How do you connect two computers to one printer?

Posted by: admin  :  Category: printer computers

I have two Dell desk top computers and one HP printer that has a Etherenet port but cannot print.

Assuming your computers share the same internet connection, they converge on a router.
Hook up your printer to this router, and configure the network settings on the printer.

On your computers, go the control panel and then printers.
Choose add printer, select network printer, choose browse to discover your printer in the network.

If you encounter problems, update your question with your printer make and model and you will receive a more specific answer to your problem

Computer Hardware – Turn to the Greener Side

Posted by: admin  :  Category: printer computers

Many people know how to use a computer but only few are aware of the great need for disposing off the used parts of a computer, in a safe manner. Many IT organisations have failed to assume sufficient responsibility for the ultimate end of used PC. The first step to be taken towards greening the computer hardware should be initiated by the manufacturers and retailers end. Manufacturing and selling companies should take a closer look at the policy of the IT organisation, towards the PC and computer hardware take back, before even buying. They should also keep account of the Electronic Take back Coalition, and maintain a list of recyclers that have pledged to adhere to certain corporate responsibility standards, including incinerate e-waste.

Even the people who own computers at home should be not reckless regarding the disposition of their used computer hardware. They too should be conscious about utilizing waste in the right manner. The initial step is not to throw away any used or outdated computer hardware in the dumpster. Instead recycle it. Be it your hard drive, monitor, keyboard, mouse, or printer, one can dispose it by recycling it in the right manner. Today, there are many recycling centres like City of Lubbock Solid Waste Department in Texas. Here they inspect all the disposed parts of a computer to check whether any hardware is working or not. Special care is taken to assure hard drives are completely erased prior to refurbishing activities. They have their own group of engineers who refurbish these computer particles and offers them to the state agencies counties, cities or school districts at no charge.

Some other ways to make your computer hardware green are discussed below –

  • Green Search – Instead of using the Google search engine, use Blackle.com. This is an eco friendly site that works on black resolution, thus saving less energy that is consumed by the white resolution. Further there is option for switching to black wallpapers and screen savers that consume lesser power than white or colored backgrounds.
  • Use LCD Screen – Replacing your CRT monitors with LCD screen will help you save up to 70% of electricity and the lifespan of the LCD is also twice more than the CRT.
  • Optimise Your PC’s Power Setting With iYogi Toolbar – One can optimize energy consumption of a PC by switching it to the power saving mode. For this one can take the help of Yogi Green PC tool bar that can be installed on all Windows-based systems.
  • Switch to Vista Green – Power consumption in Windows Vista is less than in Windows XP. Switching off to that mode will help one saving a lot of energy.
  • Last but not the least, always remember to shut down the monitor when not in use. Always remember to unplug all the input as well as storage devices to save power.

Its time for everyone to realize the environment hampering that are caused by throwing the e particles into waste bins. The impact of that negligence on the environment worldwide can be huge. It is estimated that around 1.8 billion pounds of PCs are retired worldwide each year, but only about half —865 million pounds—are processed by recyclers, as per the report issued International Data Corp. Although some of the remaining 900 million pounds of computer hardware is rebuilt or reused, much of it is just plain discarded into landfills or incinerated. Incorporate the above few points, the next time you are thinking of discarding these unused or old parts of your computer.

pvyas
http://www.articlesbase.com/hardware-articles/computer-hardware-turn-to-the-greener-side-676637.html

Digital Cameras: to Click and Pose

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When it comes to the photography field, some years ago, people used bulky cameras to take photographs. Those heavy weight cameras were unable to carry and they did not offer clear and perfect images to their users. To avoid all these inconveniences, digital cameras are introduced in the market with high performance and quality. You can take bright images even in poor light condition with these cameras. As photography is a common hobby for most of the people across the world, the popularity of these innovative devices has been increasing day by day. These sleek cameras offer crystal clear images and are equipped with all the user-friendly multi-functional features like recording videos of moving and still moments, editing and saving images etc. As these sleek devices come with removable storage capacity, you can save thousands of images and video clips on these cameras. You can delete unwanted photos to free the memory capacity. Some of the removable storage technologies that are available in the market are the Multi-Media Card (MMC), Compact Flash (CF-I), Memory Stick, USB flash drive and xD-Picture Card (xD).

The present day market is offering numerous types of digital cameras like digital single lens reflex cameras, compact digital cameras, ultra compacts, line-scan camera, bridge cameras, digital SLRs and compact.

Most of the latest digital cameras come with USB port connectivity that can be used to connect cameras directly to computers to transfer data. Some of the advanced technology cameras have PictBridge standard that enables you to send images directly to a computer printer which is capable of a PictBridge standard without taking the help of computer. To take different types of images depending on the situations, the digital cameras have several mode options to choose from like exposure, light metering, white balance, aperture and focusing. They operate on rechargeable batteries which are small enough to fit in cameras.

Now-a-days, these digital camera features are equipped in most of the mobile phones, which are known as camera mobile phones. They act like digital cameras, but the image storage capacity of these handsets is less than the cameras. Some of the latest electronic devices that come with in-built-camera features are Blackberry devices, camcorders, laptops and PDAs. The common format for most of the digital cameras is JPEG (Joint Photography Experts Group) standard.

