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Showing posts with label Education Guide. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Education Guide. Show all posts

How to see , Download and delete your chat histor on messenger service

I m explain you about how to see your message histroy on your phone or pc . what is your favourite messenger like facebook messenger or any ohter but however i would like to suggest you  if you delete your messenger history you wil be 100% safe . dont leak your message to other people . Although you probably shouldn't be snooping the only way to check it is if you log on as her. If you know her email and pw then you can go in and check her messages which is the obvious solution. Another thing you can do is if you know her email info you can always log into her email acct and not facebook. Facebook send notifications via email when you have something new. If you really do think it's something then you should just come straight out and ask her. You don't have to be confrontational about it just bring it up randomly and in a joking way. you never know it could be something her and her gf's were joking about that may be embarassing to her and she didn't want you to see.
to delete them so they stop coming back, you need to go to the regular facebook website, go to messages, and delete them there. facebook integrated messaging and chat, so anything sent in one will show up in the other, and is saved forever unless you go into Messages and delete the message thread.
1. Go to General Account Settings.
2. Click 'Download a copy of your Facebook data.
3. Click 'Start my Archive'
4. Usually, it take 24 hours for Facebook to collect all your data. Since your messages are very long, it may take longer.
5. After 24 hrs, check again. If the archive is ready for download, type in your password and download the archive to your computer.

Hope that this method works. Good luck!

Best Selfie Apps For Your Phone

Best Selfie Apps for Mobile : Take Unlimited Selfies/ Photos



Best Selfie Apps for Android : The latest high end smartphones come with high resolution front facing camera’s promising high quality selfies. However, most of the time you may not be pleased with the picture and would like to enhance your selfie a bit more before you could share it with your friends on Social Media.
Now if you own a Android device then there are so many Android Apps for taking selfies that you can use to make your photo look much better than the default look. So, Here we have the list of best Android apps for taking selfies. Get the best selfie apps for android from here

Top 5 Best Android Apps for taking Selfies : Best Seflie Apps for Your Mobile

1. YouCam Perfect Selfie Cam

The first app on our list of best selfie taking apps for Android is YouCam Perfect Selfie Cam. It is a free app and comes with in-app purchase for more features. The app comes with real-time beautifying features to see how you will look before you click a picture. Other features in the app includes, Multi-face detection, Skin smoother, add blush and remove shine to reveal a vivid face etc.

Best Selfie Apps for Android - Youcam


Download YouCam Perfect Selfie Cam from Playstore


2. Selfie Camera – Facial Beauty

The Selfie Camera -Facial Beauty is a yet another great selfie app and is similar to YouCam app. However, it comes with 20 different filters to make your selfie look better. You can also adjust skin and complexion settings according to your need. Other features in the app includes, Blur the background, adjust brightness and more.



Download Selfie Camera -Facial Beauty app from Play Store

3. Insta Selfie Cam Pic Collage

The Insta Selfie Cam Pic Collage is a free selfie taking app for Android devices and comes several features. You can make your selfie look better with photo frames, color effect and collage templates. The Insta Selfie Cam Pic Collage also comes with inbuilt sharing feature allowing the users to share their pictures directly from the app to Facebook, twitter and Instagram.

Download Insta Selfie Cam Pic Collage from Play Store

4. Retrica

Retrica is a yet another Selfie taking App for Android device and is popular for its vintage style photos.  It comes with around 80 filters allowing the users to add more awesomeness to their picture.  Real time filters allow you to preview your photo before you snap them. With Vingette you can add classic vingette borde to your click.

Best Selfie Apps for Android - Retrica

Download Retrica from Play Store

5. RetroSelfie – Selfies Editor

The RetroSelfie – Selfies Editor is a selfie taking app and as the name indicate it also allows you to edit your selfie. This app allows the users to make photo collages, apply filters, stickers and frames etc. It also comes with cosmetic tools to to give a professional makeup touch to your selfie and also allows you to share your selfies directly to Facebook, Instagram, twitter, Snap Chat and Viber.

Download RetroSelfie – Selfies Editor
So, these are the best 5 selfie taking apps for Android smartphone. Try them out and let us know you pick in the comments below.


Enable 'Auto Rotate' for your Android home screen


Google updated its Google app, which includes the Google Now Launcher, with some small tweaks on Wednesday. If you're using a Nexus device and haven't installed a third-party launcher app, such as Action Launcher 3 (or similar), you're already using the Google Now Launcher. On other devices, such as Samsung's Galaxy line you have to explicitly enable Google's launcher in the device's settings menu.

