Anniversary of Past Tragedy

Audience: all employees of an organization
Message: We remember these people who met a tragic death.
Tone: formal
Timing: 2 minutes

Today marks the anniversary of one of the greatest tragedies to occur here at (corporation). It was one year ago that an unfortunate, mentally-deranged individual entered our building and gunned down 12 of our finest employees. To the individual who committed such a horror, the act was random and without meaning.

But to us—those people who knew, worked with, and loved the individuals who met their death—the act has taken on meaning.

We have grieved. We have prayed. We have asked ourselves over and over how we could have prevented it. We have tried to take precautions to prevent forever a recurrence. We have suffered from the emptiness their death leaves.

We pause now, today, from our everyday tasks—our phone conversations, our meetings, all our planning and interacting—to remember them as they were: Energetic. Fun-loving. Talented. Compassionate. Committed to families. Committed to their fellow workers. There is pain, but there is also joy that we had the privilege of knowing and working with them through the years.

Because each of you as an individual is important to us at (corporation) and because human life is sacred to us as a nation, we resolve to remember and honor these who have died. We look forward to the day when such tragedies are no longer part of life, to a brighter day for us all.

Handling Question Answer Periods

Next to the invitation itself, the offhanded comment, “Oh, by the way, you should allow a little time at the end for questions,” is the greatest cause for concern for many speakers. Why? Several reasons: They fear not knowing the answer to a specific question. They fear that someone will question their authority or the credibility of their information. They fear stammering and faltering with unplanned answers. They fear a hostile audience or participant. They fear losing control of the audience and the situation. They may even feel “put upon” for being placed on the spot with an unpopular answer or an unpopular subject.

And any or all of these may cause embarrassment.

Why, then, should speakers put themselves through the anxiety of anticipating these predicaments and devastating results? First of all, the audience expects time for questions—as their God-given right to force the speaker to “meet the press” so to speak, particularly on controversial points.

But in addition to audience expectations and needs, questions also benefit you, the speaker. First, questions allow you to apply the key points specifically to your audience’s situation. Audience analysis, of course, is part of your preparation, but questions give you one last opportunity to make specific application. Questions also provide feedback on how clear you were and offer a chance to correct wrong impressions. When you get an off-the-wall question, you immediately recognize that one of your key points has been perhaps misleading for or misunderstood by your listener.

Another advantage of question-answer periods is to establish further rapport with your audience. Your answers show that you care about individual needs and understanding. They show genuine goodwill in giving value to your audience. Here’s your opportunity to be spontaneous and witty. And nothing shows your depth of knowledge, credibility, and communication skills as vividly as unrehearsed fielding of unplanned questions.

Finally, questioning periods give you “leeway” in judging the appropriate timing. Five or ten minutes either added or subtracted from your speech can be corrected in the time allotted for questions—a reassuring cushion for you, particularly on a first-time speech run.

Let’s get into the mechanics, then, of handling question-answer periods effectively.

Anticipate and Prepare for Questions

Audience analysis, the first step in preparing a speech, should always include consideration of questions the group will have about your information and opposing viewpoints. Plan for these questions specifically in your question-answer period and prepare succinct responses.

Here’s an acronym we use to coach students in formulating a strong, memorable, spur-of-the-moment answer:
S = Summary (One-sentence summary statement of your answer)
E = Evidence (Key points to support your answer)
E = Example (Specific illustration that will make the key points memorable)
R = Restatement (Restatement of summary)

Question: “Do you think leasing space in this building will solve our overcrowding problem permanently?”
Answer:

(S) “No, I can’t see leasing more space here as a permanent solution.

(E) “The extra space available is not suitable for the kinds of shelving we want to install. For another thing, the extra space does not open to the outside corridor, and therefore, the traffic to the registration desk will still create the main peak-hour waiting lines. And neither will the extra leasing space accommodate the additional 200 or so visitors we plan to have during the spring.

(E) “If you’ll remember, two years ago we tried—with no success—to alter the traffic pattern by leasing more space on the bottom floor. People just would not walk to the end of the hall to take the alternate route. You remember Frank Tanner’s comments about his people not even having time to reach the coffee machine in 15 minutes, much less get a cup of coffee.

(R) “So, no, I don’t consider leasing more space in this building as a permanent solution to the overcrowding problem.”

With this format, you should find it much easier to be a SEER and to think on your feet. The idea is to have a thinking format to gather and present your ideas in a concise way for maximum impact and recall.
One last tip: You may want to avoid a particular issue in your prepared remarks on the lucky chance that the matter won’t surface in the question-answer period. But don’t count on it. Be prepared with an answer or at least an acknowledgment of any opposing viewpoint.

