Archive for the “Računalništvo” Category

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Dropbox – simple sharing files on one or more computers and devices

  • Never email yourself a file again
  • Automatically backup your files online
  • Keep files synced between computers
  • files easily with others
  • files with your mobile devices

File

Dropbox allows you to your files online and across your computers automatically.

  • 2GB of online storage for free, with up to 100GB available to paying customers.
  • files of any size or type.
  • Windows, Mac and Linux computers.
  • Automatically syncs when new files or changes are detected.
  • Work on files in your Dropbox even if you’re offline. Your changes once your computer has an Internet connection again.
  • Dropbox transfers will correctly resume where they left off if the connection drops.
  • Efficient – only the pieces of a file that changed (not the whole file) are synced. This saves you time.
  • Doesn’t hog your Internet connection. You can manually set bandwidth limits.

dropbox

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Enter each email address in the From: field, separated by OR. Make sure to add parentheses around everything listed in the From: field.

filter_multi_addresses

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Use NINITE.com

ninite

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audacity-windows

Audacity® is free, open source software for recording and editing sounds. It is available for Mac OS X, Microsoft Windows, GNU/Linux, and other operating systems. Learn more about Audacity… Also check our Wiki and Forum for more information.

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DNS1: 8.8.8.8

DNS2: 8.8.4.4

nameserver 8.8.8.8
nameserver 8.8.4.4

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ctrl + f12 -> Tab[ Forms ] -> password manager

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Adobe PDF in select menu window !!!

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Using nslookup, dig, and host

nslookup, dig, and host are useful commands that allow you to perform queries, and to test out your configuration.

You can use the nslookup command interactively to enter a shell from which you can change servers, set query options, and debug . You can also use nslookup non-interactively from the command line to issue simple queries. See nslookup(1Mtcp) for more information.

dig is another useful command line tool which you can use to gather information from servers. See dig(1Mtcp) for more information.

Finally, you can use the host command to provide answers to simple host queries. See host(1Mtcp) for more information.

Using nslookup interactively

  1. Enter nslookup at the command line. The nslookup prompt appears.
  2. View the current options by entering set all.
  3. Change any desired options by entering set option.
  4. Issue nslookup commands.
  5. Enter exit to leave nslookup.

For a list of sample commands, see “nslookup interactive commands”. For a list of options, see “nslookup interactive options”.

nslookup interactive commands

These sample commands are available from the nslookup shell:

volga
Return the IP address of volga.
172.16.118.1
Return the name matching the IP address you enter.
set querytype=ns
Set the query type to the Name Server record. Future queries of names and IP addresses return the NS record from that host.
set querytype=a
Restore the query type to the Address record.
server server
Make server the default server that is queried.

nslookup interactive options

Here are the commonly used options of nslookup. For a complete list, see the manual page for nslookup(1Mtcp).

[no]recurse
Sets the query type to recursive. When toggled to norecurse, nslookup performs iterative queries.
querytype=type
Sets the query type to the data type specified. Common types include a (Address), any (any data type), mx (Mail Exchanger), and ns (Name Server).
retry=n
Resends the query n times before giving up.
root=root server
Sets the root server to the server you enter.
timeout=n
The period of time nslookup waits for a response after the query is sent. This period doubles between each retry.

You can save any of these options in a .nslookuprc file in your home directory. The format of this file, which is searched for each time you invoke nslookup, is one set command per line. Here is an example, which sets the query type to address records, the domain to mynet.com, and sets the timeout on requests to 10 seconds:

   set querytype=a
   set domain=mynet.com
   set timeout=10

Querying a single name or address

To issue a simple query from the command line, use one of the following forms of the command:

nslookup name

nslookup IP_address

nslookup should return the desired answer by querying the default server. To query a different server, enter one of the following forms of the command:

nslookup name server

nslookup IP_address server

Examples of using the dig command

Obtain the latest list of root domain servers:

dig . ns

Find out the name servers for a zone:

dig @server domain ns

Request all records for a zone from an authoritative server:

dig @server domain axfr


NOTE: This command requires a zone transfer which the server may disallow.


Look up the domain name corresponding to the IP address 172.16.118.1:

dig -x 172.16.118.1

Examples of using the host command

Use host to find all the host records for a zone:

host -l domain

Use host to request all the records for a zone:

host -lv -t any domain


NOTE: These commands require a zone transfer which the server may disallow.



© 1999 The Santa Cruz Operation, Inc. All rights reserved.
UnixWare 7 Release 7.1.1 – 5 November 1999

Link :http://docsrv.sco.com/NET_tcpip/dnsC.nslook.html

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http://ninite.com/

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shift + TAB

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Urban Cetinski