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Hello friends after long time today i sharing a great post about how to earn money by uploading files really in these days earn money online is so easy and now in internet already many sites who paid money for uploading files. so let's read about How to earn money by uploading files.
Friends if you search of best ppd sites 2016 than you are at right place in this article we will discuss about how to earn money by uploading files.
PPD measn Pay per download where you will be get paid to upload files. really this is the best method to earn money online by uploading files. with this method anyone can earn money without having any coding knowledge.
How they work
earn money by uploading files is so easy actually after uploading a file you just have to share that file on social media networks and if anyone visits with that link which you have shared and download you documents then you will be get paid.
really it's so simple process...
Best PPD Sites 2016 - Earn money by uploading files
Fileice.net
Fileice is one of the best ppd site, where you have upload files and start sharing on social media or social networks now if someone clicks on your link and download the uploaded documents then you will be get paid them minimum payout in fileice the amount approx $1. Really in these days FileIce is the Best PPD Site 2016.
Sharecash
sharecash is anothe best pay per download site where you can earn money by uploading files and it's one of the old ppd site. you have just upload your files on sharecash and start promoting your links on social networks if someone downloads your documents you will be get paid for this.
another best advantage of sharecash is you can also paste given code on your blog. now if someone clicks on that banner or links you will be get paid for this. without any work as a minimum payout of $10 (Like an affiliate marketer)
Other Best PPD Sites of 2016
- Dollorupload - dollorupload is another best ppd sites where you can earn money by uploading files online.
- CPAGrip
I hope this article is helpful for you....
So friends if you like this post How to Earn Money By Uploading Files In 2016 than please comment and share with this with your friends. thanks like our facebook page
Hello Dear Friends
Philips recently released a new Hue bridge with support for Apple’s new HomeKit bridge. Read on as we show you how to migrate your old Hue bulbs to your new system as well as how to take advantage of the HomeKit integration.
Did you know Google has its own dedicated password manager? It’s more than just password-syncing built into the Chrome browser — Google’s solution also offers a web app, mobile apps, deep integration with Android, and automatic generation of strong passwords.
Few people have noticed this, which isn’t surprising — this feature has grown from a simple part of the Chrome browser to escape it and provide a larger, cross-platform password manager.
All the Ways You Can Access Your Passwords
Your saved passwords can be accessed in a variety of ways:
- Chrome on Windows, Mac, Chrome OS, and Linux: The password manager syncs with the Chrome browser, so it can be used in Google Chrome on any desktop or laptop platform
- Chrome for Android, iPhone, and iPad: Google Chrome’s mobile apps can also sync your passwords, so you can access them in the Chrome apps on Android, iPhone, and iPad. There’s no Safari integration on iOS — you’ll have to use the Chrome browser app.
- On the Web: Google offers a web-based interface to your passwords at https://passwords.google.com. You can sign in from anywhere with your Google account to access it.
- On the Mobile Web: This is also a responsive web page, which means you could access it from a smartphone. You could even add the website to your smartphone’s homescreen, copy-pasting passwords from https://passwords.google.com whenever you need to log into an app.
- In Android Apps: Google recently added a feature named “Smart Lock for Passwords” to nearly all Android devices as part of a Google Play Services update. This feature integrates with Google’s password manager to automatically log you into apps that support it. For example, let’s say you log into Netflix in Chrome on the desktop, and you save that Netflix password in Chrome’s password manager. You can later open Netflix on your Android smartphone or tablet and Android will provide your Netflix credentials to the app, automatically logging you in. This behavior can be disabled or tweaked if you don’t like it.
How to Start Using Google’s Password Manager
To start using Google’s password manager, just use Google Chrome on your desktop, smartphone, or tablet. SIgn into Chrome with your Google account. From Chrome’s Settings, click the “Advanced sync settings” button and ensure Chrome is set to sync passwords.
(Note that, if you choose to encrypt your passwords with “your own sync passphrase”, you won’t be able to access your passwords on the web. Smart Lock for Passwords on Android won’t function, either.)
You should also ensure Chrome is set to offer to save your passwords. From Chrome’s Settings screen, search for “passwords” and ensure “Offer to save your web passwords” is enabled under “Autofill and forms.”
You can also “Enable autofill to fill out web forms in a single click.” This gives you an autofill feature like the one found in popular password managers — it can even automatically fill credit card payment details and your address from information stored in Google Wallet, if you like.
You can later click the “Manage passwords” link here or head to chrome://settings/passwords in Chrome, to access, manage, and view a list of your saved passwords.
To actually save a password, just head to a website and sign in normally. Chrome will ask if you want to save the username and password you used on that website, and you can agree.
The next time you visit the website’s login page, Chrome will automatically fill in your username and password.
Automatically Generate Strong Passwords
Google Chrome also contains a feature that will helpfully generate new, random passwords for you and save them to your vault. Many dedicated password managers — including LastPass, 1Password, and Dashlane — offer this feature.
