Showing posts with label system. Show all posts
Showing posts with label system. Show all posts
Wednesday, January 3, 2018
How to install infinity best on your system
How to install infinity best on your system
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Sunday, December 31, 2017
How to Remove System Applications or Bloatwares from your Android Device
How to Remove System Applications or Bloatwares from your Android Device
How to Remove System Applications or Bloatwares from your Android Device
When you buy a new Android device , there will always be few pre-loaded system applications which cant be uninstalled easily ..Some these applications are not only useless, but also consume a decent amount of ram ..Therefore now there came a need to uninstall these bloatwares.
Follow the below procedures to successfully uninstall these unfavorable apps .
Follow the below procedures to successfully uninstall these unfavorable apps .
STEP ! : Root your Android Device .
STEP 2: Download and install a free app from play store (Titanium Backup*root)
STEP 3: Open the application and click on backup and restore option.
STEP 4: From the drop down select the app which you want to remove.
STEP 5: Always take a backup of the app before removing it .(in case if you wish to restore it in the future)
STEP 6: Click on uninstall .
Thats it ..You have successfully uninstalled the bloatware from you android device .
CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD REQUIRED FILES
How To Recover Data From Crashed Operating System
How To Recover Data From Crashed Operating System
For windows users we are here with a cool method for How To Recover Data From Crashed Operating System. Due to viruses or any other factors operating system gets crashes in general cases and then your data is not accessible at that time. And the most worst case in then when you have your important data in your drive where OS was installed. Because when you install a new OS then the drive gets formatted and all your data get deleted. So here we have a way by which you can recover your lost data in crashed OS.
How To Recover Data From Crashed Operating System
In this method we will be discussing a way to recover out data before installing new OS that gonna deletes all your data installed in the drive containing OS. So have a look on the steps discussed below to proceed.
Steps To Recover Data From Corrupted OS:
- First of all download the Windows 7 USB/DVD Download Tool. This tool is available for free of cost by Micosoft Corporation.
- Don�t worry with software�s title thats is Windows 7. But this software works perfectly fine with Windows 7,8 or 8.1 and windows 10.
- Now you have to install the downloaded software. After installing it now you have to run it.
- Now in the opened window as shown below click on browse. Now locate the path ofWindows ISO file and select it then click on next button.
- Now in the next opened window you have to click on USB device because we are making bootable USB/Pendrive.
- The next thing is that you have to select the pendrive which you want to make bootable. Make sure that the your pendrive is empty. if not so then don�t worry a pop up will opens saying to erase data on your selected USB.
- Now the only thing is need to is just to copy windows files to do so you have to just click on Begin Copying. It takes around 20-25 minutes depending upon your system to make bootable USB. Lastly when you see the message �Bootable USB Device created successfully�.
- Now boot this Windows USB in your computer and there open recover option and browse there and move your important data in your pendrive.
The above is all about How To Recover Data From Crashed Operating System. Using this method you can easily recover your C drive data without installing the new windows and loosing all your important data.
Hope you like this post, keep on sharing with others too...THANKS.
Sunday, December 24, 2017
how to make a amplifier USB system
how to make a amplifier USB system
how to make a amplifier USB system
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Saturday, December 23, 2017
Immune System Attacked by Mobile Phones
Immune System Attacked by Mobile Phones
Immune System Attacked by Mobile Phones
Radiation from mobile phones can severely damage the human immune system, a scientist has claimed.
Biologist Roger Coghill has long campaigned for health warnings to be attached to mobile phones, which he has already linked to headaches and memory loss.
His latest research suggests the microwaves generated by mobile phones may damage the ability of white blood cells to act as the "policemen" of the body, fighting off infection and disease.
Mr Coghill took white blood cells, known as lymphocytes, from a donor, keeping them alive with nutritients and exposed them to different electric fields.
He found that after seven-and-a-half hours, just 13% of the cells exposed to mobile phone radiation remained intact and able to function, compared with 70% of cells exposed only to the natural electromagnetic field produced by the human body.
Bodys balance is upset
Mr Coghill claims the bodys immune system is partially controlled by electromagnetic fields emitted by the body. He believes the radiation emitted by mobile phones damages the bodys own electromagnetic fields, and undermines the proper functioning of the immune system.
Mr Coghill has launched a legal test case against a mobile phone shop for allegedly failing to warn customers of the potential risk of radiation.
The industry is worth a �14bn a year in Britain alone.
Industry attacks findings
Mr Coghill was criticised by a leading industry figure for not announcing his findings before they had been reviewed by experts and published in a recognised scientific journal.
Tom Wills-Sandford, director of the Federation of the Electronics Industry, which represents mobile phone manufacturers, said: "None of the proper scientific protocol has been followed.
"This is not a proper way to conduct science, and one wonders if these results will ever be published properly."
Mr Wills-Sandford said an enormous amount of research had been carried out into the safety of mobile phones but none had produced any real evidence of a risk to health.
