Monday, September 28, 2009

Quick Access to Anything Without a Mouse!

If your someone like me who wants quick access to everything then just listen to
what I have to say. This article will tell you how to makes shortcuts on your keyboard
that are Ctrl + Alt + "Any Key Of Your Choice." Heres what you have to do:

1. Make shortcuts of the programs you want shortcuts to somewhere in your start menu.

2. Right click on one of them and click on Properties.

3. Now click on Shortcut if its not already there.

4. Click on ShortCut Key's white area box and type a letter other than ones used
by XP like Ctrl Alt Del and stuff. I used the number 1 through 0 (after 9).

Do that and it should work. If it doesn't make sure its in the Programs part of
the Start Menu, I haven't tried outside programs, if it still doesn't work go to
the help section and ask a microsoft person.
Shutdown XP Faster

When a user shuts down Windows XP, first the system has to kill all services
currently running. Every once in a while the service does not shut down
instantly and windows gives it a change to shut down on its own before it kills it.
This amount of time that windows waits is stored in the system registry.
If you modify this setting, then windows will kill the service earlier. To modify
the setting, follow the directions below:

Start Regedit.
Navigate to HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE/SYSTEM/CurrentControlSet/Control.
Click on the "Control" Folder.
Select "WaitToKillServiceTimeout"
Right click on it and select Modify.
Set it a value lower than 2000 (Mine is set to 200).

Sunday, September 20, 2009


WiBro(Wireless Broband):

WiBro (Wireless Broadband) is a wireless broadband Internet technology developed by the South Korean telecoms industry. WiBro is the South Korean service name for IEEE 802.16e (mobileWiMAX) international standard.

WiBro adopts TDD for duplexing, OFDMA for multiple access and 8.75 MHz as a channel bandwidth. WiBro was devised to overcome the data rate limitation of mobile phones (for exampleCDMA 1x) and to add mobility to broadband Internet access (for example ADSL or Wireless LAN). In February 2002, the Korean government allocated 100 MHz of electromagnetic spectrum in the 2.3 - 2.4 GHz band, and in late 2004 WiBro Phase 1 was standardized by the TTA of Korea and in late 2005 ITU reflected WiBro as IEEE 802.16e (mobile WiMAX). Two South Korean Telcom (KT,SKT) launched commercial service in June 2006, and the tariff is around US$30.

WiBro base stations will offer an aggregate data throughput of 30 to 50 Mbit/s per carrier and cover a radius of 1–5 km allowing for the use of portable internet usage. In detail, it will provide mobility for moving devices up to 120 km/h (74.5 miles/h) compared to Wireless LAN having mobility up to walking speed and Mobile Phone having mobility up to 250 km/h. From testing during the APEC Summit in Busan in late 2005, the actual range and bandwidth were quite a bit lower than these numbers. The technology will also offer Quality of Service. The inclusion of QoS allows for WiBro to stream video content and other loss-sensitive data in a reliable manner. These all appear to be (and may be) the stronger advantages over the fixed WiMAX standard (802.16a). Some Telcos in many countries are trying to commercialize this Mobile WiMAX (or WiBro). For example, TI (Italia), TVA (Brazil), Omnivision (Venezuela), PORTUS (Croatia), and Arialink (Michigan) will provide commercial service after test service around 2006-2007. While WiBro is quite exacting in its requirements from spectrum use to equipment design, WiMAX leaves much of this up to the equipment provider while providing enough detail to ensure interoperability between designs.



WireLess Modem:

A wireless modem is a type of modem which connects to a wireless network instead of to the telephone system. When you connect with a wireless modem, you are attached directly to your wireless ISP (Internet Service Provider) and you can then access the Internet.


WireLess Modem Device Manufactures:

3G TECHNOLOGY:


In 1999, ITU approved five radio interfaces for IMT-2000 as a part of the ITU-R M.1457 Recommendation; WiMAX was added in 2007.[2]

There are evolutionary standards that are backwards-compatible extensions to pre-existing 2G networks as well as revolutionary standardsthat require all-new networks and frequency allocations.[3] The later group is the UMTS family, which consists of standards developed for IMT-2000, as well as the independently-developed standards DECT and WiMAX, which were included because they fit the IMT-2000 definition.

Overview of 3G/IMT-2000 standards[4]
ITU IMT-2000common name(s)bandwidth of datapre-4Gduplexchanneldescriptiongeographical areas
TDMA Single‑Carrier (IMT‑SC)EDGE (UWT-136)EDGE EvolutionnoneFDDTDMAevolutionary upgrade to GSM/GPRS[nb 1]worldwide, except Japan and Korea
CDMA Multi‑Carrier (IMT‑MC)CDMA2000EV-DOUMB[nb 2]CDMAevolutionary upgrade to cdmaOne (IS-95)Americas, Asia, some others
CDMA Direct Spread (IMT‑DS)UMTS[nb 3]W‑CDMA[nb 4]HSPALTEfamily of revolutionary standards.worldwide
CDMA TDD (IMT‑TC)TD‑CDMA[nb 5]TDDEurope
TD‑SCDMA[nb 6]China
FDMA/TDMA (IMT‑FT)DECTnoneFDMA/TDMAshort-range; standard for cordless phonesEurope, USA
IP‑OFDMAWiMAX (IEEE 802.16)OFDMAlate additionworldwide

While EDGE is part of the 3G standard, most GSM/UMTS phones report EDGE (“2.75G”) and UMTS (“3G”) network availability as separate functionality.