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DaNGeROuS KiLLeR

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Everything posted by DaNGeROuS KiLLeR

  1. Their is not so big changes with boys, just look at girls make up change their whole face. Enjoy
  2. Hello, - Go to Control Panel --> Region and Language --> Keyboards and Languages --> Change Keyboards - In the General tab, under 'Installed Services', make sure there is only 1 item under keyboard, if you're English, just stick with the default US because the Canadian one might show up as Multilingual. Good Luck & Have Fun
  3. This touched me deeply in my heart. Share this video to let people change their mind who are trying to do this, You never know how much you're actually helping.
  4. Computer scientists have created algorithms to run all kinds of tests on big hauls of data. Powerful learning algorithms, like those that can predict septic shock, improve crop yields, and filter college and job applications, supposedly remove human error and bias. However, algorithms may be more human than we think. Computer scientists at the University of Utah, University of Arizona and Haverford College in Pennsylvania created a method to both fish out and fix algorithms that may exhibit unintentional bias based on race, gender, or age. Algorithms can be biased by detecting subtleties or trends in data that correlate with a demographic even though all the data is unlabeled. For example, if offers of employment were made based on an oral exam score, some minority candidates might be filtered out by an initial algorithm screening if there is a small relationship between minorities and scores. This issue came to the attention of the lead researcher, University of Utah professor Suresh Venkatasubramanian, during a conversation with sociologists about the 1970 U.S. Supreme Court anti-discrimination case, Griggs v. The Duke Power Co. The court ruled that a business hiring decision was illegal if it was discriminatory along racial, religious, or gender lines or because of disability, regardless of whether or not the decision was deliberately prejudiced. Venkatasubramanian wanted to know if algorithms succumb to biases unintentionally the way humans do. Over a conference luncheon, “we ended up doodling on a napkin how to formulize if a machine-learning algorithm was doing what is was supposed to or if it was discriminatory,” says Venkatasubramanian. “The very idea that an algorithm can be biased is difficult for people to draw. It is perhaps the biggest hurdle in the paper itself.” In the paper, presented on 12 August at the Association of Computing Machinery’s Conference on Knowledge and Discovery, the group introduced two important new algorithms that work in tandem. The first implements the disparate-impact rule from the Griggs case and tests whether a particular selection algorithm is discriminatory. If the test results show that the algorithm under question can distinguish attributes—like whether a data point represents a male or female—then it’s labeled biased. The other algorithm the researchers introduced tries to remedy the bias by modifying the actual data set so that any selection algorithm would deliver fair results. The algorithm does this by blurring attributes that may be correlated to, say, race or gender. To ensure that the new algorithms worked, the researchers ran the test on three sets of data that had previously been analyzed. They found that their technique of detection and repair was more effective than competing methods. Understanding how an algorithm becomes biased is fascinating, says Venkatasubramanian. The bias is germinated innocently enough within a simple processing system, and develops in a carefully controlled setting. But the self-improving nature of learning algorithms raises concern. Venkatasubramanian and his colleagues wonder whether we can ever trust the fairness of algorithms. To that end, they have begun stockpiling relevant information about where and how they go wrong. He also hopes that the study will help lawmakers understand how algorithms and big data should be treated in a legal case. Many people believe that an algorithm is just a code, but that view is no longer valid, says Venkatasubramanian. “An algorithm has experiences, just as a person comes into life and has experiences.”