Scientifically sound
But Mr Coghill, who spoke at a conference on mobile phone safety in London on Thursday, insisted that his results were scientifically sound and should not be ignored.
He said: "We found that the competence of these white blood cells was depleted after being exposed for seven or eight hours to a mobile phone on standby.
"Theres a possibility that we are damaging lymphocyte performance simply by having these phones on standby next to our bodies."
Mr Coghill said there was no danger in using mobile phones for two or three minutes.
But people who left them on for 20 minutes or more could be doing themselves harm.
If even 5% of the estimated 10 million users left their phones switched on it would mean 500,000 people were at risk, he said.
Mr Coghill said: "What Im asking for is that the industry recognises that and puts warning labels on their phones."
He said a paper on his findings was accepted for inclusion at a major scientific meeting in Florida, USA, in June.
He was also going to be forwarding the results to a recognised journal and co-operating with other scientists trying to replicate the findings.
A spokesman for the National Radiological Protection Board, the radiation watchdog, said: "We have no comment to make on the claims made by Roger Coghill. If his work is published in a scientific journal it will be reviewed by the NRPBs advisory group on non-ionising radiation."
Reproduced from http://news.bbc.co.uk/
Friday, December 22, 2017
How to know IP address of your system
How to know IP address of your system
To know ip address of your pc there are two simple steps.
Then type ipconfig and press enter you will find your ip address.


- first you open the command prompt in your PC.
Then type ipconfig and press enter you will find your ip address.

- second in your internet connection properties click details on that and you will find your Ip.

Sunday, December 17, 2017
How to install DISQUS Comment System in Blogger Blog
How to install DISQUS Comment System in Blogger Blog

Comments are an important feature to keep in touch with your blog readers, it gives you an idea about what people thinks about your blog and blog posts. It also gives freedom to readers to share their views on your blog and blog posts. If you are using blogger, their are two pre-made comment systems by default i.e Blogger Comments and Google+ Comments, but both of the comments systems does not allow you to login with Facebook and Twitter, infact Google+ comment system only supports Google+ users to comment. But what if your commenters wants to comment with Facebook, Twitter and Google in order to leave comments?
Dont worry! I have a solution, give a try to Disqus Comment System.
What is Disqus?
So the first thing in your mind is What is Disqus. Lets first read what Disqus says about itself!
" Disqus is a networked community platform used by hundreds of thousands of sites all over the web. With Disqus, your website gains a feature-rich comment system complete with social network integration, advanced administration and moderation options, and other extensive community functions. Most importantly, by utilizing Disqus, you are instantly plugging into our web-wide community network, connecting millions of global users to your small blog or large media hub. "
READ ALSO: How To Import Old Blogger Comments Into Disqus?
There are millions of sites using Disqus, because its easy to use, easy to install and gives much more powerful tools to engage visitors. It gives commenters 4 ways to start using Disqus, you can create an account by connecting Disqus with your Facebook, Twitter, Google account or by putting up your email ID. So lets begin the tutorial!
How to install DISQUS Comment System in Blogger Blog?
1. Register a New Account:
You can easily signup with your existing Facebook, Twitter and Google ID or you can signup by giving your email address and verifying your email address.

2. Add Disqus on Blogger:
After signing up and verifying email, look to right top corner, where it gives Setting Options. Click on it, a drop down will come, select Add disqus to site option.

After clicking that you will be able to see Add Disqus To Site page, fill information and click on Finish Registration button.

Now you will be asked to choose your blog platform. Click on Blogger and don�t forget to verify your email.
After choosing your platform you will see two options that is integrating Disqus in your blog and importing comments from your blog.
Click on Add ----- to my blogger site option.
On the next page, select your desired blog, give it a title and click on Add Widget.
Thats it! You have installed Disqus Comment System on your Blogger blog.
From My Desk:
Disqus in my opinion, is the best commenting system so far, it is more powerful than old comment systems. If you need a demo, you see it on this blog (And do not forget to comment! lol!). I would strongly recommend Disqus for your blog. I would suggest you to read my post on How to Import Old Blogger Comments Into Disqus.
Saturday, December 16, 2017
Idealized Design How Bell Labs Imagined and Created the Telephone System of the Future
Idealized Design How Bell Labs Imagined and Created the Telephone System of the Future
Idealized Design: How Bell Labs Imagined -- and Created -- the Telephone System of the Future
Idealized design is a way of thinking about change that is deceptively simple to state: In solving problems of virtually any kind, the way to get the best outcome is to imagine what the ideal solution would be and then work backward to where you are today. This ensures that you do not erect imaginary obstacles before you even know what the ideal is.
