What Is GodMode And How To Enable It On Windows 10 [Video]

What Is GodMode?

GodMode is like your Microsoft windows second control panel with bunch of 270 different settings and options on any windows version. If you enable God Mode in windows you can see all control panel settings and shortcuts in one folder. here I am going to show how to enable this god mode feature on your Microsoft windows computers and laptops.

How To Activate ‘God Mode’ On Windows 7,8 and 10

Godmode means you can control all things from a single click. this feature is first revealed in 2007 and works with all windows versions like windows 7, windows 8 and also on windows 10.

DWS to acquire SMS Management and Technology, valued at $124 million

Danny Wallis (DWS) and
Rick Rostolis (SMS Management and Technology)
SMS Management and Technology has entered into a scheme to be 100 percent acquired by Melbourne IT provider DWS.
If successful, shareholders will receive $1 in cash and 0.39 DWS shares for each SMS share, representing a total consideration of $1.66 per share. This gives SMS a valuation of $124 million.
The companies are among two of Australia’s biggest IT services and body shopping firms, and the parallels do not end there.
Along with the three-letter acronyms, both ASX-listed companies have reported mixed business performancein recent years. They both brought in fresh blood to replace long-term leaders, only to then bid farewell to these new CEOs after short stints.
SMS hired Infosys heavy-hitter, Jacqueline Korhonen, to replace Tom Stianos after 26 years with the company. Korhonen resigned just over 12 months after SMS’s "national sales and delivery restructure" led to a "serious deterioration" of the sales pipeline.

Seven Alien 'Earths' Found Orbiting Nearby Star

The Earth-size worlds orbit a star just 39 light-years away, and most may have the right conditions to host liquid water on their surfaces.

ILLUSTRATION BY M. KORNMESSER, SPACEENGINE.ORG/ESO

Seven rocky planets orbiting a nearby star may be roughly the size of Earth and could even be right for water—and maybe life—to adorn their surfaces, researchers announced Wednesday.
The planets, which circle a star called TRAPPIST-1 just 39 light-years away, are tucked together so tightly that they routinely spangle each others’ skies, sometimes appearing as shimmering crescents and at other times as orbs nearly twice as large as the full moon.
“The spectacle would be beautiful,” says the University of Cambridge’s Amaury Triaud, coauthor of a study describing the otherworldly heptad that appears in the journal Nature.
The TRAPPIST-1 system is now tied with several others that have seven planets for the greatest number of planets in a stellar system other than our own (which has eight, not counting dwarf planets like Pluto). The system’s existence suggests that Earth-size planets are much more plentiful than previously imagined.
And now, it’s among the best neighborhoods to study for signs of life beyond Earth: The relative sizes of the planets and star, plus the system’s proximity, mean that plucking the signatures of living, breathing organisms from the planet’s atmospheres could be within reach.

Running DNA Like a Computer Could Help You Fight Viruses One Day

GETTY IMAGES

DON’T TAKE THIS the wrong way, but you’re just data. Genes built you, from the tips of your toes to the crown of your head. In that sense, you’re not unlike a computer: Code produces the output that is your body.
In fact, for the past two decades, scientists have used actual DNA as if it were literal code, a process called DNA computing, to do things like calculating square roots. Today, researchers report in the journal Nature Communications that they’ve deployed DNA to detect antibodies—soldiers your body produces to fight viruses and such—by running a sequence of molecular instructions. Someday, the same kind of calculations could automatically release drugs in response to infections.

