardware” tab> Device Manager.
- Launch the ImgBurn software.
- Launch the ImgBurn software.
- 4Click “Write image file to disc”.
- 5Click the magnifying glass file icon in the “Source” section to browse your computer and select your ISO image.
- 6Click the large disc icon button at the bottom left of the window to automatically begin burning your DVD.
Burning ISO Files (Mac OS X)
- 1Obtain a blank single-layer or dual-layer DVD. Be sure the DVD has enough memory to fit your .iso image. Note: a dual-layer DVD typically stores approximately 8GB of data.
- 2Insert your DVD into your DVD drive or DVD writer.
- Check if your computer has a DVD drive capable of burning DVDs by clicking the Apple icon in the top left corner of the screen> “About This Mac”> “More Info…”> “Hardware”> “Device Manager”.
- Check if your computer has a DVD drive capable of burning DVDs by clicking the Apple icon in the top left corner of the screen> “About This Mac”> “More Info…”> “Hardware”> “Device Manager”.
- 3Open the Disk Utility app by navigating to “Finder”> “Applications”> “Utilities”> “Disk Utility”.
- 4Click “File” from the Disk Utility menu bar followed by “Open Disk Image” in the context menu.
- 5Browse for and select the ISO image you want to burn. Click the “Open” button to mount it in Disk Utility.
- 6Select the ISO image from the pane on the left of Disk Utility and click the “Burn” button to burn your DVD.
Thursday, January 12, 2012
Some important Android Application
Click on below link to download. if you want to know about these apps, Google it. its free to download. Have fun Droiders!!
1>playerpro
2>Flvplayer
Comming soon
5001 amazing facts
Thermal Vision Camera
Ant Smasher
QQplayer
Floating Image
Astro
Metal Detector
Little Photo
Cool Reader
Quick office pro
Team viewer
Gemini App
Tweetdeck
stick cricket
root explorer
task killer
folder player
barcode reader
flash light
unit convertor
patro
maps
photo art color effect
Thursday, January 5, 2012
Tuesday, December 20, 2011
How to Change Window 7 Password without Knowing Current Password:
Method 1:
- Go to Control Panel and click on the Administrative Tools.
- Under this section double click on Computer Management.
- Select System Tools from right window pane.
- Under this, just double click on Local Users and Groups and then on Users
- Now you will see all the login accounts of your computer. Right click on any the account whose password you want to change and then click on Set Password.
- A warning message will popup on your screen just click on Proceed button.
- Now enter your New Password and click on OK button.
Method 2:
If you love to be work on Command Line then this method is for you.- Open command prompt by typing with administrative privileges .( Type CMD in start, right click on it and select Run as Administrative )
- In the CMD window type the following command and hit Enter
net user Account Name Your New PasswordIn this command replace Account Name by the account name (Account Name is case sensitive) whose password you want to change and replace Your New Password by the password that you want to set.
- Now if everything goes alright you will see “The command completed successfully” on your screen, now type exit command and hit Enter
Monday, December 19, 2011
Droid Explorer 0.8.8.2 Beta
Manage your rooted android device with the simplicity of Windows Explorer
The Droid Explorer application was designed to be a small tool to manage your rooted android device with the simplicity of Windows Explorer.
Features
Multiple Device Support
Copy and auto-apply update.zip
Copy local files to device
Auto detection of connected/disconnected device
APK file icon and extended information
Device command shell window
Reboot device
Reboot device in to recovery mode
Open files for viewing / execution locally with the default file type executable
Drag & Drop file copy from Explorer
Flash Recovery Image
Package Manager (Install & Uninstall)
No need to mount SD card to access files from computer
Access files in other directories besides SD card
Copy files from device to local clipboard
Paste files from local clipboard to device
Open files on local machine
Display open with dialog to specify what to open a file with
Right click APK and Uninstall
Right click APK and Install
Delete files from device
Take a Screen Shot (landscape or portrait)
Plugins can register as a component to open files
Open from within Computer
Should now work with more ROMs as long as they are Rooted and have busybox
Device "Friendly Name" instead of device serial number.
Android Screencast Plugin - Control your android device with your mouse and keyboard
Install/Uninstall APK files right from explorer
Standalone plugin runner (will mainly be used for windows 7 jump lists and the apk installer but can be used to run any plugin.
