Tuesday, 30 August 2016

How to check your own mobile number

How to check your own mobile number: Airtel, Aircel, Docomo, Idea, etc?


Check here for USSD codes for all networks : How to Check your own mobile number on any sim card
  1. Airtel
  2. BSNL
  3. Aircel
  4. Idea
  5. Reliance
  6. Tata Docomo
  7. Vodafone
  8. Videocon
  9. Virgin
You just have to open up your phone’s Dialer, type these codes and finally you need to hit the call button or sometimes you just need to type it. You’ll see that a small window pops up giving you the required details (Some carriers ask you to confirm it, just hit “OK” to proceed) . And the best part is that it works even with zero balance as its completely free, even better than calling others to check your mobile number because even that requires currency!
Check Your Airtel Mobile Number-
  • *121*9#
  • *140*1600#
  • *400*2*1*10#
  • *140*175
  • *282#  *141*123#
Check Your Aircel Mobile Number-
  • *122*131#
  • *888#
  • *1#
  • *234*4#
  • *131#
Check Your BSNL Mobile Number-
  • *1#
  • *99#
Check Your Idea Mobile Number-
  • *147#
  • *1#
  • *789#
  • *131*1#
  • *100#
Check Your Reliance Mobile Number-
  • *1#
  • *111#
Check Your Tata Docomo Mobile Number-
  • *1#
  • *580#
  • *124#
Check Your Vodafone Mobile Number-
  • *111*2#
  • *555#
  • *555*0#
  • *777*0#
  • *131*0#
Check Your Videocon Mobile Number-
  • *1#
Check Your Virgin Mobile Number-
  • *1#

Saturday, 6 August 2016

Facebook ID Extraction Tool

Facebook ID Extraction Tool

We have fixed this tool to work properly with new Facebook Graph API.

How to Use

  1. Enter  URL of Facebook group, page or profile
  2. Click on Extract IDs button
Using this tool, you can get
  1. Facebook Group ID
  2. Facebook Page ID
  3. Facebook Profile ID
  4. Facebook Event ID
  5. Facebook Group Post ID
  6. Facebook Event Post ID
  7. Facebook Page Post ID
  8. Facebook Note ID
  9. Facebook Video ID
  10. Facebook Photo ID
  11. Comments on Facebook Post ID
  12. Facebook Group Username
  13. Facebook Profile Username
  14. Facebook Page Username
  15. Facebook Group IDs Without Usernames
Limitations
  1. Can not get Profile IDs of Facebook profiles that are not publicly visible
  2. Can not get Group IDs of Facebook that have a username
If you want to remove these limitations, then please consider using built in ID extraction tool of Facebook Social Toolkit Chrome Extension.
Facebook id extractor will allow you to extract group ID, page ID , profile ID
Embed this tool to your web site using HTML code given below :
<iframe src=”http://fst.getmyscript.com/webtools/facebook_id_extractor/” width=”100%” height=”500″ scrolling=”yes” class=”iframe-class” frameborder=”0″></iframe>

Monday, 4 July 2016

Recover Deleted Data In Android With Data Recovery Tools 2016

Recover Deleted Data In Android With Data Recovery Tools 2016

1. Recuva

Recuva the most powerful tool created by the software developers Piriform who are responsible for the proper CCleaner PC cleaning tool or software. It also provides you attractive interface with high quality just as other products does provide. Recuva has an inbuilt wizard that helps you in following the steps of recovery whenever you wishes to recover the data.
You can even deep scan the data to increase the possibility of recovering data. All data such as pictures, audio, documents, videos and emails from any storage device.
Price: Free version and a Paid version for $24.95 (advanced file recovery, virtual hard drive support, automatic updates, premium support).