One such addition is the ability to enable auto rotate for your Android device's home screen. Meaning, you can rotate an Android smartphone from portrait to landscape when viewing any of your home screens and the interface will adjust to accommodate the device's orientation. As Droid Life notes, the update also seems to have adjusted the size of some app icons in the app tray.

To enable auto rotate, you'll need to download the latest Google app update from the Play store.

A quick way to free up iPhone memory

iPhone acting sluggish or strange? When my iPhone feels like it's a step slow, a poor network connection is usually to blame. And in instances where a weak signal isn't the culprit, I usually power down my iPhone, give it a minute to catch its breath, and then power it back on. That maneuver usually does the trick, but I just discovered a quicker way to get my iPhone back on track.

When your Wi-Fi is rock-solid or your cellular connection is strong and your iPhone is still slow to respond, there is a quick procedure you can perform that flushes your iPhone's memory. I tried it on both my iPhone and iPad and found that while it doesn't completely or even dramatically free up memory resources, it did reduce each device's memory usage somewhat.

To free up some memory, unlock your phone and then hold down the power button until the "slide to power off" screen appears. Next, instead of sliding to power off or tapping the cancel button, press and hold the Home button for a few seconds until you are returned to the home screen. That's it, memory flushed.
Screenshot by Matt Elliott/CNET
What I think this maneuver really does is suspend all background app activity. After you are returned to the home screen, if you double tap the Home button, you will see that all of of your recently used apps are still listed in the app switcher carousel. When you tap to open one, however, you won't pick up where you left off as the app switcher normally does. Instead, the app reloads and starts you off fresh.
I installed a system monitor app on my iPhone and iPad to see what my memory usage looked like before and after performing this memory-flush move. What I found was that I freed up an average of 75MB of RAM on my iPad Air (out of a total 1GB of RAM) and about 50MB (out of 2GB of RAM) on my iPhone 6S. But I performed these tests when each device was operating smoothly. I tried to open and engage as many apps as possible to simulate a heavy load before each test, but I was unable to bring either device to its breaking point. While my gains in free memory were minor, perhaps they'll be greater in cases where a higher percentage of memory is active.

What do you think? Did this move work for you? Better yet, what do you do when your iOS device is acting sluggish? Let me know in the comments below.

How to run Windows 10 on a virtual machine

If you want to play with Windows 10 or Office 2016 but aren't ready to abandon Windows 7 or 8 or Office 2013 just yet, there's an easy solution: a virtual machine. Broadly speaking, a virtual machine (VM) is a sandbox that tricks one operating system into running inside another. If you want a guided tour, check out our review of Windows 10.

Setup requires a more-than-entry-level PC, since you'll be running two resource-hungry OSes at once. But a virtual machine is well worth the effort, because it means fewer headaches than fully upgrading to beta software or running a second version of Windows on a drive partition. Also, if a VM gets a virus or starts acting weird, you can just delete it and reinstall, assuming it doesn't contain any important data.

There are a number of virtual machine apps you can choose from, but for simplicity's sake, this tutorial sticks to VirtualBox. These instructions are for Windows 7 and 8.1, but you can apply this process to other Windows versions.

What you need:
1. A CPU prepped for running a virtual machine.

2. A broadband Internet connection to download up to 4GB of files.

3. 50GB or more of free space on your PC.

4. Up to one hour of free time.

Step 1: Verify virtual machine support

Oddly, your CPU's virtualization features are often disabled by default. Fixing that can be a hassle, but the process of getting Windows 10 up and running in a virtual machine gets easier after this step. To make sure that virtualization is enabled in your hardware, you need to go into the motherboard BIOS interface. To do that, hit the F2 or Delete key while your PC is booting up. The timing can be tricky if you have a solid-state drive, because your window of opportunity is only a few seconds.

If F2 and Delete don't work, you may need to try F10 or F12 -- your motherboard manual will tell you. If you don't have your manual, you can usually download it from the manufacturer's website. If you don't know who made your motherboard or which model it is, download Speccy and click the Motherboard tab. If you have a laptop, the model is usually printed on the device itself. Then you can Google the motherboard name to find the manual, which will also show you where in the BIOS you will find the setting to toggle your CPU's virtualization settings. Once you've enabled virtualization in the BIOS, press F10 (unless the manual tells you to use a different key) to save your settings and reboot.

You may have a basic BIOS with no CPU virtualization setting. In that case, just hit the Escape key to leave the BIOS and boot into Windows.