Nothing better illustrates the power of this idea in action than the experience that one of the authors, Russell L. Ackoff, had many years ago. The experience both enlightened him and proved to him that the idea could facilitate profound change in a major corporation. To relate the experience, this author "steps forward":
In every life, there are seminal experiences that exert their influence on a great deal of experience that follows. The one that is responsible for this book took place in 1951. I was then a member of the faculty of Case Institute of Technology in Cleveland, Ohio. (It had not yet merged with Western Reserve University.) On a consulting trip to New York, I drove down to Bell Labs in Murray Hill, New Jersey, to see Peter Meyers, a manager whom Id met when he had come to Case to recruit promising graduate students for the labs.
It so happened that on the day of my visit he and other managers had been summoned to an important -- but last-minute -- conference by the vice president of Bell Labs. After some hesitation, Peter Meyers said, "Why dont you come with me?" I pointed out it was a meeting for section heads and I was not even an employee of the labs. He said that no one would know the difference.
We arrived at a typical classroom that held about forty people and was almost full. The vice president was not there yet. Nor did he appear on time. This was very unusual. He was a big man, extroverted, and voluble. He could not get near someone without punching, pinching, pushing, hugging, or pounding them on the back.
About ten minutes after the hour, the door to the room squeaked open. All eyes turned to it, and there he was. He was obviously very upset. He was a pasty gray and bent over as he slowly shuffled down the aisle without a word to anyone. He mounted the platform, stood behind the podium, put his elbows on it, and held his head in his two hands, looking down.
The room was dead silent. Finally, he looked up and in an uncharacteristically meek voice said, "Gentlemen, the telephone system of the United States was destroyed last night." Then he looked down again.
The room broke out in a hubbub of whispered conversations saying that his statement was not true. Many in the room had used a phone that morning. The vice president looked up and said, "You dont believe the system was destroyed last night, do you? Some of you probably used the phone this morning, didnt you?" Most of the heads in the room shook with assent. The vice president began to tremble with rage. He shouted, "The telephone system was destroyed last night and you had better believe it. If you dont by noon, youll be fired."
He then looked down again. "What was wrong with the VP?" everyone was asking each other. But because discretion is the better part of valor where ones boss is involved, the whispers stopped as all waited for further word from him and an explanation of his erratic behavior.
The vice president looked up and glowered at the group. Then he suddenly straightened up, his normal color seemed to return, and he broke out in a great big belly laugh. All those in the room also began to laugh. They did not know why they were laughing, but it released the tension that his unusual behavior had created. It began to dawn on all of us that his behavior had been a trick.
After the laughter died down, he said in his normal voice with his normal demeanor, "What was that all about? Well, in the last issue of the Scientific American," he said, "there was an article that said that these laboratories are the best industrially based R&D laboratories in the world. I agreed, but it got me thinking."
He reached into the inside pocket of his jacket and withdrew a piece of paper and said, "Ive made a list of those contributions to the development of telephonic communications that I believe have earned us this reputation. Before I share my list with you, Id like your opinions. What do you think are the most important contributions we have ever made to this development?"
Almost every hand in the room went up. He called on one of those with a raised hand. He said, "The dial." "Right," said the vice president. "This is certainly one of the most important. Do any of you know when we introduced the dial?" One in the room volunteered a date in the 1930s. The vice president agreed. He then asked, "When was it developed?" No one knew.
He said he had not known either but had looked it up before he came to the meeting. He said, "It was before 1900." We were surprised to say the least. He pressed on, asking for another candidate. The next one offered was multiplexing, a way of transmitting multiple conversations simultaneously over one wire. This yielded an enormous increase in the capacity of AT&Ts network. "Right," the vice president repeated. He once again asked when it has been introduced. Someone knew it had been between the two world wars. The vice president confirmed this and asked, "When was it invented?" No one knew. Again he revealed that it was before 1900.
He asked for one more suggestion. The person he called on said, "The coaxial cable that connected the United States and Great Britain." The vice president agreed and asked when it had been built. Someone knew: 1882.
"Doesnt it strike you as odd," he said, "that the three most important contributions this laboratory has ever made to telephonic communications were made beofre any of you were born? What have you been doing?" he asked. "Ill tell you," he said. "You have been improving the parts of the system taken separately, but you have not significantly improved the system as a whole. The deficiency," he said, "is not yours but mine. Weve had the wrong research-and-development strategy. Weve been focusing on improving parts of the system rather than focusing on the system as a whole. As a result, we have been improving the parts, but not the whole. We have got to restart by focusing on desiging the whole and then designing parts that fit it rather than vice versa. Therefore, gentlemen, we are going to begin by designing the system with which we would replace the existing system right now if we were free to replace it with whatever system we wanted, subject to only two not-very-restrictive constraints.
"First," he continued, "let me explain why we will focus on what we want right now, not out five or ten years. Why? Because we know that where we say today we would like to be five years from now is not where we will want to be when we get there. Things will happen between now and then that will affect our goals and objectives. By focusing on what we want right now, we can eliminate that potential source of error."