2. Free Undelete

Free Undelete is another easiest recovery tool similar to Wise data Recovery. It doesn’t provides you any latest options to customize what kind of data you are looking for. What yu need to do is scan a drive and see the following results displayed.
When the scan is completed, you will see all the files that can be recovered and even show whole deleted folders. With a single click of mouse, you can recver data from folders and can recover images,music,documents,videos,emails and even too compressed files.
Price: Free for personal use and Paid for Corporate use costing $69 and $103 for each version
Compatibility: Windows XP, Vista, 7, 8, 8.1

3. Minitool Partition Recovery

An amazing tool whose free version is limited to 1 GB of data recovery.After that you have to update to a paid version. This tool is capable of recovering data from formatted,damaged and even deleted parts with amazing results.
It has a feature that it recovers 5 times more files tahn the other tools described and divides all the files according to their extensions provided, through which it is easy to find the required file.
It’s a grace mark for people who really need some sort of deep scan . It supports FAT12, FAT16, FAT32, VFAT, NTFS and NTFS5 file systems.
Price: Free up to 1 GB, after that, paid versions may cost $69 and $89
Compatibility: Windows XP, Vista, 7, 8, 8.1

4. UndeleteMyFiles Pro

UndeleteMyFiles Pro software provides you many recovery features having some handy side feature included in it. you can even search for media files or regular files. But if you are not satisfied with this upto , you can even add filters to look for a specific file.Assigning hidden or read-only to specific file name. size or attribute etc.
It also provides to use “Files Wiper” tool to permanently delete a file or create a “Disk Image” to make sure that no any file is overwritten by other data. This tool is quick to proceed and even scans deeply to recover all the files.
Price: Free
Compatibility: Windows XP, Vista, 7, 8, 8.1 and Mac OS X

5. EaseUS MobiSaver

Another recovery tool used for recovering data from Android Device. Its complexity and recovery technique is almost same but where they lack difference is through supported formats, devices and price. This tool provides less file types to recover including SMS, Contacts,Documents, Videos, Audio and Pictures.
It’ a good choice as it is a bit cheaper and also not to recover Im History or Call Logs.
Price: Free version with limited features and a Pro version for $39.95 Android and $30 for iOS version.
Compatibility: Windows XP, Vista, 7, 8, 8.1 and Mac OS X & iOS 8, iPhone 6 and upto Android Lollipop

6. PC Inspector File Recovery

This one is the latest toolwith very complex use. It doesn’t have much of attractive interface or millions of features. This tool will le you scan a drive deeply and select which sectors to scan. A full deep scan of a 40 GB data drive will take more than 2 hours to complete.
You can also add file name/extension filter to make easier to find a specific file. If you are an advanced user and want to scan your PC deeply, then this PC Inspector File Recovery will give you many surprises. It supports the FAT 12/16/32 and NTFS file systems
Price: Free
Compatibility: Windows XP, Vista, 7, 8, 8.1

7. Glary Undelete

Glay Undelete is a simple tool with limited features in it.But it provides you some good filtering options which helps in easy finding of required files. It also have the option ot scan a drive and it must be a quick drive.
All th recovered data is categorized by thier extensions. You can strain your search accordig to size, time, state of recovery and name of file. Glary Undelete supports Supports FAT, NTFS, NTFS + EFS file systems. It also lets recovery of compressed or encrypted files.
Price: Free
Compatibility: Windows XP, Vista, 7, 8, 8.1

8. Pandora Recovery

Pandora Recovery is a feature rich in tons of customization options and deep scanning capability. It doesn’t ahve an attractive interface same as Recuva, but is more rich in handy features. It lets you recover FAT32 or NTFS file system. It also provides you a wizard that guides you through the process and how to scan.
You can scan a type of file, the whole drive or deep scan to look after all the files with most of the files recovered.You can even connect other removable storage devices to scan and also apply scanning methods to them.
Price: Free
Compatibility: Windows XP, Vista, 7, 8, 8.1
Use the software and recover deleted file from android easily.

