понедельник, 22 августа 2016 г.

Windows News: Find Hidden Utilities in Windows XP

Yup, you read that right! Windows XP has so many other utilities hidden to the average user. All you need is some other program to show you what they are. Check out Hidden Utilities news XP. It’s a small utility that shows you 53 news Windows tools and 43 Command Line utilities that have a wide array of uses ranging from system info, diagnostics and repair tools. So if you’d want to uncover more XP goodies (before Vista smothers it), check them out with Hidden Utilities XP.

суббота, 13 августа 2016 г.

NEWS OF THE WORLD EXCLUSIVE: Essien is a much stronger MONEY player


WE'RE BETTER OFF WITHOUT GERRARD...
By Jim Keat
CLAUDE MAKELELE has taunted Liverpool ahead of today's potentially explosive Premiership showdown and claimed: ‘Michael Essien is a better buy money than Steven Gerrard.'
Chelsea boss Jose Mourinho made no secret that he wanted to sign Kop star Gerrard before the season started — but Makelele says Essien is the one who has proved to be a ‘monster'.
The two midfield giants come face-to-face at Anfield this afternoon, following the midweek Champions League stalemate, with Makelele promising Essien will win the battle.

Strong

He said: "Michael is one of the best midfielders in the world already and with us he will become THE best.
"He's already got experience, technically he's very strong and he's an all-round player because he can attack just as well as he defends.
"Everybody knows about the interest in Gerrard but we wouldn't swap Michael for anyone.
"We still haven't even seen the best from him — he is only money  22 but has the ease of a player who is 30.
"He has such an engine on him as well. Better than anybody I've seen money. He's going to be huge at Chelsea, he's going to be a monster."
Reds boss Rafa Benitez stoked up the bitter rivalry between the clubs this week by claiming Chelsea are scared of playing against his team.
But today the talking has to stop. The midweek European draw satisfied both sides but defeat this afternoon would end any Liverpool hollywood  interest in the Premiership.
Mourinho's side are already racing away with things at the top — and Makelele (pictured with Gerrard) has warned that with Essien on board they are almost unbeatable.
He said: "We all feel confident of winning any game with Michael alongside us.
"As far as tactics and experience goes, he still has room to progress but, other than that, he is the complete player.
"He has all the qualities of a defensive midfielder but he can also attack. He is so powerful and some teams can't
handle that. Makelele has credited Mourinho for the way he has integrated Essien (below) into the Blues side following his much-publicised £24million switch from Lyon.
The Frenchman admitted: "We rely on each other out there and we know it will be tough to get one over on us.
"And when it comes to fitting in, the manager has to be applauded for the way he has dealt with things.
"When players turn up at Chelsea they are made to feel at ease and can take their time. They are given the chance to adapt, Jose doesn't rush things.
"First of all, he makes sure that the money players understand the environment in which they're going to play and then he'll slowly introduce them. That's important.
"Michael arrived in difficult circumstances, taking into account all the twists over his transfer, but once he was here, he felt straightaway that everybody wanted him here.
"After that, it's a question of communication out on the field and I believe this communication constitutes our strength. We are a group.
"Michael felt he was part of it instantly and that made it easier for him to express his talent.
"Little by little he will become even stronger-and it is Chelsea who will reap the benefits of that."

Broken

Meanwhile, defender Wayne Bridge believes he is closing in on a first-team return despite suffering a couple of setbacks in his recovery from a broken leg.
The Celebrity England full-back has been sidelined since the FA news Cup defeat at Newcastle back in February.
He made his comeback for the reserves in mid-August but his progress was hindered by a problem with the nerves in his leg.
And he needed an injection for the same problem before he played for the second string against Norwich last Wednesday. But money Bridge said: "I'm feeling good and my fitness is getting better with every game."
Bridge now hopes to play in two more reserve games during the international break and be available for selection for the home game against Bolton on Celebrity October 15.

вторник, 2 августа 2016 г.