Step 2: Download Windows 10 Insider Preview

There are two ways to get Windows 10: (1) install it as an upgrade to your current OS (Windows Vista, 7, or 8.1) or (2) download an ISO file. An ISO is a package of files that's usually installed from an optical disc, but a virtual machine basically tricks your computer into thinking that the files are on a CD or DVD. The virtual machine will install the ISO's contents much faster than an optical drive can. Go to Microsoft's site to get the Windows 10 ISO. Sign up as a Windows Insider, if you haven't already, and choose your file language.

If the Windows Insider ISO is not available, you can grab a 90-day free trial of Windows 10 Enterprise instead. This version won't give you the exact same set of features -- for example, the Windows Store is not present -- but it's the only legit method of getting a free test copy of Windows when the Insider program is not providing them.

Next, select either the 32-bit (x86) or 64-bit (x64) version. If you're not sure which one is compatible with your PC, hold down the Windows key and press the Pause/Break key to bring up the System window. Look for the System type entry, which will tell you if you have 64-bit or 32-bit Windows: 64-bit Windows can use either ISO, but 32-bit Windows can use only the 32-bit ISO. If you plan to test 64-bit software or to dedicate more than 4GB of system RAM to your virtual machine, you'll need 64-bit Windows running on your PC.

Some older CPUs cannot support a 64-bit virtual machine, even if the CPU is technically 64 bits. If you bought your PC more than five years ago, we recommend Googling your CPU (revisit the instructions in Step 1 to find your CPU name in the System) to check if it has 64-bit guest support. The guest is the OS running inside the virtual machine. The host is the computer the VM is running on.

Step 3: Get your virtual machine software

While your ISO is downloading, you can queue up VirtualBox. Once that's downloaded, install it and set it up for Windows 10.

With the program open, click the New button in the upper-left corner to get started. Name the virtual machine anything you like. The second entry field will default to Windows, if you use that word in the description above it, or you can select Windows from the drop-down menu. In the Version menu, select Windows 10 (32-bit) or Windows 10 (64-bit), depending on which ISO you downloaded.

Now you select your system RAM usage. The green section of the slider is considered safe, and the red zone may cause performance issues. We'd recommend at least 2GB of RAM, preferably 4GB. But if you have only 4GB to start with, give the virtual machine 2GB. If you have 6GB of system RAM, 3GB is great.

Click Next, and you'll be asked to create a virtual hard drive. You're installing a full operating system, so you'll need a healthy amount of room on your PC's storage device. The default for Windows 10 is 32GB; we recommend at least 25GB to install Windows 10 correctly. Click Create to go to the next menu. If you want to use more or less space, click Hide Description to open an advanced menu with a slider. Click Show Description to return to the hard drive file-type selection. It defaults to VDI, which is fine for basic testing. Other types are compatible with other VM software, such as VMware or Parallels.

Click Next, and you'll see that VirtualBox defaults to dynamic allocation. As the description states, this method will not automatically take up all 32GB (or whatever size you chose). Choosing Fixed size will immediately take up all the drive space that you reserved for the virtual machine. The next window will ask you to confirm the name and size of the VM. Click Create to finish setting up the essentials.

Step 4: Make optional tweaks

The tweaks in this step are optional. All VM apps have customizable settings to improve performance and change how the guest (the virtual machine) interacts with the host (your computer). In the left-hand column of VirtualBox's interface, you'll see the new VM you just set up. It's preselected, since you presumably have no other VMs to choose from right now, so just hit the Settings button to start tweaking. Settings sends you to a General menu, where most options will be grayed out when the VM is running, so you need to set it all up before you've booted it. There are lots of things that you can fiddle with here, but we'll focus on a few highlights.

First, click the Advanced tab to look at how the guest (VM) can talk to the host (PC). If you want to copy and paste between the two, go to Shared Clipboard and select Bidirectional from the drop-down menu. You can also choose your drag-and-drop behavior from the drop-down menu right below that. Since the VM version of Windows can't see the other storage devices and drive partitions on your PC, you'll need drag and drop to transfer files between the guest and the host.


Now click the System item in the left-hand column. Click the Processor tab to choose how many CPU threads you want to dedicate to the VM. VirtualBox defaults to one thread to stay on the safe side. But if you have more threads in the green zone, you can select them here by moving the slider to the right.

The last point of interest is the Display menu, again listed in the left-hand column. On the Video tab, you can increase how much video memory the VM uses, and you can enable acceleration. (Acceleration can create visual glitches, though, so you must disable it later.) As before, choices within the green zone shouldn't have a negative performance impact on the host PC, unless you're doing processing-intensive tasks while running the VM. Once you've made your selections in the three areas of the Settings menu that we've talked about here, click OK to save your changes.