"Second, why remove practically all constraints? Because if we dont know what we would do now if we could do whatever we wanted, how can we know what to do when we cant do everything we want? If we knew what we would do with virtually no constraints, we could modify it, if necessary, to become feasible and adapt it to changing internal and external conditions as time goes on."
"Now, here are the two constraints. First, technological feasibility. This means we cannot use any but currently available knowledge. No science fiction. We cant replace the phone with mental telepathy. The second constraint," he said, was that "the system we design must be operationally viable. What does that mean? Because we are not changing the environment, it means that the system must be able to function and survive in the current environment. For example, it will have to obey current laws and regulations."
The vice president then said, "This group is too large to operate as a single group. Therefore, I am going to divide you into six subgroups of about six each, each with responsibility for a subsystem. Each group will select a representative to meet with other representatives at least once a week to discuss interactions. Let me explain.
"Each group will be able to design whatever it wants as long as it does not affect any other groups design. If what a group wants to do does affect one or more other groups designs, it must get their agreement before it can be included in their design. I can tell you in advance," he said, "that the groups will do little that does not affect other groups. At the end of the year," he said, "I want to see one completely integrated system design, not six subsystem designs. I dont even want to know what the individual teams came up with. Is that clear?" he asked.
He created a "long lines" (inter-city communication) team, a "short lines" (within city communication) team, a switching stations team, two other teams, and finally the telephone set team, on which I found myself with my friend Peter Meyers.
When the meeting was adjourned, the teams immediately gathered so that their members got to know each other. When Peter introduced me to the other members of our team, they thought it very funny that an "outsider" had successfully invaded their meeting. But, they said, the vice president had not precluded their use of "outsiders." Therefore, they invited me to participate in the effort. As a result, I spent a great deal of time in the next year with that team. What a learning experience it was!
The first meeting took place after lunch that day. The seven of us, six from the labs and I, met in a small breakout room. After the amenities, we discussed where we should begin. We decided to list the properties we wanted a telephone to have. We noted suggestions on a pad mounted on an easel. The first few were as follows:
� Every call I receive is intended for me -- no wrong numbers.
� I want to know who is calling before I answer the phone so I need not answer it if I dont want to speak to the caller.
� A phone I can use with no hands.
� A phone that comes with me wherever I am, not one I have to go to in a fixed location.
We continued to add to this list for several weeks, ending with just more than ninety properties we wanted a phone to have. These properties became very complicated near the end. For example, we wanted to be able to talk simultaneously to groups in multiple locations, see all of them, and be able to transmit documents or charts instantaneously.
But we ran dry. We noted, however, that we had designed nothing yet, so decided to try our hands at it. We decided to select the first property on our list -- no wrong numbers -- and see if we could design a phone that met this requirement.
At this point, I almost destroyed my credibility in the group by pointing out that there were two kinds of wrong numbers. One consisted of having the right number in ones head but dialing it incorrectly. The other consisted of having the wrong number in ones head and dialing it correctly. One member of the group immediately pointed out that if one had the wrong number in ones head and dialed it incorrectly, one might get the right number. Fortunately, the group decided this was too rare to be of concern but that the percentage of wrong numbers of each type was of concern.
Here I was able to save credibility a bit because I knew the head of the psychology department at the labs. I called him using the phone in the room. After the amendities, I asked him if he had ever done any work on wrong numbers. He exploded at the end of the line. It was minutes before I could understand him. It turned out that he had been doing work on wrong numbers for a number of years, and I was the first one to ask him about it. He wanted to unload all of his results on me. I had to convince him otherwise. After he calmed down, I learned that four out of five wrong numbers were the result of incorrectly dialing the right number in ones head. We decided to go to work on this.
An amazing thing happened; in less than an hour, we found a way, conceptually, to reduce, if not eliminate, such errors. We replaced the dial by -- what did not exist at that time -- a small handheld calculator. There were ten keys, one for each digit, a register, and a red key in the lower-right corner. The phone was to be used as follows. Leaving the phone "on the hook," one would put into the phone the number one wanted to call by pressing the appropriate buttons. These numbers would appear on the register. If these numbers, on examination, appear to be correct, one would lift the receiver and the whole number would go through at once. If the number on the register was wrong, one would press the red button in the corner. This would clear the phone, and one would start over.
We were very pleased with ourselves, but nevertheless we recognized that we did not know whether such a phone was technologically feasible. (The handheld calculator was not yet available.) Therefore, we called a department of the lab that worked on miniaturization and asked for technical help. They sent two young men down to our meeting. They appeared to be fresh out of school, still wearing their intellectual diapers.
As we described what we were trying to do, they began to whisper to each other and were soon more absorbed in their private conversation than in what we were saying. This bothered us, but such behavior was not entirely unexpected in an R&D laboratory. However, they suddenly got up and hurried out of the room with no explanation. We were furious but decided to let it pass for the time being. We went on to another property.
