Showing posts with label Google Tips. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Google Tips. Show all posts

Wednesday 10 July 2013

How To Utilize Google For Some Common Tasks

Hi To All The
Today i teach you about google facts.
how many of you know that google is a search engine based on spiders.
means whenever user search down a keyphrase or keyword in google search bar google use his spiders/crawlers and try to download a copy of your site their own server these crawled sites is arranged in a order of their increasing relevancy. and one more fact about google is google is blind when it comes to reading images from a website.

So here is a small demo for my upcoming tutorials with google search bar .
step1.
visit  google.com
then type a long calculation like
1+9999*2/3 =?


can u guess 

i know that it is very hard to explain that how google calculates a input when we type in search bar.



Monday 13 May 2013

Installing Google Talk In backtrack Linux Distros

Welcome Back To The Mindbenders,


Aim:- To Install Google talk(Gtalk) application In Linux

Steps:-


Step 1
open Terminal And Type The Following commands (Text In Red)

root@bt:~# apt-get install prism-google-talk

Step 2

Now Go to Applications>Internet>Google Talk
Step 3

Google Down About Prism

===(Next Is What...?)===

Sunday 17 February 2013

E-Mail Bomber By The Mindbenders

Hi To All The Mindbenders,


                                Visit Email-Bomber

Sunday 3 February 2013

Using Google Drive As A Web Hosting Service | GoogleDrive Tips


Hi Guys,
Welcome To All The Mindbenders,
Today We Are Planning to create our very first website without paying a single rupee To Web Hosting providers and thanks to google for google drive serving capabilities...

Let's Start

Step 1.
Login To Your Google Drive Account Using Your Gmail Account
https://www.drive.google.com

Step 2.
Create A new Folder in Your drive say "devendermahto" is created by me in my google drive
Note:- Click on image to in-large image



Step 3.
Select Our Created Folder which is "devendermahto"



Step 4.
Then Click on "more" and choose "share>share"



Step 5.
change permissions to public for this folder and then copy and paste the sharing link of this folder somewhere in your notepad.
check again that your link is similar to this link
https://docs.google.com/folder/d/0B3cYFzCQvhE1OHBKbl8yVnlqenM/edit?usp=sharing


Copy Link after changing permissions

Step 6.
Upload all your website files like index.html and images to this folder.


Step 7.
When all your stuffs uploaded by you then open a new tab and type following address in your address bar

https://googledrive.com/host/0B3cYFzCQvhE1OHBKbl8yVnlqenM

Step 8.
Replace 
0B3cYFzCQvhE1OHBKbl8yVnlqenM

With your own code,
 in your case text after https://docs.google.com/folder/d and before /edit?usp=sharing
is your website address{webfolder address}

check mine
https://googledrive.com/host/0B3cYFzCQvhE1OHBKbl8yVnlqenM/

Bye Guyzzzz

===(Next is What?)===


Friday 16 November 2012

How to Get Rid of the Non-Essentials Features Of Your Gmail Account



Good Morining Friends,
I’ve been running a Minimalist Gmail setup lately, stripped of nearly everything but, you know, emails … and I’m in love with its simplicity.
There’s something pure about having nothing but the essentials.
Now, some of you will recall a couple of other posts I did, and let’s quickly review them for background:
So, two things: one, I haven’t completely killed email. I still use Gmail, though not as often. I have moved most of my communication to Twitter, Google Docs, a wiki, and Basecamp. But I still do email, a little. It’s a hard thing to kill, but maybe drastically reduced email usage is OK with me. It’s certainly less stressful.
Two, when I do use Gmail, lately, I am bothered by all the clutter. I removed all the gadgets, and still too much. Google is known for its simplicity, but I really wanted to strip out not only ads but chat and the navigation menus at the top and more. So I did.
I’ve used Greasemonkey for Firefox and some great user scripts, listed below, to achieve this. I thought of rewriting Gmail’s CSS, but user scripts are much easier. It didn’t take long — just Googled every little thing I wanted to do, and found others had already solved the problems, one at a time.
Here’s how I’ve made Gmail into a minimalist inbox:

1. Fire and Grease. First, be sure you’re running Firefox withGreasemonkey installed. I love the minimalism of Google Chrome — been running both the dev version and latest Chromium builds — but unfortunately it can’t do what Greasemonkey can, at the moment. So I mostly just use Firefox for Gmail now.
2. Remove gadgets. First thing I removed was gadgets — go to Settings, then Gadgets, and remove any you have installed. I had Twitter and Delicious. Then I went to Labs under Settings, and disabled “Multiple Inboxes” and the Google Docs and Google Calendar gadgets, as well as the option to move the Chat box to the right side of Gmail. Things were starting to get cleaned up!
3. Hide labels, chat, footer. I really wanted to remove chat but couldn’t figure it out. Also, the clutter in Gmail’s footer was bothering me. So I found this brilliant user script: Gmail 3: Hide Labels, Chat and Footer. Install it in a click, and voila! Lovely.
4. Remove ads. Ads on the right side of email messages also bothered me. Found a script to do this: Gmail Ad Remover. Added benefit of maximizing your screen space for messages.
5. Remove stars. It’s a minor thing, but the stars are unnecessary for me. I don’t use them for task management (did at one time), so what’s the point?Gmail Remove Stars to the rescue.
6. Gmail logo and searchbar. Found Gmail toggle searchbar area script. Cleans things up nicely. You can always toggle the search area back on if you need it, but most of the time when I’m processing email, responding, I don’t need this.
7. Menu navigation bar. This was the most annoying. I couldn’t figure out how to remove the navigation menus that run across the top of Gmail. Then found the Gmail Real Estate script. It actually toggles not only the navigation menus, but the search area too. This somewhat duplicates the logo and searchbar script’s function above, but I’ve found they actually work nicely together, allowing you to show just a minimal navigation bar if you like, or whatever you feel like showing at the moment. I normally have everything minimized.
Updated: 8. Clean up rows and remove the “inbox is empty” message!  
Now two excellent Greasemonkey scripts. The first, called Gmail Clean Rows, removes the lines and other clutter from your inbox’s list of emails. The second is called Gmail Empty is Empty, and removed a small annoyance of mine — the message that shows up when your inbox is empty that says “No new mail! Want to read updates from your favorite sites? Try Google Reader”. Now the empty inbox is really empty, which is lovely lovely.
Updated: 9. Remove extraneous buttons. I took it a step further, at my fans request, and wrote Gmail Inbox with Less Buttons, removing all the buttons above and below the inbox, except archive, report spam and delete. This is perfect, because I don’t have a need for the move-to, label or more actions drop-down buttons, or the refresh link, or the Select links below all the buttons. Your needs may vary.
And that’s it. It might sound complicated, but basically it’s turning off some options in Gmail’s settings, and then installing a few user scripts. It should just take a few minutes. See the before and after pics below.
How I Use Gmail, the Minimalist Way
Now that everything is stripped down — no gadgets, no chat, no labels or stars — I just process and reply to email, and empty my inbox. Here’s how:
1. Use keyboard shortcuts. See this list if you don’t already know them. Pressing a key such as “c” or “r” or “a” to do email messages, or “j” or “k” or “x” or “y” to navigate and select and archive, is much faster than using the mouse. I can process very quickly using shortcuts.
2. Remove all unnecessary incoming email streams. Very important. Unsubscribe from all newsletters, all ads sent to you from businesses, all notifications from other services you use. Filter out messages from people who just forward jokes or chain mail. I no longer publish my email address, and give people other options for getting the info they want, so only my closest friends or business partners email me. Leaves the inbox relatively uncluttered.
3. Process quickly. Just run through your inbox, processing like lightning. Each email requires instant action: archive or trash, reply then archive, put on your task list (see next item) and archive. Or just do the task now, and archive. Those are the only options. Should take 10 minutes tops.
4. Tasks. I use a separate task list these days (Anxiety, a very simple Mac app) to make a quick note of any tasks, so that I can archive an email without needing it in the inbox as a reminder. Gmail Tasks is another good option — I don’t use it these days because I keep my email closed most of the time, and want my small task list open when I need it without having to open Gmail.
5. Short messages. Keep things short, and it doesn’t take long to reply. I try to do it in 3-5 sentences. I rarely go over this.
Before and After Pics
Took some screenshots to illustrate the changes. Click the thumbnails to see full images. Update: I’ve changed the “after” screenshot to illustrate the new scripts noted above by Matt Constantine.
Edit: The Firefox theme you see in the screenshots is Chromifox Basic, modeled after Google Chrome. I didn’t mention this above, but I removed most of the toolbars and icons from Firefox awhile back, to make Firefox as minimalist as I can. You can do this in the View->Toolbars menu, unselecting toolbars and removing icons as you please.
Before:(inlarge please)