The Wespro Digital Camera, Sony Cyber-shot DSC-W130 Silver Digital Camera, Canon Power Shot A590 IS, Fuji film Fine Pix Z20FD and Sony DSC-W110 Silver Digital Camera are some of the cheap digital cameras that are available at affordable prices in the market. These cheap Digital cameras come with high-end technology and offer you great flexibility to carry them with you wherever you go.

To have a close and clear view of all the cheap digital cameras, visiting related websites over the Internet is the best source than the others. This helps you to get the best deal on purchasing the best quality digital camera.

Issac Brandon
http://www.articlesbase.com/digital-photography-articles/digital-cameras-to-click-and-pose-673073.html

Samsung U600i-a Smartphone Which is Surprising

Posted by: admin  :  Category: printer computers

Most of the civilised members of human beings are absolutely enthusiastic about Samsung mobiles. A fact, which is easily understandable due to the phone being discussed about here, is one, which has lots of amazing technologies. Samsung in their initial years was manufacturing home appliances. After seeing the enlightenment taking place in the mobile industry, they decided to make an entry into this market as well. The decision has been an excellent one when one looks at the results. Samsung has got into the habit of manufacturing sleek,stylish and lightweight handsets.

Last year, Samsung launched a fantastic mobile phone, which is known as the Samsung U600i. Users have preferred this handset in a major manner due to its wonderful features. This device is filled with features such as a 3.2 MP camera, a media player, good expandable memory, high-speed web browsing and many more.

This smartphone has very sleek and stylish body. The dimensions of this handset are 103.5 x 49.3 x 10.9 mm, which makes it look very slim. This Samsung device weighs only 81 grams, which is perhaps, the main reason behind the comfortable feeling that the user gets when he holds this handset.

This fabulous mobile phone has a 2.2 inches TFT screen with its display being coloured up with 256K colours. The internal screen is vested with a resolution of 240 x 320 pixels, which has led to an amazing level of clarity in the display, while playing games and watching video clips.

This Samsung U600i is available in seven different colour versions such as Sapphire Blue, Crystal Blue, Platinum Silver, Copper Gold, Garnet Red, Neutral White, Soft Black. These colours have the ability to automatically attract the users towards the wonder known as the Samsung U600i.

This widget has a 3.2 MP camera, capable of providing an image resolution of 2048 x 1536 pixels. This device also has the standard camera settings like autofocus and flash, which enable the process of taking extremely clear picture under poor light conditions. The users can also harbour the facets of the video recording feature of this handset. So, the users can capture images and videos of all those memorable moments which come only once in a lifetime.

This fantastic device has a media player, which can be used for listening to fantastic songs and watching video clips and captured images. This media player plays only those songs, which are encoded with MP3,AAC,eACC and WMA formats. This gadget has the fantastic feature of TV out,which enables the users to see their capture image and video clips on the television screen. This handy handset also has a built-in FM radio with RDS technology.

This Samsung U600i has the facility of web browsing with GPRS and EDGE. The users can transfer their data in wireless mode by using Bluetooth v2.0 with A2DP. The users can easily connect this device with other mobile phones, computers, laptops and printer with the usage of the USB v2.0 port present in this handset. The browser is able to handle the following languages: WAP 2.0 and xHTML. The users can send and receive mails with this handset. The users can read their documents (being anyone from the set of Word, Excel, PowerPoint and PDF documents). This smart device is featured with the Yahoo Search feature,and the users can search whatever they want by using this feature.

The standby time and talk time of this mobile phone are up to 250 hours and up to 3 hour and 30 minutes respectively.

Finally, the Samsung U600i belongs in the league of all those mobile phones, which have fantastic applications, capable of providing entertainment in a stylish way. Actually,Samsung mobiles is known for being one of the best technology phones, which are currently present.

Stephen George
http://www.articlesbase.com/cell-phones-articles/samsung-u600ia-smartphone-which-is-surprising-676110.html

Khomeini Had Failed in His Specific Goal of Eliminating Rushdie

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The problem began in January 1989. That was when Muslims living in Bradford, England, decided to do something to show their anger about The Satanic Verses, a new novel by the famed writer Salman Rushdie that included passages making fun of the Prophet Muhammad. The Muslims, mostly Pakistani immigrants, purchased a copy of the novel, took it to a public square, attached it to a stake, and set it on fire. Television news showed this auto da fé in scandalized detail, and pictures of the scene were splashed across the British media for days, making it a major topic of discussion throughout the country.

In Pakistan itself, after a month’s buildup, an unruly mob of some 10,000 anti-Rushdie protesters took to the streets of the capital city of Islamabad. Marching to the American Cultural Center (a fact significant in itself), they attempted with great energy, but without success, to set the heavily fortified building on fire. Six people died in the violence, and many more were injured. These events, in turn, caught the attention of Ayatollah Khomeini, the revolutionary ruler of Iran, who took prompt and drastic action: on February 14, 1989, he called upon “all zealous Muslims quickly to execute” not just Salman Rushdie as the author of The Satanic Verses but “all those involved in its publication who were aware of its content.” This edict led to emergency measures in England to protect Rushdie’s person, and to weeks and months of intense debate among the world’s politicians and intellectuals about the issues of freedom of speech and blasphemy.