Encourage Questions When They are Slow to Come

Don’t assume that if the group voices no questions there are none. Audience members hold their tongues for any number of reasons: They haven’t shifted gears yet to active participation. They think that a question is stupid and that they should have understood your information the first time around. They may also think their question and your answer would be of limited interest and, therefore, hate to monopolize others’ time for their own clarification. They may feel particularly inept at wording their question. They may not want to risk others’ hostility with a controversial viewpoint or question. They may have understood your speech so thoroughly that they have no questions.

And your greatest three worries: They may not have understood your talk well enough to ask a question! They may have no interest at all in your subject! Or they may have written you off for credibility reasons.
To encourage questions, make sure your body language shows openness to the audience—upturned palms, wide-open arms, alert posture, raised eyebrows, a smile, movement toward the audience. All these gestures and movements show that you welcome their interaction.

Extend an invitation to questions with comments such as: “What questions do you have?” rather than “Do you have questions?” The least effective invitation is to mumble, “Are there questions?” as you glance up briefly, leaf through your notes again, or leave the stage.

Affirmations from you after questions (“Excellent question,” “Thank you for asking that,” “I’m glad someone brought that up because…”) also encourage other listeners to take a risk with their own questions.
If you anticipate difficulty in generating questions, you can distribute index cards at the beginning or end of the speech, asking participants to jot their questions down and pass them to the front. That way, you can weed through the cards, selecting the best ones. This procedure gives you maximum control and flexibility while still being responsive to the audience.

You can also generate questions with an opinion poll: “How many of you think that it would be feasible to raise this amount of money in six months’ time? In a year?” They raise their hands after each. “Lisa, you responded on six months. What gives you that confidence?” Such probing relaxes the group, encourages openness, and starts momentum for expressing opinions.

Pose your own question: “A question many groups frequently ask and one that may also be of interest to you is….” Or: “A question Bill Maxwell raised at our last meeting may still warrant discussion. He wanted to know if….” Or: “An issue I didn’t get into in my earlier remarks is Z—do any of you have a particular concern about how…?
Or you may want to repeat questions or comments overheard at the beginning: “I overheard someone earlier express the idea that…. How many of you agree?” This help on your part gives audiences time to consider their own questions and shows that you’re taking their questions seriously.

Maybe most important of all: When you do receive a question, be brief in your answer. If you take ten minutes to answer the first one or two, some participants will fear antagonizing less interested audience members by asking another question that may lengthen your speech another half hour.

Determine Whether to Repeat or Not Repeat the Question

If the sound is so poor in the room that questions from the audience can’t be heard, certainly you should repeat them for all to hear. You may want to repeat some questions, if not all, simply to give yourself time to think.
But to repeat a question in a small-group setting where everyone obviously heard is redundant and makes you sound like a parrot.

And you never want to repeat hostile questions because it’s difficult to do so without sounding hostile or defensive yourself. The other danger is that you reinforce the negative thought or the opposing viewpoint in your audience’s mind.

Maintain Control of the Audience

Set boundaries at the beginning of the session as to what kinds of questions you will take, the number of questions you have time for, and who will respond to each.

“I’ll ask you not to bring up the issues of X and Y for security reasons.” “We won’t let ourselves get into the Z matter because of the current litigation.” “I prefer to deal with questions only in the area of A and B rather than C, which headquarters can more appropriately deal with.” All these comments at the beginning set the stage for your control of what is to follow.

Then when someone asks an irrelevant question, you can defer the answer to a private dialogue afterward and not waste the group’s time or seem unresponsive to their needs. You will also limit the occasion for questions unrelated to your topic or expertise.

And no one says that you must answer all the questions. If you consider a question out-of-line, confidential, personal, irrelevant, or of little interest to the rest of the group, you can always deflect it, reroute it, challenge it, or simply defer answering it. “I’m afraid that’s out of my area of expertise; would someone else like to respond?” “Jack, I’m curious about why you’re asking that question; didn’t you and Mark work those issues out earlier?” “Do we really need to answer that question, or would it be more advantageous to focus on…?”

Finally, take questions in turn and don’t let a few monopolize: “I regret that we’ll not have time to finish with all the questions from those of you who are so perceptive with additional thoughts. But we do need to wrap this up. I’ll be around here for a few minutes if any of you would like to follow up one on one.”

