Unlocker 1.9.2 Free Download

If you've ever been unable to delete a file in Windows, and can't figure out what program's using it, Unlocker is the solution. Have you ever seen these Windows error messages?
  1. Cannot delete folder: It is being used by another person or program
  2. Cannot delete file: Access is denied
  3. There has been a sharing violation.
  4. The source or destination file may be in use.
  5. The file is in use by another program or user.
  6. Make sure the disk is not full or write-protected and that the file is not currently in use.
Unlocker can help! Simply right-click the folder or file and select Unlocker. If the folder or file is locked, a window listing of lockers will appear. Simply click Unlock All and you are done!

Technical
Title: Unlocker 1.9.2
Filename: Unlocker1.9.2.exe
File size: 1.03MB (1,078,591 bytes)
Requirements: Windows 2000 / XP / Vista / Windows7 / Windows8
Languages: Multiple languages
License: Freeware
Author: Unlocker unlocker.emptyloop.com
MD5 Checksum: 1E02D6AA4A199448719113AE3926AFB2

Change Log
- Improved Installer: Universal installer for both 32 and 64 bit machines
- Fixed Bug: Fixed small memory and behavior bugs
- Promotional feature: Fully optional Delta toolbar.
http://filehippo.com/download_unlocker/download/93ffae8a5bad6c1fd1eed8ad1bfaae10/

Windows Live Writer 2012 16.4.3508

http://www.techc.tk/2013/11/Windows-Live-Writer-2012-16-4-3508.html
Writer makes it easy to share your photos and videos on almost any blog service Windows Live, WordPress, Blogger, LiveJournal, TypePad, and many more.

Writer is part of Windows Live Essentials, which includes free programs for photos, movies, instant messaging, e-mail, blogging, family safety, and more. Get Writer or get them all they're free!

1) What you see is what you get - With Writer, you can preview everything you’re adding to your blog, to see how the fonts, spacing, colors, and images will look, before you publish.

2) Bring your blog to life - It's fast and easy to make your photos and videos look great on your blog. Insert them and apply cool borders and effects.

Technical
Title:  Windows Live Writer 2012 (16.4.3508)
Filename:  wlsetup-web.exe
File size:  1.18MB (1,239,536 bytes)
Requirements:  Windows Windows7 / Windows7 64 / Windows8 / Windows8 64
Languages:  en-US
License:  Freeware
Date added:  May 15, 2013
Author:  Microsoft Corporation www.microsoft.com
Homepageexplore.live.com/windows-live-writer
MD5 Checksum:    517792A56DBF99B4277B9B573E008EDD
http://filehippo.com/download_windows_live_writer/download/dff3d02d45a774bb986a9f907febc7c6/

Word Viewer 11.0.8173

http://www.techc.tk/2013/11/word-viewer-1108173.html
Word Viewer 11.0.8173 : After installing Word Viewer you can open and view DOC files without having to use Microsoft Office Word.

The small tool supports DOC, RFT, TXT, HTML, XML, WPD and WPS documents.

One limitation of the viewer is that it can not run Macros. On the positive side it means your Windows computer is not at risk to be infected by a Macro virus when opening documents with Word Viewer.

To view documents in the newer DOCX and DOCM formats, Microsoft Office Compatibility Pack is needed additionally. You can download the tool from www.techc.tk, too.

Technical
Title:  Word Viewer 11.0.8173
Filename:  wordview_en-us.exe
File size:  24.50MB (25,685,128 bytes)
Requirements:  Windows 2000 / XP / Vista / Windows7 / XP64 / Vista64 / Windows7 64 / Windows8 / Windows8 64
Languages:  Multiple languages
LicenseFreeware
Date added:  June 22, 2012
Author:  Microsoft Corporation www.microsoft.com
Homepagewww.microsoft.com/en.../details.aspx?id=4
MD5 Checksum:  EF59DC6B88EAB99362B3BA4982F1A4CB
http://filehippo.com/download_word_viewer/download/5557600b588dbb9aeda258c492cec426/

WordWeb 7.0 Free Download

http://www.techc.tk/2013/11/wordweb-70.html
WordWeb is your assisting dictionary and thesaurus that looks up words in almost any program.

Choose from the off-line dictionary with 150,000 root words and 120,000 synonym words or take a look in web dictionaries, just one click away. In general, WordWeb quickly provides you with definitions, synonyms and related words as well as readable and audible pronunciations.

