Thursday, 8 November 2012

Windows 8 Transformation Pack 6.0 Give your PC a Windows 8-themed makeover













 Give your PC a Windows 8-themed makeover 



Every new version of Windows involves adapting to change, and Windows 8 will be no different, promising a radical new look as it attempts to bestride tablets and phones as well as your laptop or desktop. If all you want to do is preview the new look and some of the tools on your Windows 7-powered PC, try the Windows 8 UX Pack.
If you’d like to emulate the look on an earlier version of Windows, you’ll need this Windows 8 Transformation Pack tool instead. It takes the UX Pack and adds in a number of extra elements that emulate key aspects of Windows 8 already built into Windows 7 such as the translucent Windows Aero interface. Basically, if you want to get the Windows 8 look in Vista, XP or Windows Server, you need this instead.
Installation is simple enough: extract the setup file from the zip archive, then double-click it to get started. If you’ve installed the pre-requisites (.NET Framework 4.0, plus .NET Framework 2.0-3.5 if you’re running Windows Server or the 64-bit version of XP) you can select what to install and then click Install to see if the program will be able to supply you with the features you desire.
Be patient, it can take a while to apply everything, and it occasionally appears stuck, but persevere and if all works you’ll be prompted to reboot at which point you’ll be able to get a feel for Windows 8.
For Vista and Windows 7 users, the changes will be largely superficial, with access to the Metro-like user interface and various gadgets the big attraction. XP users will notice the most radical changes, with a completely revamped interface to contend with. You may encounter glitches – if these prove too troublesome, or you decide the new look and feel isn’t for you, just re-run the setup tool to remove it from your system. 
Windows 8 Transformation Pack v6.0 additions and new features:
Added Windows 8 RTM wallpapers
Configured Aero frame UI, Metro Desktop UI and Aero’s auto-colorization to be used by default if applicable
Improved Segoe fonts family installation code for better compatibilities
Updated Metro Inspirat theme with improved start orb and few adjustments
Updated Newgen’s start screen background to Windows 8 RTM’s default
Updated Segoe fonts family from Windows 8 RTM
Updated TrueTransparency Aero skin rebuilt from Windows 8 RTM resources
Updated Windows 8′s Explorer toolbar layout configuration
Updated Windows 8 theme for Windows 7 by wango911 with customized theme files
Updated system files resources found in Windows 8 RTM

Sunday, 18 March 2012

Facebook - Dark + Transparent theme


AuthorPRINCE
CreatedJul 19, 2011
UpdatedJul 19, 2011
Installs (this week)14,497
Installs (total)482,077

FREE DOWNLOAD     

 

 


More Info

This is a Adaption of the Full Blue Template from Facebook - Dark Shiny Transparency [with Options] by DaedalusIcarusHelios.

This currently is just a bunch of fixes for those things left out.

This is currently only made for Chrome. This is due to the Chrome only features used.

To Do: - Fix Chat so seeing who is offline/online is easier to see. 







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Tuesday, 3 January 2012

How To Get Facebook’s Timeline Without The Wait

Facebook gives developers early access to timeline so they can develop applications for it. However, you don’t really have to be a real developer, just pretend to be one!Here’s how.



STEP 1


Facebook’s Developer Application



Facebook has a page, a group and an application called Developer — you want to click on the app, which you can find here.
If you’ve never used this app before, you’ll need to allow it to access your basic information, the same way you would when launching anything else for the first time on Facebook.



After you’ve installed the Developer tool, click on “create a new app,” a button that appears in the top right corner of the screen.

Step Two: Make Up A Name


Developer asks you to provide some information about this app you just clicked the create button for.
A pop-up asks you to input a display name and a namespace, and two of them can’t be exactly the same. It’s simplest to type in your full name for the first field and then in the second area, type it in without any spaces between words.


Then a security popup window pops up, asking you to type in the letters you see.

Step Three: Launch Open Graph



Within the left-hand column, click on the words “open graph.”
Fill out two different verbs. You can use “get profile” or choose whatever you wan





Now you’re almost done.
After a few minutes, your profile will display a notification across the top suggesting you try timeline.
Click “get it now” and start playing with your timeline.