However, this feature isn’t enabled by default — it’s a hidden flag. Plug chrome://flags into Chrome’s address bar and press Enter to access the list of flags. Locate the “Enable password generation” flag and set it to “Enabled.”
The next time you create a password, Chrome will detect that you’re using an account-creation page and offer to automatically fill and and save a random password for you.
You can also modify other flags that can make the password manager more useful — for example, website developers have the ability to mark certain password fields with a “do not remember” option, which would make Chrome not offer to remember the password. There’s a “Enable force-saving of passwords” flag that will make Chrome ignore this, allowing it to remember any password.
Google’s password manager isn’t as feature-filled as dedicated password manager apps, but Google has regularly been adding features. It’s linked to your Google account, and Google accounts are pretty secure — they can even be protected with all kinds of two-step authentication.
Google’s focus is on providing an easy password manager that automatically works with features like Smart Lock for Passwords, so people looking for a more powerful interface might want to go with another password manager instead.
While all operating systems have some things in common, you may find yourself wondering if one type of operating system has a specific ‘feature’ that another one does. With that in mind, today’s SuperUser Q&A post has the answers to a curious reader’s question.
Today’s Question & Answer session comes to us courtesy of SuperUser—a subdivision of Stack Exchange, a community-driven grouping of Q&A web sites.
Photo courtesy of BiblioArchives/LibraryArchives (Flickr).
The Question
SuperUser reader Toby Blunt wants to know if there is an equivalent for the (Linux) bin directory in Windows:
Is there an equivalent for Linux’s bin directory in Windows? If so, how can I access it from the command prompt?
What is the equivalent of the (Linux) bin directory in Windows?
The Answer
SuperUser contributor CBHacking has the answer for us:
There is actually nothing special about /bin on Unix/Linux at all. It is just the location where executable files and scripts (which are not actually binary files) are placed by convention. It is included in the PATHenvironment variable by default for all users.As Ryan says (comments one and two), the \Windows\System32 directory on Windows is also in PATH for all Windows users (and, even if it is not, the program loader in Windows will search there anyhow).You can easily create your own equivalent of /bin on Windows. To make it system-wide, place it somewhere like the root of the file system (such asC:\bin or under an already-restricted location like \Windows\System32\bin), and add it to the PATH environment variable for all users.For a per-user location, create the directory in your own profile (%USERPROFILE%\bin) and add it to your account’s PATH environment variable. Windows combines environment variables with the same name, so anything in the machine PATH variable is also added to any user’s PATH, but not the other way around.Of course, you will have to add files, scripts, shortcuts, and symlinks to your /bin directory yourself. Windows installers do not expect such a thing and will not put files there automatically the way that Linux installers usually do.
Make sure to read through the other interesting answers for this question thread via the link below!
You can add text, such as page numbers, filename, worksheet name, and date, to the header and footer on your spreadsheet. But, what if you want the first page of your worksheet to have a different header than the rest? That’s an easy task to accomplish.
NOTE: We used Excel 2016 to illustrate this feature.
To make header and footer on the first page of the current worksheet different from the rest of the pages, click the “Page Layout” tab.
In the “Page Setup” section, click the “Page Setup” button in the lower-right corner.
The “Page Setup” dialog box displays. Click the “Header/Footer” tab.
Click the “Different first page” check box so there is a check mark in the box.
Once you’ve turned on the “Different first page” option, you can customize the header for the first page of the spreadsheet and the header for the rest of the pages. Click “Custom Header”.
The “Header” tab is where you specify the header for all the pages after the first page, which, in our example, is the page number and the total number of pages. For the first page of your spreadsheet, you may want to leave the header blank, which is the default. However, for our example, we’ll add different text. To do so, click the “First Page Header” tab.
Click in the “Left section” box, “Center section” box, or “Right section”, depending on where you want to put the content of your header. You can have content in all three boxes. We’re going to add the filename to the center of the header, so click in the “Center section” box and then click the “Insert File Name” button.
To accept your changes and close the “Header” dialog box, click “OK”.
You’re returned to the “Page Setup” dialog box. Click “OK” to close it.
We created a custom header in this example, but you can also create a custom footer in the same way using the “Custom Footer” button on the “Page Setup” dialog box.
You can also use this dialog box to make the header and footer different for odd and even pages, by selecting the “Different odd and even pages” check box on the “Header/Footer” tab on the “Page Setup” dialog box. Then, you can customize the different headers and footers for the odd and even pages using the “Custom Header” and “Custom Footer” buttons.
Android now allows you to customize the shortcuts that appear in your Quick Settings panel and the icons that appear on your status bar. This is part of the hidden “System UI Tuner” screen, added in Android 6.0 Marshmallow.
Google will probably add more features to the System UI Tuner in future versions of Android. It’s hidden, so you’ll never find it without someone telling you where it is — just like the Developer Options screen and Android’s hidden Easter egg.