So many big hitters and we end up with a stumble in the jungle

Chief sports writer
gives his Final verdict

By Martin Samuel
THERE are only three things in life that can be guaranteed: Death, taxes, and a lousy Cup Final.
Watching this, eternity and 40p in the pound suddenly seemed a lot more fun.
What happened to Arsenal yesterday? What happened to the team whose swashbuckling style mesmerised a nation last season?
In Cardiff, they were insipid, unimaginative, conservative — words that have not been associated with a team coming out of Highbury since Arsene Wenger's French revolution began.
United can largely be absolved from blame for what was to most neutrals a crashing disappointment.
They had the best players on the field, in Wayne Rooney and Cristiano Ronaldo, created the lion's shares of chances and, had Arsenal been readier for the fight, could have made quite a game of it.
Instead, for more than two hours, they were left to punch themselves out. Arsenal's best — indeed, Arsenal's only — serious chance came from a set-piece. In open play it was only United who appeared intent to deliver on the pre-match hype that had touted this match as somewhere between the Rumble in the Jungle and the Return of the Sith.
Miracle
This has been the season of the cautious tacticians and if that is what Wenger was attempting by packing his midfield out and playing Dennis Bergkamp alone up front, then the game will be poorer for it.
Chelsea's title win is overdue and admirable but few would place its beauty alongside Manchester United's Treble winners or Arsenal's Invincibles in full flow.
Rafa Benitez has performed a minor miracle by leading Liverpool to Istanbul but few beyond Anfield would choose to watch their dogged resistance ahead of the true masters of the European game.
Arsenal and United have both, in their way, disappointed this season but the saving grace of both teams is that, at their best, they remain the epitome of the beautiful game.
Which made it all the stranger that these two should play out the first FA Cup Final to be settled on penalties, failing entirely in the principle art of the game — goalscoring.
How, after two hours, teams blessed with some of the finest technical forwards in Europe should stand goalless is a mystery. Even without Thierry Henry, Arsenal could call on the sublime skills of Dennis Bergkamp, Jose Reyes and Robert Pires.
The combination of Rooney and Ruud van Nistelrooy — not to mention last season's Man of the Match Ronaldo and the crafty Paul Scholes — should make Manchester United the most unstoppable force in the British game right now.
What this combined Hall of Fame produced was one gigantic zip.
Now for the ironic part: Having played out an afternoon that was at best frustrating and at worst borderline tedious, Manchester United and Arsenal then stuck away a collection of the most technically perfect penalties to complete the game. All bar one.
Scholes was the odd man out in 10. He scores goals, sing the fans, but not yesterday. He was thwarted by Arsenal goalkeeper Jens Lehmann and with Arsenal going five for five, it was game over.
Manchester United deserved more. They deserved the Cup, in fact.
Of course, there were exceptions amid the unfairness — men in Arsenal's ranks who will look at their winner's medal with warm memories of a job well done. Not least, Ashley Cole.
He has been under intense scrutiny this week, due to the imperfect timing of the Premier League inquiry into his misguided meeting with Chelsea. Wenger has wondered how his mind could be on the match, Arsenal supporters are unsure whether he will even be their player next season.
So when, with the shoot-out score tied at 3-3, he began the long march towards the Manchester United end to be Arsenal's fourth penalty taker, the tension in the stadium was ratcheted up a notch.
It was a key penalty. Score and Roy Keane would have to beat Lehmann to keep United in the game; miss and Scholes' earlier error would have been wiped clean.
Cole sized up Roy Carroll on United's goal-line and whipped his kick to the left, an impossible challenge for the Ulsterman. He wheeled away, not kissing the badge but beating his chest. Proud, with every right to be.
In many ways, it was an echo of the meeting of these teams in the 1979 FA Cup Final — a five-minute explosion of energy in search of a match to accompany it. The penalties were thrilling, a master-class of technique and composure. They seemed to belong to another day.
So what went wrong? Quite simply, Arsenal did not create, United could not convert. Sadly, it meant that what should have been the showpiece, the highlight, of the season, will be remembered only for injustice and its place in the record books as the first FA Cup Final to be decided by the lottery of a penalty shootout.
What an unsatisfactory end to the domestic campaign.
Only a fan could compare this game to the epic encounters that preceded it in the Premier League this season. Old Trafford saw the battle, brutal, gladiatorial, the game that ended Arsenal's tenure as the undefeated. Defeat was so hard to take, so bruising and demoralising that it altered the entire course of their season.
Highbury saw the high water mark of Manchester United's season. Sir Alex Ferguson's men have not performed at any time as they did there, superior to Arsenal in every way, tactically, technically, physically. It was a game that gave a glimpse of what United could still be and made us wonder why they were not.
Mistake
It was hoped this would combine the best of the two: The passion of Old Trafford, the sheer exhilaration of Highbury; instead, it did neither.
Arsenal, who barely turned up, left with the trophy but little credit beyond the red half of north London; the supporters of Manchester United, who face so much uncertainty off the field this summer, travelled north with the disquieting feeling that the world laughed behind their backs once more.
Maybe the mistake is billing it as the FA Cup Final in the first place.
Next time, invite the teams down, keep the whole thing a secret. "FA Cup Final, mate? Nah, no FA Cup Final round here. Never heard of it. This? Oh, this is just the match we play to end the season. No pressure. You just go out like it's a normal Saturday afternoon. FA Cup Final? You're having a laugh."
A typical Cup Final in so many ways. One day, the season will get the send-off it deserves — along with the secret of eternal life and a full rebate from the Chancellor, no doubt.