When the dust settled, Khomeini had failed in his specific goal of eliminating Rushdie physically: today, over a decade later, the author is once again writing well-received books and accepting literary awards. But if Khomeini did not manage to harm Rushdie, he did accomplish something far more profound: he stirred the souls of many Muslims, reviving a sense of confidence in their faith and a strong impatience with any denigration of it, as well as a determination to take the offensive against anyone perceived to be a blasphemer or even a critic. Although Khomeini himself passed from the scene just weeks after issuing his decree, the spirit it engendered is very much alive.

During the decade since 1989, many efforts have been undertaken by the forces of Islamism – otherwise known as Muslim fundamentalism – to silence critics. Ranging from outright violence to more sophisticated but no less effective techniques, they have produced impressive results.

Some early acts of physical intimidation involved the Rushdie case itself. Translators of The Satanic Verses were stabbed and seriously injured in Norway and Italy and, in Japan, murdered. In Turkey, another translator escaped when a fire set in his hotel failed to kill him, but 37 others died in the blaze. Other acts of violence were designed to punish both Muslims and non-Muslims for a variety of alleged offenses.

Egypt alone offers a number of examples. Nasr Hamid Abu Zayd, a professor of literature who wrote that certain references in the Qur’an to supernatural phenomena should be read as metaphors, found his marriage dissolved by an Egyptian court on the grounds that his writings proved him an apostate. (According to Islamic law, a Muslim woman may not be married to a non-Muslim.) Another case involved the author of a nonconformist essay on Islam: he, his publisher, and the book’s printer were each sentenced to eight years in jail on the charge of blasphemy. Farag Foda, an Egyptian intellectual who expressed scorn for the Islamist program, was shot and murdered. And Naguib Mahfouz, the elderly and much-celebrated Nobel Prize laureate for literature, was seriously injured in Cairo when an assailant knifed him in the neck, presumably in revenge for an allegorical novel written decades earlier.

Nor has the campaign been limited to Muslim-majority countries. Makin Morcos, also an Egyptian, was killed in Australia for criticizing the Islamists’ anti-Christian campaign in his native country; Rashad Khalifa, a biochemist from Egypt living in Tucson, Arizona, was stabbed to death in January 1990 to silence his heretical ideas. (A member of Usama bin Laden’s gang has been implicated in the latter murder.) Both these incidents sent a chilling message: you can run but you cannot hide.

Nor, finally, is the campaign in Western countries limited to violence or threats of violence against Muslims; it also extends to non-Muslims. In some cases, purely private matters may be at issue: Jack Briggs, an Englishman, has been on the lam for years, hiding with his wife from her Pakistani family who have vowed to kill both of them (even though they are properly married and even though he converted to Islam to win their approval). Other cases concern publicly expressed views: Steven Emerson, a former Senate aide and investigative reporter for U.S. News & World Report, CNN, and other media, received death threats for Jihad in America, his award-winning television documentary that drew on the Islamists’ own commercial videos to demonstrate their virulently anti-Semitic and anti-American views and activities.

Emerson told his story to a congressional committee in 1998, and it bears quoting at length:

Immediately following the release of Jihad in America, I became the target of radical fundamentalist groups throughout the United States (and internationally) who fiercely denied the existence of “Islamic extremism” and accused me of engaging in an “attack against Islam.” For this “transgression,” my life has been permanently changed.

Explaining the details of just one incident – to pick among a whole series – will help you understand the changes I have been forced to endure. One morning, in late 1995, I was paged by a federal law-enforcement official. When I returned the call, this official immediately instructed me to head downtown to his office and specifically directed me to take a taxi rather than my car. The urgency in this person’s voice was palpable. When I arrived at the office, I was ushered into a room where a group of other law-enforcement officials was waiting. Within minutes, I found out why I had been summoned: I was told a group of radical Islamic fundamentalists had been assigned to carry out an assassination of me. An actual hit team had been dispatched from another country to the United States. The squad, according to the available intelligence, was to rendezvous with its American-based colleagues located in several U.S. cities. Compounding the jolt of being told about this threat was an additional piece of information: the assassination squad had been successfully able to elude law-enforcement surveillance.

I was told that I had limited choices: since I was not a full-time government employee, I was not entitled to 24-hour-a-day police protection. However, I could probably get permission to enter the Witness Security Program under the right circumstances. But the prospect of being spirited away and given a new identity was not acceptable to me – especially since that would afford the terrorists a moral victory in having shut me down. Frankly, however, the alternative option was not that attractive either – being on my own and taking my own chances. And yet that for me was the only effective option.

While Emerson remains doggedly on the trail of Islamists, especially those among them who support terrorism, he has for four years been forced to live at a clandestine address, always watching his movements. Like the case of Rashad Khalifa, murdered in Tucson for his views, the case of Steven Emerson suggests that, despite the Constitution’s guarantees of freedom of religion and freedom of speech, when it comes to Islam, unapproved thinking can lead to personal danger or even death.