Your Feeble Skills Can’t Handle This Amazing Sports Car

SCUDERIA CAMERON GLICKENHAUS

Think of the world’s fastest cars and a few names come to mind. Ferrari. Lamborghini. Porsche. Glickenhaus.
Glickenwhat?
That would be Jim Glickenhaus. He made an ungodly amount of money in films and finance and has a thing for cars. The kind of thing that leads you to build a bazillion-dollar custom Ferrari because, you know, a Ferrari isn’t extreme enough. So now he’s building cars. Crazy fast supercars. He’s the Glickenhaus in Scuderia Cameron Glickenhaus, an American boutique automaker rolling into the Geneva auto show with the SCG 003S. Yeah, there’s nothing at all graceful about the name, but who cares. Just look at the damn thing.
Now, the supercar game is all about superlatives — most horsepower, highest top speed, that sort of thing. And the Glick aims for the highest honor in this arena: fastest lap at the Nurburgring. The ‘ring is the stuff of legend, a 12.9-mile track so nasty that F1 champion Jackie Stewart dubbed it the Green Hell. It is not for the weak or the stupid, and Glickenhaus wants to lap it in 6 minutes and 30 seconds. That would set a record for a production car.
For those of you who are shrugging, maybe this will get your attention: Scuderia Cameron Glickenhaus claims the 003S will hit 60 from a standstill in less than 3 seconds and top out at 217 mph.

Top 10 Ways To Access Blocked Websites Easily


There are some nations which block opening a particular site because of an unusual restriction. They think that the site will cause detriment to the securities of the nation. Moral police role has been accepted by many countries hence they have to obstruct the NSFW (Not safe/suitable for work) sites. Some countries even obstruct the social media websites which are free to access. Free Wi-Fi connectivity is offered by many educational institutes and administrative centre or organisation but they obstruct access to social networking sites as well as private sites.

Goodbye CyanogenMod, hello Lineage Android

CyanogenMod is shutting down, but the Lineage Android Project is poised to keep its spirit alive.



CyanogenMod is no more.
In a post on the official CyanogenMod blog, we're told that the current state of everything Cyanogen means it's no longer feasible to continue and that the best path forward requires change. Nobody should be surprised after recent events within the Cyanogen Inc. parent company and today's announcement that it has reached the end of the road and will shut down operations.

Firefox 50.1.0 Lands in Ubuntu's Repos, Multiple Security Vulnerabilities Fixed

On December 13, 2016, Canonical published a new USN (Ubuntu Security Notice) advisory to inform users of the popular Ubuntu Linux operating system about the availability of Mozilla Firefox 50.1.0 in the software repositories.
Mozilla released the Firefox 50.1.0 web browser a couple of days ago, and it looks like they patched a total of 13 security vulnerabilities, which could have been used by an attacker to crash the application or run programs as your login if the users were to open a malicious website.
"Multiple security vulnerabilities were discovered in Firefox. If a user were tricked in to opening a specially crafted website, an attacker could potentially exploit these to conduct cross-site scripting (XSS) attacks, obtain sensitive information, cause a denial of service via application crash, or execute arbitrary code," reads USN-3155-1.

California threatens legal action against Uber unless it halts self-driving cars

Threat from the attorney general came shortly after Uber declared it would defy state regulations, a move the company said as ‘an important issue of principle’

Uber’s defiant stance appears to be setting the company on a collision course with California regulators in court. Photograph: Eric Risberg/AP
California’s attorney general Kamala Harris on Friday threatened legal action against the ride-sharing tech company Uber unless it “immediately” removes its self-driving from the roads in San Francisco.
The threat from the office of the outgoing attorney general was contained in a letter released to the public Friday shortly after Uber declared it would defy state regulations, a move the company said was “an important issue of principle”.
Twenty companies have been approved to test self-driving cars in California, according to the DMV. Uber is not one of them, and the company is refusing to abide by the same rules as its rivals – a defiant move that critics argue shows disregard for the law and public safety.
Friday’s development portends a dramatic confrontation between Uber and California state officials, amid mounting anger in San Francisco at Uber’s refusal to abide by the same rules as other companies.
Harris, a rising star in the Democratic party, was recently elected to the US Senate. The letter from attorneys in her office said they were acting on a request from California’s department of motor vehicles (DMV).
The DMV ordered Uber to either remove its self-driving cars from the road or obtain a permit on Wednesday, the first day the company began a trial of its self-driving taxis in San Francisco without permission.
The letter warns that if Uber does not remove the vehicles from the road until it obtains a permit, the attorney general will “seek injunctive and other appropriate relief”.
Earlier Friday, Uber made clear it had no intention of backing down.

