Facebook Protection Hints

Monday April 8th, 2013

If  you have a Facebook account? Well most of us do so these tips should be useful.

Sometimes there are strange messages in your inbox or on your wall. You only need to press like on these and they can be spread over Facebook like fire. There are also friend requests from people that simply do not exist. Facebook can be a crazy place and you need to know how to protect your account.

Maintain Your Password

Firstly you need to create a unique and difficult password for you to login to Facebook. That is the first step to being secure. The next step is to never share your password with anyone. And lastly you should change your password every so often, but still making it very difficult by using a combination of upper case, lowercase, and numbers.

Be Aware Of E-Mail Security

When your Facebook account gets hacked, it is not always through Facebook. Most of the time it is through your e-mail, where there is an insecure pass word or some kind of access to hackers. If someone can hack into your e-mail account, they can easily reset passwords and gain access to any online accounts that you have. This is extremely important and people often neglect this fact.

You can also protect accounts with multiple layers of emails accounts. Each email address should represent its own job to do. That way you you are not handing out e-mail addresses to friends that are connected to important accounts.

Protect Your Computer First

People often blame Facebook when their account gets hacked. But sometimes it is because they have not got their own protection on the computer they are using. It is very important to protect your computer as this is the gateway to all of your activities online and off-line. It is access to all of your friends on Facebook, your e-mails that come to your computer, your personal pictures, and more.

Facebook account protection starts at home or on the device that you use to access Facebook. There is some great software out there that will protect your computer and ensure you have a safe browsing device. You can get a free scan for your computer from PCMatic, the highly awarded all in one software.

Be Careful When Staying Logged In

I had a friend visit me one day and she was using my computer and was logged in to my Facebook account. I asked her how she got in there and she said she just pressed enter. That was because my password and e-mail were already entered in by default.

This is something that you have to watch. I like to personally go to my computer and quickly login to Facebook, but definitely not when other people can do it as well.

If you do not want to stay logged in, especially if you are on a public computer, always un-tick the box below to sign up area.

Also do not forget to actually log out of your Facebook account. This is because people can still just hop on your computer and browse through your account as you are already logged in.

Monitor Logins for Facebook Account Protection

If you enable login notifications then you will know when someone has logged in to your Facebook account. This is a pretty simple concept and you can get the details sent to your mobile phone or your e-mail address.

To enable login notifications see the following instructions:

Go to the top right corner of your Facebook page and click on the little cog icon.
This will bring down your main menu. Choose account settings from this menu.
Click on login notifications.
Put a tick in the box next to the type of alerts you’d like to receive.
Now press save your changes.
Watch What You Click On

Have you seen those links on Facebook that says something other than “like all share”? If you see something different like “Change the Skin of Facebook Profile” or to “View who visited Your Profile”, they are fake! You should never click on these types of links or anything that looks different from the usual links under a Facebook post.

I know a friend that clicked on a funny looking link and pornographic material was posted all over his account and even sent messages to his friends. This was just from clicking on the wrong link and he was very embarrassed.

Did you know – How to lock iPad Screen orientation

Sunday February 24th, 2013

There is anything more annoying than attempting to view the iPad with one orientation like landscape mode and having the slight tilt of the iPad change it to the other orientation.  This is particularly annoying true if you are trying to watch a film or play a game, and  you are sitting at an angle.

Did you know you can  lock the screen orientation through two different methods. First, you can flip the switch next to the volume controls on the side of your iPad. Depending on how you have it set up in your iPad settings, this will either lock the orientation or mute the sound.  The icon for locking the orientation is just to the left of the music controls.

Don’t Type the Apostrophe

Sunday February 10th, 2013

The  auto-correct feature can sometimes get on your nerves, but there are other times when it very useful. If you type a lot, you’ll no doubt need to use the apostrophe , especially when you are typing in a contraction like “can’t” or “won’t”.

But did you know you can skip the apostrophe? a good alternative is using the auto-correct to change “cant” to “can’t” and “wont” to “won’t”. Just try it out.

Update Everything as Soon as You Can

Sunday February 10th, 2013

 

Regular updates for hardware and software are sent to your computer via internet every week or so. Don’t put these off. It’s like going to a doctor or mechanic—as soon as you see that something is wrong, take care of it. By updating your computer, this protects your computer and keeps it as up to date as any other machine out there.