Still, were force the only weapon in the Islamists’ arsenal, their accomplishments would be limited. In the West, at least, violence and physical intimidation can achieve only so much. But, contrary to stereotype, Islamists are hardly all wild-eyed hit men and suicide bombers; in Western countries, many of them are quite at home with computers, well-versed in the latest lobbying techniques, and adept at the game of victimology. Energetic, determined, and skilled, they employ the tools not of physical but rather of intellectual intimidation. Their aim in doing so is to build an inviolate wall around Islam, endowing it with something like the sacrosanct status it enjoys in traditionally Muslim countries.

Islamists of this latter stripe make full use of every recourse available to them in the laws and customs of the Western liberal democracies themselves. A few examples will illustrate. In France, Marcel Lefebvre, a renegade Catholic bishop, was fined nearly $1,000 under French law for declaring that when the Muslim presence in France becomes stronger, “it is your wives, your daughters, your children who will be kidnapped and dragged off to a certain kind of place as they exist in [Morocco].” In Canada, a Christian activist handing out leaflets protesting the Muslim persecution of Christians was accused by Muslim organizations of “inciting hatred,” found guilty of breaking Canada’s hate-speech laws, and sentenced to 240 hours of community service and six months of probation time in jail. At the United Nations, the decidedly nondiplomatic epithets “blasphemy” and “defamation of Islam” have become part of normal discourse, serving as convenient instruments for shutting off discussion of such unpleasant matters as slavery in Sudan or Muslim anti-Semitism.

In the United States, where the concept of freedom of speech is sturdier than elsewhere, the First Amendment still prevents the government itself from fining or jailing anyone for offensive speech. But, relying on the ethos of political correctness that has resulted in such abridgements of First Amendment freedoms as university speech codes and other restrictive practices, Islamists seek to win what sanction they can to censor others. Thus, they have recently sponsored an innocent-sounding Senate resolution entitled “Supporting Religious Tolerance Toward Muslims.” This resolution states as a fact that “Muslims have been subjected, simply because of their faith, to acts of discrimination and harassment that all too often have led to hate-inspired violence,” and concludes that criticism of Islam, though legal in the strict sense, is morally reprehensible (”the Senate acknowledges that individuals and organizations that foster such intolerance create an atmosphere of hatred and fear that divides the Nation”). Should this resolution pass, and there is every reason to expect that it will, anyone with anything negative to say about Islam or Islamism can expect to be accused of fostering a hate crime.

Who, in the American context, is behind this campaign of mental intimidation and of what, in a journalistic context, would be called prior restraint? Among the many candidates, the leading one is surely the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR), a Washington-based institution founded in 1994. CAIR presents itself to the world as a standard-issue civil-rights organization, whose mission is to “promote interest and understanding among the general public with regard to Islam and Muslims in North America and conduct educational services.”

Sometimes, indeed, this is what CAIR does. In 1997, for example, it protested when an official at a meeting of a board of education in South Carolina said, “Screw the Buddhists and kill the Muslims.” At other times, it has come to the defense of women who have lost their jobs for insisting on wearing a headscarf, or of men for wearing beards. But these occasional good works serve mostly as a cover for CAIR’s real agenda, which appears to be twofold: to help the radical organization Hamas in its terror campaign against Israel, and to promote the Islamist program in the United States.

In furtherance of the first goal, CAIR regularly sends out “action alerts” to instigate dozens or even hundreds of protests, many of them vulgar and aggressive, whenever anyone dares to suggest publicly that Hamas or other te rrorist networks operate in the United States, or indeed dares to support those who say such things. When Jeff Jacoby, a columnist for the Boston Globe, protested CAIR’s almost successful effort to have Steven Emerson blacklisted from National Public Radio, CAIR cranked up its letter-writing campaign (”Dear JEW,” went a characteristic missive from a CAIR minion, “How dare you defame Islam. . . . There is enough Muslim-bashing going on, I am sure your resigning will not make a difference to our jewish [sic] media”) and, in a bit of raw intimidation, threatened the Globe with legal action.

CAIR’s defense of Islamist violence takes other forms as well: picketing the Dallas Morning News for revealing the Hamas infrastructure in Texas, launching a campaign against the Tampa Tribune for uncovering the Islamic Jihad network in that city. The group has inveighed against the Journal of the American Medical Association for investigating the medical condition of victims of terrorism, and against a children’s magazine, The Weekly Reader’s Current Events, for publishing material on international terrorism. CAIR denounced the Atlantic Monthly for publishing an article on Islamist violence in Sudan, and a Senate Subcommittee for holding a hearing on “Foreign Terrorists in America: Five Years After the World Trade Center Bombing.”