E-Cigarette Use Falls Among Teens

Vaping and marijuana use more popular among teens than regular cigarettes, according to NIH


A Betamorph E-Cigs employee exhaling vapor from an electric cigarette at the company's store in Albuquerque, N.M. PHOTO: BLOOMBERG NEWS

E-cigarette use among teens dropped in 2016, reversing an upward trend that had prompted the U.S. Surgeon General to recommend increased regulation and taxation.
Among high-school seniors, 12% this year said they had used e-cigarettes in the past month compared with 16% in 2015, according to the National Institutes of Health’s annual Monitoring the Future survey.
E-cigarettes and marijuana are both more popular among teens than regular cigarettes, whose use among teens has been declining for more than two decades, according to the survey. E-cigarettes are battery-powered devices that heat nicotine-laced liquid into a vapor.
Among high-school seniors, 23% said they had used marijuana in the past month, and 11% said they had smoked conventional cigarettes. Some 13% of high-school seniors said they had used tobacco with a hookah in the past year, down from 23% in 2014, the peak since the survey began measuring hookah use in 2010.

Lenovo K6 Note Price Leaked Before Launch, Starts At Rs 14,999

The Lenovo K6 Note, which was initially unveiled at IFA 2016, is all set to launch in India this week. Recent company tweets suggest that the upcoming Lenovo device will arrive in India as soon as December 14th. However, Indian e-commerce website OnlyMobiles has jumped the gun and revealed the price ahead of the official launch.




The Lenovo K6 Note flaunts a 5.5-inch Full HD display with 1920 x 1080 pixel resolution. It comes in all-metal unibody design, boasting Dolby Audio surround sound technology and stereo speakers at the back.
Under the hood, it is powered by a 1.4GHz octa-core Qualcomm Snapdragon 430 processor coupled with Adreno 505 GPU for graphics. The phone comes in two variants — 3GB and 4GB RAM. The internal memory of 32GB is further expandable up to 128GB by means of a microSD card support.

Can Virtual Reality Help Women Cope With Childbirth?

Clinical trials in Los Angeles plan to explore how virtual reality can be used to deal with acute pain through coaching and distraction. Photograph: Tracey Nearmy/AAP

Clinical trials are using a VR headset to help manage pain during labor

rin Martucci had been enjoying the beach vista and gazing at a flock of birds overhead when something shook her view. The voice of Ralph Anderson, her gynecologist, broke through the sound of the waterfall next to her.
“We’re ready to push!” he said, gently taking Martucci’s virtual reality headset off and bringing her back to a hospital room at Orange Regional Medical Center in Middletown, New York. Martucci, 40, looked around at her husband and mother, their voices swirling excitedly around her: “She’s crowning! She’s ready!”
“I was like, ‘Wait, what are you doing?’. I thought I needed the goggles to push!,” Martucci says. She had been so engrossed in her virtual beachside hideaway, she hadn’t realised that her baby’s head was starting to show. It was time to take off the goggles.
Martucci is believed to be the first woman to use virtual reality (VR) for pain management during labor. With more women moving away from scheduled C-sections – which accounted for 32% of US births in 2015 – VR might offer another drug-free pain option during birth.
“I was on a beach, and there was a fire going,” Martucci recalls. “Wherever you moved, the scene moved with you. If I looked up, I saw the galaxy and the sun setting. On the right, there was a waterfall and a lot of movement with birds,” Martucci says. From time to time, a woman with an English accent peppered Martucci’s virtual world with guidance.
“You wanted to listen to her,” she says. “I remember her focusing on the breathing and your body tensing and relaxing, and tensing and relaxing. She kept saying ‘Focus on the birds,’” says Martucci. “It was really very calming. She would teach me how to breathe and be really in touch with your body.”
‘It made me feel I’m OK here’
Martucci had declined an epidural earlier in the day when she started to think her labor contractions were becoming too painful to manage on her own, but she was open to Anderson’s suggestion to try a pre-programmed VR headset.

Which iPhone 8 rumors can we trust?

The iPhone 8 is nine months away, but we’re already expecting it to have OLED and wireless charging. Watch the video to find out why.

