Thursday 19 April 2012

Introducting to XHTML and jQuery

Hi There ..

I am starting one project to get one of  our the pages on http://www.itechreload.co.uk/  to be more interactive.. I made a quick video showing what I want to achieve.. With a video hosted on youtube..

So, relax and watch it..




.. Please anything send me a comment please !! I need help to get this done!!

Wednesday 18 April 2012

I got stuck to on Oracle DataBase Developer apps

Dear Readers, 


Over a period of one entire, month I've being put off by Linux ubuntu 11.10, to install the sqldeveloper package. Every single time I've tried to do it, I got errors ... 


Today finally I managed to find the solution.. Someone had the same problem as me and posted a solution in one forum, so I followed their instructions and got mine working.. Thank you to this guy.. 


Really saved the day.. 


So, I decide to honour him and post his solution here. 


"Hi guys, just got a quick question: 

I need to install Oracle's SQL Developer since I need to use the program for a database unit at Uni. Anyway, if you've tried to use it before you'd realise that there is only a .rpm installer available for it (no .deb). So I tried to convert it to .deb using alien.  When I "sudo alien --scripts" the .rpm I get: error: incorrect format: unknown tag mkdir: cannot create directory `sqldeveloper-2.1.1.64.45': 


File exists unable to mkdir sqldeveloper-2.1.1.64.45: at /usr/share/perl5/Alien/Package.pm line 257.  
Basically, I'm asking, does anyone know what I'm doing wrong here? I've never used alien before since I've never had a need to convert a .rpm before. I also tried installing and running Java JDK and SQL Developer under Wine, but was unsuccessful with that as well :( Anyway, thanks for taking your time to read and (hopefully) help with this ;) 


Oh and I'm using Ubuntu 10.04 32bit, if that helps? 


; -->poltak July 22nd, 2010, 07:49 AM Ah, crud <-- [That's the name of the guy that created the post]
Managed to solve this problem with the help of another more-advanced-than-me linux user. 


Anyway, I'll write up how we got it sorted without needing to convert an rpm package to deb just so if anyone else has this same problem in the future and googles this or something... 
First make sure you have Java JDK installed. I used openjdk (open-source alternative to the official Sun Java jdk thingie). Download the "Oracle SQL Developer for other platforms" from the Oracle site (http://www.oracle.com/technology/software/products/sql/index.html)and then extract it into its own folder. 


Then in terminal, cd to the extracted directory and: sudo sh sqldeveloper.sh 
It'll ask you to type the pathname of your J2SE installation


Mine turned out to be "/usr/lib/jvm/java-6-openjdk". Then press enter and you should be right and it will boot up and work the exact same as it does under Windows or OS X. 


 Hopefully this helps another linux newbie out one day down the track :)"


This is the end result on my computer ..Finally working 
 :-)

Tuesday 27 March 2012

Data recovery walk through.. Guide How to !!


To recover files from a drive containing deleted files or folders, follow these steps:

Key Features:
  • Recover deleted files/folders even after recycle bin has been emptied or use of Shift+Del key.
  • File recovery from Missing or Lost folders.
  • Recognize and preserve long file names when restoring files & folders.
  • Multi-Disk Drive Support - Performs FAT/NTFS, EXT2/EXT3 recovery on all IDE, EIDE, SCSI and SATA disk devices.
1. Download EaseUS Data Recovery Wizard, install it and launch it. Click the "Deleted File Recovery" button on the main window of Data Recovery Wizard.
Data Recovery Software
2. Select the file types you want to recover. Tick 'Search all lost files automatically' to find all lost file types. Tick 'Ignore bad sectors' to skip bad sectors when scanning.
Select file types
3. You can see the list of all volumes found on your computer, select the exact drive and press the "NEXT" button to search. If you are familiar with file system details, you can change "Option" before pressing the "NEXT" button.
recover deleted files
4. Data Recovery Wizard will read file system on selected volume and search the files. This step may take some time depending on the size of disk space. You have to wait until scanning is finished.
recover deleted files
5. After this scanning is finished, you'll see file/folder tree.
Note: If you are not able to get the desired results after Deleted File Recovery, go back to home window and select the option "Complete Recovery" or "Partition Recovery".
recover deleted files
6. The "Search files" or "Find file by name" option makes finding the file you need much easier. You also can check the quality of the data in the container by the "File Preview" option.
recover deleted files
recover deleted files
recover deleted files
7. Select the files or folders that you want to recover and press the "NEXT" button.
recover deleted files
8. Select a directory and press the "NEXT" button to save the files.
Caution: Saving file(s) to the partition or drive where you are recovering data, for it may result in overwriting data and permanent data loss!
Please see "Deleted File Recovery" for more details.
The demo version of Data Recovery Wizard gives you a much fairer idea about chances of data recovery from your hard disk before deciding upon the purchase.