Listen to the Question

Listening to the questions may not be as easy as it sounds. If you’re nervous, if you’re lambasting yourself about a previous error, if you’re worrying about the time, or if you’re threatened by the hostile body language of someone in the room, it’s easy to miss the point of what the questioner is asking. Poor listening may cause you to fumble a question you could have easily fielded.

Compounding the matter is the fact that the asker may give too much background or irrelevant information before getting to the real point. And the asker may not have a clear understanding of what his or her real question is!
To avoid giving an off-base answer, clarify with a probing question of your own: “Let me see if I understand your question correctly. You want to know if…?” Or: “Is your question thus-and-so? Or are you really asking if it is possible to…?”

Give your best effort to understanding the true question rather than concentrating on preparing your reply to contradict or refute the asker’s viewpoint. Finally, show that you are listening with attentive body language, such as leaning forward, head tilted in reflection, and steady eye contact.

Think Before You Answer

Even when an answer pops quickly to mind, pause before rushing ahead. With frequently asked questions, it’s tempting to give the canned answer when, with a little forethought, you can customize your answer, making it even more responsive to the asker.

To allow even more thinking time, you can use props such as removing or replacing eye glasses, taking a sip of water, striding to another spot in the room before turning to face the group, or tilting your head and rubbing your chin as if reflecting on the brilliance of the question.

You can also buy thinking time by commenting on the question itself: “That’s a tough question.” “That’s a perceptive question.” “I anticipated someone asking that and I don’t know if I’m going to have an answer that you’ll agree with or find completely satisfying, but….”

You may say honestly: “Let me think about that a moment” and then repeat the question to yourself aloud, “Ummm, what would I recommend if….” Such a pause and repetition renews the audience’s attention as they anticipate why the question required serious reflection.

You may refuse to answer at all: “I’m not at liberty to answer that now.” “That piece of the puzzle is still in the works now. May I get back to you on that later?”

Overview Your Answer Briefly, Then Elaborate

The question-answer period is not the place to redo your speech. When asked a question, respond with a headline message, then elaborate very briefly. Your audience will understand the elaboration much better within the context of your overview answer.

Here are a couple of examples of this technique: “In a word, my answer is yes. Management is aware of the problem and we’re trying to correct it. Last week, for example….” Another example of overviewing and then elaborating: “I don’t think it’s too expensive, no. It costs less than X and Y. Here’s how I think we can finance the first phase….”

Direct the Answers to the Entire Audience

Begin your answer while maintaining eye contact with the asker, and then after a few seconds glance away and sweep the entire group. Direct the remainder of your answer to everyone and make your comments generic enough for their interests also.

Remember that you do not have to satisfy every questioner completely because some will never stop their follow-up questions. Others may persist in presenting their own viewpoints even after you’ve given your answer. Keep in mind that you don’t have to answer every question fully. Just make your point briefly, break eye contact with the asker, then turn to the entire group and ask for the next question.

Use Your Answers to Reinforce Your Points

“I’m glad you brought that issue up because it will give me opportunity to elaborate on…” realigns the question with one you really want or need to answer. You can also refocus the question to make it bigger or smaller: “The larger issue that most of the industry will be concerned with is…; therefore, let me put my answer in a larger context.” Or: “Yes, that is the big-picture problem, but let me bring it a little closer to home with the more direct issue of….”

Go in either direction with the question to reinforce what you think is the essential viewpoint or message of interest.

Polish Your Techniques for Handling “Problem” Questions

Show-Off Questions

These are the questions asked merely to show the asker’s own knowledge of the subject or accomplishments. Recognize the reason behind the question, then comment only briefly and go to the next question. If this kind of questioner persists, you may have to add a comment such as the following to keep him or her from monopolizing the situation: “I’m not sure I’m understanding your question in all this. Would you please ask the specific question again.”

The asker will generally fumble into focusing on a question that you can answer briefly and use to regain control.

Off-the-Subject Questions

If the question is completely off the wall, you may simply gaze at the asker momentarily and then move on without a response at all—as if you didn’t quite understand the point.
You may ask if someone else has a similar concern. If so, answer briefly. If not, ask for permission to hold the question until the end, “if there’s time.”

Or you may comment: “Interesting idea, but how does that relate to Y?” The asker will usually mumble that it doesn’t and acquiesce or ask a more relevant question.

“That’s interesting and something worth further thought, but right now I’d like to spend our time focusing on….” will usually put the matter to rest. Or: “I hadn’t expected a question of that nature. May we discuss that later—just you and I?” The asker will usually be reinforced by the personal attention offered and you won’t lose the rest of the audience.

