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Actual for You - Linux for Windows Users
Home Insurance - Understanding How They Calculate Your Premium And Using It To Your Advantage tepad that allows you to create links to other notes that you create. You can think of it as a Wiki on your desktop.The better your understanding of any subject, the more easily you can position yourself for the greatest benefits. This is true of home insurance. If you understand how insurance companies calculate your home insurance rates, you'll be better equipped to position yourself for the best price value. This article will help you do that...Home insurance providers (Whether home owners or renters) are there to make profit. Yes, they are there to render a service. However, you must understand that they are primarily out to make a decent profit. And like every good business, they'll not jeopardize their chances of being profitable.So what does thi Why won’t my video files play? Out of the box, Ubuntu Linux will not play AVI and other proprietary multimedia formats. The easiest way to solve this problem is to install and run EasyUbuntu or Automatix (System> Administration> Synaptic Package Manager). After they are installed, you ought be able to find these programs in Applications> System Tools. The default multimedia player on Ubuntu is Totem, but I prefer VLC Media Player, which you can also install using Add/Remove. For music files, I like XMMS Music Player, which looks a lot like WinAmp. Others swear by Amarok, which also maintains a database of your music. Can I work with files created in Windows? Unlike Windows or Mac OS X, Linux comes with a complete office suite that’s compatible with MS Office. OpenOffice.org will let How Are Structured Settlements Structured SHIFTING to the Linux operating system can be pretty daunting for long-time Windows users who have grown accustomed to doing things a certain way.How Are Structured Settlements Structured?The structured settlement is becoming one of the most common methods for individuals to secure payment from those lawsuits that they have filed and won. If you have been hurt or otherwise victimized and a judge has ruled that you deserve to be compensated for what's happened, or the defendant is willing to work out compensation with you, a structured settlement may be one of the best methods for you to receive those funds. Understanding how they are set up and how they work for you is essential getting the funds that you need, the way that you need them.Setting Up A Struct Some months ago, we looked at the challenges that Windows users face when first using Mac OS X. The challenges are somewhat different on Linux, but can also lead to a fair amount of frustration for first-time users. Unlike Windows or Mac OS X, there are many flavors of Linux. I use a distribution called Ubuntu Linux Version 6.06, but this is by no means the only one available. It is, however, one of the more user-friendly distributions around. Also unlike Windows and Mac OS X, you can get Linux free--without breaking any laws. But free software also comes at a price. There’s a lot less hand-holding and there are more things you’ll have to figure out on your own. Most of the answers to questions that newbies ask are tucked away in forums and mailing lists, but these require some dogged Web searching to ferret out. If you’ve just started using Ubuntu, a good place to start is the Absolute Beginner Talk in the Ubuntu forums. The tips in this column are by no means as comprehensive, but they answer some of the questions I had when I first moved from Windows to Linux. I’ve also included a list of software that I’ve found to be indispensable. How do I install programs? As a Windows user, I was so used to downloading software from a Web site and running an EXE file to install it. Things aren’t that simple in Linux because programs are often dependent on other programs that also have to be installed. Package managers keep track of these dependencies to make sure the programs run properly. On Ubuntu Linux, there are two easy ways to install software. Use Add/Remove from the Applications menu or the Synaptic Package Manager (System> Administration> Synaptic Package Manager), both of which will download an updated list of software available. Why does Linux keep asking me for a password? One reason Linux (and Mac OS X, which is also based on Unix) is relatively safe from viruses and spyware is that the user needs to type in a password every time a new program is installed. This means it’s much harder to accidentally install malicious software from the Internet. But where are my files? Linux uses the same directory structure as other Unix-based operating systems like OS X. The root is reserved for system files and contains folders with cryptic names such as bin, boot, dev, and etc. You generally do not want to touch these files, and every time you try to change something here, you will be asked for a password. On the other hand, you can write data files to your home folder (Places> Home Folder) without such restrictions. In the root, this folder is found in the “home” directory. There are two powerful tools to help you find programs and files: Beagle Search and Gnome Deskbar. Beagle Search indexes the contents of your hard disk so that you can find what you need quickly. To add the program, go to Add/Remove, click on Accessories and scroll down till you find Search. Check the box next to it and click on the Apply button. When Beagle is installed, you can find it in Places> Search. Deskbar is a very efficient launcher. To make it available, right-click on any desktop panel, choose Add to Panel and choose Deskbar from the Accessories section. Click the Add button. Deskbar works like Spotlight on the Mac. Just type in the first few letters of your search term and a menu will drop down showing possible choices. In this way, you can quickly launch a program without moving the mouse through nested menus. A useful tool for organizing and finding scraps of information is Tomboy Notes, a notepad that allows you to create links to other notes that you create. You can think of it as a Wiki on your desktop. Why won’t my video files play? Out of the box, Ubuntu Linux will not play AVI and other proprietary multimedia formats. The easiest way to solve this problem is to install and run EasyUbuntu or Automatix (System> Administration> Synaptic Package Manager). After they are installed, you ought be able to find these