As for its other goal – promoting Islamism in the United States – CAIR focuses on the single tactic of trying to silence those who have anything critical to say about Islam. It attacked the Wiesenthal Center in Los Angeles for portraying Ayatollah Khomeini as a Hitler-like enemy of Jews, and it went after the Reader’s Digest for documenting the repression of Christians in several Muslim countries. When James Jatras, a Senate aide, published in his private capacity a stinging critique of Islam (”a self-evident outgrowth not of the Old and New Covenants but of the darkness of heathen Araby”), CAIR took out a full-page newspaper ad in the Washington Times calling for his dismissal. And when Father Richard John Neuhaus, the distinguished author and editor of First Things, outspokenly condemned contemporary Islam’s “resentments and suspicions, alternating with low-grade jihad in the form of the persecution of Christians, international terrorism, and dreams of driving Israel into the sea,” CAIR called on the Catholic Church to “investigate” Neuhaus, and its supporters sent a cascade of abusive mail accusing him of being “obviously mentally ill” and “doing the work of Adolf Hitler.”

Even lesser provocations than these elicit a barrage of CAIR-inspired letters that can leave writers and editors feeling isolated and under siege. A case in point indirectly involves the Oslo peace process. Beginning in May 1995, Yasir Arafat, having entered into negotiations with Israel, took to defending himself before Arab audiences by alluding cryptically to the treaty of Hudaybiyah, signed by the Prophet Muhammad in 628 C.E. Dusting off their history books, American commentators mostly concluded that, in invoking an agreement signed but then subsequently broken by Muhammad when circumstances changed, Arafat was signaling that he, too, did not really mean to keep his pledge. Arafat’s intentions aside, however, it was the suggestion that the Prophet Muhammad had gone back on his word that aroused CAIR’s fury. So impassioned was the reaction when Mortimer B. Zuckerman, editor-in-chief of U.S. News & World Report, referred in a column to “the doctrine of the prophet Muhammad of making treaties with enemies while he is weak, violating them when he is strong,” that the magazine ended up printing not one but two apologies.

A flavor of what CAIR and its network of letter writers were capable of producing on this occasion may be gleaned from the pages of the New Republic, where a similar statement had been made by Yehoshua Porath, an eminent professor of Middle East history at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. This statement (”Muhammad broke the [Hudaybiya] agreement eighteen months after its conclusion”) elicited, according to the magazine’s editors, “hundreds of abusive phone calls, letters, and e-mail accusing us of defamation of the Prophet and worse.” Among the letters published by the editors, all in their original grammar and spelling, one read:

You guys had better watch out, ok? Because this is not going to go on further anymore, ok? You’d better watch out that f*ing Jew . . . tell him where he is coming from, ok? Because you know mother-f*er bastard, mother – his mom is a bastard. ok? He can’t talk about Muslim shit and you get your act together . . . all of you. We don’t want to hear anymore about this problem, ok? You got that right?

Another was more threatening:

The jews from back in history were the ugly decievers and BLOOD SUCKERS. . . . It is importatn that an apology is issued to calm down the MUSLIM all over the world. WE DO NO WANT TO SEE ANOTHER 19 AMERICANS GO A WSAY IN THA LAND OF THE PROPHET ,,, DO WE ??????? !!!!!! I am saying this because the Muslims will never tolerate the actions of the jews agains their religion. And articels like these contribute in the future loss of life of Anmericans all over the Islamic world. . . . We are fed up of filthy jews robbing our lands, and defaming all HOLY concepts we have. Please, save the lives of few Americans by issuing your apology.

Which brings me to my own case. In mid-1999, I published articles in the Los Angeles Times and the National Post (Toronto) emphasizing the distinction between, on the one hand, traditional Muslims who go quietly about their business and ask only to be allowed to practice their faith, and, on the other, radical Islamists with their agenda of transforming society in the image of their beliefs. In reply, CAIR launched fifteen separate attacks on me in the space of two months. Many of these, reaching all the way back to 1983, cited random quotations from articles and books in order to indict me out of my own mouth, or resurrected unflattering appraisals of my work by others. One bulletin attempted to demolish an article I had written about the treaty of Hudaybiya – even though, contrary to other American commentators, I had found that “Muhammad was technically within his rights to abrogate the treaty.” The broadside was titled “Daniel Pipes Smears Prophet Muhammad”: fighting words for many Muslims.

Reverberating through the Internet, CAIR’s attacks were also widely reprinted in Muslim publications, spurring dozens of letters, overwhelmingly negative, to the two newspapers that had carried my articles. One such letter urged me to enroll in sensitivity training (at CAIR, naturally), while others branded me with harsh names (”bigot and racist”), compared me to the Ku Klux Klan and the neo-Nazis, or characterized my writings as an “atrocity” filled with “pure poison” and “outright lies.” More alarmingly, the letters accused me either of perpetrating a hate crime against Muslims or of promoting and abetting such crimes. And they did not stop short of vague threats: “Is Pipes ready to answer the Creator for his hatred or is he a secular humanist . . . ? He will soon find out.”