Limited-Interest Questions

When possible, bridge from the limited perspective to the larger issue at hand: “With reference to your specific situation, my opinion is that…, but the larger issue here seems to be….” Continue by making application to the entire audience.

Ask: “Does anyone else here have that concern?” Pause and look around, then continue: “Well, let me give you a brief answer and let’s talk about that later one on one—will that be more helpful?”
Then break eye contact and move on.

“Dumb” Questions

Don’t chance cutting someone off with what sounds like a “dumb” question but may be a very intelligent one after all. Rather, the “dumb” question may be a result of advanced, complex thinking that may not have occurred to you. The question may be quite relevant and you simply don’t understand the relevance because of limited expertise. Probe further to make sure you understand completely: “I’m afraid I’m not following the question. Would you explain further exactly how X relates to Y?”

Rambling or Long-Winded Questions

You may interrupt with, “Excuse me, but do I understand your central question to be…?” Or: “Excuse me, but I think I now have the drift of your question. My response is simply that….”

Unintelligible Questions

If you cannot understand the question because the asker has a heavy dialect or is fuzzy in his wording, pick one phrase or part of the question to deal with and frame a question that you think he or she may be asking.

Multiple Questions

In response to long, complex questions with irrelevant information thrown into the pot, you may have difficulty remembering everything that was asked along the way. When that’s the case, either answer the questions you remember, answer the last one, answer the most important one, or ask the questioner to repeat them slowly while you write them down. Then respond one by one.

You can defer some of them with: “If I understand completely, you’ve asked me four good questions. Let me answer the first two and come back to the others later if there’s time.”

Hypothetical Questions

Be careful that you don’t get trapped here. Express your disagreement with assumptions and say so when you think such a situation is highly unlikely. End with: “I prefer to concern myself with the real here-and-now in formulating policy on this issue. For the present situation, I still consider….”

Or refocus with: “James, we have so many real-life situations at hand that I’d rather stick with those concrete facts, if you don’t mind.” Or: “There are so many unknowns and variables in hypothetical questions that it would be difficult to give a meaningful answer to that concern. In the case of Z, is your interest more about…?”
Forced “Yes or No,” “A or B” Questions

If you can answer with a simple yes or no, do so. But if you prefer not to see the matter in black or white, say so: “I think we have to be careful here not to back ourselves into a corner with either answer. Either simple answer can keep us from seeing the extenuating circumstances that might alter….” Or: “I don’t think a simple yes or no would do justice to the issue.” Or: “I think we’d make a mistake to put it in either-or terms. There are so many issues that can affect….”

Finally, you can expand your options: “I think we have more than those two alternatives. Rather than A or B, a third possibility is to….”

Questions You Don’t Know the Answers to

You may defer the question to someone in the room with more expertise in that area: “I’m not sure I can adequately elaborate on that. Jeff, will you offer your expertise here?” You will win respect for your honesty and the support of the more experienced person you deferred the question to.
Never be afraid to say simply, “I don’t know. I’ll have to check on that information and get back to you.” And then do so.

Hostile Questions

If you expect hostile questions, you may request that all questioners state their names, companies, and titles before they ask questions. Some will think twice before they blurt out a hostile comment and risk associating it with their company. Anonymity is great protection.

Try to determine the reason for any hostility. By acknowledging and sympathizing with the legitimate feelings of the asker, you may defuse the hostility and help him or her receive your answer in a much less hostile manner.
The questioner’s hostility may be a reflection of his business agenda or his personality and may have little to do with you. Simply let the asker vent his emotions, and then go to the next question after a brief statement of your opinion.

Some questioners use a pseudo-courteous tone to wrap a hostile question. If so, reply just as courteously, but without the sarcasm.

You may even try a little humor or drama before answering, such as throwing your hand across your heart as if you’d been shot. “You may have hit me on that one.” Then proceed to answer as calmly as you can.
For frivolously hostile questions, you can relay the question back to the asker or to another person: “Mr. Jones, I feel uncomfortable in responding to that question. Maybe you’d just like to tell us how you would answer that question were you in my place?”

If you think the hostility is limited to one person’s viewpoint, you can let the group respond on your behalf: “Do any of the rest of you agree with that viewpoint? Does anyone else want to respond?” The silence will be a great answer. Or you may add your own in a courteous way.

Don’t feel that you have to refute the opposing view in great detail, particularly if the hostile view was not well supported itself. Simply comment: “No, I don’t think that’s the case.” No elaboration. Your answer will sound authoritative and final and will put the asker in the position of being rude and argumentative if he/she rephrases and continues.