Lost you Data ? Hard Drive file system corrupted ..I think this might help


Recovering deleted files after you have emptied the Recycle Bin, including Word, Excel, PowerPoint, email, photo, database and more files...

The easy recovery software - Data Recovery Wizard restores deleted files no longer in the Recycle Bin. It can recover the deleted Word, Excel, PowerPoint, photo, Email, database, and all document formats and folders in Windows 2000, XP, 2003, Vista, 2008, Windows 7, which have been emptied from or by-passed the Windows Recycle Bin.


Why can you recover deleted files?

Emergency file recovery requires more than the correct tool, though. It is requested to know how file deletion occurs, and what you have to do to maximize the chances of a successful recovery.
When a file is deleted from your computer, you just lose the file entry in My Computer. The file content still exists on the hard disk, Windows simply marks the hard drive space as being available for use so that you can write new files. If you manage to start an undelete process before Windows uses that part of the hard drive to write a new file, all you have to do is set that flag back to "on" and you get the file.
Obviously, the sooner you try to restore a file, the more successful you'll be. But stop a moment and think about the other things that could cause this part of the hard drive to be overwritten. If your hard drive is pretty full, the odds are much greater that Windows will grab your precious unallocated space for its next write. Or, if you defrag the hard drive, you run the risk of unused parts of the drive being overwritten! (This also means that if you are running silent background defrags services like Diskeeper, or if you have defragged utilities scheduled to defrag automatically, you might get blindsided - lose your chance at data recovery - if you don't halt them until you have your deleted file recovered.
For that matter, simply starting up Windows or, to a lesser extent, shutting down Windows causes many tiny files to be written. You really want to avoid these processes if possible.
So the first rule is: Stop using that computer immediately! This minute! Right now! Use another computer to get the Data Recovery Wizard you need. Please see: How to install a hard drive?
This is also one of the places where the well-planned partitioning of your hard drive has a huge advantage. Partitions physically mark off different parts of the hard drive. If, for example, you have your data and program files on their own separate partitions, and it's a data file that you want to recover (which is usually the case), then Windows startup or shutdown won't touch that part of the hard drive. If you have the swapfile / pagefile on its own partition, and all of your directories for temporary files on another, then these most-changing and most-written files will also be kept from overwriting the part of the drive holding the files you want to recover. However, if you take that 80 GB hard drive and make it all one big single C: partition, then you run the risk of making your file unrecoverable anytime the swapfile resizes, or any time Windows writes a temporary file of any kind... and this could be pretty much at any moment whatsoever! Partitioning gives enormous advantage in file recovery.

Thursday 15 March 2012

One-To-One Tutorials in Computing

Give One-to-One Tutorials in Computing (in Person or over Skype). Tutorials - Operations Systems (Windows [XP, Vista and 7], Linux, Mac) Also .. Programming (Java and Python). Web Development (HTML, XHTML, CSS, PHP, MySQL) - WordPress and Joomla. Windows management and Simple Networking.
£7.50 per-hour ... Contact on 

e-mail: info@mydreamwave.com
tchize@itechreload.co.uk
Skype: Tchize_black1

Mastering Docker Minified Systems: A Step-by-Step Guide with Real Use Cases

Introduction Docker is a powerful platform for developing, shipping, and running applications. Minified Docker systems are optimized for siz...