How to Restore Your Lost Homepage on Any Browser
Have you ever lost your homepage? Whether you accidentally installed malware or tampered with the wrong setting, it doesn’t matter how it happened. Check out this article from MakeUseOf.com
Have you ever lost your homepage? Whether you accidentally installed malware or tampered with the wrong setting, it doesn’t matter how it happened. Check out this article from MakeUseOf.com
If you’re anything like me, chances are high you’ve got an Android tablet gathering dust in a drawer somewhere, unused and unloved. You might have received one as a Christmas or birthday present one year, and just not have found a compelling use for it. It might have served you faithfully for years, but has been rendered slow and unwieldy under the weight of multiple software updates. Check out this article from MakeUseOf.com
The activity of Romanian hacker Guccifer, who has admitted to compromising almost 100 email and social media accounts belonging to U.S. government officials, politicians, and other high-profile individuals, is the latest proof that humans are the weakest link in computer security. More of this article from PCWorld.com
With Microsoft’s Insider Preview Build 14352 of Windows 10, released on Thursday afternoon, new features include the ability to ask Cortana for specific songs and ink reminders in Windows Ink’s Sticky Notes. The most interesting addition is this: You can now run two antivirus programs on your PC. Check out this article from PCWorld.com
Android users often get some features that iOS users don’t have. For the longest time, this included keyboards not made by Apple, which meant constant jibes from Android fanboys about Apple’s restricted system. Check out this article from MakeUseOf.com
In the coming weeks, Microsoft will push more than ever for you to upgrade to Windows 10 because from July 29 on the upgrade will cost $119. For Microsoft, it’s more valuable if you upgrade now — for free — because Windows 10 creates long-term revenue and it’s easier to support. More of this article from MakeUseOf.com
If a new report is to be believed, Microsoft could debut a pair of streaming devices at E3, both of which could be used to remotely play Xbox One games on another TV within the home. More of this latest news from PCWorld.com