If you can easily do so, rephrase a legitimate question minus the hostile tone: The question is: “Why are you demanding six years’ funding up front?” Repeat the question aloud: “Why do we think six years’ funding at the outset is necessary? Well, first of all….”

Above all, do not match hostility with hostility; instead, try to remain congenial in your answer. The audience will almost always side with (or at least empathize with and respect) the person who remains the calmest and most courteous.

Remember that the way you answer questions will always be remembered more clearly and for much longer than the content of your answer.

Conclude the Question-Answer Period with a Summary

Don’t let your speech limp to a close after the last question with “Well, if there are no more questions, that’s about all, folks.” Instead, firmly conclude with your prepared closing remarks. Here is where you actually use your prepared closing—that pithy quote or challenging question that will leave your audience charged and ready to act. In fact, some speakers prepare two closings: the one that ends their prepared speech and leads into the question-answer period and then one that wraps up the entire session with high impact.

If you’re lucky, you may happen to get a question that’s a great lead-in to your prepared closing. If so, use it as impetus to your conclusion and you’ll look even more eloquent and in control.

Maybe the very idea of questioning got off to a bad start when we as children were told never to question our parents’ decisions or commands. And schools sometimes reinforce the idea that questions negatively challenge the instructor’s authority. Certainly, we all remember the loudmouthed smart aleck whose every question was a challenge. Or maybe we’ve seen too many LA Law dramas where the judge instructs the witness in a booming tone: “Just answer the question.”

Don’t let those experiences keep you from making your speech all it can be. Allow questions and watch your audience’s mood, interest, and body language switch from low gear to high. Questions clarify, tailor, and reinforce your key message. To your audience, they are your statement of openness, genuineness, courtesy, and goodwill.

Selecting the Appropriate Slant, Tone, and Length for Your Speech

Generic subjects make poor speeches. Never attempt to give a speech with the “Big Black Hole Theory” as your message. You always need a context—a slant, tone, and length appropriate to the specific audience. The way you handle your message makes the crucial difference in the audience’s acceptance or rejection.

Take the subject of sales quotas. Let’s say the actual sales volume of your company has been falling behind projections by about 25 percent each month for the last four months. That’s the information you want to convey. But you’ll need to fine-tune that message even in the planning stage.

To the board of directors—

Message slant: The sales slump should have been expected because of new competition in the arena, a reorganization of the marketing territory, and the general economic slump in the state. We should have foreseen this slump and brought our projections in line with reality.

Tone: Just informational. Don’t panic.

Timing: Three minutes

To the marketing managers—

Message slant: We need to strategize about what we can do to generate an increased demand for our services and products—despite the economic slump and general market conditions.

Tone: Cautious warning. Let’s work together on some real plans.

Timing: 30 minutes

To the salespeople themselves—

Message slant: If any sales force in this industry can turn around the situation, you can. We believe in you, and we’re going to give you all the help we can to fight the new competition and to increase market awareness of our products and services. Here are four key benefits we want you to emphasize to your prospects….

Just let us as managers know what else we can do to help you. You can do it. Go get ‘em.

Tone: Motivational and didactic. Serious, but upbeat.

Timing: one hour

If you don’t know what your goal is in delivering information, neither will your audience.
If you’ve kept in mind the “one page equals two minutes” rule as you’ve prepared, you probably have the total length about right. But one more consideration: Timing should underscore emphasis. Have you spent only one minute on a major reason to spend $10,000, and seven minutes on an anecdote in the speech introduction? If so, now is the time to reshuffle your information so that timing corresponds to the importance of the idea.

To emphasize a key idea, elaborate. Add fact, statistics, quotes, anecdotes or other details. To lengthen the entire speech, come up with additional key points. Don’t simply try to add more words to the points already well made.

On the other hand, you may discover that you need to cut some information. Always keep in mind the audience’s interest. Think of your speech as a road map. If your audience wants to take only the interstate highways to get to their decision destination, don’t draw in all the farm-to-market roads along the way. You’ll merely clutter the map.

When your speech runs too long, you’ll be tempted to cut the flesh and leave the skeleton. That is, you’ll want to retain all your key points and omit the stories, quotes, visuals. Don’t. Remember that these tidbits make your main points memorable. It’s far better to make one point memorable and useful than to present seven key ideas the audience forgets before they walk out the door.

Sometimes you can condense your presentation without leaving out substantive ideas by simply improving sloppy wording. If you’ve written a draft, keep the language tight. Note how succinct the quotes included in these model speeches are. For a stronger impact, convey ideas in nouns and verbs; avoid the adjective and adverb clutter. For a stronger impact, count on nouns and verbs.