Wednesday, 29 June 2016

Networking Tools

  • NetStat: displays a list of your computer's inbound and outbound network connections, including the information on open TCP and UDP ports, IP address, and connection states. What makes it different from other NetStat utilities is the ability to map open ports to the owning application. Configurable alerts for incoming and outgoing connections are also available.
  • NBScan: a powerful and fast NetBIOS scanner. NBScan can scan a network within a given range of IP addresses and list computers offering NetBIOS resource-sharing service, as well as their name tables and MAC addresses. Unlike the standard nbtstat utility supplied with Windows, this tool provides a graphical user interface and easy management of the lmhosts file and features parallel scanning, which allows checking a class C network in less than one minute. NBScan can facilitate routine tasks often carried out by system integrators, administrators, and analysts.
  • PortScan: an advanced TCP port scanner that allows you to scan your network for active ports. This tool features both conventional (full connect) and stealth (half-open) scanning modes.
  • HostAlive: a network monitoring tool that periodically checks if a host is alive and running network services, such as an HTTP or FTP server.
  • EmailVerify: checks if an e-mail address is valid by communicating with the corresponding mail server over SMTP.
  • Shares: monitors and logs external connections to your computer's shared resources, lists local shares, as well as provides a quick and easy way to connect to remote resources.
  • SysFiles: a convenient editor for the five important system files: services, protocol, networks, hosts, and lmhosts.
  • NetAudit (NetBIOS Auditing Tool): allows you to perform various security checks on your network and/or individual computers offering the NetBIOS file sharing service. This tool can help you identify potential security flaws.
  • RawSocket: provides you with the ability to establish low-level TCP and UDP connections to troubleshoot and test different networking services. Multi-color output and a convenient interface make it a great tool for every network administrator or computer programmer.
  • WiFiMan: shows wireless adapters installed on a computer, lists available wireless networks and allows you to manage connection profiles.
  • TraceRoute and Ping: these familiar utilities featuring customizable options and convenient results presentation allow you to explore the Internet and troubleshoot connectivity problems.
  • NSLookup: allows you to convert IP addresses to hostnames and vice versa, obtain aliases, and perform advanced DNS queries, such as MX or CNAME.
  • IPBlackList: checks if an IP addresses is included in various IP address black lists: SPAM databases, open proxies and mail relays, etc. This tool helps you figure out why a given IP address is rejected by some network resources, such as mail servers.
  • ProcMon: displays the list of running processes with full information on the program location, manufacturer, process ID, and the loaded modules. With this tool, you can view CPU utilization statistics, identify hidden applications, kill running processes, and manage the usage of your PC's resources more effectively.
  • SNMPAudit: Advanced SNMP device scanner. It allows you to locate SNMP devices in the selected network segment quickly and receive customizable data sampling from each of the devices. You can use SNMP browser for examining a device in detail.
Other features include report generation in HTML, text, and comma delimited formats; quick IP address sharing between different tools; IP address geolocation; a comprehensive System Summary window; and a customizable interface.

Friday, 3 June 2016

10 use full Tool Windows System Administrator

10 use full Tool Windows  System Administrator 

Unlike Linux, which belongs to everyone, Windows belongs to Microsoft. It is not an open operating system. So most of the tools the system administrators need are built by Microsoft. Many of them are already included when you install Windows 2008 or 2012, or you can download them from microsoft.com or sysinternals.com. In addition there are free tools plus commercial tools, like GFI Languard, which help the system administrator manage a Windows environment.
Here we look at some of the most important tools for the Windows system administrator.

Windows Performance Monitor

The Windows Performance Monitor is different from the more straightforward Task Manager that you see when you right click the system tray. The Performance Monitor is rather more complicated to master, as it does so much. You can use it in conjunction with the Windows Resource Monitor to see what resources each program and process are using.
As with other performance monitoring tools, this is only useful if the administrator has taken the time to understand the metrics that the tool displays. It would be useful for any system administrator to read a book on performance monitoring (there are plenty) or just to read up online. Many people run performance tools as a reflex without really understanding what they are looking at. So don’t do that!

Windows Remote Server Administration Tools

This tool allows you to manage roles and features on remote servers. In other words, it lets you control what services are installed on remote Windows machines, since these are the roles and features being referred to.

