Thursday 15 September 2011

Access any PC without knowing the password


Access any PC without knowing the password


Hi all users, As you know,getting inside someones pc to which we even have physical access isnt an easy task.Most of them will be password protected.So here's a simple tool that will help you to get access.It is KON BOOT. Rather than cracking a Windows password, KON-BOOT bypasses it and lets you into the computer without typing one in. Then, when you restart, everything is back to normal, that is, everything you didn’t change when you were inside.

No need of any pro knowledge required.Just download this tool.Burn to a disk or setup live usb.Plug it into to victim pc.Start the computer.

You'll see the screen of Kon boot and it'll restart.Then there'll be no password for logging in.After doing your works,restart again and there'll be password as before and no one know..that you were inside.It is that simple to use.
 
 
Download here

 

Use goo.gl to Know if your Email has been Read

One option is that you embed a tracking image in your outgoing email messages. If that image downloads on to the recipient's computer, it is a confirmation that your email has been opened and read. Obviously, this technique will only work if the recipient has enabled automatic image downloads and that he or she is reading your email in HTML and not plain text.
There’s another option as well. If your outgoing email messages include one or more hyperlinks, you may even consider taking the help of a URL shortening service like goo.gl for email tracking.


The idea is pretty simple. Before including an hyperlink in your email, shorten it with goo.gl first. Now if the recipient opens your email and clicks on the link, his activity will be captured which you can see by simply adding a + sign to the Google short URL.
For instance, if the short URL of your link is goo.gl/abc, you can see the click stats for that short URL on goo.gl/abc+ or goo.gl/info/abc. Hover over the click points in the graph and you’ll even get to know the time when the person clicked your link in the email.


This of course is based on the assumption that your email messages have one or more hyperlinks and that the recipients are keen to click on them for you to track their activity.