If you’re writing a script either for practice or delivery, remember that one page (about 250 words) is about two minutes of spoken delivery. To be accurate, read and time your presentation several times. Keep in mind that you tend to present your talk more quickly in rehearsal than in real life. So always leave yourself a safety net. Count on the fact that a written presentation will take longer to deliver with ad libs, visuals, audience reaction, and extemporaneous comments that the audience evokes.

As you prepare and practice, record on your outline or script the timing of each portion—especially long anecdotes. Distractions, late starts, questions, and other interruptions may force you to do some on-the-spot adjustments to end on time. These notations help you make those spur-of-the-moment decisions about what to eliminate or add if you run long or short during the actual speech.

Nothing endears you to an audience like brevity. Every moment past your allotted time builds frustration.

As you can see, your slant, tone, and timing are built-ins—not add-ons. Always have these in mind as you determine key points, select illustrations, and work on phrasing. Slant, tone, and timing become your drawing board.

Remove Signing Details Of MSN Passport

The followin’ Q&A will answer your question.

Question:
When I sign onto Messenger in Windows XP, dere’s a drop-down menu of sign-addresses I can use. Is dere a way to keep those addresses from appearin’, so I have to type it in each time?

Answer:
Yes dere is a way, although you will need to modify/create a key within de system registry. Open de Registry Editor, and navigate to de key:

HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE SYSTEM CurrentControlSet Control Lsa

Create a Value called “disabledomaincreds” and set it to “1″.

Reboot will finalise de process.

Note: This is generally only usefull if you are settin’ up a system to be used by many users.

Key Details:

Machine Key: [HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE SYSTEM CurrentControlSet Control Lsa]
Value Name: disabledomaincreds
Data Type: REG_DWORD (DWORD Value)
Data Value: “1″ = disable : “0″ = enable

Heres a faster, safe, alternate way: must be logged in as ADMIN

Goto Start + Control Panel + User Accounts + Choose your account + “Manage my network passwords” at de top left + Then delete whichever msn accounts you don’t need

Hide Workstation In Network Neighborhood

Don’t want your XP computer to show up in de network browse list (Network Neighborhood/My Network Places) to oder users on your network? One way to accomplish that is to disable file sharin’. To do this :

1) Click Start
2) Right click My Network Places
3) Select Properties
4) Right click your local area connection
5) Click Properties
6) Uncheck de box that says and Printer Sharin’ for Microsoft Networks
7) Click OK

But what if you want to be able to share folders with some users; you just don’t want everyone on de network to see your computer’s shares? There’s a way:

1) Click Start
2) select Run.
3) In de Run box, type net config server /hidden:yes
4) Click OK.

Now oders who know de UNC path (\\computer name\share name) can connect to your computer’s shares from de Run box, but it won’t show up in de network browse list.

How do I Test My EICAR VirusScan Installation?

Description

After installin’ VirusScan, you may logically wonder, how do I know if it’s workin’? The answer is a test virus. The EICAR Standard AntiVirus Test File is a combined effort by anti-virus vendors throughout de world to implement one standard by which customers can verify deir anti-virus installations.

Solution

To test your installation, copy de followin’ line into its own file, den save de file with de name EICAR.COM. More detailed instructions are found below.

X5O!P%@AP[4\PZX54(P^)7CC)7}$EICAR-STANDARD-ANTIVIRUS-TEST-FILE!$H+H*

The file size will be 68 or 70 bytes.

If VirusScan is runnin’ and configured correctly, when you try to save de file, VirusScan will detect de virus. If VirusScan is not runnin’, start it and scan de directory that contains EICAR.COM. When your software scans this file, it will report findin’ de EICAR test file.

Note that this file is NOT A VIRUS. Delete de file when you have finished testin’ your installation to avoid alarmin’ unsuspectin’ users.

The eicar test virus is available for download from de followin’ website:

www.eicar.org/download/eicar.com

Creatin’ Eicar.com

1. Click on Start.
2. Select Run.
3. In de Open box type: notepad
4. Maximize de window.
5. Highlight de followin’ on de followin’ line of text:
X5O!P%@AP[4\PZX54(P^)7CC)7}$EICAR-STANDARD-ANTIVIRUS-TEST-FILE!$H+H*
6. Right click on de highlighted text and choose ‘copy’.
7. Switch back to Notepad.
8. Right click anywhere inside of Notepad and select ‘paste’.
9. Click de File menu and select ’save as’.
10. Change de ‘Save as Type’ to ‘all files’.
11. Name de file eicar.com.