  5. "In a Class of Its Own" This is the marketing slogan that AMD keeps feeding us. Over and over, the company tells us just how great it is to game at 4K using a small form factor platform. Believe us AMD, we know. The Tom's Hardware audience certainly appreciates the technical acumen that goes into generating big frame rates in compact enclosures. We're certainly not surprised to see AMD emphasize the highest resolutions with its newest products. As far back as last year’s FirePro W8100 and W9100, AMD declared high-res 3D to be the killer feature distinguishing it from the competition. The thought process was fairly simple. If you can't beat the other team in a straight-up battle, find a way around them. So what does all of that have to do with the launch of AMD's Radeon R9 Nano? As we saw in theory when we teased the Fiji GPUs, and then in practice when we reviewed the Fury X, the graphics processor's design shines particularly at high resolutions. And it’s easy to explain why: a quick look at the Fiji block diagram illustrates the chip's four shader engines, similar to Hawaii's configuration. Each has its own geometry processor and rasterizer, as well as four render back ends that can process up to 16 pixels per clock each. Fiji distinguishes itself by increasing the number of compute units (CUs) per shader unit from 11 to 16. With 64 shaders per CU, each engine ends up with 1024 shaders, or 4096 shaders total. AMD stuck with four texture filter units per CU, which means that there’s a total of 256 per shader engine, as opposed to Hawaii’s 176. Perhaps you're wondering if the lack of change in the front end bottlenecks the back? We got our answer back when we reviewed the Radeon R9 Fury X. That's why Fiji fares better at high resolutions, but runs into trouble against the competition at Full HD. The Form Factor as the Next Big Thing?With our guesses as to AMD's newly-discovered focus on Ultra HD out of the way, we turn to the company's most recent obsession: compact high-end graphics cards for the mini-ITX form factor. There’s no real competition in this space. The nearest threat is Nvidia’s GeForce GTX 970 Mini, which has trouble with high resolutions due to its memory subsystem. If there’s one thing that Nvidia and its board partners have completely missed, it’s high-end graphics designed for small PCs (though that doesn't stop companies like Falcon Northwest from dropping GeForce GTX 980 Tis into mini-ITX builds). The HBM that AMD takes advantage of on its single-GPU flagship is also a boon for the Radeon R9 Nano. Still, the GeForce GTX 970 Mini shows us that a small card from Nvidia isn't out of the question, even if GDDR5 makes layout more of a challenge. Without a diminutive 980 variant planned (that we know of), the gap in Nvidia’s line-up is exactly what AMD wants to capitalize on, delivering high performance at demanding settings without generating a ton of heat. As it turns out, AMD's Radeon R9 Nano is a great piece of hardware; there's really nothing like it out there. That’s probably why AMD is setting its price at an eye-popping $649. A lack of competition shapes our testing. Really, we're forced to narrow our focus to the Radeon R9 Nano versus Nvidia’s GeForce GTX 970 Mini, which is close in size but not as fast.
  6. Welcome To CsbackDevil Enjoy Your Stay Have Fun
  7. I see you played Need For Speed great game. Try Asphalt 8: Airborne there is mobile version and pc version it's an amazing game. Good Luck & Have Fun
  8. Crash-prevention technology is on a fast track to dealerships as 10 major automakers late last week vowed to make automatic emergency braking a standard feature on all new vehicles. The agreement was announced on Friday by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration and Insurance Institute for Highway Safety. Audi, BMW, Ford, General Motors, Mazda, Mercedes-Benz, Tesla, Toyota, Volkswagen and Volvo are working to bring the technology to vehicles "as soon as possible," NHTSA said in a statement. A timeline for the rollout is expected later. Automatic emergency braking includes a range of systems to prevent rear-end crashes and apply the brakes automatically. The technology is available now, but mostly as an option on high-end models. "We are entering a new era of vehicle safety, focused on preventing crashes from ever occurring, rather than just protecting occupants when crashes happen," said U.S. Transportation Secretary Anthony Foxx. "But if technologies such as automatic emergency braking are only available as options or on the most expensive models, too few Americans will see the benefits of this new era." General Motors said it supports the push for making forward-collision warning and automatic emergency braking standard on light vehicles. But it noted that both technologies are available today "on dozens of 2016 Chevrolet, Buick, GMC and Cadillac models." Nineteen GM models offer both technologies. Automatic emergency braking is optional on the 2016 Chevrolet Equinox, Impala, Malibu, Tahoe, Traverse and Silverado. GM first rolled out the safety features on the 2013 Cadillac XTS, ATS and SRX. Volvo noted it already has approximately 250,000 vehicles on U.S. roads with forward-collision warning and automatic emergency braking. Volvo introduced low-speed automatic emergency braking as standard on the 2009 XC60, and the technology became standard in all Volvos by 2014. A recent report from the IIHS shows that automatic emergency braking technology can cut insurance injury claims by as much as 35 percent.
  9. Hello, 1. Right place to ask for support is F..A.Q. 2. Make the "Resolution" low then the problem will be solved, your pc/laptop is not strong enough to afford high Resolution. Good Luck & Have Fun
  10. I don't think that person survived, i think they even didn't found the body of that person again. It's not only Russia this happened almost in all country's nobody can say it doesn't happened in my country, if you say it then you know less about your own country.