Better Hero Support
Backup the "Google Experience" applications and creates an update.zip containing the applications
Use an existing Android SDK with Droid Explorer, or let Droid Explorer set up the SDK for you.
Device Requirements
Rooted Android Device with busybox
PC Requirements
Windows (looking for a developer to help create UI for mono)
.NET Framework 3.5 SP1
Some plugins require Java Runtime Environment and Java Web Start
I'd like any thoughts you may have for other features to add to Droid Explorer. Report bugs or request features here or on the project issue tracker.
Web Installer (x86)
Requires internet connection to download android sdk tools
x86 Serivce will not work on x64 OS
Web Installer (x64)
Requires internet connection to download android sdk tools
Use this install if running a 64 bit OS
Thursday, December 8, 2011
Modifying Samsung Splash Screens (Galaxy S Series + SGS2)
How to Modify/Change the Samsung Splash Screens (FULL MANUAL METHOD!) - PART ONE
The following is a two-part guide (this is part one), which will teach you exactly how to modify the splash screen on ANY of the Galaxy S series devices (Captivate, Vibrant, SGS4G/Vibrant 4G, Fascinate, Exhibit 4G, Epic 4G, & SGS2)
Firstly, before I explain HOW to do this, you're going to need a bit of a background as to what exactly it is that you're going to be doing. The changes we're going to be making are two-fold, as the one splash-screen that you think you see, is actually two identical images, back-to-back.
Image 1
The first image is a simple jpg, located in a hidden directory in the root of your device.
Image 2
The second image is a specially formatted and modified image, that will require the use of certain tools, and the ability to build a kernel. If you're not comfortable with building a kernel from source, then I suggest you stick with Image 1. A guide on building kernels for Samsung devices can be located by searching our site.

Image 1 Guide - param.lfs
Pre-requisities
- The device must be ROOTED
- You must have a HEX editor installed on your computer (I recommend HxD - free)
- You must be capable of following simple instructions
- Familiarity with, and an installation of, ADB.
Method
- The first thing we're going to do, is pull an entire directory from your device. This step can be skipped if you already know the name of the jpg image which needs replacing on the device. Simply run the following in cmd/terminal (ensure that you change the directory format for Linux/Mac):
adb pull /mnt/.lfs c:\whatever
- Now, open up that folder on your computer, and look through the images until you find the one which you see on each boot. Make a note of it's name. Let's say, for argument's sake, that it's Logo.jpg.
- Open Logo.jpg in the photo-editor of your choice (Photoshop/Gimp) and create your new image. Do not alter the size (in pixels) of the image. It should remain 480x800.
- Once you've designed a splash screen you're happy with, save it to the same directory you have adb installed (platform-tools, most likely).
- Now, we're ready for the fun bit! In cmd prompt/terminal, type the following (ignore $ and # from the text below, this is just to indicate level of access):
adb shell
$ su
# dd if=/dev/block/stl6 of=/sdcard/param.lfs bs=4096
IF THAT DOESN'T WORK, use the following path:
# dd if=/dev/block/stl6 of=/mnt/sdcard/param.lfs bs=4096
- You have just dumped the param.lfs partition, which contains the images we want to edit. As it stands right now, this folder is read-only, and root access does not change that. So... we're going to modify it ourselves.
- Copy the newly acquired param.lfs file from the SDCard to your computer, leaving a backup on your SDCard.
- Open the file in HxD (or the HEX editor of your choice), and do a FIND (CTRL+F) on the full name of the image (Logo.jpg, for example).
You will find a result like this:
- Simply change the highlighted hex values (highlighted in blue) to 00's. See the below image of how it should look:

- FIND again, until you have done the same for EVERY reference to Logo.jpg. TAKE CARE NOT TO GO TOO FAR WITH 00's. Only change what is highlighted!
- Now save param.lfs, and prepare to flash it in DOWNLOAD MODE.
- Using Heimdall (much easier), type:
heimdall flash --param /location/of/param.lfs
ALTERNATIVELY:
Build into an ODIN flashable tar (see our guide on this website) and flash using ODIN.
- You will notice after flashing, that your splash screen image is a download-mode image. Don't worry about that. We will be sorting it next.
- When the phone boots back up, connect it to the computer, and flash the new logo like so:
adb push Logo.jpg /mnt/.lfs
adb reboot
Congratulations - you did it! See our Part Two guide for how to change the kernel image.
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