Several weeks later, the young men appeared at one of our sessions looking sheepish and apologetic. They said, "You probably wondered why we ran out on you when we were here last." We told them this was an understatement. They explained, "We were very excited by what you were doing but not for the reasons you were. We did not want to take the time to explain. That wrong-number stuff was not as interesting as the buttons."
They went on, "We went back and built a push-button telephone and tested it on a very large number of people. It turns out to take about twelve seconds less to put in seven digits by pushing buttons than turning a dial, and additional time is saved by not occupying a line until after the number is put in and the receiver is picked up. The combined saving in time is worth millions to AT&T," they said, "so we have started a project to develop that telephone. We have given it a code name that is being kept secret for now." They looked around the room to be sure no one was listening and then told us, "Touch tone."
Before the year was over, the groups had established the technological feasibility of each of our many design features. The group of design teams continued to work after I was no longer a participant, and they anticipated every change in the telephone system, except two, that has appeared since then. Among these are touch-tone phones, consumer ownership of phones, call waiting, call forwarding, voice mail, caller ID, conference calls, speaker phones, speed dialing of numbers in memory, and mobile phones. They did not anticipate photography by the phone or an Internet connection.
The impact of the design we produced was greater than the impact of any other effort to change a system that I had ever seen. As a result, I began to adapt and modify the procedure to fit such other applications that we describe in this book. As you will see, its use has been extensive and is still growing.
This experience is a convincing example of how idealized design can literally move mountains of change. However, applying the process involves not only discarding old mindsets that inhibit creative thinking but knowing the steps that we have learned work best in applying it. The book is intended to take you through the process with many examples of different organizations in different industries.
Idealized design is a way of thinking about change that is deceptively simple to state: In solving problems of virtually any kind, the way to get the best outcome is to imagine what the ideal solution would be and then work backward to where you are today. This ensures that you do not erect imaginary obstacles before you even know what the ideal is.
Nothing better illustrates the power of this idea in action than the experience that one of the authors, Russell L. Ackoff, had many years ago. The experience both enlightened him and proved to him that the idea could facilitate profound change in a major corporation. To relate the experience, this author "steps forward":
In every life, there are seminal experiences that exert their influence on a great deal of experience that follows. The one that is responsible for this book took place in 1951. I was then a member of the faculty of Case Institute of Technology in Cleveland, Ohio. (It had not yet merged with Western Reserve University.) On a consulting trip to New York, I drove down to Bell Labs in Murray Hill, New Jersey, to see Peter Meyers, a manager whom Id met when he had come to Case to recruit promising graduate students for the labs.
It so happened that on the day of my visit he and other managers had been summoned to an important -- but last-minute -- conference by the vice president of Bell Labs. After some hesitation, Peter Meyers said, "Why dont you come with me?" I pointed out it was a meeting for section heads and I was not even an employee of the labs. He said that no one would know the difference.
We arrived at a typical classroom that held about forty people and was almost full. The vice president was not there yet. Nor did he appear on time. This was very unusual. He was a big man, extroverted, and voluble. He could not get near someone without punching, pinching, pushing, hugging, or pounding them on the back.
About ten minutes after the hour, the door to the room squeaked open. All eyes turned to it, and there he was. He was obviously very upset. He was a pasty gray and bent over as he slowly shuffled down the aisle without a word to anyone. He mounted the platform, stood behind the podium, put his elbows on it, and held his head in his two hands, looking down.
The room was dead silent. Finally, he looked up and in an uncharacteristically meek voice said, "Gentlemen, the telephone system of the United States was destroyed last night." Then he looked down again.
The room broke out in a hubbub of whispered conversations saying that his statement was not true. Many in the room had used a phone that morning. The vice president looked up and said, "You dont believe the system was destroyed last night, do you? Some of you probably used the phone this morning, didnt you?" Most of the heads in the room shook with assent. The vice president began to tremble with rage. He shouted, "The telephone system was destroyed last night and you had better believe it. If you dont by noon, youll be fired."
He then looked down again. "What was wrong with the VP?" everyone was asking each other. But because discretion is the better part of valor where ones boss is involved, the whispers stopped as all waited for further word from him and an explanation of his erratic behavior.
The vice president looked up and glowered at the group. Then he suddenly straightened up, his normal color seemed to return, and he broke out in a great big belly laugh. All those in the room also began to laugh. They did not know why they were laughing, but it released the tension that his unusual behavior had created. It began to dawn on all of us that his behavior had been a trick.
After the laughter died down, he said in his normal voice with his normal demeanor, "What was that all about? Well, in the last issue of the Scientific American," he said, "there was an article that said that these laboratories are the best industrially based R&D laboratories in the world. I agreed, but it got me thinking."
He reached into the inside pocket of his jacket and withdrew a piece of paper and said, "Ive made a list of those contributions to the development of telephonic communications that I believe have earned us this reputation. Before I share my list with you, Id like your opinions. What do you think are the most important contributions we have ever made to this development?"