  11. Hello, There was a time that all ip from Pakistan were banned from all servers for servers security reason. On that time too many people from Pakistan ip were trying to hack the server, and they destroy all the addons in that server, so that's why they take this action. The new server will not face this problem but the old server will like WalkingDeadZM, ThunderZM etc... I guess they are still banned in WalkingDeadZM, in ZmOldSchool & NewLifeZM they all are unbanned GOOD NEWS FOR PAKISTANI PLAYERS (OldSchool & NewLifeZM). Contact Administrator or make a ticket only Administrator can help you with this. Good Luck & Have Fun
  12. Most people in Europe are too fat, according to a report by the World Health Organization (WHO). It said 59% of the po[CENSORED]tion were either overweight or obese. Its European Health Report also said the WHO Europe region, which includes parts of Asia, had the highest levels of alcohol and tobacco use in the world. And as a result, WHO officials warned, young people in the region "may not live as long as their grandparents". The report praised countries for cutting deaths from cancer, diabetes and cardiovascular diseases (which include heart attacks and stroke). However, it also warned that 30% of the region still smoked - a higher figure than for any other region. And an average alcohol consumption equivalent to 11 liters (20 pints) of pure alcohol a year was also a global high. Meanwhile, the proportion of people either overweight or obese ranged from 45% to 67%. The report said these figures were "alarmingly high". WHO regional director for Europe Dr Zsuzsanna Jakab said: "This report shows heartening progress. "But there is a very real risk that these gains will be lost if smoking and alcohol consumption continue at the current rate. "This is especially relevant to young people, who may not live as long as their grandparents."
  13. A Macedonian police officer directed migrants toward a camp after they crossed the border from Greece. The flood of migrants and refugees into Europe this year — more than a half-million so far, many fleeing the civil war in Syria and other conflict zones — has sorely strained the Continent’s ability to absorb them. Leaders argued bitterly for weeks before the European Union could adopt a plan on Tuesday to share the burden among its members. The plan will require some countries to accept refugees and some people to be relocated whether they like it or not, raising issues of freedom, rights and obligations under international law. Here are answers to some of the key questions. Can refugees choose where they get asylum? To a certain extent, yes. People fleeing war or persecution are free to choose where to seek asylum. Most often it will be a neighboring country or the first safe place they are able to reach, but it could also be a country halfway around the world. Under international law, nations have a legal duty not to turn refugees away; they must be allowed to apply for asylum, even if they have entered a host country’s territory illegally. But it is up to each host country to decide under its own laws whether to allow refugees to stay there permanently and whether they and their children can become citizens, among other issues. Can host countries send refugees elsewhere? Yes, within limits. Nothing in international law prohibits countries from agreeing to distribute refugees among them, as the European Union plans to do, in order to share the burden of accommodating arrivals while their asylum applications are considered. There is an important caveat, though: Countries are barred from sending refugees to a place where they would not be protected from persecution. For that reason, it may be hard for the European Union to justify distributing refugees to a country like Hungary that has been actively hostile to accepting them, according to Madeline Garlick, a lawyer for the Migration Policy Institute in Brussels. But Ms. Garlick said there is no bar to sending refugees who are awaiting asylum to be housed in Poland, for example, even if they said they wanted to go to Germany. Are there precedents for distributing refugees this way? When refugees began to reach Australia from Southeast Asia in large numbers, Australia tried to send some of them to Malaysia to be housed. The Australian courts struck down the arrangement because Malaysia did not have a good record of providing protection to refugees, according to James C. Hathaway, a law professor at the University of Michigan. But he said the European Union’s plan was “absolutely, utterly correct and legal.” The situation in Europe is complicated by the bloc’s system of open internal borders and free movement. A longstanding rule that asylum seekers should be accommodated by the first member country they entered, and can be sent back there if they go elsewhere in the union, has partly broken down under the pressure of the current wave of migrants. Can asylum be denied? What happens then? If refugees cannot demonstrate “a well-founded fear of persecution” in the country they fled, they can be denied asylum and deported. But the refugees are entitled to a full and fair hearing first, and not a swift rejection in what the United Nations last week called “summary proceedings.” They can also be denied asylum and lose their protected status as refugees if they are found to have committed war crimes or crimes against humanity. How can refugees receive asylum in the United States? One way is to physically reach American soil. A person who then claims to be fleeing war or persecution must be allowed to make that case before a court. Another way, for those who cannot get to America on their own, is to be referred through the United Nations refugee agency. Thousands of such applicants are granted asylum each year after being screened first by the United Nations and then by American officials, a process that generally takes 18 to 24 months. The refugees might not have chosen the United States specifically; the United Nations agency decides where to refer them. Once they are in the United States, these refugees usually get help with housing and job placement, and they can eventually become citizens.