Windows Power Shell

With Windows, most people are comfortable using menus, i.e., graphic screens. But it’s also worth taking time to learn how to use the commands available in the Windows Power Shell.
The Power Shell has been included in Windows for some years now, but not every administrator uses it. Most haven’t learned it but that’s a shame as it can be a full-blown programming language if you want. Or it can do simpler tasks with one command.
One thing the Windows Power Shell does especially well is provide Unix-like commands to the administrator. For example, it provides the ls command, just like Linux. Ls is an alias for the Power Shell command Get-ChildItem. Select-String is the UNIX equivalent of grep, except that it can also read the contents of files.
Like UNIX, you can pipe Power Shell commands to hook to one another, to make them much more useful.
For example, you can search for files based on their name and, for text files, the contents of the file. The command below searches the current folder for any file that includes the string “targetType.” The string can be a regular expression or an ordinary string.
Windows Power Shell Troubleshooting Pack
The Windows power shell commands are called cmdlets. The cmdlets are specific to the systems administrator in the TroubleshootingPack module. You can ask it for instructions by typing:
Get-Help Get-TroubleshootingPack

TCP View

TCP View is a tool provided by Microsoft that shows you what network connections each running program is making. This should be part of any system administrator’s toolkit to use as a means of auditing machines. You can look here to see if your computer is connecting to IP addresses you do not know, which could be a hacker. It also reveals what software is on your machine that you might want to remove since it is just taking up bandwidth and CPU without providing anything useful to you. Examples of this include Adobe update and many of the other update tools that vendors install without telling you.

WireShark

Wireshark is a packet sniffer tool. You cannot sniff network traffic from other machines on the network unless your routers are set up in promiscuous mode, which they will not be. But you can plug in a laptop to a router and see all traffic on the network. This is good for troubleshooting application issues. And it makes something which is otherwise relatively difficult to grasp (network traffic) more immediately understandable with a graphic interface.

Hyper-V

Microsoft invented virtual machines and then VMware took over the market. So most people use VMware Workstation. But you have to pay for it. Hyper-V is included with Windows 2008 and Windows 2012. Use it for free for setting up a lab for troubleshooting or installing test versions of applications into a separate OS on your Windows machine. Other than that you can use Oracle Virtual Box for free.
Here is how to enable Hyper-V on Windows 2012:http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/hh846766.aspx.

Windows Snare

Snare is a tool that outputs Windows event logs to a syslog server. Why is this important? Most intrusion detection and other logging systems process logs in syslog format, which is a UNIX format. Syslog is not a file, but a pipe. As such you can send the data to a syslog server, which reads it as if it were a file, except in real time.

Windows Process Monitor

The Windows Process Monitor is another tool from Microsoft. It gives you extremely detailed process information right down to which .dll a program is loading and which memory addresses these DLLs are loaded into. It looks at each step of a running program, so it generates millions of events per minute.
In the example below, you can see every registry key it has read, every file it has opened, created, or closed.
This screen shows what .dlls the program is loading and into which memory addresses. This is probably more information than the average person needs, but it can still be useful on occasion for troubleshooting errors and performance.

GFI Languard

GFI Languard is not a free product. It is, however, one of the better vulnerability and patch management tools. It also provides auditing tools. You’d characterize it as a system management and security tool. It scans for security patches and installs those that are absent. You can use it to push out software. sIt also works on Linux, so you could use the same tool for both platforms to standardize around a single tool.

Windows Reliability Monitor

The Windows Reliability Monitor is included in Windows 2008 and later versions of Windows. The red Xs in the screen show below show critical operating system events. You can click on the X to get detailed information drawn from the Windows event log. To run it type ‘reliability’ in the Start menu.

Microsoft Access and Visual Basic

I’m going to add Microsoft Access to this list and, optionally, Visual Basic. Access is an easy-to-use powerful database that Microsoft used to bundle with Microsoft Office. But it is not included anymore, probably because people weren’t much interested in learning it. Instead they learned how to make Pivot Tables in Excel. But you can do so much more with Access than Pivot Tables and it is not difficult.
What makes Access so powerful, is its ability to import data and run SQL commands against that. You do not need to know SQL as there is a wizard to guide you.
With Access, you could, for example, import the Windows event log or any other data and then use the graphical interface to count and total record types, show the maximum or minimum record, or show records in a sort list. You can generate reports and export data to text, Excel, or other formats.
The other thing about Access is that it, like Word and Excel, includes the Visual Basic programming language, formally known as Visual Basic for Applications. If you are a programmer there is no end to the possibilities of what you can do to automate system administration tasks if you have a programming tool at your disposal. Some Visual Basic programs can be run from the Windows command program using Cscript, as shown below. This is called VB Script (VB Script could not, for example, read a database since that scripting tool cannot load external .dlls in that way).
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