It keeps running in the background and can be activated by marking a word and pressing the customizable hotkey. Use the "Replace"-Button to exchange the initial word in your favourite word-processor with an appropriate synonym.
http://www.techc.tk/2013/11/wordweb-70.html
Technical
Title:  WordWeb 7.0
Filename:  wordweb7.exe
File size:  21.37MB (22,407,464 bytes)
Requirements:  Windows 2000 / XP / Vista / Windows7 / XP64 / Vista64 / Windows7 64 / Windows8 / Windows8 64
Languages:  en-US
License:  Freeware
AuthorWordWeb Software WordWeb.info
MD5 Checksum:    56FAC632EA34F18FC098263B57A3F8A2

Change Log
- Database updates, new words and related links
- Hundreds of new audio pronunciations
- New improved one-click engine, with better 64-bit and Windows 8 support
http://filehippo.com/download_wordweb/download/fc27e4b59cd5c93873e4ac3ebe135c7f/

Cody Wilson created a gun that can be downloaded and built with a 3D printer - is he too dangerous for Britain?

http://www.techc.tk/2013/11/cody-wilson-created-gun-that-can-be.html
The extreme libertarian is coming to London challenge the global financial system

He speaks of liberty, freedom and helping society’s marginalised. His dedication to civil liberties has brought him a loyal band of followers. Now Cody Wilson, scourge of the campaign to control the proliferation of arms, is coming to London with a new mission: to challenge the global financial system.

Mr Wilson, 25 – named by Wired magazine as one of the world’s 15 most dangerous people after he created a gun that can be downloaded and built with a 3D printer is promoting a crypto-currency that would operate outside of government control.

Driven by an extreme libertarian philosophy, the Texan has already achieved notoriety with his vision of putting a gun in the hands of anyone who wants one and who has a few hundred pounds. The online blueprint for his handgun the Liberator has been downloaded 100,000 times since it was released in May.

Senior police sources have warned that the gun is one of the biggest threats they face as they try to cut firearms crime in Britain. The US Government embarked on legal action to prevent his organisation Defense Distributed from continuing to disseminate the designs.

Calls for stricter gun control laws in Britain followed the a series of raids in Manchester last month that netted what police believed to be the country’s first 3D-printed gun parts. Though it was later confirmed that the parts were not from a 3D gun, a man arrested remains on bail until January.

Mr Wilson yesterday laughed off his position at No 14 on the Wired list (below Bashar al-Assad but above Paula Broadwell, whose relationship with General David Petraeus ended the career of the director of the CIA), saying that his philosophy placed individual liberty above attempts at gun control.

“Do the interests in protecting liberties overcome the fact that bad things may happen? It’s a simple calculus: for me it’s worth it.”

Mr Wilson described the Liberator as “the gift that keeps on giving”. Despite his current legal battle with the US State Department, he remains unconcerned about its implications. “We can’t disseminate the files directly, so I haven’t – but it’s all over the internet anyway, so it’s not an issue.” While the wrangling continues, he has embarked on a new project linked to the cyber currency Bitcoin.

Created in 2009 by activists sceptical of the international monetary system, Bitcoin is not tied to any national currency and its value is dependent on online exchanges. Mr Wilson sees it as a “permanent gadfly on the current financial superstructure” and describes its use as “financial freedom of speech”.

Bitcoin has been used as the primary currency in some criminal networks – most notably the Silk Road, an online marketplace for the sale of drugs, forged papers and pornography. It was shut down last month and its alleged founder, Ross Ulbricht – a 29-year-old former physics and engineering student from Austin, Texas – was arrested after agents infiltrated the network that operated on a secret sublayer of the internet.

Despite concerns that it is used for money laundering and drug dealing, Bitcoin has been championed by a growing number of US financial institutions and entrepreneurs, including Tyler and Cameron Winklevoss, the twins best known for their long legal dispute with Mark Zuckerberg over the genesis of Facebook.

Mr Wilson is a self-confessed advocate from the “anarchist” wing of the bitcoin movement who is critical of those who have sought to temper the radical philosophy of the currency’s founders. While the venture capitalists downplay Bitcoin’s illicit links, Mr Wilson has been an unabashed supporter of the market forces that drove the Silk Road. Although the site is gone, Mr Wilson said bitcoin would spawn “1,000 more” Silk Roads in its place.

“It’s relatively anonymous, but not completely anonymous like cash. Most deals, for drugs and arms, are still done in cash,” he said. “I want Bitcoin to be completely untaintable. People talk of Silk Road, child porn, trafficking and ask what do you say? Well the biggest money launderers are Standard Chartered and HSBC they have the institutional veil of respectability.”

Mr Wilson has benefited from the concern about state-sponsored snooping raised by Edward Snowden to crowd-source funds for his latest scheme. The Dark Wallet project is an attempt to use anonymity and encryption which he describes as the few remaining tools available to the “dwindling garrisons of liberty” to add layers of financial secrecy to bitcoin deals at the same time as the US authorities try to regulate the use of the currency, of which there is thought to be more than $4bn in circulation. “Bitcoin is what they fear it is,” said Mr Wilson darkly.

