Wednesday, May 21, 2014

Microsoft Word Document-How to Make it Password Protected

Microsoft Word Document-How to Make it Password Protected

Previously I created a post on Microsoft Office Rarely used Functions which was much liked by the viewers. Today I am writing a post on the security point of view of the Microsoft Word documents. We have a number of important documents in our computer and some of them are so important that we do not want them to be seen by others. The solution for this problem is to make the document password protected. This is not a mammoth job. You can easily insert a password in your document by following the following simple procedure –
MSWord Document PasswordT
Step-1
Please open the document which you want to make password protected. When the document opens click the Office Button Now the following screen will appear.
MSWord Document PasswordI
Step-2
Now hover over “Prepare” and click “Encrypt Document” as shown in the image given below –
MSWord Document Password
Step-3
After you click “Encrypt Document” a small window will appear asking you to enter your pass word. Your password may be alphabets, figures, special characters etc. Please enter your desired password and clock “OK”
MSWord Document Password1
Step-4
It is a standard procedure of creating a password that it is always entered twice to avoid any possibility of error, once for creation and again for confirmation. The same standard procedure is followed here and you will be asked to confirm your password by entering it again.
MSWord Document Password2
Please reenter your password and click “OK”. That’s all and now your document is password protected now.
How to Open a Password Protected Microsoft Word Document
The procedure of opening a password protected Microsoft Word Document is very simple and easy. While you click to open your password protected Microsoft Word Document a small window like this will appear asking you to enter your password.
MSWord Document Password3
Please enter your password and click “OK”, the document will open.
Please be careful to remember or keep the password safe.

Saturday, November 2, 2013

Washingtonpost-insider November 08

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The Washington Post Tuesday, November 19, 2013

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Xbox One: What to know about Microsoft’s new console

Microsoft is set to release its next-generation console, the Xbox One, on Friday — just a week after the PlayStation 4 hit store shelves.
The Xbox is $100 more than Sony’s new console: $499, likely because of the included Kinect, vs. $399. And it will have to have a good first day of sales to outdo the PlayStation’s early numbers — 1 million units of the PlayStation 4 were sold in its first 24 hours, Sony reported.
Read full article >>

Sony: ‘Blue Light of Death,’ other issues affect fewer than 1 percent of consoles

Sony said Tuesday that reported problems with the PlayStation 4 are affecting fewer than 1 percent of the customers who have picked up the console since its launch last week.
News about the problems have cropped up on social networks and in news articles ever since the launch. But company spokesman Dan Race said in a statement that while Sony is working to troubleshoot a number of small issues with the console, it hasn’t received any indication that there is a single, widespread problem plaguing the device’s launch.
Read full article >>

Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer conducts his final shareholders meeting

Steve Ballmer wrapped up another duty as he heads closer to the end of his 13 years as Microsoft’s chief executive: his final annual shareholder’s meeting.
While much of the meeting was focused on the new products that Microsoft is planning, including the Xbox One, top executives from the firm took the time to acknowledge Ballmer’s tenure. The executive said in August that he would step down from the company within 12 months.
Read full article >>

The Switch: 12 questions you were too embarrassed to ask about Bitcoin

This has been a big week for Bitcoin. On Monday, the Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs held the first-ever Congressional hearing on Bitcoin. Later in the day, the currency's value reached an all-time high of more than $800.
Read full article >>

Innovations: In the battle for smartphone supremacy, size doesn’t matter. Shape does.

Seemingly out of nowhere, shape -- not screen size or color -- has emerged as the new battleground in the smartphone wars. In October, Samsung unveiled the first-ever “curved display” smartphone (the Galaxy Round) and in November, LG followed with another curved display phone that also happened to be flexible (the G Flex). And now come rumors that Apple is bringing two new curved iPhones to market sometime late next year. It’s now all about shape, as companies begin to develop and deliver phones that are “curved,” “round,” “flexible,” and even “bended.”
Read full article >>

Computer giant Lenovo plays down China roots

Computer giant Lenovo wants to tweak its image. That means emphasizing its global reach as the largest maker of personal computers and de-emphasizing its main roots in China — where it has 35,000 employees.
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Thursday, October 31, 2013