I do not want to leave the impression that CAIR represents the only opinion to be found in the Muslim community, either here or abroad. Shaykh Abdad Hadi Palazzi, for instance, secretary general of the Italian Muslim Association and director of the Cultural Institute of the Italian Muslim Community in Rome, has actually denounced CAIR for falsely claiming to represent the entire Muslim community while in reality being bent on launching “hate campaigns against journalists, Congressmen, Senators, and Muslims who interfere with [its] true terrorist agenda.” What is more, Shaykh Palazzi has commended both me and Steven Emerson for daring to challenge the Islamists; though he does “not agree with [our] attitude toward Islam in particular and with [our] secular worldview in general,” nevertheless we are to be lauded for distinguishing “authentic Islam from the counterfeit image presented by the Islamists” – of whom, the Shaykh pointedly concludes, Muslims themselves “are the main victims.”

But Shaykh Palazzi is one among only a few voices of reason and sanity. Within the universe of Muslims who speak and write about Islam and its position in the modern world, the Islamists by far have the upper hand. That is not only a great tragedy for Muslims, but a danger to the rest of us. For if the Islamists have their way, any possibility of speaking the truth not only about them but about Islam itself will be foreclosed. Indeed, to a certain extent, as in the near-successful blacklisting of Steven Emerson at National Public Radio, it already has been.

Bernard Lewis, the renowned scholar of Islam and the Middle East, has noted with asperity that whereas, in a majority-Christian country like the United States, an English-language biographer of Jesus enjoys total latitude to say what he will and as he will, his counterpart working on a biography of Muhammad must look fearfully over his shoulder every step of the way. About my own writing, one correspondent protested to the National Post: “It’s is interesting to me as a Muslim American to hear you, a non-Muslim, speaks about Islam as an expert without you first consulting with an American Muslim organization like CAIR for an example, to get their opinion about what you are about to print.” In other words, one is perfectly free to voice an opinion about Islam, provided that one has vetted its contents beforehand with the Islamists – roughly the situation that now prevails in Iran.

What the Islamists are demanding, in short, is that the United States take a giant step toward applying within its borders the strictures of Islamic law (the shari’a) itself. A basic premise of that body of law is that no one, and especially no non-Muslim, may openly discuss certain subjects – some of the very subjects, as it happens, that CAIR wishes to render taboo. However absurd this may seem to a casual observer – Muslims, after all, make up, at most, 2 percent of the U.S. population – it is a fact that, when the guard of the democratic majority is let down, determined minorities in pursuit of anti-democratic aims can sometimes get their way.

tatar job
http://www.articlesbase.com/religion-articles/khomeini-had-failed-in-his-specific-goal-of-eliminating-rushdie-681779.html

Windows Xp Driver Updates are Easier Than You Think!

Posted by: admin  :  Category: printer computers

Obtaining the most recent Windows XP driver updates can have an extremely beneficial effect on the performance of your personal computer.  Many people don’t realize that outdated drivers are often the culprits behind errors, slowdowns, and overall poor performance.  As a matter of fact, many people do not even realize what drivers are!

Windows drivers are code interfaces that allow your computer to communicate with external hardware devices.  This includes your mouse, keyboard, video card, sound card, printer, monitor, and more.  All these things utilize device drivers in order to properly run with your Windows computer.

Finding the proper Windows XP driver updates for your hardware and operating system can be a big hassle.  First you have to figure out which hardware needs new drivers (which is not always clear), and then you have to go on a hunt over the internet to find the appropriate driver for your operating system and hardware version.

There is an easy way to update drivers, however, and it’s in the form of automatic driver update software.  One excellent program is called Driver Detective, and it draws on a database of over 2.2 million different device drivers, including special drivers for computers manufactured by Dell, Toshiba, Compaq, and other brands.

Another excellent program you can check out is Driver Genius.  It’s very similar to Driver Detective.  Basically these programs scan your computer for all installed drivers and then compares that data with their company’s databases of the latest drivers.  If yours are out of date all it takes is a few simple clicks, and the software will download the latest driver updates automatically.

Keeping your Windows XP drivers up to date is important if you want to ensure that your computer is running at peak performance.  It’s a basic part of computer maintenance, as well as a first step in troubleshooting any sort of computer error or problem.

Cynthia Blake
http://www.articlesbase.com/hardware-articles/windows-xp-driver-updates-are-easier-than-you-think-740657.html

Printers Toronto

Posted by: admin  :  Category: printer computers

If you live in Canada and are looking for commercial printers, Toronto is the place to turn to first. When you have a business that you are trying to promote, you are going to need a professional printer company that can print up some promotional materials for you. These usually include: brochures, posters, business cards, fliers, graphic design, post cards, greeting cards, notepads, letterhead, door hangers, calendars, envelopes, pocket folders, and catalogs. You do not have to get all of these promotional products at once, but instead may just get them one or a few at a time as your budget allows.

This city is one of the best places to hire printers. Toronto is a global city, and one of the top financial cities in the entire world, so there are plenty of printing businesses to choose from. Thanks to the internet, you no longer have to visit a business in person, or do it over the phone or mail. No matter where you are in Canada, or the whole world for that matter, you will be able to go online and view the offers and prices of many different printing firms in the state. When you have found the company that has what you are looking for at the right price, you can simply complete the transaction online and you will have your materials sent to you once they are completed.