Clean Up Your Email

Sunday February 10th, 2013

Every month or so, go through your  junk mail or special offers or emails you will never need again. Empty the trash folder manually, as sometimes emails you meant to delete get hung up in there for an extended period of time.

This can cause your computer to run much more slowly if there are lots of emails stored up.

Deleting Old Programs

Monday December 31st, 2012

Old programs will slow down everything on your computer. So if there is a program that you used to use but now use a different version of, or there is a program that you hardly ever use at all, just delete them and worry about re-installing them in the off chance you will ever really need them. This will not only make your computer faster  but it will keep your software up to date with the newest programs out there.

Put your files Files in One Folder

Monday December 31st, 2012

You will have noticed  how your desktop is cluttered with individual files of all those different tasks you are working  on? This  really slows your computer down.  If you create a folder and put those  documents in the new folder, you will see your computer runs faster almost immediately, it also helps you to know where all of your documents are making it easy for you to back everything up at once.

How to get Microsoft Word Margins as Narrow as Possible

Sunday December 23rd, 2012

Microsoft Word by default gives all your documents rather wide margins. You can make those smaller if you want your document to make better use of the page area, but remember, most printers can’t print to the edges of the paper but here’s a way to find out

For  Word 2010/2007, select the Page Layout tab on the Ribbon, click the Margins button and choose Custom Margins.

For  Word 2003/2002 chose File > Page Setup. This is where you can set the widths of the left, right, top and bottom margins,

And now the Solution: set each of them to Zero and then click OK. your printer probably won’t cope with having no margins at all, and Word certainly knows it can’t, look for the message asking what should be done about it.

Click Fix and Word will adjust those margins to the minimum widths supported by your printer. You can make any of these larger if you want to (obviously there’s no point in trying to make any smaller!) and then click OK again to put those new margins into effect.

Windows 8 has arrived

Sunday October 28th, 2012

It is now available in a computer shops or an online , you’ll see the brightly-coloured boxes offering Windows 8 in three versions:
• Windows 8: the ‘basic’ edition – if you want Windows 8, this is the edition you’ll choose.
• Windows 8 Pro: this variety, this adds a few options slanted at professional and business users.
• Windows 8 Pro Pack: something most people won’t want This gives you a product key (no disk) to upgrade from the basic Windows 8 to Windows 8 Pro.
Instead of buying Windows 8 in a box, you can visit the Microsoft website and purchase a licence there. Using this method a small setup program is downloaded to your PC which then handles the task of downloading and installing Windows 8.
You can now buy the first Windows 8-based computers you’ll find an extensive choice of desktop, notebook, tablet PCs already, with many more appearing before Christmas.
The choice PC owner’s have to make is whether they want to use it, either by upgrading their existing PC or by buying a new computer of some description.
Those Windows XP users have an aging operating system that will cease to receive updates in about 18 months’ time, and for that reason they should think of upgrading to something newer, better and hugely more secure. Windows Vista users have something that’s effectively not a great operating system though, an upgrade to Windows 8 will involve having to reinstall all the programs you use afterwards, which can be a bit of an ordeal.
Windows 7 users, an upgrade to Windows 8 should be plain sailing, but it appears they will benefit least from the upgrade.
Of course, we’ll start to find out what the computing world thinks of Windows 8. There will be lots of comments and opinions. There of course is that option which many people use to wait until after the first maintenance update and there is nothing wrong with that approach.
You can of course walk into a computer store and try it out for yourself, which is not a bad idea especially with the pricing in the first few months.

or Change Your Name on Email Messages

Friday October 12th, 2012

If your name doesn’t appear in the ‘From’ section, only your email address. Here’s how you can change it.

In fact, if you’d set up your email account manually in your email program, you’d have been prompted to enter your name, and (assuming you did) your email program would be showing that name on all the messages you send. However, if you used an automatic method of setting up your account – such as your ISP may have sent you a CD, which may have created the basic settings for your account without asking your name.

You can easily add your name to your account’s settings or changing it is quick and simple.:

For Outlook Express users (Windows XP) and Windows Mail (Windows Vista): go to Tools > Accounts and double-click your email account on the list. In the dialog box, type your name in the box labelled Name and click OK.

Windows Live Mail: in the left pane of the window, right-click the name of your email account (may be shown as your email address) and appears in large blue letters. Choose Properties, and then type in your name in the box labelled Name and click OK.