Almost every hand in the room went up. He called on one of those with a raised hand. He said, "The dial." "Right," said the vice president. "This is certainly one of the most important. Do any of you know when we introduced the dial?" One in the room volunteered a date in the 1930s. The vice president agreed. He then asked, "When was it developed?" No one knew.
He said he had not known either but had looked it up before he came to the meeting. He said, "It was before 1900." We were surprised to say the least. He pressed on, asking for another candidate. The next one offered was multiplexing, a way of transmitting multiple conversations simultaneously over one wire. This yielded an enormous increase in the capacity of AT&Ts network. "Right," the vice president repeated. He once again asked when it has been introduced. Someone knew it had been between the two world wars. The vice president confirmed this and asked, "When was it invented?" No one knew. Again he revealed that it was before 1900.
He asked for one more suggestion. The person he called on said, "The coaxial cable that connected the United States and Great Britain." The vice president agreed and asked when it had been built. Someone knew: 1882.
"Doesnt it strike you as odd," he said, "that the three most important contributions this laboratory has ever made to telephonic communications were made beofre any of you were born? What have you been doing?" he asked. "Ill tell you," he said. "You have been improving the parts of the system taken separately, but you have not significantly improved the system as a whole. The deficiency," he said, "is not yours but mine. Weve had the wrong research-and-development strategy. Weve been focusing on improving parts of the system rather than focusing on the system as a whole. As a result, we have been improving the parts, but not the whole. We have got to restart by focusing on desiging the whole and then designing parts that fit it rather than vice versa. Therefore, gentlemen, we are going to begin by designing the system with which we would replace the existing system right now if we were free to replace it with whatever system we wanted, subject to only two not-very-restrictive constraints.
"First," he continued, "let me explain why we will focus on what we want right now, not out five or ten years. Why? Because we know that where we say today we would like to be five years from now is not where we will want to be when we get there. Things will happen between now and then that will affect our goals and objectives. By focusing on what we want right now, we can eliminate that potential source of error."
"Second, why remove practically all constraints? Because if we dont know what we would do now if we could do whatever we wanted, how can we know what to do when we cant do everything we want? If we knew what we would do with virtually no constraints, we could modify it, if necessary, to become feasible and adapt it to changing internal and external conditions as time goes on."
"Now, here are the two constraints. First, technological feasibility. This means we cannot use any but currently available knowledge. No science fiction. We cant replace the phone with mental telepathy. The second constraint," he said, was that "the system we design must be operationally viable. What does that mean? Because we are not changing the environment, it means that the system must be able to function and survive in the current environment. For example, it will have to obey current laws and regulations."
The vice president then said, "This group is too large to operate as a single group. Therefore, I am going to divide you into six subgroups of about six each, each with responsibility for a subsystem. Each group will select a representative to meet with other representatives at least once a week to discuss interactions. Let me explain.
"Each group will be able to design whatever it wants as long as it does not affect any other groups design. If what a group wants to do does affect one or more other groups designs, it must get their agreement before it can be included in their design. I can tell you in advance," he said, "that the groups will do little that does not affect other groups. At the end of the year," he said, "I want to see one completely integrated system design, not six subsystem designs. I dont even want to know what the individual teams came up with. Is that clear?" he asked.
He created a "long lines" (inter-city communication) team, a "short lines" (within city communication) team, a switching stations team, two other teams, and finally the telephone set team, on which I found myself with my friend Peter Meyers.
When the meeting was adjourned, the teams immediately gathered so that their members got to know each other. When Peter introduced me to the other members of our team, they thought it very funny that an "outsider" had successfully invaded their meeting. But, they said, the vice president had not precluded their use of "outsiders." Therefore, they invited me to participate in the effort. As a result, I spent a great deal of time in the next year with that team. What a learning experience it was!
The first meeting took place after lunch that day. The seven of us, six from the labs and I, met in a small breakout room. After the amenities, we discussed where we should begin. We decided to list the properties we wanted a telephone to have. We noted suggestions on a pad mounted on an easel. The first few were as follows:
� Every call I receive is intended for me -- no wrong numbers.
� I want to know who is calling before I answer the phone so I need not answer it if I dont want to speak to the caller.
� A phone I can use with no hands.
� A phone that comes with me wherever I am, not one I have to go to in a fixed location.
We continued to add to this list for several weeks, ending with just more than ninety properties we wanted a phone to have. These properties became very complicated near the end. For example, we wanted to be able to talk simultaneously to groups in multiple locations, see all of them, and be able to transmit documents or charts instantaneously.
But we ran dry. We noted, however, that we had designed nothing yet, so decided to try our hands at it. We decided to select the first property on our list -- no wrong numbers -- and see if we could design a phone that met this requirement.