programs in Applications> System Tools. The default multimedia player on Ubuntu is Totem, but I prefer VLC Media Player, which you can also install using Add/Remove. For music files, I like XMMS Music Player, which looks a lot like WinAmp. Others swear by Amarok, which also maintains a database of your music. Can I work with files created in Windows? Unlike Windows or Mac OS X, Linux comes with a complete office suite that’s compatible with MS Office. OpenOffice.org will let y Hungary Property - Guide to Buying a Property in Hungary quire some dogged Web searching to ferret out. If you’ve just started using Ubuntu, a good place to start is the Absolute Beginner Talk in the Ubuntu forums.OverviewOf the ten newest members of the European Union, Hungary has the fastest growing economy. As a result, those foreign nationals that took advantage of the liberalization that has begun to occur in the real estate laws of that country have enjoyed a profitable status over the course of the past three years.Interestingly, the largest block of foreign nationals that are purchasing real estate in Hungary are from Ireland. The remaining groupings of foreign nationals tend to come from some of the other European Union nations.The Hungarian national government has made a consistent and concerted effort to attract foreign investment The tips in this column are by no means as comprehensive, but they answer some of the questions I had when I first moved from Windows to Linux. I’ve also included a list of software that I’ve found to be indispensable. How do I install programs? As a Windows user, I was so used to downloading software from a Web site and running an EXE file to install it. Things aren’t that simple in Linux because programs are often dependent on other programs that also have to be installed. Package managers keep track of these dependencies to make sure the programs run properly. On Ubuntu Linux, there are two easy ways to install software. Use Add/Remove from the Applications menu or the Synaptic Package Manager (System> Administration> Synaptic Package Manager), both of which will download an updated list of software available. Why does Linux keep asking me for a password? One reason Linux (and Mac OS X, which is also based on Unix) is relatively safe from viruses and spyware is that the user needs to type in a password every time a new program is installed. This means it’s much harder to accidentally install malicious software from the Internet. But where are my files? Linux uses the same directory structure as other Unix-based operating systems like OS X. The root is reserved for system files and contains folders with cryptic names such as bin, boot, dev, and etc. You generally do not want to touch these files, and every time you try to change something here, you will be asked for a password. On the other hand, you can write data files to your home folder (Places> Home Folder) without such restrictions. In the root, this folder is found in the “home” directory. There are two powerful tools to help you find programs and files: Beagle Search and Gnome Deskbar. Beagle Search indexes the contents of your hard disk so that you can find what you need quickly. To add the program, go to Add/Remove, click on Accessories and scroll down till you find Search. Check the box next to it and click on the Apply button. When Beagle is installed, you can find it in Places> Search. Deskbar is a very efficient launcher. To make it available, right-click on any desktop panel, choose Add to Panel and choose Deskbar from the Accessories section. Click the Add button. Deskbar works like Spotlight on the Mac. Just type in the first few letters of your search term and a menu will drop down showing possible choices. In this way, you can quickly launch a program without moving the mouse through nested menus. A useful tool for organizing and finding scraps of information is Tomboy Notes, a notepad that allows you to create links to other notes that you create. You can think of it as a Wiki on your desktop. Why won’t my video files play? Out of the box, Ubuntu Linux will not play AVI and other proprietary multimedia formats. The easiest way to solve this problem is to install and run EasyUbuntu or Automatix (System> Administration> Synaptic Package Manager). After they are installed, you ought be able to find these programs in Applications> System Tools. The default multimedia player on Ubuntu is Totem, but I prefer VLC Media Player, which you can also install using Add/Remove. For music files, I like XMMS Music Player, which looks a lot like WinAmp. Others swear by Amarok, which also maintains a database of your music. Can I work with files created in Windows? Unlike Windows or Mac OS X, Linux comes with a complete office suite that’s compatible with MS Office. OpenOffice.org will let Lenders See Signs of Increase in Bad Debt which will download an updated list of software available.HSBC, the third largest bank in the world by market value and a major force in credit lending in the United States and elsewhere, has forecast increasing defaults on credit cards and other loan types in the next few months.The warning comes as the credit lending industry has seen two quarters of declining credit quality. Quite simply, people who take out loans are failing to repay them.HSBC knows the industry. The bank is one of the largest lenders in the nation for people with below-average credit worthiness, and is bracing for an increase in bankruptcies and higher losses from defaults. The trend in greater loan delinquencies began in t Why does Linux keep asking me for a password? One reason Linux (and Mac OS X, which is also based on Unix) is relatively safe from viruses and spyware is that the user needs to type in a password every time a new program is installed. This means it’s much harder to accidentally install malicious software from the Internet. But where are my files? Linux uses the same directory structure as other Unix-based operating systems like OS X. The root is reserved for system files and contains folders with cryptic names such as bin, boot, dev, and etc. You generally do not want to touch these files, and every time you try to change something here, you will be asked for a password. On the other hand, you can write data files to your home folder (Places> Home Folder) without such restrictions. In the root, this folder is found in the “home” directory. There are two powerful tools to help you find programs and files: Beagle