Obama Orders Intelligence Report on Russian Election Hacking

President Obama giving a speech at MacDill Air Force Base in Tampa, Fla., on Tuesday. Credit
Doug Mills/The New York Times
Washington — President Obama has ordered American intelligence agencies to produce a full report on Russian efforts to influence the 2016 presidential election, his homeland security adviser said on Friday. He also directed them to develop a list of “lessons learned” from the broad campaign the United States has accused Russia of carrying out to steal emails, publish their contents and probe the vote-counting system.
“We may have crossed a new threshold here,” Lisa Monaco, one of Mr. Obama’s closest aides and the former head of the national security division of the Justice Department, told reporters Friday. “He expects to receive this report before he leaves office.”
The report, according to senior administration officials, will trace the attacks on the Democratic National Committee and on prominent individuals like John D. Podesta, the chairman of Hillary Clinton’s presidential campaign.

Scorpio Won’t Compete with High-End Rigs, Selling At ‘Console Price-Point’


Microsoft’s Project Scorpio is the last of the three systems to be inevitably unveiled in what is this strange eighth-generation of new, new-ish and upgraded consoles alike. And the head of Xbox, Phil Spencer, has shared a tad bit of insight into Xbox’s decision-making with what Scorpio will be. Speaking to AusGamers, Spencer claims that with Project Scorpio, the focus has been less on the highly-spoken six teraflops claimed and more a balance of other components.

The Bridge Headset Powers Up iPhone VR With Positional Tracking

BRIDGE

IF YOU’VE BEEN holding onto your trusty iPhone 6, 6S, or 7 and wondering when a cool VR headset will be available for it, this is your lucky day. The Occipital Bridge headset looks like it’s well worth the wait, as it’s more powerful than any other phone-driven headset on the market.

That’s because it’ll have positional-tracking capabilities other mobile-driven headsets lack. The Bridge comes from the same company that created the Occipital Structure Sensor, an iPad and iPhone add-on that uses infrared to scan objects and gauge distances automatically.

Inside Oculus’ Quest to Design an Invisible VR Controller

This prototype embodies a trifecta of roads not traveled: it's worn rather than held; it employs a centered thumbstick and no buttons; and rather than a conventional trigger button, it opts for a rotary scroll wheel. JONATHAN SPRAGUE


the perfect time for getting some last-minute things done at the office, maybe finishing up holiday shopping. If you’re feeling particularly brave, you might even fight your way through airport crowds to visit your family. On December 22 in 2012, though, Nirav Patel was in China. A couple of months before, the young engineer had left Apple for a little company called Oculus, and now he was checking out production facilities that could help manufacture his new employer’s virtual-reality headset. Nirav being Nirav, he had a pocket notebook with him, and on this particular Christmas Eve Eve Eve, he sat down and started drawing.
Soon, he had sketched out two different views of the same object. From the top, it looked like a lima bean. In profile, it was the spitting image of a cyborg walrus with a tiny chef’s hat on. Scribbled around the drawing were annotations describing the various buttons and shapes festooning the object—“jog/scroll,” “vibe motor,” “piezo element,” “clicking analog”—and at the top of the page, in a space marked Project, Patel wrote the word “Controller.” As long as Oculus was making a VR headset, he reasoned, the company might as well think about the best way to play games in that headset.

Nearly four years later, Oculus has produced a pair of devices that share some key features in common with Patel’s sketch. But the Oculus Touch, which goes on sale today, is much more than a set of controllers—they are, in effect, your hands. And by being your hands, they provide the first glimpse of what virtual reality is fast becoming: a social universe.


Oculus engineer Nirav Patel's 2012 sketch of what a VR input device might look like.

A New Level of Immersion

Patel’s 2012 sketches proved to be a bit premature. For the next year, pressure to make the Rift headset a reality would turn the controller into something Patel and other employees worked on during off hours—“not like a side project,” the company’s VP of product Nate Mitchell said to me in spring of 2014, “but that’s all the time people could find for it.” The company had outsourced early exploration work to Seattle firm Carbon Design Group. It was only in early 2014, after Facebook bought Oculus, that work on the controller began in earnest.

So 2016 Was Not the Year Messaging Changed Your Life


THIS WAS SUPPOSED to be the year that texting wasn’t just texting anymore. After big announcements from Facebook, Google, and others, Americans were going to use messaging apps for so much more than chatting with friends. You were going to seamlessly interact with a world of online businesses. You were going to send questions to search engines and book tables at restaurants. You were going to get stuff done without ever opening another app.