At this point, I almost destroyed my credibility in the group by pointing out that there were two kinds of wrong numbers. One consisted of having the right number in ones head but dialing it incorrectly. The other consisted of having the wrong number in ones head and dialing it correctly. One member of the group immediately pointed out that if one had the wrong number in ones head and dialed it incorrectly, one might get the right number. Fortunately, the group decided this was too rare to be of concern but that the percentage of wrong numbers of each type was of concern.
Here I was able to save credibility a bit because I knew the head of the psychology department at the labs. I called him using the phone in the room. After the amendities, I asked him if he had ever done any work on wrong numbers. He exploded at the end of the line. It was minutes before I could understand him. It turned out that he had been doing work on wrong numbers for a number of years, and I was the first one to ask him about it. He wanted to unload all of his results on me. I had to convince him otherwise. After he calmed down, I learned that four out of five wrong numbers were the result of incorrectly dialing the right number in ones head. We decided to go to work on this.
An amazing thing happened; in less than an hour, we found a way, conceptually, to reduce, if not eliminate, such errors. We replaced the dial by -- what did not exist at that time -- a small handheld calculator. There were ten keys, one for each digit, a register, and a red key in the lower-right corner. The phone was to be used as follows. Leaving the phone "on the hook," one would put into the phone the number one wanted to call by pressing the appropriate buttons. These numbers would appear on the register. If these numbers, on examination, appear to be correct, one would lift the receiver and the whole number would go through at once. If the number on the register was wrong, one would press the red button in the corner. This would clear the phone, and one would start over.
We were very pleased with ourselves, but nevertheless we recognized that we did not know whether such a phone was technologically feasible. (The handheld calculator was not yet available.) Therefore, we called a department of the lab that worked on miniaturization and asked for technical help. They sent two young men down to our meeting. They appeared to be fresh out of school, still wearing their intellectual diapers.
As we described what we were trying to do, they began to whisper to each other and were soon more absorbed in their private conversation than in what we were saying. This bothered us, but such behavior was not entirely unexpected in an R&D laboratory. However, they suddenly got up and hurried out of the room with no explanation. We were furious but decided to let it pass for the time being. We went on to another property.
Several weeks later, the young men appeared at one of our sessions looking sheepish and apologetic. They said, "You probably wondered why we ran out on you when we were here last." We told them this was an understatement. They explained, "We were very excited by what you were doing but not for the reasons you were. We did not want to take the time to explain. That wrong-number stuff was not as interesting as the buttons."
They went on, "We went back and built a push-button telephone and tested it on a very large number of people. It turns out to take about twelve seconds less to put in seven digits by pushing buttons than turning a dial, and additional time is saved by not occupying a line until after the number is put in and the receiver is picked up. The combined saving in time is worth millions to AT&T," they said, "so we have started a project to develop that telephone. We have given it a code name that is being kept secret for now." They looked around the room to be sure no one was listening and then told us, "Touch tone."
Before the year was over, the groups had established the technological feasibility of each of our many design features. The group of design teams continued to work after I was no longer a participant, and they anticipated every change in the telephone system, except two, that has appeared since then. Among these are touch-tone phones, consumer ownership of phones, call waiting, call forwarding, voice mail, caller ID, conference calls, speaker phones, speed dialing of numbers in memory, and mobile phones. They did not anticipate photography by the phone or an Internet connection.
The impact of the design we produced was greater than the impact of any other effort to change a system that I had ever seen. As a result, I began to adapt and modify the procedure to fit such other applications that we describe in this book. As you will see, its use has been extensive and is still growing.
This experience is a convincing example of how idealized design can literally move mountains of change. However, applying the process involves not only discarding old mindsets that inhibit creative thinking but knowing the steps that we have learned work best in applying it. The book is intended to take you through the process with many examples of different organizations in different industries.
http://knowledge.wharton.upenn.edu/article/1541.cfm
Idealized Design: How to Solve Tomorrows Crisis...Today (Wharton School Publishing), authors Russell L. Ackoff, Jason Magidson and Herbert J. Addison
Tuesday, December 12, 2017
How to Improve System Speed
How to Improve System Speed
How to Improve System Speed.
Installing too many programs on the PC creates problem and lower the system speed. You should periodically check the programs installed on the PC and remove the all unnecessary softwares.
Most computer problems occur because something in the computer has recently changed. You may not be able to easily undo the effects of a power failure or spilling coffee on your keyboard, but if youve recently installed software, try uninstalling it.
Most software can be easily uninstalled from Windows XP using Add Or Remove Programs in the Control Panel.
If a software program offers an Uninstall option, use it form that Programs group.
Click the program listing under Start All Programs. Right-click the program you want to uninstall. If an Uninstall option is offered, use it.
Remove any software program with the Add Or Remove Programs utility under Control Panel.
If there is no Uninstall option, go to Start Control Panel and select Add Or Remove Programs .
