Beranda
»
Internet
» Tips | Block any websites from your Computer with Windows OS
Update Terbaru BLUE.. Pada Article Hari Ini Penulis Akan Memberi Anda Cerita Yang Amat Menarik Hari Ini . Jadi Mari Kita Mula Membaca.

First go to C
drive from My Computer (for XP) or Computer (for Win7). Enter Windows folder from C:\ drive. After that enter folder System32. In System32 folder their is a folder name "driver". Just go to etc folder from driver folder. There is a file name host in this etc folder. Open it with notepad. At the very bottom you'll see the 127.0.0.1 Localhost is written. It's below enter 127.0.0.2 and
your website address. Like below 127.0.0.2 http://www.xyzzyx.com
127.0.0.3 http://www.abccba.com
127.0.0.4 http://www.aeiouxyz.com
In this way you can add as many site you wish. But remember, do not change the line "127.0.0.1 Localhost". Just add the new websites name periodically. Then save the notepad file and close it. But if you want to unblock any website just delete the line of that website from the host file and save it again.
Bagaimana Menarikkan Article Pada Hari Ini . BLUE.Jangan Lupa Datang Lagi Untuk Membaca Article Yang lebih Menarik Pada Masa Akan Datang/
Related Posts
The Atlantic on "secret societies" and how they stay hidden in the postmodern world of Twitter, cell phone cameras, and instant information.
Inside the surreal recruitment process of a legendary club—or something like it—at New York University
Matt King | Jul 27 2014
Matt King - How Secret Societies Stay Hidden On the InternetVery interesting article from The Atlantic on "secret societies" and how they stay hidden in the pos[...]
This story is a tragedy, in my opinion. Aaron Swartz was being made an example of for having embarrassed the government on a couple of occasions. Even the case for which charges were finally brought did not cause any financial harm to his target (JSTOR), who urged the government to drop the charges. The Feds refused - Swartz's conviction would serve as a warning. Instead, the young man hanged himself in his NYC apartment.
Here is a key passage that explains why so many of us supported Swartz's "work":
Swartz’s manifesto didn’t just call for the widespread illegal downloading and sharing of copyrighted scientific and academic material, which was already a dangerous idea. It explained why. Much of the academic research held under lock and key by large institutional publishers like Reed Elsevier had been largely funded at public expense, but was now being treated as private property – and as Swartz understood, that was just one example of a massive ideological victory for corporate interests that had penetrated almost every aspect of society. The actual data theft for which Swartz was prosecuted, the download of a large volume of journal articles from the academic database called JSTOR, was largely symbolic and arguably almost pointless. (As a Harvard graduate student at the time, Swartz was entitled to read anything on JSTOR.)
Academic publishers like Reed Elsevier, JSTOR, Science Direct, Nature, Hindawi, Springer, and others control nearly all of the published research in nearly every field, much of which is funded by tax dollars either directly or indirectly.
These publishers then charge authors hundreds [sometimes thousands] of dollars to publish, and charge more if the author wants open access; they charge for images in articles; they charge libraries hundreds of dollars for subscriptions, even digital subscriptions; and they try to charge consumers (like me) between $30 and $70 for use of an article (often on 24 hours).
Anyway, first up here is a review of the film and the life of its subject, via Salon, followed by an open access version of the film from Open Culture.
A film tells the story of the coder-activist who fought corporate power and corruption -- and paid a cruel price
Andrew O'Hehir | Tuesday, Jun 24, 2014
The Internet’s Own Boy: The Story of Aaron Swartz - New Documentary Is Free Online This story is a tragedy, in my opinion. Aaron Swartz was being made an example of for having embarr[...]
All in the Mind (Australia) focused on how the internet and social media can be harnessed for everything from taking the emotional pulse of the nation to suicide prevention.
Lynne Malcolm | Sunday 25 May 2014
Posting Komentar
Click to see the code!
To insert emoticon you must added at least one space before the code.