Asia in wallstreet journal November 06


http://online.wsj.com/img/b.gif
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The Wall Street Journal takes a look at the Chinese financial system where debt has surged and cracks are beginning to show.
China is a great place for expatriates - if you don't ask about the air.
The best of our recent coverage on Indian sporting legend Sachin Tendulkar, starting with that historic 2011 Cricket World Cup.
While Japan's nuclear watchdog has been trying to promote “a culture of safety” for the industry ever since the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant accident, a new issue has been raised at the Monju fast-breeder reactor complex. Namely, a failure to adhere to proper security in order to prevent any theft of nuclear materials such as plutonium.
Intelligence gathered from North Korean defectors-a key source of information about the North-has deteriorated in recent years, according to an official South Korean government report.
Philippine disaster officials have hoisted the highest warning alert level over a "super typhoon" that could directly hit the central part of the Southeast Asian country on Friday.
News by Country and Region
News from the Wall Street Journal and Dow Jones Newswires
Top of Form
Bottom of Form
Asia News
Samsung Electronics promised to boost its dividend yield to 1%, but investors still aren't satisfied.
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China's biggest pork producer, Shuanghui International, is following up its acquisition of Smithfield Foods with a planned US$5 billion listing in Hong Kong, one of the biggest in the city in recent years.
A Myanmar military-controlled conglomerate said its tussle with its Singaporean partner over a beer joint venture is a purely commercial dispute, rejecting recent media depictions of the matter as a test of Myanmar's investment laws.
Asian stock markets were mixed Wednesday with Bank of Chongqing struggling in its debut in Hong Kong, while a weaker yen supported shares in Tokyo. The Nikkei rose 0.8%.
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Several explosions authorities believe were caused by homemade bombs left at least one person dead and eight others injured outside a provincial headquarters for the Communist Party in northern China.
State Bank of India, the country's largest lender by assets, has increased the interest rates it charges on floating-rate loans.
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Samsung will target a dividend yield of about 1% for 2013 and says the company will put more emphasis on shareholder return.
Southeast Asia's largest economy saw the slowest growth in nearly four years, with GDP expanding 5.62% in the third quarter.
Factory presses at Australia's The Perth Mint have been running round-the-clock as a steadying of precious-metal prices kindles demand from mom-and-pop investors globally.
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Net profit at the world's largest auto maker surges in latest quarter, fueled by a weaker yen and strong U.S. sales
World Watch
Agribusiness company Archer Daniels Midland's grains head Ian Pinner says Australian farmers would benefit from wider access to foreign markets if the 2.9 billion dollar acquisition of GrainCorp Ltd. is approved.
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Australia's big lenders have delivered stronger earnings and maintained enviable credit ratings despite several years of weak credit growth. Commonwealth Bank is the latest to impress investors.
The Chinese lender priced its shares near the lower end of the range in its Hong Kong initial public offering, while Bank of Chongqing shares fell in their trading debut, amid concerns about bad loans on the mainland.
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The Hong Kong billionaire is scouting European utility assets again, eyeing Nordic company Fortum's electricity distribution business in Finland, which could be worth more than $2 billion

Tuesday, September 24, 2013

Madarsa Board Rajasthan Para Teachers Result 2013-District wise-Merrit list


Madarsa Board Rajasthan Para Teachers Result 2013-District wise-Merrit list

Madarsa Board Rajasthan Para Teachers Result 2013
Results have been declared and the  district wise lists are posted on the Official website of Rajasthan Madarsa Board. Final list may be out after the counseling and verification of documents and antecedents of the candidates.

Alwar
Madarsa Board Rajasthan Para Teachers Result 2013
Baran
Results have been declared and the  district wise lists are posted on the Official website of Rajasthan Madarsa Board. Final list may be out after the counseling and verification of documents and antecedents of the candidates.
Banswara
Madarsa Board Rajasthan Para Teachers Result 2013
Ajmer
Results have been declared and the  district wise lists are posted on the Official website of Rajasthan Madarsa Board. Final list may be out after the counseling and verification of documents and antecedents of the candidates.