Feel Fresh

Long had been my search for a perfect solution for my contact solution and here I’m, taking a fresh look at everything and feeling fresh about what I’m doing. Wanna know how? Just like everybody, I had the routine trouble of taking care of my contact lens. How much ever care I take in cleaning the lens, the results won’t be good. I started to get the feeling of wearing old contact lens, which in turn made me feel like my eyes got aged.

So I looked up whether there is a solution (answer) for this problem on the internet – and voila! The Bausch themselves offer a great cleansing solution – RENU. If you had been wondering about this new contact care you can visit their site renufresh.com for further details. This solution is used for cleaning, rinsing, disinfecting, and storing your contact lenses. Not only it gently removes the proteins but also retains the moisture of the lenses giving you the ultimate feeling of wearing a new set of contacts each time you clean it with Renu. It’s said that Hydranate helps you to remove that protein deposits without the need to rub. This is an ingredient which has been clinically proved and tested for this purpose. So what are you waiting for? Feel fresh from everyday forth!

Displaying PDF documents without ‘window flood’ (IE 6,7 64-bit)

While surfing, the Internet Explorer always opens a new window as soon as you click a linked PDF file. This is irritating since earlier the browser displayed the document in the same window.

If you are using 64-Bit-Windows, by default you automatically surf with the 64-Bit-version of the browser. The ActiveX-control element ‘pdf.ocx’ installed by Acrobat for opening lined PDF documents is, however, only present in a 32-Bit-version—the browser cannot do anything about this. It passes on called-up PDF files to the 32-Bit-version installed in its system, which opens a new window. To avoid a window flood, go for a 32-Bitversion, which, by default, is installed by the Windows setup. To open this version, you have two options: you either go through the start menu and open ‘Start | Programs | Internet Explorer (32-Bit)’, or click ‘Start | Run’, enter the following command in the ‘Open’ field ‘C:\Programs (x86)\Internet Explorer\Iexplore.exe’ and confirm with ‘OK’. Here, ‘C’ stands for your system drive. If you want to work with this version more often, the best thing is to create a link on your desktop. For this, right-click an empty space on the desktop and select ‘New | Link’. In the following dialog, enter the command as you did in case of ‘Run’.

Use Labels in Gmail

Want to have your e-mail sorted so you don’t have to wade through one huge pile to find a particular message?

Here’s how you can easily find the mail you are looking for by giving it a label allowing it to be searched easily. Although Gmail does not have the ability to sort your mail into folders, it does have labels that filter the ones you see, similar to a list of search results. With the use of filters, you can even have Gmail sort your incoming mail by sender, subject, or even criteria. Here’s how:

  • Click on the ‘Create a filter’ link that appears to the right of the Search toolbar on your Gmail page.
  • In the ‘Create a Filter’ dialog box that appears, fill in the criteria to determine what to do when a new message arrives.
  • To filter all mail received from a particular person, simply type the contact’s name in the ‘From:’ field.
  • Then click on the ‘Next Step’ button.
  • Insert a check mark in the ‘Skip the Inbox’ check box so that your e-mails are directed straight to a particular label.
  • Insert a check mark in the ‘Apply the label:’ check box and then select an existing label or select the new label option to create a new one from the adjacent drop list.
  • Type the desired name for the label in the ‘Please enter a new label name:’ field.
  • Click ‘OK’.
  • Click on the ‘Create Filter’ button.
  • Now all the new messages matching your rules will arrive in their respective labels. You can access the mails directly from the ‘Labels’ section that appears on the left pane in your Gmail account.