Scroll down the list of the installed programs until you reach the program you want to uninstall. Select it and click the Change/Remove button. This will uninstall the program.
you can ask more questions through email : msaqib9@hotmail.com
How to reload the BlackBerry Z10 or Q10 operating system
How to reload the BlackBerry Z10 or Q10 operating system
How to reload the BlackBerry Z10 or Q10 operating system
Have you ever been in the position where your BlackBerry Z10 or BlackBerry Q10 simply won�t start up? Are you getting just a red flashing light but nothing else, no matter how many times you remove and reinsert the battery? Have no fear: just follow our handy guide below and you will see how you can reload your BlackBerry using BlackBerry Link, a USB cable and a little time!
When a BlackBerry 10 device is only flashing the red light and refusing to boot up, this indicates that the device�s operating system has become corrupted. The flashing light may follow the pattern of 1, 2 or 3 short blips, with a longer pause between the sets.
In order to fix this, you need to re-install the operating system on the device, which will then set the device back to its original factory state.
Please note: this process will completely wipe your device, so please make sure you have a backup of your personal information available to restore before going through this process.
- Download and install the latest version of BlackBerry Link for your computer.
- Open BlackBerry Link software.
- Plug in the BlackBerry device using your USB cable.
- At the bottom left of the program, find the device youre having issues with and select it by clicking on it.
- The BlackBerry Link application will then ask to either reconnect or reload the device software. Choose Reload.
- Confirm the reload when prompted to do so, which will wipe clean any data previously on the handset.
- Allow the reload to complete, which can take some time. Whilst this is underway, the device will have a solid green light. This process of downloading and reinstalling the device can take an hour or more, depending on the speed of your internet connection, so please dont disconnect the BlackBerry until the process has finished.
- Once the restore is complete, simply set up your device again, or restore it from a previous backup stored on your machine. However, if you want to restore a previous backup, remember to sign in to your BlackBerry ID on the device first!
Saturday, December 9, 2017
How to make your PC talk like a JARVIS system of IRONMAN movie
How to make your PC talk like a JARVIS system of IRONMAN movie
This article is about making your PC talk like a JARVIS system of IRONMAN movie. It seems unreal, but it is possible too !
If you must have seen the IRONMAN movie series, then you must be a huge fan of the JARVIS system.
In IRONMAN movie, it was the JARVIS operating system that helped Tony Stark (Robert Downey Jr.) to do his tasks by voice command and in reply, he also got some voice as human would reply. If you could also make your PC talk like a JARVIS system of IRONMAN movie, then wont be that amazing?
JARVIS of IRONMAN movie was an imaginary machine. Human beings have not developed that much that we can have that much big machine like JARVIS operating system right now, but surely we can help you to develop a small project that works like JARVIS system of IRONMAN movie.
Lets take an instance of what we�re going to work upon on this project of making your PC talk like a JARVIS system of IRONMAN movie ?
Your own JARVIS system will work something like this..
Give your PC a name like �My PC� so whenever you�ll say �My PC� it will reply �Hello sir !� or �Good Morning !�
OR
You: Who are you?
Computer : I�m chitti The robo Speed, 1 terahertz, memory, one zettabyte. (Just Like Rajnikanth�s Movie �ROBOT�, ENTHIRAN in Tamil.)
Computer : I�m chitti The robo Speed, 1 terahertz, memory, one zettabyte. (Just Like Rajnikanth�s Movie �ROBOT�, ENTHIRAN in Tamil.)
You: Good Morning my PC !
Computer : Good Morning Mr. Ashish ! How are you ?
Computer : Good Morning Mr. Ashish ! How are you ?
So, let us start our project and convert our computer into JARVIS system just like the Movie Ironman !
Just Follow these codes below to convert our computer into JARVIS system just like the Movie Ironman!
Don�t worry, it doesn�t need any programming skills !
Steps Innvolved >>
- First, you need a microphone or internal Microphone of computer will work!
- You must have Windows 7 (or Higher version)
- Download Windows speech macros from here. or click the button below to start download!

4. Install the speech macros
5. Open Notepad and copy the code below.
<speechMacros>
<command>
<listenFor>Hello</listenFor>
<speak>Good Morning</speak>
</command>
</speechMacros>
6. Paste above code in NotePad and save as �Anyname.WSRMac�
7. Then Goto your WSRMac file and right click on it.
8. Now click on �import signing Certificate� and automatically it will save a digital signature for it.
Now Open Speech recognition And Say Your Command. Enjoy Talking to your Computer !
For the above example, your command is Hello and the reply is Good Morning. You can replace these two words in the code to get some cool answers !
This article was all about making your PC talk like a JARVIS system of IRONMAN movie.
If you liked this article of making your PC talk like a JARVIS system of IRONMAN movie, then please share it with your friends too !You can also make use of following Social Sharing buttons
If you liked this article of making your PC talk like a JARVIS system of IRONMAN movie, then please share it with your friends too !You can also make use of following Social Sharing buttons
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