After: ( <> Maximize it)

Comments and Queries are welcome for this Blog...The Mindbenders

Wednesday 14 November 2012

Find IP Address of Mail Sender


How to find the IP address of the sender in Yahoo! mail

When you receive an email, you receive more than just the message. The email comes with headers that carry important information that can tell where the email was sent from and possibly who sent it. For that, you would need to find the IP address of the sender. The tutorial below can help you find the IP address of the sender. Note that this will not work if the sender uses anonymous proxy servers.
Finding IP address in Yahoo! Mail
1. Log into your Yahoo! mail with your username and password.
2. Click on Inbox or whichever folder you have stored your mail.
3. Open the mail.
4. If you do not see the headers above the mail message, your headers are not displayed. To display the headers,
* Click on Options on the top-right corner
* In the Mail Options page, click on General Preferences
* Scroll down to Messages where you have the Headers option
* Make sure that Show all headers on incoming messages is selected
* Click on the Save button
* Go back to the mails and open that mail.
5. You should see similar headers like this:Yahoo! headers : nameLook for Received: from followed by the IP address between square brackets [ ]. Here, it is 202.65.138.109.That is be the IP address of the sender!
6. Track the IP address of the sender

How to find the IP address of the sender in Hotmail

When you receive an email, you receive more than just the message. The email comes with headers that carry important information that can tell where the email was sent from and possibly who sent it. For that, you would need to find the IP address of the sender. The tutorial below can help you find the IP address of the sender. Note that this will not work if the sender uses anonymous proxy servers.
Finding IP address in Hotmail
1. Log into your Hotmail account with your username and password.
2. Click on the Mail tab on the top.
3. Open the mail.
4. If you do not see the headers above the mail message, your headers are not displayed. To display the headers,
* Click on Options on the top-right corner
* In the Mail Options page, click on Mail Display Settings
* In Message Headers, make sure Advanced option is checked
* Click on Ok button
* Go back to the mails and open that mail.
5. If you find a header with X-Originating-IP: followed by an IP address, that is the sender's IP addressHotmail headers : name ,In this case the IP address of the sender is [68.34.60.59]. Jump to step 9.
6. If you find a header with Received: from followed by a Gmail proxy like thisHotmail headers : nameLook for Received: from followed by IP address within square brackets[].In this case, the IP address of the sender is [69.140.7.58]. Jump to step 9.
7. Or else if you have headers like thisHotmail headers : nameLook for Received: from followed by IP address within square brackets[].In this case, the IP address of the sender is [61.83.145.129] (Spam mail). Jump to step 9.
8. * If you have multiple Received: from headers, eliminate the ones that have proxy.anyknownserver.com.
9. Track the IP address of the sender


How to find the IP address of the sender in Gmail

When you receive an email, you receive more than just the message. The email comes with headers that carry important information that can tell where the email was sent from and possibly who sent it. For that, you would need to find the IP address of the sender. The tutorial below can help you find the IP address of the sender. Note that this will not work if the sender uses anonymous proxy servers.
Finding IP address in Gmail:
1.Log into your Gmail account with your username and password.
2. Open the mail.
3. To display the headers,* Click on More options corresponding to that thread. You should get a bunch of links.* Click on Show original.
4. You should get headers like this:Gmail headers : nameLook for Received: from followed by a few hostnames and an IP address between square brackets. In this case, it is65.119.112.245.That is be the IP address of the sender!
5. Track the IP address of the sender.


Sunday 11 November 2012

Googling With Smsing



Yeah, now you can also search anything, anytime, anywhere on Google without a internet connection. Google on your mobile either it’s a Smartphone or low cost phone it will help you with his SMS service. You don’t need to buy a expensive phone’s out of your budget to just surf for internet on the go.

Please follow the following step:-


1. You have to just type your keywords (You want to search) in your phone message box (create message).


2.Then add receipt send it to 9773300000. And it will comeback you the answer within a few seconds.

3. You will feel like you are surfing Google on the Internet.


Note: Standard Sms Charge May Apply.