Search and Gnome Deskbar. Beagle Search indexes the contents of your hard disk so that you can find what you need quickly. To add the program, go to Add/Remove, click on Accessories and scroll down till you find Search. Check the box next to it and click on the Apply button. When Beagle is installed, you can find it in Places> Search. Deskbar is a very efficient launcher. To make it available, right-click on any desktop panel, choose Add to Panel and choose Deskbar from the Accessories section. Click the Add button. Deskbar works like Spotlight on the Mac. Just type in the first few letters of your search term and a menu will drop down showing possible choices. In this way, you can quickly launch a program without moving the mouse through nested menus. A useful tool for organizing and finding scraps of information is Tomboy Notes, a notepad that allows you to create links to other notes that you create. You can think of it as a Wiki on your desktop. Why won’t my video files play? Out of the box, Ubuntu Linux will not play AVI and other proprietary multimedia formats. The easiest way to solve this problem is to install and run EasyUbuntu or Automatix (System> Administration> Synaptic Package Manager). After they are installed, you ought be able to find these programs in Applications> System Tools. The default multimedia player on Ubuntu is Totem, but I prefer VLC Media Player, which you can also install using Add/Remove. For music files, I like XMMS Music Player, which looks a lot like WinAmp. Others swear by Amarok, which also maintains a database of your music. Can I work with files created in Windows? Unlike Windows or Mac OS X, Linux comes with a complete office suite that’s compatible with MS Office. OpenOffice.org will let Keyword Research – The Backbone of Optimization here are two powerful tools to help you find programs and files: Beagle Search and Gnome Deskbar.Readymade furnishings: how do you rate this keyword phrase? Is the phrase popular? How many people search the phrase? These questions came up when I had a chance visit to my friend’s place. She was optimizing web content for one of her clients who dealt in readymade furnishings business. She was thorough in her work – the title, the meta tags, the headline, the alt tags, the keyword-rich contents, and so on. Yet the traffic was thin, ranking less than satisfactory and conversion to sales poor.Since she evidently knew the basics of optimizing page-content, I started on a cautious note. On the face of it, ‘readymade furnishings’ seemed a good-enou Beagle Search indexes the contents of your hard disk so that you can find what you need quickly. To add the program, go to Add/Remove, click on Accessories and scroll down till you find Search. Check the box next to it and click on the Apply button. When Beagle is installed, you can find it in Places> Search. Deskbar is a very efficient launcher. To make it available, right-click on any desktop panel, choose Add to Panel and choose Deskbar from the Accessories section. Click the Add button. Deskbar works like Spotlight on the Mac. Just type in the first few letters of your search term and a menu will drop down showing possible choices. In this way, you can quickly launch a program without moving the mouse through nested menus. A useful tool for organizing and finding scraps of information is Tomboy Notes, a notepad that allows you to create links to other notes that you create. You can think of it as a Wiki on your desktop. Why won’t my video files play? Out of the box, Ubuntu Linux will not play AVI and other proprietary multimedia formats. The easiest way to solve this problem is to install and run EasyUbuntu or Automatix (System> Administration> Synaptic Package Manager). After they are installed, you ought be able to find these programs in Applications> System Tools. The default multimedia player on Ubuntu is Totem, but I prefer VLC Media Player, which you can also install using Add/Remove. For music files, I like XMMS Music Player, which looks a lot like WinAmp. Others swear by Amarok, which also maintains a database of your music. Can I work with files created in Windows? Unlike Windows or Mac OS X, Linux comes with a complete office suite that’s compatible with MS Office. OpenOffice.org will let Four Customer Service Principles To Put Into Action Today tepad that allows you to create links to other notes that you create. You can think of it as a Wiki on your desktop.Good customer service is indeed hard to find, much more to provide. It is one thing to want to provide good customer service to your customers and yet another thing to do it. Information sharing between the management and frontline staff, budget constraints and equipments needed to do the job makes providing good customer care harder than it seems.But with these simple and age-old tips, you can boost your customer care program without even shelling out a huge amount of cash. Moreover, these customer care tips are not dependent on extra equipments, software or any other things that will cost a lot of money.1) It is important to keep your p Why won’t my video files play? Out of the box, Ubuntu Linux will not play AVI and other proprietary multimedia formats. The easiest way to solve this problem is to install and run EasyUbuntu or Automatix (System> Administration> Synaptic Package Manager). After they are installed, you ought be able to find these programs in Applications> System Tools. The default multimedia player on Ubuntu is Totem, but I prefer VLC Media Player, which you can also install using Add/Remove. For music files, I like XMMS Music Player, which looks a lot like WinAmp. Others swear by Amarok, which also maintains a database of your music. Can I work with files created in Windows? Unlike Windows or Mac OS X, Linux comes with a complete office suite that’s compatible with MS Office. OpenOffice.org will let you load files created in MS Word and MS Excel and save them back in that format so your colleagues who are still using Windows can read them back. Another useful tool is Wine, which lets you run some Windows programsI use it to run Adobe Photoshopin Linux. Setting up Wine isn’t easy, however, and it’s usually better to simply find Linux counterparts that work like your favorite Windows programs. Making the shift to Linux isn’t as easy as some people make it out to be. But there’s a lot of helpand cool, free software available, if you know where to look.
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