  14. With the technical and market parameters of SDE still taking shape, CIOs are in no rush to adopt, despite the hype going into overdrive With the technical and market parameters of SDE still taking shape, CIOs are in no rush to adopt, despite the hype going into overdrive. Just as everybody starts getting comfortable with the once derided term "cloud", the IT industry marketing machine foists a new one on us. And although "software-defined everything" (SDE) heralds a return to the tried-and-tested three-letter acronym (TLA) formula, its precise meaning to many CIOs is as nebulous as its more descriptive predecessor used to be. Like cloud before it, SDE is being used as a catch-all term for all the latest technologies and approaches that promise to take us to that long-touted nirvana of true IT flexibility and agility through advances in virtualisation. Clearly, it’s a vital approach for the giant cloud operators and providers looking to build out vast, scalable datacentres with industrial scale and efficiency. Indeed, it’s from developments like Facebook’s Open Compute Project (an initiative to drive standardisation and automation right through the datacentre) that SDE has largely taken its cue. But does the approach really translate to enterprises more broadly, and if so is now the time to be doing something about it? While cloud has today largely come to mean a way of easily spinning up virtual servers, processing power and storage – and the services and applications hosted on them – SDE refers to the idea of virtualising everything in the datacentre and beyond, from compute and storage to networks and devices. This is meant to give IT departments the capability to automate all their IT provisioning and management entirely through software, using standard commodity hardware that will effectively become invisible to them. Finally, we’re told, CIOs will be able to focus wholly on delivering a fast, efficient, fully scalable IT service to their organisations without the inevitable bottlenecks of integration and manual configuration commonly encountered with today’s public and private clouds. Some analysts are bullish. IDC predicts the market for software-defined networking (SDN) alone will grow from less than $1bn in 2014 to $3.7bn by 2016 and $8bn by 2018. Gartner claims that by 2017 more than half of all enterprises will have adopted an architectural approach similar to that of the cloud giants. Frost & Sullivan, meanwhile, says the hypergrowth starts here – at least in Asia-Pacific. "2015 is seen to be the year of SDE as the software-defined revolution spreads beyond the boundaries of the datacentre," the analyst recently predicted. Puff versus prudenceCIOs, though, are more cautious. Steve Pikett, head of IT at Harrods Bank, says: “As with so much in IT, the hype is way ahead of the reality, and seems to exclude history and current reality altogether. Marketers say we should buy the all-new product, but it makes little sense to corporations to walk away from what currently works and bet the farm on something new. "There are times when IT buys into its own hype too heavily and fails to market sensibly. Cloud was one such example – we accept and adopt it now in co-existence with other ways of working. It was sold as the answer to all our problems, but it merely introduced new ones while solving others. I’ve no reason to believe this will be different." Myron Hrycyk, group CIO of Severn Trent Water, similarly says that while he is proactively pursuing a cloud-centred IT strategy, SDE is still too far from maturity to consider implementing now. "Software-defined datacentres may well come about eventually, but based on some of the conversations I’ve had on the topic, the suppliers are still trying to describe what it means, reminding me of the early days of the cloud, when it was hyped yet undefined. I think we need to give this new idea more time to develop before we start trying to deploy it," he says. The hybrid reality At present, for a software-defined environment to work without bottlenecks, the entire infrastructure has to be virtualised. But most enterprises today operate in a hybrid environment, with a mix of standalone systems, private and public cloud. Until people have transitioned to fully virtualised environments, SDE simply won’t bring about the touted, trouble-free benefits. As Andrew Marks, CIO of Tullow Oil, says: "It will be a while before any IT shop with legacy (physical or virtual) platforms buys this." Besides, as cloud services and solutions continue to mature, an increasing number of organisations may choose to use external providers rather than invest in yet more in-house technology. “If anyone uses cloud, we shouldn’t care whether it’s hardware or software-defined since we have no role in the platform as long as it works,” adds Marks. Slow burn Yet despite the reservations, there is an increasing acceptance by CIOs that SDE is coming, and will ultimately have a profound impact on IT infrastructures. It