الرقم تستطيع الاتصال به مجانا بشرط من هاتف أرضي
و ذلك عند تقديم شكوى لصلاح الانترنت أو الهاتف الأرضي لديك
الرقم هو :
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* الرقم مجاني حسب قول موظفي الشركة...
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الأردن-المفرق
العنوان: الأردن-المفرق
1. Boot through Windows XP CD.
2. After all the files are completely loaded, you get the option to select the partition. Select “c”.
3. Now Format the partition, whether it is normal or quick with NTFS or FAT
4. Once the formatting is completed, All the setup files required for installation are copied. Restart your system by pressing Enter.
Now, here begins the Simple trick to save 10-15 minutes.
5. After rebooting, you get a screen where it takes 40 minutes to complete or finalize the OS installation.
6. Now, Press SHIFT + F10 Key -> This opens command prompt.
7. Enter “Taskmgr” at the command prompt window. This will open Task Manager.
8. Click the Process Tab, here we find a process called Setup.exe -> Right Click on Setup.exe -> Set Priority -> Select High or Above Normal. Initially it will be Normal.
Thats it, no more work to do. Relax your self and see how fast the installation process completes
Default user code : 1122, 3344, 1234, 5678
Engineer mode : *#110*01#
Factory mode : *#987#
Enable COM port : *#110*01# -> Device -> Set UART -> PS Config -> UART1/115200
Restore factory settings : *#987*99#
LCD contrast : *#369#
Software version : *#800#
Software version : *#900#
Set default language : *#0000# Send
Set English language : *#0044# Send
Set English language (new firmware) : *#001# Send
Default user code : 1122, 3344, 1234, 5678
Here's an example: I sent myself a message from a different account to my Hotmail account and here's how it looked in the inbox:
Let's look at that second message. To do so, simply click on the subject shown, and it'll show the message itself:
At this point, notice the "Action" menu button on the top right. Click on it and there are a bunch of different options you can do here in Windows Live Hotmail:
There's what we want, almost at the bottom: View Message Source. Choose that one and *poof* you're seeing a lot of crufty message routing and status information data, along with other message headers:
So the answer to your question of how to see message source is: use the Action menu. Your question of why they keep moving this sort of thing around? Not so sure about that one, but I'd guess it's just to keep up with the Joneses (Yahoo Mail, Google's Gmail).
Start out by launch "Computer"...
That's it. You don't have to go any further to see how big your disk is and how much space you have left:
But don't stop there. Right click on the disk space display and check out the options:
Choose "Properties" and you'll move into the Local Disk Properties window:
To move to the area where you can identify and clean up the unwanted files, click on the button in the middle of the window, "Disk Cleanup".
The utility takes a little time analyzing the files on your disk, maybe 2-3 minutes, then it displays the various categories of safely removed files, with sizes listed:
For me, none of these areas are particularly huge, but still, why keep them around, even if the space freed is just 10-20MB? I mean, heck, that was the size of my original hard disk, and now we're not even bothering with it??
Go through the individual categories, reading the description of each, then decide which you can safely remove and check them. Ready? Click on "OK"...
Ya sure? Okay, click on "Delete Files" and ...
That's all there is to it. If you are still finding your disk space vanishing, analyze which programs you're using the most and see if they have temp folders. If so, check to see whether that's the culprit.
Pop over to your Facebook account and on the top left you'll see something like this:
Click on "Friends" and it'll open up to show you some options:
You can see here that I have three lists set up: The Criminal Element, Coloradoans, and Family. I'll click on The Criminal Element and now the news updates from people on that list (who shall remain nameless, thank you very much!) show up, along with the following:
This is where it gets confusing: this is not how you delete the list. Click on Edit List and poke around, you'll see. To me, this is exactly where a "delete list" option should be present, but I guess I think about user interface design differently to Mark Zuckerberg and his team at Facebook!
Instead, you need to click on Account on the top right and choose "Friends":
Now you see all the lists you've created, along with some additional options:
Click on the list you want to delete and three buttons show up:
Any guesses which to click on? You guessed it! "Delete List".
One quick verification:
And you're done, list deleted, mission accomplished!
To start out, log in to your Facebook account and go to the Account menu:
Choose "Account Settings" and scroll down, looking for:
It's the last option we're interested in, "Download your Information". Click on the oddly named "learn more" link and now we can get this show started!
Smart. They point out that, correctly, anything you've posted to Facebook will then be on your computer, unencrypted, and anyone who gains access to that set of files also gains access to what's likely a lot of very personal information. My suggestion: download it all, then wrap it up in an encrypted ZIP archive or similar if you're worried.
Click on "Download" and...
One more click and you'll get a sense of just how much work is involved on the backend for Facebook to be able to accomplish this massive data dump:
Okay, so it's time to go do something else. Why not become a fan of Ask Dave Taylor by clicking the "Like" button on the Ask Dave Taylor Fan Page on Facebook? Sweet!
If you did go back to this area, you'll find you can't start up the process again. It knows:
Eventually you'll get a notification like this one I received in my Gmail inbox:
Clicking on the link doesn't initiate a data transfer, however, but gets you to yet more disclaimers:
They'll confirm you are the valid account holder (a good thing!):
One more warning (you certainly can't criticize them for not telling you that the information you're downloading is of a very personal nature):
Now, finally, are you ready? Click on "Download Now" and you'll find that it's downloaded from Facebook as a convenient ZIP archive (though not password protected, which would be a splendid additional touch):
Mine is pretty darn big: 26MB of text information. It took a few minutes, actually.
The question is really whether the information is useful on a standalone basis, and I really have to give Facebook lots of credit for creating a very useful, easily understood archive. I double-clicked the ZIP file to unpack it, and then opening the base HTML file showed me this:
From here everything's linked together, so clicking on "Photos", "Friends", "Notes", etc will bring up a full archive from the day you joined Facebook. Nice. Now, for a script that automatically requests and downloads a copy of this on a monthly basis.
Hope that helps you out. Whether other companies are going to be able to unpack and parse this ZIP data and/or even just your friend lists remains to be seen, but this is a great step in the right direction of Facebook acknowledging that the data we put on their site is still our own personal data and we should be able to extract it from that mythical walled garden. I don't expect a garden in the middle of a field, so it's a good compromise. Good luck!