Monday, August 27, 2012

Use TreeSize to recover your space


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You often wonder where your disk space has gone many times, even though you know you have downloaded a lot of movies or taken a lot of pictures lately.
TreeSize Free is here to help. This free software will help you discover and recover your lost disk space.
Installing and running TreeSize Free is a breeze. Once open, the application allows you to see the size of the directory you are into and then, in Explorer-style, you can open sub-folders to see their size as well.
According to Jam Software “scanning is done in a thread, so you can already see results while TreeSize Free is working. The Explorer context menu is supported within TreeSize, as well as the usual drag & drop operations.”
This is a good app that will be appreciated especially by those in need of good and cheap (or free)  server administration tools for monitoring their space
- Prachi Chourey

Photography : Long Exposure, Night Shot



Night Photography : No Flash : Natural Street Yellow Light along with MoonLight : Shutter speed = 15 Seconds (Long Exposure) : Aperture size F = 3.2 : ISO : 50 : Model sitting on the Car top : Moon on Centre Right : Actual Lighting condition very poor for Human eyes, but sufficient for Camera when exposed for this long time : A Light beam (both Left & Right side of Model) Tangent to Car top surface is of a Motor Bike Headlight which passed from behind when the shot was being taken : White spark light on the Model’s shadow is reflection of light coming from window of far off house.
- Prachi Chourey

Photography : Mosquito on apple


Prachi Chourey
Mosquito on Apple
Prachi Chourey
Needed lot of patience to click this, I must thank this mosquito also who demonstrated patience and was too busy in sucking apple that it didn’t notice that I was that close to it. I took 102 photographs and I selected this for usefilm for the reason that I like the Symmetry in this capture .. legs, antennas, position, angle, focus…
- Prachi Chourey

Photography : Mosquito with my blood


Prachi Chourey
Mosquito …
- Prachi Chourey
Took early morning. This damn mosquito did bite me and had my blood in its stomach.. I couldn’t get my blood back but thought of having its pic atleast…
Macro photography, did put Glass magnifier in front of Camera for this macro shot..
- Prachi Chourey

Photography : Lotus


Prachi Chourey
Lotus
- Prachi Chourey

Lotus Flower, Colors of Nature.
It was Cloudy, Canon G3 Camera.. Lotus was in water at Office Landscape..
Photographed in year 2004..
Hope you like it..
- Prachi Chourey

Photography : Cactus


Prachi Chourey
Cactus
- Prachi Chourey

This cactus flower, of our garden, comes every 4 months. Keeps healthy and fully grown for only 1 day and then slowly dies off. Taken on the day when it was it its best. Hope you will like it..
Hope you like it..
- Prachi Chourey

Photograpy - Water Lady


Prachi Chourey
Water Lady
- Prachi Chourey
Lady Sitting on floor, thinking, keeping both of her hands wrapped around the folded legs.
Water Experiments at Kitchen, Used Ordinary Hand held Magnifier lens. Water drop, from kitchen tap, splashing into water filled glass bowl.
Hope you like it..
- Prachi Chourey

Water Drop


Prachi Chourey
Water Drop
-Prachi Chourey

In the Kitchen, got some more like this, but got this one as Drop closest to ‘Detach’ point.
- Prachi Chourey

How to Recover Watered/Wet phone..


How to save a wet mobile phone – and what not to do


Washing machines, toilets, cups of tea, the British weather… these are a few of our favourite things. That is, until they fill the lungs of our cherished mobile phone, leaving us weeping over a soggy, lifeless metal carcass.
Dropped your handset in the bath? Fumbled your phone and plopped it in the loo? Don’t panic — just follow these steps and you’ll have a good chance of breathing life back into your drowned smart phone. And check out the ‘What not to do’ section for some useful mythbusting.