just might take a while to manifest. Ian Campbell, group CIO at the Highways Agency, says: "I do agree that the [CENSORED]ure will be SDE, just as I believe that datacentres will become increasingly virtual, with companies buying processing and storage on demand from suppliers providing it in true utility style, like electricity. But at the moment most systems and services are too complex or too customised for SDE. This will gradually improve and become easier as we develop and manage new systems with SDE in mind. But realistically it will be several years before a clear winner emerges, who will then create the standard that other providers must work to." Likewise, Ian Cohen, group CIO at insurance firm Jardine Lloyd Thompson, says of SDE: "Like so much of the recent vendor/analyst-led tech hype there is an underlying capability that has value and potential. The problem, as ever, is that it’s already being oversold. Those who jump too early or move without suitable thought, planning and insight will inevitably get burned." That said, while 2015 is unlikely to be the year when the technology makes significant inroads into the enterprise, Cohen says CIOs would be foolish to dismiss it. “It’s definitely time to test the water, gain some experience and learn fast, because there is an element of genuine pace here. Equally, the world isn’t greenfield, one size doesn’t fit all – be it DevOps, private cloud, public cloud or SDE – and we don’t all have the luxury of working in unregulated environments. I think SDE will grow rapidly and become part of the next-generation compute capability, but only part – for now at least.
  15. Meshing traditional LXDE functionality with the added tweaks from Razor-qt is a big step in a better direction for this lightweight desktop environment. The addition of LXQt in ExTiX 15.03 is a very good option, especially for challenged hardware. It brings new features to a reliable and efficient Linux OS staple. ExTiX 15.03 is an excellent OS for a seasoned Linux user or a newcomer. The latest release of ExTiX offers a new spin on an old desktop environment and exhibits a passion for speed and ease of use. ExTiX 15.3, a fusion of the LXDE and Razor-qt desktop environments, has the economy of working in the LXQt desktop environment. LXQt is lightweight, modular, very fast and user-friendly. It is based on the po[CENSORED]r LXDE -- that is, Lightweight X11 Desktop Environment. I tried several early releases of LXQt on other distros and was pleased with their performance. LXQt proved to be a stable desktop environment usable on production desktop machines. The brand new LXQt desktop and Windows-like menu and bottom panel make ExTiX 15.3 a near-perfect lightweight operating system for older or new computers. I downloaded the first ExTiX release with LXQt and found much more control over what I knew from my days of using the LXDE environment. The Qt Configuration Tools are integrated within the LXQt Settings Panel. Meshing traditional LXDE functionality with the added tweaks from Razor-qt is a big step in a better direction for this lightweight desktop environment. If you want eye-popping visual displays, you won't find them in either LXQt or Xfce, another very accomplished lightweight desktop environment. ExTiX 15.03 KDE offers a much heavier desktop environment with an ample supply of eye candy. Both versions became available last month. ExTiX offers one other desktop option, KDE. This is much more than lightweight in terms of visual effects and desktop flashiness. However, the same software and features as the LXQt version are under the hood. Screen Saver, LiterallyI favored the lighter option because the several-year-old box I prepped for its installation has a subpar Nvidia integrated video card. It has no driver support available for most anything else I installed on it. Not so with ExTiX 15.03 running LXQt. As an example of how banal this cheap gear is, it failed to qualify for a free upgrade to Windows 10 because of the graphics issue. It barely ran Windows 7 and gagged on Windows 8. Other than Puppy Linux and the Chromixium distro, even the lightweight Linux environments I installed on it barely ran. The driver issue is one of the reasons developer Arne Exton swapped out Gnome 3.14 with LXQt in his latest release. Gnome 3.14 does not work with Nvidia's proprietary drivers. The Nvidia graphics driver 352.30 automatically runs on any of the supported cards. Exton installed the Nvidia graphics driver 352.30 in the LXQt version. It has support for the following GPUs: Quadro K1200, Quadro M6000, GeForce 920M, GeForce 930A, GeForce 930M, GeForce 940M, GeForce GTX 950M, GeForce GTX 960M and GeForce GTX TITAN X. That explains why ExTiX works so well on the box that Windows rejected -- it has a GeForce 930M card installed. Under the HoodExTiX LXQt is based on Ubuntu 15.04 Vivid Vervet. LXQt 0.9.0 is not in Ubuntu's repositories. All packages have been updated to the latest version. ExTiX LXQt runs a