Mr Wilson is one of the guest speakers at a bitcoin conference next weekend in London, where he is considered a revolutionary innovator rather than a dangerous radical who threatens to bring US-style gun crime to Britain.

Paul Goggins, the Labour MP for Wythenshawe and Sale East where the suspected 3D gun components were found, said that his philosophy should be ignored. “The development of this [3D gun] technology is very worrying,” he said. “It’s worrying that it could fall into the hands of the wrong people who could do harm. I shan’t be paying any attention and I would advise any person with any sense to ignore him.”(Techc)(independent)(GNN)

'Superbugs could erase a century of medical advances,' experts warn

Drug-resistant "superbugs" represent one of the gravest threats in the history of medicine, leading experts have warned.
http://www.techc.tk/2013/11/superbugs-could-erase-century-of.html
Doctors issue new warning of devastating effect of over-prescribing antibiotics for trivial ailments

Routine operations could become deadly "in the very near future" as bacteria evolve to resist the drugs we use to combat them. This process could erase a century of medical advances, say government doctors in a special editorial in The Lancet health journal. Although the looming threat of antibiotic, or anti-microbial, resistance has been known about for years, the new warning reflects growing concern that the NHS and other national health systems, already under pressure from ageing populations, will struggle to cope with the rising cost of caring for people in the "post-antibiotic era".

In a stark reflection of the seriousness of the threat, England's deputy chief medical officer, Professor John Watson, said: "I am concerned that in 20 years, if I go into hospital for a hip replacement, I could get an infection leading to major complications and possible death, simply because antibiotics no longer work as they do now." About 35 million antibiotics are prescribed by GPs in England every year. The more the drugs circulate, the more bacteria are able to evolve to resist them. In the past, drug development kept pace with evolving microbes, with a constant production line of new classes of antibiotics. But the drugs have ceased to be profitable and a new class has not been created since 1987.

Writing in The Lancet, experts, including England's chief medical officer, Dame Sally Davies, warn that death rates from bacterial infections "might return to those of the early 20th century". They write: "Rarely has modern medicine faced such a grave threat. Without antibiotics, treatments from minor surgery to major transplants could become impossible, and health-care costs are likely to spiral as we resort to newer, more expensive antibiotics and sustain longer hospital admissions." Strategies to combat the rise in resistance include cutting the amount of antibiotics prescribed, improving hospital hygiene and incentivising the pharmaceutical industry to work on novel antibiotics and antibiotic alternatives.

However, a leading GP told The Independent on Sunday that the time had come for the general public to take responsibility. "The change needs to come in patient expectation. We need public education: that not every ill needs a pill," said Dr Peter Swinyard, chairman of the Family Doctor Association. "We try hard not to prescribe, but it's difficult in practice. The patient will be dissatisfied with your consultation, and is likely to vote with their feet, register somewhere else or go to the walk-in centre and get antibiotics from the nurse.

"But if we go into a post-antibiotic phase, we may find that people with pneumonia will not be treatable with an antibiotic, and will die, whereas at the moment they would live. "People need to realise the link. If you treat little Johnny's ear infection with antibiotics, his mummy may end up dying of pneumonia. It's stark and it's, of course, not direct, but on a population-wide level, that's the kind of link we're talking about."

There are no reliable estimates of what resistance could cost health systems in the future, but the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control believes that €1.5bn (£1.2bn) a year is already being spent on health problems associated with antibiotic resistance in Europe. Joanna Coast, professor of health economics at the University of Birmingham, said that the problem of resistance had the potential to "affect how entire health systems work".

Professor Coast added: "We don't know how big this is going to be. It's like the problems with planning for global warming. We know what the costs are now but we don't know what the costs will be into the future. "Much of what we do in modern health system relies on us having antibiotics. We need them for prophylaxis for surgery, for people having chemotherapy for cancer. The worry is that it might make big changes to how we run our health system."

Antibiotics are also used in vast quantities in agriculture, fisheries and by vets, the resulting environmental exposure adding to bacterial resistance, with further consequences for human health. Experts say that to meet demand without increasing resistance, drug companies will need to find new ways of financing antibiotic development that are not linked to expectations of large volume sales. Global health authorities such as the World Health Organisation have also warned that global drives to reduce antibiotic use must not harm access to life-saving drugs in poorer countries.

Writing in The Lancet, Professor Otto Cars of Uppsala University in Sweden, and one of the world's leading experts on antibiotic resistance, said: "Antibiotic resistance is a complex ecological problem which doesn't just affect people, but is also intimately connected with agriculture and the environment. "We need to move on from 'blaming and shaming' among the many stakeholders who have all contributed to the problem, towards concrete political action and commitment to address this threat." (Techc)(independent)(GNN)