Enable System UI Tuner
To enable the System UI Tuner, pull down the notification shade at the top of your Android smartphone or tablet’s screen. Long-press the gear icon that appears between the battery indicator and your profile image for about five seconds. Just hold it down until it begins to spin. A notification saying “Congrats! System UI Tuner has been added to Settings.”
Access the System UI Tuner
This is a new settings screen that will appear in Android’s system-wide settings app. To access it, open the app drawer and tap the “Settings” app icon. Scroll down to the bottom of the screen — you’ll see a new “System UI Tuner” option appear under About phone or About tablet. Tap it to access the formerly hidden options.
Open the System UI Tuner screen and Google warns you that these options are “Fun for some but not for all.” As Google puts it, “these experimental features may change, break or disappear in future releases. Proceed with caution.”
In a sense, this is like the chrome://flags interface in Chrome — both on Android and on desktop platforms. While the Developer Options screen hides options intended for developers, the System UI Tuner screen hides options intended for Android power users and tweakers.
Customize Your Quick Settings Tiles and Status Bar Icons
In the System UI Tuner’s initial release in Android 6.0 Marshmallow, there are just a few options here. You can customize the Quick Settings panel that appears along with your notifications when you pull down from the top of the screen, control what appears in the status bar, show battery percentage on the battery icon in the status bar, and enable a “Demo mode.”
The Quick Settings screen allows you to rearrange the tiles that appear here, remove tiles you don’t want to see, and add other tiles. You can also tap the menu button and tap “Reset” to restore the tiles to their default state if you decide you don’t like your customizations.
The Status bar screen allows you to hide certain icons from your status bar. You can choose to hide the Cast, Hotspot, Bluetooth, Do not disturb, Alarm, Work profile, Wi-Fi, Ethernet, Cellular data, and Airplane mode icons so they don’t clutter up your status bar.
The “Show embedded battery percentage” option modifies the battery icon that appears in that status bar. When not charging, the current battery percentage will be shown inside the battery icon so you don’t have to guess at it or pull up the notification panel to see the exact percentage.
You can also choose to enable “Demo mode.” In demo mode, the status bar is cleaned up and shows no notifications, a full battery, full Wi-Fi and cellular signal strength, and the time is always set to 6:00. This is just a visual trick — disable demo mode and all your notifications will still be there.
More options should appear here in the future, and Google may remove some of the current options. It’s a bit like about:flags in Chrome, but Google doesn’t seem to be testing out new features — they’re just giving users more options that Android’s developers haven’t figured out how to integrate into the normal settings interface yet.
Microsoft has really pushed Windows 10 to the point where it’s getting annoying — first they automatically installed a service that ran all the time to show the Get Windows 10 icon, and then they started automatically downloading Windows 10 onto people’s computers even when they didn’t want it. Now because of an “accident” they automatically triggered the installer on some people’s computers.
From ArsTechnica:
For the first year of its availability, Windows 10 is available for free to most Windows 7 and 8 users, and Microsoft has been trying to coax those users to make the switch by delivering the operating system through Windows Update. Until now, the OS has been delivered as an optional update; while Windows Update gives it prominent positioning, it shouldn’t be installed automatically.This system has already generated some complaints, as Windows Update will download the sizeable operating system installer even if you don’t intend to upgrade any time soon, but, over the last couple of days, the situation seems to have become a little more aggressive. We’ve received a number of reports that people’s systems are not merely downloading the installer but actually starting it up.
And from ZDNet:
Reports are circulating that some users are being presented with dialog boxes that only give them the option to start the upgrade process or reschedule it for a later date. Others are finding that the Windows Update screen is only offering them the option to begin the upgrade process, with other system updates being hidden from view.
We get it, Windows 10 is a free upgrade, and the security enhancements alone make it worthwhile for most people. When it was first released, we told everybody to hold off for a few months, which was good advice considering some of the problems people had. But by this point it’s getting a lot more stable, and their big service release update is right around the corner. It’sprobably worth doing the upgrade for the average person.
But there are a lot of people that are using software that just might not be compatible. Small businesses might be running important applications and can’t deal with the downtime of upgrading. It’s not right to automatically push down the entire operating system upgrade when nobody has asked for it.
Seriously, do they need to push it quite this hard? When you make a good product, people will want it, especially when it’s free. Over 100 million people have upgraded already, after all. There’s no reason for them to try and shove it onto everybody’s computer immediately.
On a completely unrelated has nothing to do with it note, some unconfirmed reports are saying that the insider builds of Windows 10 now have “suggested apps” in the Start Menu. Which sound a lot like ads for apps to us.
Total War Rome II
Download Game Total War: Rome II - PC Game - Full Version
Total War: Rome II
Release Date: September 3, 2013
Developer: The Creative Assembly
Publisher: Sega
Genre: Strategy/Real-Time Strategy
Release Date: September 3, 2013
Developer: The Creative Assembly
Publisher: Sega
Genre: Strategy/Real-Time Strategy
DOWNLOAD LINKS:
Total War Rome II
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