What to do

While dismantling your phone completely would help it to dry out more effectively, doing so will void your warranty. It usually requires specialist tools and may jeopardise your phone if you’re not careful, so I don’t recommend it. Instead, follow these steps:
1. Firstly, retrieve your handset from the drink straight away. A prolonged plunge will increase the risk of damage.
2. Resist the urge to check if it still works or press any buttons, since putting pressure on the keys could shift liquid further into the device.
3. In all cases, the best thing to do is immediately pull out the battery, thus minimising power to the device that may cause it to short circuit.
Phone buried in rice
4. If you own a handset with a non-replaceable battery, like an iPhone orNokia Lumia, then pulling the battery isn’t an option. You’ll have to risk pressing a few buttons to check if it’s still on and to swiftly turn it off if it is. Take care when handling the phone in this case.
5. Remove any peripherals and attachments on your phone, such as cases.
6. Extract the SIM card and any SD cards it carries, leaving ports or covers on your handset open to aid ventilation.
7. Dry off everything with a towel, including the exterior of your handset, being careful not to let any water drain into openings on the phone.
8. Even when everything’s dry, it’s very likely there’s latent moisture within the device that you’ll want to get out before turning it on. The most oft-reported fix for a sodden phone is to bury the handset in a bowl of dry rice. Desiccant materials, such as rice, have hygroscopic properties that can attract and absorb moisture. You can also use silica gel packs — the kind used in shoeboxes — to greater effect. If you don’t have any lying around, uncooked rice will do nicely.
Silica packs
Place your phone in an airtight container and completely cover it with your choice of desiccant. Leave the container for 24-48 hours for the material to draw all the moisture out of your handset. If you feel like splashing out, you can buy silica-lined, hermetically-sealed pouches that are specifically designed for the task.
9. When you’re confident it’s dried out, replace the battery and try switching it on. Good luck!

What not to do

A purported fast-track method of drying out a wet phone is to use a hairdryer, or applying heat to the device in other ways. While this would successfully evaporate all the moisture still sitting within the handset, it risks becoming too hot and causing damage to the components.
In cases of severe waterlogging, the steam created may not be able to fully ventilate and would simply condense again elsewhere in the phone. You may get away with it, but it seems rather perilous, so my recommendation is to avoid this method.
Another recurring recommendation is to stick your phone in a freezer, wrapped in paper towel to prevent frost damage. Supposedly, the reduced conductivity of water when close to freezing temperatures will stop your phone from short circuiting when in use.
This is definitely not a long-term solution, however, since as soon as the ice begins to thaw, you’re left with the same, if not exacerbated, problem. In the process you’ll probably mess up your phone’s very fragile screen, which hardly seems worth risking for a short-term fix of dubious effectiveness.
For less severe dunkings, you may get away with drying your phone thoroughly on the exterior alone, paying special attention to openings like the headphone jack and USB port. To this end, a few have suggested gently poking into them with a toothpick wrapped in paper towel. While jabbing into your phone with a stick is always a bit iffy, the biggest risk is that rags of sodden paper will get stuck inside your phone and play havoc with its innards.
One suggestion is to overcharge the handset so that the build-up of heat is gradual and not excessive, but this carries all the risks you’d expect with running a current through wet circuitry.
Inevitably, someone reading this will wonder if it’s possible to dry out a phone by putting it in the microwave. Please see this for an adept response.

Beware corrosion

If you succeed in reviving your phone, then congratulations, but you may not have yet won the war with the Grim Reaper of gadgetry. The metal within your phone coming into contact with water and oxygen may create rust that will corrode over time.
While a professional phone fixer may be able to clear out any corrosion by swabbing the circuitry with rubbing alcohol — again, don’t try this at home, kids — in many cases, the eventual demise of your phone is only a matter of time. Sorry.

Is your warranty still valid?

Seek out the liquid contact indicator (LCI). It’s a small white sticker that turns red when it comes into contact with water. Manufacturers place LCIs on their products to use as a litmus test when deciding warranty claims. In most cases, they can refuse to fix or replace your handset if the LCI has been triggered.
Their location varies from phone to phone, and increasingly manufacturers have taken to hiding them out of reach of Tipp-Ex-wielding customers.
iPhone 4 liquid contact indicatorIrrespective of the LCI’s state, you should contact the manufacturer to see if they can help. That’s a long-term solution, but if you need a phone (or the data it holds) right away, you’ll need to dry out your phone before you try to use it, as outlined above.

- Prachi Chourey
Source : http://reviews.cnet.co.uk/mobile-phones/how-to-save-a-wet-mobile-phone-and-what-not-to-do-50008881

Tuesday, August 21, 2012

Baby Shower Cake..


Baby Shower

This one I made for one of my friend's Baby Shower...
I wanted to try something different .. more than just cake and this is what I came up with.
Friends like the Washing Line with Clothes thing..
Hope you like it ..