special type of Linux Kernel 4.1.3, version 4.1.0-3-exton. By comparison, Ubuntu 15.04 released on April 5 uses kernel 3.19.0-16-generic. One of the best features in ExTiX is its inclusion of all multimedia codecs. This distro needs no extra downloads of special software or drivers -- it just works. Software SupplyGoogle Chrome is the stock Web browser. With Chrome, it's possible to watch Netflix movies, which is not the case with Firefox on Linux. Any Google infrastructure junkie will appreciate not having to install the Chrome browser. Just sign in to your Google account and all your settings appear. A Web editor is not usually a must-have application, but I use it often, so I appreciated not having to grab one. I was pleased to be introduced to BlueGriffon, a new WYSIWYG content editor for the World Wide Web. Powered by Gecko, the rendering engine of Firefox, it is a modern and robust solution to edit Web pages that follow the latest Web standards. Other typical Linux favorites, including LibreOffice, Thunderbird, GParted, Brasero and SMPlayer, come preinstalled. Package DealExTiX does not have its own repository, nor does it tap into the Ubuntu Software Center like other Ubuntu-based Linux distros. Instead, ExTiX uses the Synaptic Package Manager to maintain system files and add or remove software. This is not a bad point at all. If anything, it frees you from worrying about in-house support lagging behind. ExTiX includes several other compilation tools so you can install packages from source. This is a convenience for seasoned Linux users. You do not really have to install anything from source unless you stray onto nonstandard open source packages. The preinstalled software gives typical users everything they need for a solid out-of-the-box experience. ExTiX uses the Synaptic Package Manager instead of its own distro-specific repository. ExTiX LXQt is based on Ubuntu 15.04 Vivid Vervet, but you won't find it in Ubuntu's desktop options. Installation NirvanaLinux distros generally fall into one of two installation categories. Either they have a well-tooled automated installation routine that requires little or no technical skills, or they don't. ExTiX definitely falls into the first category. Almost all you really need to know, even to load the live session DVD, is to use "extix" for the username and just hit the enter key for the password. Of course, you also have to know about using a media program that burns a self-booting DVD from the downloaded ISO file. You can do that from any Linux system or from within Windows. The ExTiX ISO is a hybrid. You can copy it to a USB drive and boot to ExTiX without installing the OS to the hard drive. The process includes persistence, so you can save all your system changes and data to the USB stick. The developer included two scripts to make the installation to USB very simple. You can run ExTiX from RAM by selecting alternative 3 for the boot option. After the system boots, you can remove the DVD or USB stick. To run ExTiX that way, you need at least 2 GB RAM. To install ExTiX to a hard drive, start the install program Ubiquity from the menu. Then follow the instructions or click on the desktop icon Install ExTiX 15.3. Lovin' LXQtThe additional tweaking that the QT settings panel brings to LXDE seems to close the gap considerably between traditional LXDE and Xfce. The only real visible differences between the old LXDE and the new LXQt desktop are in the settings and controls. There are numerous control options. Plus, you can launch many of the settings individually from other menu lists. You can find most of them in the Configuration Center in the Preferences menu. The Configuration Center provides access to some dozen icons to configure functions such as Appearance, Desktop Notifications, Keyboard and Mouse, Openbox Settings and more advanced System Settings choices. You also can access the QT Configuration panel by clicking on that icon. Bottom LineMeshing traditional LXDE functionality with the added tweaks from Razor-qt is a big step in a better direction for this lightweight desktop environment. The addition of LXQt in ExTiX 15.03 is a very good option, especially for challenged hardware. It brings new features to a reliable and efficient Linux OS staple. ExTiX 15.03 is an excellent OS for a seasoned Linux user or a newcomer. It is loaded with all the software typical users will need. Adding more software is a two-click process. The user interface is easy and pleasant to use.
  16. Hello, 1. Right place to ask for support is F..A.Q. 2. The problem is that you have to extract the Counter Strike 1.6 you have and you need 7-Zip the file. Just what you have to do is "Right Click" on "Counter Strike 1.6" go to "7-Zip" and then click on "Extract Here". Then you can install the Counter Strike 1.6. Good Luck & Have Fun
  17. PS: You have to sign in for your age to see this video. PS1: There are 4 parts i will post every day 1 Enjoy
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