The printers Toronto has to offer are some of the best you can find and are always developing new methods that they can use in order to give you the highest quality product available. Thanks to computers and digital imaging, getting high quality prints has never been easier or less expensive. Because of the internet, you no longer have to send copies of your promotional images to the printing company and wait for them to reach their destination. All you have to do is upload your images onto the internet or send them through an email and they can have them instantly.

If you do not have any marketing images or materials, then you will have to have a marketing firm draw some up for you. They will have graphic artists on hand that can create some lovely images for you and copywriters who can write your advertisements. Sometimes marketing firms have their own printers and will also create the actual end product for you as well. It all depends on what kind of company you end up hiring.

Once you have looked around the net for all the available printers Toronto has, you are definitely going to find the company that best suits your needs. After you have submitted your pictures to them, they will first create a proof for you. This is basically a test print to make sure that you are happy with what they are giving you before they go ahead and print out the full order. Your approval of the proof ensures that everything is accurate and can catch any errors before things have gone too far. For more information visit http://www.life-like-imaging.com.

Jackie Johnson
http://www.articlesbase.com/business-articles/printers-toronto-669554.html

Essential Information for New Graphic Artists

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VECTOR GRAPHICS: A vector drawing is one that is made of nothing more that a series of lines connected at control points. These lines can be curved or straight. The control points are called nodes or anchor points. The inside areas bounded by lines and nodes can be filled with color.
Vector drawings are stored by the computer as simple formulae, these take up far less of the computers resources than do bitmaps, and make much smaller files when saved.
Traditionally Vector images are used for Logos and line work Graphics. They give a very sharp crisp print.
Vector drawing can be extremely detailed and complex with graduated fountain fills and can be almost photographic. The really great thing about Vector Images is that they can be scaled to any size without sacrificing quality have a look at the image below to see how a Vector image is made up of a collection of shapes.

BITMAP or RASTER GRAPHICS: Bitmap is the term used to describe an image that is constructed and saved by the computer as a series of squares. These squares are called pixels. Each pixel has its own numerical code which records information such as the color, size and position of the square. The pixels are usually small and not apparent to the naked eye.
The problem is that is you get an image that is low resolution i.e. 72ppi (pixels per inch often referred to as dpi) and enlarge that image, it will become more and more fuzzy the larger you go until you can actually see the pixels.

As a rule 72dpi images are good for the Web because the files are small but these files are no good at all for publishing they are to low a quality.
Images to be used in Publications should be 300dpi or better. An image of 150 dpi or 200dpi is a good option if you intend to print larger than A4 on your Inkjet or Laser printer.

Bitmap Programs such as Adobe Photoshop or The GIMP: are ideal for working with Photographic Images and also for providing their own unique special effects that can not be preformed on Vector Graphics Programs.
Vector Graphics Programs such as Inkscape can also Incorporate Bitmaps into a Finished Artwork that combines Vector and Bitmap Images together. They also have filters for applying effects to Bitmaps from within the program allowing a certain degree of Bitmap editing without leaving the Illustration Program.
These programs also incorporate Trace programs that can convert a Bitmap Image into a Vector Image. You can follow one of our Inkscape Tutorials showing you how to do this.

About Compression and File Types:
It is essential to understand the difference in file types, particularly when you are dealing with photographic Images intended for high quality publishing.
bmp, jpeg and tiff are the most common file types used for Bitmap or Raster images.
Tiff and Bmp files faithfully store the information about every pixel, maintaining the quality of the Image but in doing this they create large files that can take up space on your hard drive or storage device. For a really high quality Image suitable for Publication it is always best to maintain high quality 300 dpi images.
Jpeg files use compression to make the file smaller. Jpeg files are very suitable for creating artwork for the Web but because of the compression the file quality can be severely compromised depending on how much compression you use. Instead of storing information on every pixel, jpeg files use a formula that groups pixels together. Below is a close up of a low quality 72 dpi jpeg typical of the artwork often sent to me by customers to work with. No good for me to blow up and print, however viewed at the right size on the web this file was ok. There is a great article on how to enhance a poor image like this on our Desktoptips Tutorials Page.

If you are using a Digital camera remember that by default most cameras use jpeg compression. Set your camera to ‘Raw’ for the best quality images. It really depends on what you plan to do with the image in the end. If you want to view it on a screen then jpeg compression is fine. Most digital camera jpegs will also print a good 6 x 4 high gloss photo, but not so good if you intend to have a shot enlarged for framing. Again you should set your camera to ‘Raw’.

PNG &SVG FILES:
.Png files also use compression, they also allow transparent backgrounds which jpeg files don’t. Inkscape uses .png files to export Bitmap artwork. I find .png files less ‘lossy’ than jpeg files although slightly larger in file size. Png files are very suitable for creating artwork for the Web.
Svg files are Vector Graphic files. Inkscape uses this file type as default. All of the Vector elements are maintained and the Image can be scaled up or down with no loss of quality. Svg files can now be viewed in the latest browsers on the Web. Vector graphic files are typical much smaller than bitmap files.