Do Share and comment...

Regards
Prachi Chourey

Cup Cakes


Image

These are the cup cakes, I tried.. 
They use Fondants. Looks Yummy but yes very sweet too..
Every Design is unique in itself and needs good effort to give them proper shape and contour.. 

Share it .. Comments ?

Regards
Prachi Chourey

How to make Fondant Cake (Recipe)


How to make a Fondant Cake
Ingredients:-
1 cup all purpose flour(maida)
1/2 cup sugar
1/2 cup vegetable oil (I prefer Canola) or you can use pure ghee
1/2 cup milk
1 tsp baking powder
1/2 tsp baking soda
8-10 drops of vanilla or any other essence(a/c to ur choice)
(For 2 cups just double the recipe)
Method:-
1. In a large bowl or plate sift(2-3 times) together the flour,baking powder & baking soda.
2. In other bowl take milk, sugar,vanilla essence & oil stir it well with the help of either hand blender,electronic blender or whisk (for 2-3 min)
3. Preheat the oven at 350F/180C for 15 minutes. Lightly grease pan and sprinkle some flour to avoid the stickiness.
4. Now add the flour(1st bowl mixture) in to 2nd bowl & blend it all together for 10 to min, avoid the lumps.
5. Pour the batter in to prepared greased pan, tap the pan to even it out and break the air bubbles if any.
6.Bake it for 20-25 min. check in between with the help of toothpick or any other long stick for its doneness, if the batter get stick with the toothpick keep it for some more time.
7.Place the cake on the rack for it to cool down completely before putting the icing or frosting on it.
8. You can use any icing on it like a butter cream, whipping cream or can use fondant(a/c to ur choice & taste)
9. I always prefer to use whipping cream, it tastes yum. For that use heavy whipping cream(can get easily in HEB,Kroger or Walmart)(sorry guys don't know about there in India, if it is easily available or not ).
10.Chill the bowl and whisk attachment of a stand mixer(can use hand blender too ) for 20 min. in the refrigerator or 5 min. in the freezer. Pour the heavy cream into the bowl and whisk on medium-high speed until it just starts to thicken. Slow the speed down to medium and gradually pour in the sugar. Continue to whisk until soft peaks form.
Add the vanilla extract and continue to whisk by hand until the cream is smooth, and stiff peaks form (the cream will stand up straight when the whisk is raised).
11. Your frosting is ready to use on the cake, now spread it well with the help of spatula.
12. Fill the icing cones with you desirable icing color & tip & make designs according to ur ideas..can take the help of Youtube.
13. You can also use ready to use fondant & gumpaste to make beautiful cakes (but its kind of much sweet)
Enjoy the recipe & please let me know how it turned out


Regards
Prachi Chourey

Cake Decoration # 1


Prachi Chourey
Cake Design #1
Lets talk about this Cake Design. This is fondant based cake that I prepared along with my neighbor friend.
It did take around 6 hrs to prepare & decorate this one. So it took around 2 hrs to prepare the cake base and approx 4 hrs to decorate it.

Lets learn more about fondants. What are they and how it is used in Cake decorations.
Fondant is is one of several kinds of icing-like substance used to decorate or sculpt pastries. The word, in French, means "melting", coming from the same root as "foundry" in English.

Types of Fondants
Poured fondant is a creamy confection used as a filling or coating for cakespastries, and candies or sweets. In its simplest form, it is sugar and water cooked to the soft-ball stage, cooled slightly, and stirred or beaten until it is an opaque mass of creamy consistency. Sometimes lemon is added to the mixture, mainly for taste. Other flavorings are used as well, as are various colorings. For example, the main filling of a Cadbury Creme Egg is poured fondant.
Rolled fondant or fondant icing, which is not the same material as poured fondant, is commonly used to decorate wedding cakes. It includes gelatin (or agar in vegetarian recipes) and food-gradeglycerine, which keeps the sugar pliable and creates a dough-like consistency. It can also be made using powdered sugar and melted marshmallows. Rolled fondant is rolled out like a pie crust and used to cover the cake.
This particular in picture is Rolled fondant and it's raw material is available in market.
Keep visiting, Next blog I will detail more about it..

Regards
Prachi Chourey