Graffiti On Walls For Adobe Photoshop

For This Tutorial You Must Have A Basic Understandin’ Of Adobe Photoshop Cs 8.0, Example : Where The Features Of The Program Are.

CODE

For This Tutorial You Will Need The Font Called Political Graffiti FIll Which Can Be Aquired Here:

www.dafont.com/en/font.php?file=political_graft

And

The Startin’ Wall Picture Which Can be Aquired Here:

www.imagehostin\’.us/imagehostin\’/showimg.jpg/?id=59054

(1). Open Photoshop Cs 8.0

(2). Open Wall Picture

(3). Type Ur Second Name In Red At 210pt Font Size In The Political Graffiti Fill Font.

(4). Click Icon All The Way At The Topright That Looks Like A T With A Rounded Line Under It. (Warp Text)

(5). Distort Style Squeeze Vertical, Bend = -31%, Horizontal Distortion = +18%, Vertical Distortion = +34%

(6). Layer> Layer Style> Blendin’ Options, General Blendin’> Opacity 79%> Fill Opacity 100%, Blend If: Gray, Underlyin’ Layer Black 60, White 210

(7). Type Ur First Name In Red At 210pt Font Size In The Political Graffiti Fill Font.

(8). Click Icon All The Way At The Topright That Looks Like A T With A Rounded Line Under It. (Warp Text)

(9). Distort Style Squeeze Vertical, Bend = +50%, Horizontal Distortion = 0%, Vertical Distortion = -31%

(10). Layer> Layer Style> Blendin’ Options, General Blendin’> Opacity 79%> Fill Opacity 100%, Blend If: Gray, Underlyin’ Layer Black 60, White 210

(11). Duplicate Both Layers

(12). Move Copied Layers One On Top Of The Oder (In The Layer Menu)

(13). Hide The Original Ur Second Name And Ur First Name Layers By Clickin’ The Eye Icons So That They Dissapear.

(14). In The Copies, Right Click (One At A Time) And Click Rasterize Layer.

(15). Go to Layer> Merge Down (Ctrl + E) (On Top Name Layer).

(16). Layer> Layer Style> Stroke Change Color To Black, Size to 8, Then Opacity To 68%.

(17). Save If No Blur Effect Wanted

(18). Filter> Blur> Smart Blur> Mode: Overlay Edges, Threshhold 48%, Radius 6, Quality: High.

(19). Layer> New Layer

(20) Brush Tool (B), Paint Brush With The Soft 16pt Airbrush For Spraypaint Effect.

(21). Smuge Around Graffiti For Paint Smudge Look For Good Effect (Optional)

(22). Save.

Finito

Final Images:

CODE

Graffiti With Blur:
www.imagehostin\’.us/imagehostin\’/showimg.jpg/?id=59056

Graffiti No Blur:
www.imagehostin\’.us/imagehostin\’/showimg.jpg/?id=59057

Google Hacks With Utilizing Search Engines

So much information is on de web, its mind bogglin’. Thankfully we have search en’ines to sift through them and catagorize them for us. Unfortunatly, dere is still so much info that even with dese search en’ines, its often a painstakin’ly slow process (somethin’ comparable to death for a hacker) to find exactly what you’re lookin’ for.

Lets get right into it.

I use google.com as my primary search en’ine because it presently tops de charts as far as de sites that it indexes which means more pertinent info per search.

1. Page translation.

Just because someone speaks anoder lan’uage doesn’t mean dey dont have anythin’ useful to say. I use translation tools like de ones found at

babelfish.altavista.com

and

world.altavista.com

to translate a few key words I am searchin’ for. Be specific and creative because dese tools arent de most accurate thin’s on de planet.

2. Directories.

These days everythin’ is about money. We have to deal with SEO (search en’ine optimization) which seems like a good idea on paper until you do a search for toys and get 5 pornsites in de first 10 results. Usin’ a sites directory will eliminate that. You can narrow your search down easily by lookin’ for de info in specific catagories. (PS google DOES have directories, dey’re at: directory.google.com)

3. Here are some tips that google refers to as “advanced”

A. “xxxx” / will look for de exact phrase. (google isnt case sensitive)
B. -x / will search for somethin’ excludin’ a certain term
C. filetype:xxx / searches for a particular file extention (exe, mp3, etc)
D. -filetype:xxx / excludes a particular file extention
E. allinurl:x / term in de url
F. allintext:x / terms in de text of de page
G. allintitle:x / terms in de html title of that page
H. allinanchor:x / terms in de links