Step 5: Set up the ISO

Now you're ready to boot your virtual copy of Windows 10. In the left column of VirtualBox, double-click your virtual machine to start it, as if it was a Windows installation disc. VirtualBox will ask for the location of your ISO. Don't remember where you downloaded it? In Google Chrome or Mozilla Firefox, press Ctrl-J to open the Downloads menu. Your downloaded files will be listed in chronological order. In Chrome, click Show in folder. In Firefox, hover your mouse pointer over the ISO and double-click to open its folder.

Want to get fancy? Click the folder location in Windows Explorer and press Ctrl-C to copy the location. Go back to VirtualBox, click the little folder icon with the green arrow, click the location window, and press Ctrl-C to paste the ISO's location. Press the Enter key to go to the ISO's folder. Select the ISO and click Open. If you don't want to try this copy-paste trick, you'll need to manually navigate to the folder containing the ISO.

Once you've set up your ISO location, click the Start button in VirtualBox's main window to run your VM copy of Windows 10. After a few seconds, you'll see a light blue Windows icon on a black background. The ISO is setting up the installer. This may take a few minutes, depending on how speedy your PC is. Then the screen will go black, and you'll see several menus on a purple background. Click the Next button and select Install Now. VirtualBox will tell you about available settings to detect key presses and mouse pointers in the guest (VM). Click the blue-and-white X button in the upper right to make those messages go away. Microsoft will ask you to agree to an end-user license agreement. Check the box if you agree, and click Next.

Step 6: Install Windows 10 in your VM

You have two installation options. Select the Custom option (the second one) and click Next to install Windows in the VM. This step can take a long time, depending on your computer's speed. Our test systems have solid-state storage devices and a dual-core laptop CPU with Hyper-threading, so for us installation took less than five minutes -- a lot faster than installing Windows from a DVD.

You're almost done! The VM may reboot a few times while it sets up, and then you'll see an operating system setup menu on a white background. You can use express settings here or go through each choice -- you can always adjust these settings later. To do that, finish installing Windows, then click the Windows icon in the lower left-hand corner of the screen, choose Settings, and click Privacy.

In the next section, tell the installer that this PC belongs to you, then sign in with your Microsoft account. Don't have one or don't want to use one? Hit the Sign Up button and choose Connect My Account Later. Now give Windows a username to log in with, decide if you want to set a password, and click Next. (You may get an error right after you click Next, but we clicked the OK button, and Windows kept installing.) Windows will take a few minutes to make some final adjustments in the background, and then you'll finally be on the Windows 10 desktop.

From here, you can do anything you want, but we recommend checking for updates first. To do that, click the Windows icon in the lower left-hand corner, choose Settings in the upper left of the menu that pops up (yes, the Windows Start menu is back), and select Update & Security. This will automatically check for the latest updates for Windows 10.

There's one last optional item you can try: installing Guest Additions (GA) so that you have more aspect-ratio choices for your VM window, or so that you can maximize the VM window and have it automatically scale to the corect resolution for your display. VirtualBox version 4.3.26, which we used for this tutorial, wouldn't scale with GA on our test laptops running Windows 7 and 8.1, but you may have better luck. With the Windows 10 VM running, click the Devices menu at the top of the window, select CD/DVD Devices, and select Remove Disk From Virtual Drive. This disk is just the ISO that you used to install Windows, which you don't need anymore.

Next, in the Devices menu, go to the bottom and select Insert Guest Additions CD image. Windows will pop up a notification in the lower right-hand corner of the screen. Click it and select the first option (the one with the VirtualBox icon next to it). Click Yes, Next, Next again, and Install to start the process. Windows will ask you to confirm some device-driver installations. Click the Install button to do that. The VM's screen may flicker a few times. This is normal. Finally, click Finish to reboot with the Guest Additions installed.

Step 7: Run Windows 10

You're now done setting up your virtual machine and Windows 10. You can shut down Windows 10 by clicking the Windows icon, selecting Power, and choosing Shut Down. To quickly run the VM next time, go back to VirtualBox's Manager screen, which comes up when you launch the software, right-click your VM in the left-hand column, and choose Create Shortcut on Desktop. That lets you skip the Manager screen and directly boot the VM from your host computer's desktop.

