History

You are currently browsing the articles from MS Windows Articles, Reviews and Videos matching the category History.

Internet privacy cleaner

Cleaning your becomes more important as it is a matter of personal issue for most of us.

NVT is one of the ’s which lets you clean your .

This programs lets you clean your in a customised way as you can easily select what to and what not to .

It lets you the following things:

NVT can clean your from any including Explorer and .

Download NVT Internet Privacy Cleaner

Share and Enjoy: del.icio.us StumbleUpon Facebook Google Furl Live MisterWong.DE NewsVine Reddit Slashdot Technorati YahooMyWeb BlinkList description Fark Netvouz Spurl MisterWong Webnews.de Blogsvine description IndiaGram kick.ie Taggly E-mail this story to a friend! Print this article!

Tags:, , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Related posts

Written by Jason on August 15th, 2008 with no comments.
Read more articles on 1340 and 1354 and 1426 and 1429 and 1673 and 169 and 2065 and 2157 and 401 and 544 and Browser and Contributors and Firefox and History and Internet and Internet Explorer and Software and cache and command and download and freeware and mozilla and program.

What’s with this MSH_MOUSEWHEEL message?

The hardware folks had this mouse wheel thing they were making, and they needed a way to get applications to support the mouse. Now, one way of doing this was to say, "Well, we'll start selling this wheel mouse, but no applications can use it until the Read More......(read more)

Written by The Old New Thing : History on August 6th, 2008 with no comments.
Read more articles on 1340 and 1354 and 1426 and 1429 and 1673 and 169 and 2065 and 2157 and 401 and 544 and Contributors and History.

The evolution of menu templates: 32-bit extended menus

At last we reach the 32-bit extended menu template. Introduced in Windows 95, this remains the most advanced menu template format through Windows Vista. As you might expect, the 32-bit extended menu template is just a 32-bit version of the 16-bit extended Read More......(read more)

Written by The Old New Thing : History on July 16th, 2008 with no comments.
Read more articles on 1340 and 1354 and 1426 and 1429 and 1673 and 169 and 2065 and 2157 and 401 and 544 and Contributors and History.

The evolution of menu templates: 16-bit extended menus

Windows 95 introduced a new menu format, known as "extended menus". You declare these in a resource file with the MENUEX keyword. The 16-bit extended menu is really just a temporary stopping point on the way to the 32-bit extended menu, since the 16-bit Read More......(read more)

Written by The Old New Thing : History on July 15th, 2008 with no comments.
Read more articles on 1340 and 1354 and 1426 and 1429 and 1673 and 169 and 2065 and 2157 and 401 and 544 and Contributors and History.

Why does the “Install Font” dialog look so old-school?

8 wonders why the "Install Font" dialog looks so old-school. (And Kevin Provance demonstrates poor reading skills by not only ignoring the paragraph that explains why the suggestion box is closed, but also asking a question that's a dup of one already Read More......(read more)

Written by The Old New Thing : History on July 14th, 2008 with no comments.
Read more articles on 1340 and 1354 and 1426 and 1429 and 1673 and 169 and 2065 and 2157 and 401 and 544 and Contributors and History.

The evolution of menu templates: 32-bit classic menus

Now that we've got a handle on 16-bit classic menu templates , we can move on to the next evolutionary step, namely 32-bit classic menu templates. The 32-bit classic menu template is in fact nearly identical to the 16-bit classic menu template. The only Read More......(read more)

Written by The Old New Thing : History on July 11th, 2008 with no comments.
Read more articles on 1354 and 1426 and 1429 and 1673 and 169 and 2065 and 2157 and 401 and 544 and Contributors and History.

What’s the deal with that alternate form for menu item template separators?

We saw last time that you can specify a separator in a menu item template by specifying zero for everything, even though technically you're supposed to pass MFT_SEPARATOR for the flags. What's the deal with that alternate form for menu item template separators? Read More......(read more)

Written by The Old New Thing : History on July 10th, 2008 with no comments.
Read more articles on 1354 and 1426 and 1429 and 1673 and 169 and 2065 and 2157 and 401 and 544 and Contributors and History.

The evolution of menu templates: 16-bit classic menus

Menus aren't as complicated as dialogs. There are no fonts, no positioning, it's just a list of menu items and flags. Well, okay, there's the recursive part, when a menu has a submenu. But that's really the only wrinkle. Most of it is pretty boring. The Read More......(read more)

Written by The Old New Thing : History on July 9th, 2008 with no comments.
Read more articles on 1354 and 1426 and 1429 and 1673 and 169 and 2065 and 2157 and 401 and 544 and Contributors and History.

The evolution of menu templates: Introduction

As with dialog templates , menu templates have also gone through a four-stage evolutionary process. People don't often generate menu templates in code, although the LoadMenuIndirect function is there waiting for you once you get the urge. As a result, Read More......(read more)

Written by The Old New Thing : History on July 8th, 2008 with no comments.
Read more articles on 1354 and 1426 and 1429 and 1673 and 169 and 2065 and 2157 and 401 and 544 and Contributors and History.

Why is the LOADPARMS32 structure so messed up?

If you look at the LOADPARMS32 structure, you'll find a horrific mishmash. Double-null-terminated strings, a null-terminated string, some WORD s, and even a Pascal-style string. What's going on here ? Each of those members comes from a different era in Read More......(read more)

Written by The Old New Thing : History on July 7th, 2008 with no comments.
Read more articles on 1354 and 1426 and 1429 and 1673 and 169 and 2065 and 2157 and 401 and 544 and Contributors and History.

« Older articles

No newer articles