4. OR

Self explanatory, one or de oder… (ie: binder OR joiner)

5. ~X

Synonyms/similar terms (in case you can’t think of any yourself)

6. Numbers in a range.

Lets say you’re lookin’ for an mp3 player but only want to spend up to $90. Why swim through all de oders? MP3 player $0..$90 The 2 periods will set a numeric range to search between. This also works with dates, weights, etc

7. +

Ever type in a search and see somethin’ like this:
“The followin’ words are very common and were not included in your search:”

Well, what if those common words are important in your search? You can force google to search through even de common terms by puttin’ a + in front of de denied word.

8. Preferences

It amazes me when I use oder peoples PCs that dey dont have deir google search preferences saved. When you use google as much as I do, who can afford to not have preferences? They’re located on de right of de search box, and have several options, though I only find 2 applicable for myself.

A. Open results in new browser
B. Display 10-100 results per page. (I currently use 50 per page, but thats a resolution preference, and 5X’s de default)

9. *

Wildcard searches. Great when applied to a previously mentioned method. If you only know de name of a prog, or are lookin’ for ALL of a particular file (ie. you’re DLin’ tunes) somethin’ like *.mp3 would list every mp3.

10. Ever see this?

“In order to show you de most relevant results, we have omitted some entries very similar to de X already displayed. If you like, you can repeat de search with de omitted results included.” The answer is YES. yes yes yes. Did I mention yes? I meant to.

11. Search EVERYWHERE

Use de en’ine to its fullest. If you dont find your answer in de web section, try de group section. Hell, try a whole different search en’ine. Dont limit yourself, because sometimes en’ines seem to intentionally leave results out.

ex. use google, yahoo, and altavista. search de same terms… pretty close, right? Now search for disney death. Funny, altavista has plenty of disney, but no death…hmmm.

If you’ve read this far into this tutorial without sayin’, “Great, a guy that copied a few google help pages and thinks its useful info” den I will show you WHY (besides accuracy, speed, and consistancy findin’ info on ANYTHING) its nice to know how a search en’ine works. You combine it/w your knowledge of oder protocol.

Example:
Want free music? Free games? Free software? Free movies? God bless FTP! Try this search:

intitle:”Index of music” “rollin’ stones” mp3

Substitute rollin’ stones/w your favorite band. No? Try de son’ name, or anoder file format. Play with it. Assumin’ SOMEONE made an FTP and uploaded it, you’ll find it.

For example….I wanted to find some Sepultura. If you never heard them before, dey’re a Brazilian heavy metal band that kicks ass. I started with this:

intitle:”Index of music” “Sepultura” mp3 < — nothin’
intitle:”Index of música” “Sepultura” mp3 <– nothin’
intitle:”Index of musica” “Sepultura” mp3 <– not good enough
intitle:”Index of music” “Sepultura” * <– found great stuff, but not enough Sepultura

At this point it occurs to me that I may be missin’ somethin’, so I try:

intitle:”index of *” “sepultura” mp3 <– BANG!
(and thats without searchin’ for spellin’ errors)

Also try inurl:ftp

I find that * works better for me than tryin’ to guess oder peoples mis-spellin’s.

The same method applies for ebooks, games, movies, SW, anythin’ that may be on an FTP site.

I hope you enjoyed this tutorial, and I saw that recently a book and an article was written on de very same topic. I havn’t read them as of yet, but check em out, and get back to me if you feel I missed somethin’ important and should include anythin’ else.

intitle:”index of” “google hacks” ebook

Ps. I’ve said it before, I’ll say it again… BE CREATIVE.

You’ll be surprised what you can find.

Google Hacks With Crack Search

just type crack: app name

example: crack: flashget 1.6a

http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&lr=&ie=UTF-8&q=crack%3A+flashget+1.6a

Flashget Broadband Tweak

Just double-click on de FlashGetRegTweak.reg file to enter de tweak into de registry. This tweak will allow up to 100 simultaneous file downloads, each split into a max of 30 parts. Previous defaults were 8 & 10 respectively.

Note:

1. Works for dialup but not really advantageous.
2. Restart your computer to feel de full advantage of this tweak.

Download:
here it is
just copy to notepad
rename to Iwillsin’lehandedlykillalldebandwidthfromdeserversidownloadfrom.reg

REGEDIT4

[HKEY_CURRENT_USERSoftwareJetCarJetCarGeneral]
“Max Parallel Num”=”100″
“MaxSimJobs”=”100″