Now that you have a sandboxed version of Windows 10 running inside your main operating system, you can do things like test virus/malware protection or run experimental software without worrying about wrecking your whole system. You can learn how to navigate Windows 10 and decide if you like it before committing to the full upgrade or a fresh installation. You can check out Microsoft Edge, previously known as Project Spartan, which will replace Internet Explorer. Edge is preinstalled in Windows 10 and is supposed to support add-ons intended for Firefox and Chrome, so it's worth checking out. You can use your VM to test the preview version of Microsoft Office 2016, which would otherwise require you to uninstall your current copy of Office first. If you told VirtualBox to use the default 32GB installation of Windows 10, you have about 22GB left over after Windows is installed, so there's lots of room to play in your sandbox.

Study in the USA - a guide for international students

Study in the USA
Study in the USA - a guide for international students
 Is Studying in The United States Something You Been Contemplating Forever?
We can help you with that!
Unlike the overwhelming number of abroad study consulting agencies that flood the internet or our cities, using all sorts of analyses, our experts go out of their way to make sure you make the best of this opportunity so that upon completion of your studies in the USA, a bright future awaits you.

One thing Americans pride themselves over is the United States is the one country of the world where you can literally become anything you want. Hundreds of American universities are among the best in the world – the flexibility of programs offered is amazing - If you are ambitious and above all can pay for out of pocket for your studies, USA is THE destination for you. There are “study for free” options (through scholarships) in the USA as well.

Here are some other facts that may also interest you:
    Entrance in American vocational and some non-vocational schools is competitive; admission tests/entance exams are often required, but do you know that on a case by case basis these can be waiver?
    Admission to some of the top American institutions is increasingly being made easier for those who are able to pay for their studies out of pocket. Why should you care? Well when comes to knocking at the doors of the job market having attended a famous institution becomes a huge asset.
    If you had big dreams all your life, regardless of your age and current social status setting sail toward the USA might mark a turning point in your life. I love the flexibility of the American system - do you know for example that there are MBA with specializations in almost all fields of study in America? Who could dream of a better gateway into the world of business

        You be the judge, you have things like:

        MBA in:
        Arts and cultural management
        Aviation management
        Economics/finance/banking/accounting /business administration/human resources
        Electronic commerce
        Engineering management
        Entrepreneurship
        Hospitality management
        Computer-Human interaction
        Industrial and labor relations
        Industrial and manufacturing management
        International affairs//development management/logistics/marketing/ trade ,
        Management of technology
        Marketing, marketing research
        Mineral economics
        Nonprofit management
        Pharmaceutical administration
        Real estate
        Speech and interpersonal communication
        Statistics (math)
        Taxation
        Telecommunications
        In this day and age when starting one’s own company, sooner rather than later is the way to go, can you think of any better way to enter the buisness world whatever your background?
All sorts of info regarding studies in The USA are provided below; before that, here’s an important parenthesis.
 When it comes to going to the USA for your studies, there's two ways to go about it:
(1) Paying everything out of pocket.
(2) Applying for a scholarship.
Whichever option you choose, avoid the mistake committed by thousands of African students each year: "traveling for the sake of traveling" – you need to put a lot of thought into what brings you to The United States.

Study in USA , Online Collage and University

STUDY IN THE U.S.

Every year thousands of Nepali students attend higher education colleges and universities in the United States. To begin researching the opportunities to study in the USA, there are a number of resources available:

United States Educational Foundation in Nepal (USEF-Nepal)

If you are considering studying in the USA, USEF-Nepal is the best place to start your research. The Foundation offers individual and group advising sessions, a large library of research materials, special presentations on scholarships and admission procedures, and test preparation assistance. Most of the services provided by USEF-Nepal are free.

EducationUSA

EducationUSA is the parent organization that oversees all educational centers (like USEF-Nepal) around the world. It is operated by the Department of State’s bureau of Educational & Cultural Affairs. EducationUSA provides general information about studying in the USA, including tips on selecting a college, admission policies, financial advice and more.

Educational Exchanges

Opportunities for Nepali students and scholars to study or conduct research in the United State are announced in the newspapers, radio and on this website. The competitions are nation-wide and open. Selections are made by the Fulbright Commission's bi-national Board of Directors after an intensive review of applications, English language screening, and interviews. Opportunities are also available for American students and scholars to do research or teach in Nepal.

The Fulbright Program provides grants for Graduate Students, Scholars and Professionals, and Teachers and Administrators. This site includes Fulbright Commissions and other information on the program.
Hubert H. Humphrey Fellowships bring mid-level professionals from developing countries to the United States for a year of academic study and professional experiences.
East-West Center (EWC) Awards include both graduate degree scholarships and funding for short-term programs such as seminars and workshops. Nepalis have also received post-doctoral research awards and the Jefferson Fellowship for journalism. The annual East-West Center competition is usually announced in February of each year.