PDF files:
Pdf files were created by Adobe to provide a standard file format that encapsulates both bitmap, vector and text elements in a format that can be opened by anyone with a pdf viewer. You can embed typefaces and also choose to add compression to make files smaller for the Web.
Inkscape allows you to save your files using the Pdf format.

GIFF files:
Giff files are used primarily for the web, they make an Images file size smaller by reducing the color palette. giff files also support animation and can have transparent backgrounds.

PS & EPS files:
There are many other file types which Inkscape supports including .ps (postscript) and .eps (encapsulated postscript) . Saving files in these formats allows you to open the file in other programs such as Corel Draw and Adobe Illustrator. I have found Illustrator opens the native .svg files with no problems

Rod Taylor
http://www.articlesbase.com/art-articles/essential-information-for-new-graphic-artists-671426.html

Laptops and Printers

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Laptops are the darlings of everyone these days, irrespective of gender, age, job and position. Desktop computers, it seems, are slowly getting outrun by these veritable beauties. Revered multinationals like IBM, Toshiba, HP, Sony, Panasonic, Dell, Apple and Lenovo come out with newer models regularly. The market is very vast, the stakes are very high and the competition is very tight where no quarter is asked nor given.

Every manufacturer worth their salt spends millions in research processes to make their products stand out in the crowd. They beckon a potential buyer by combining cutting edge technologies with eye catching designs.

If you have plans to buy a laptop, make a list of your requirements before going for a market survey. Capabilities and features of laptops differ from model to model. So make sure that the one you buy is actually suitable for your work and other requirements. The screens also differ in size.

Price is certainly a very important deciding factor. Cost comparison keeping in view the available features would help save your hard earned money. Try to find out what extras the manufacturer is offering, such as extended memory and graphics.

In the present scenario where technology becomes outdated in a wink, you need to be extra cautious about the features of a laptop. Wi-fi capability, good speed and large memory and portability should be your primary criteria. Light weight and thin notebook laptops with futuristic capabilities would serve you well for long years.

Desktop printing technology has progressed a great deal in recent times. Things have come to such a situation that you need not go to professional printing firms to get your small scale printing works done. These printers are so advanced that they can take multiple printouts at any given time.

The capabilities of printers differ immensely. Some can perform multiple functions whereas some are made to meet specific goals. Line printers, label printers and plotters serve specific purposes whereas laser printers, ink jet printers and dot matrix printers solve almost all printing requirements of an office. Multifunction printers can perform different functions and can be a one stop solution to all printing requirements of your office and home.

Presently, the thrust is to buy printers which can double as fax machines, photocopiers and scanners. You need to consider your present and future requirements and the depth of your pocket before selecting a printer. The initial cost and the operational costs should definitely be given a serious thought. Some printers may be cheap to buy, but high on operational costs. The durability of the model and its speed and performance should also be given a thought. Some printers can even perform some specialty jobs like printing a card or so.

Roberta Groche
http://www.articlesbase.com/computers-articles/laptops-and-printers-681167.html

Organize Your Digital Albums With CD Labels

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When was the last time you looked at your photo albums? Your last compilation probably dates back more than five years ago. The advent of digital cameras made these book-like things with sticky sheets and clear plastics obsolete. Photo albums are a thing of the past.

Now we have digital albums – a collection of digital pictures stored either in your computer’s hard drive or in a recordable CD. Storing your photos in CDs is more efficient because you not only preserve their quality, you can also store thousands of images in them.

Technology has also revolutionized how you record videos. Your daughter’s birthday party can now be recorded directly to a CD in DVD format. This eliminates those small cassette-like things that you used to for recording.

With CDs, less is definitely more. Now, how do you organize these CD albums to make it easier for you to search for photos or videos? Or how do you make these CDs more memorable? The answer is CD label printing.

CD label prints make your bland, uninteresting and generic looking CD into colorful and classifiable CD albums. You can now make these shiny round things more delightful to look at and more memorable with CD labels.

Through CD label printing, you can easily label your CD album. Writing directly on the CDs with a permanent marker is not ideal because it can always be erased or altered. With your CD label printing, affixing a title to a CD has never been easy: Anissa’s 7th Birthday party; Christmas 2007; Thanksgiving 2008. With these titles on your CD labels, it would be easier for you to sort them out.

You can even make elaborate label prints by attaching an image, a logo or a WordArt. Insert your daughter’s picture blowing a cake on her birthday album, or your company logo on your album of your last team building activity. If you do not want photos, graphics might do the trick. Let your imagination run wild to make your digital albums easily identifiable.

To make your label prints, you either use Microsoft Word or some labeling software produced by the same makers of ready-to-print label paper. Between the two, the software programs are preferred because it comes with label templates and it will also walk you through the process so you can produce good CD label printing. The software also comes with ready-to-print papers- pre-cut stickers that you just have to insert in your printer.

With CD labels, you can easily sort your CDs according to the event or the date. More importantly, your CD labels make your digital albums more interesting and more memorable.

For comments and inquiries about the article visit: Label Printing

Janice Jenkins
http://www.articlesbase.com/online-business-articles/organize-your-digital-albums-with-cd-labels-738601.html