‏إظهار الرسائل ذات التسميات Tutorials. إظهار كافة الرسائل
‏إظهار الرسائل ذات التسميات Tutorials. إظهار كافة الرسائل

الاثنين، 25 ديسمبر 2017

HOW to Connect a Printer Wirelessly

Hello guys, Today we shall be talking about "How to connect a wireless Printer" It's easy to get a printer working over with a USB or Ethernet cable. Connecting a wireless printer can be trickier. Here's what you need to know to get your Wi-Fi-enabled printer up and running.Connecting a wired printer is easy. Pick the right cable, and then plug one end into the printer and the other into a computer or network. Connecting a wireless printer, on the other hand, is ... well ... not as easy. Even when everything goes smoothly, as it usually does, it's still more complicated than plugging in a cable.
One issue to keep in mind is that there's more than one type of wireless printing. Bluetooth-enabled printers, for example, are wireless printers, and so are printers that offer infrared (IrDA) connections. However, when most people talk about wireless printers, they mean Wi-Fi printers, which is what we'll largely focus on here.
Even limiting the discussion to Wi-Fi, there's more than one way to connect a wireless printer, and for each basic type of connection, the steps vary depending on the particular printer. That makes it impossible to cover all the variations in any detail in one short article. Our goal instead is to cover the key information you need along with strategies for troubleshooting problems you may run into. The combination should give you a fighting chance of getting your wireless printer to connect even when the process doesn't run smoothly.
The Other Side of the Equation
The steps for connecting a printer by Wi-Fi depend in large part on what you want to connect to. The three choices are a Wi-Fi access point on a network, one or more individual computers directly, or a smartphone or tablet. Let's start with an access point.
Any Wi-Fi device, including a printer, can support one or more of three different Wi-Fi modes—infrastructure, ad hoc, and Wi-Fi Direct. Infrastructure mode requires a Wi-Fi access point, usually built into a router. The idea is that all the Wi-Fi devices on your network connect through the access point. If you have a network with an access point, both it and every other Wi-Fi device on the network should already be set for infrastructure mode. Virtually any Wi-Fi printer will support this mode.
For purposes of this discussion, we'll assume that either you set up the network yourself and are familiar with its settings, especially its security settings, or you can easily contact someone who can give you the information. Key information you may need to know, so you can enter it during the printer setup, are the network's SSID (its name), the network password if it has one (which it should), and, assuming there is a password, which security protocol your network uses (WEP, WPA, or WPA2).
You should also know about any other settings that you changed from the most common choices. For example if you turned off DHCP, which automatically assigns IP addresses, you'll have to assign the printer an IP address manually. Similarly, if you set the access point to connect only with devices with specific MAC addresses, you'll have to enter the printer's MAC address in the list before you install it. All the comments here assume that you either stayed with the most common settings or know what changes you made, and know how to adjust the installation procedure to accommodate them.
Connecting to an Access Point
The computer you're installing the driver on should already be connected to the network, so setting up the printer consists of just two steps: establishing the Wi-Fi connection between the printer and network and installing the driver so it knows how to send print jobs to the printer.
How you establish the Wi-Fi connection depends on the printer. In some cases you'll find a setup wizard in the printer menus to walk you through each setting, asking you to enter the network Service Set Identifier (SSID), for example. In others, you'll find separate menu options that you'll have to choose and fill in individually. In still others, the driver installation program on the disc that came with the printer will take care of entering the information in the printer, typically telling you to connect by USB cable to send the settings to the printer.
Check your printer's setup guides to find out which approach to use. If you've lost your original documentation, you should be able to download copies from the manufacturer's Web site. Regardless of the approach, once you enter the information the printer needs, it should establish the connection. If it doesn't, it's time to take a close look at any changes you made to settings in the access point.
Write down the current settings, change them all back to the defaults, and try connecting again. If the connection works, you'll have to take a brute force approach, changing one or more settings back to the way you had them, and trying to reconnect again, until you track down which one is preventing the connection. Note that once you've tracked down the problem setting and changed it so the printer will work, you may have to change settings for the other Wi-Fi devices on your network as well.
With the Wi-Fi connection working, everything else is easy. If you connected the printer using the installation program, simply continue on to install the driver. If you used the printer menus to set up the connection, run the installation program and pick Wi-Fi as the connection option. Note that even if you already have the driver installed, so it prints using, say, a USB cable, reinstalling it from the disc that came with the printer is usually the easiest way to set it to print over the Wi-Fi connection.
Connecting Directly
Depending on your printer, you may or may not be able to connect it directly to another Wi-Fi device for wireless printing. Connecting directly requires either the ad-hoc or Wi-Fi Direct modes that I mentioned earlier. Ad-hoc mode was the original option for connecting without an access point. Wi-Fi Direct is functionally similar in that it allows a direct connection, but it's a lot easier to set up and use. It's also new enough that many printers don't support it.
If your printer doesn't support either mode, and your computer doesn't support Wi-Fi Direct, connecting without an access point isn't an option. If the printer offers ad-hoc mode—something you'll have to check with the manuals or the manufacturer—and you have an ad-hoc network, you can typically connect much the same way as you would connect to an access point, by entering the SSID and other details through the printer menus, and then installing the driver on the computer you want to print from. Check the printer manual or its online documentation for step by step details.
Wi-Fi Direct is by far the preferred choice for direct connections. Not only is it easier to use, but you can connect two devices with it even if only one of the two supports Wi-Fi Direct.
As an example of how it works, a printer we were testing at PC Labs, a Brother MFC-8950DW, let me establish a secure connection with a Windows laptop simply by turning on Wi-Fi Direct in the printer, clicking on the Wireless icon in the laptop's system tray, picking the printer from the list of available networks, and entering the password for the printer. Beyond that, all I had to do was run through a standard installation program for the driver, confirming that the program found the right printer.
Wi-Fi Direct is designed for this sort of easy connection, so this should be a typical setup scenario for any Wi-Fi Direct printer. Just as important, according to the Wi-Fi Alliance, if your printer doesn't support Wi-Fi Direct, but your computer (or phone or tablet) does, you can still use a Wi-Fi Direct connection. The promise is that any Wi-Fi Direct connection will be easy to set up.
Smartphones and Tablets
Connecting a printer directly to a smartphone or tablet can be tricky, in part because any given printer manufacturer may not offer a printing app for any given phone or tablet. And even if there's an app for your printer, you may not be able to connect the printer directly to your mobile device. More likely, you'll have connect both to an access point and print that way, or, as with HP ePrint Home & Biz app, print some files through the access point and others by going through a cloud-based print utility.
Fortunately, Apple's AirPrint has made it easier to print from iOS devices to compatible printers (more than 1,100 printer models are now supported), though once again you must print through an access point, with both devices connected to a Wi-Fi network. With AirPrint, you can print from within supported apps simply selecting Print, choosing an available printer, setting the number of copies and whether to print on one or both sides of a sheet of paper (if applicable), and pressing Print again.
On the Android side, the Mopria Print Service app takes advantage of the built-in print features of Android 4.4 (KitKat) to enable setup-free wireless printing to compatible printers. A small but growing number of printers from major manufacturers are certified by the Mopria Alliance, a nonprofit consortium of printer manufacturers and other technology companies. The organization's sole purpose is to develop methods of providing simple wireless printing from mobile devices.
In principle any Wi-Fi Direct printer should connect to any phone or tablet that offers Wi-Fi, and any Wi-Fi Direct phone or tablet should connect to any Wi-Fi printer. As partial proof, we had no trouble connecting to the Brother MFC-8950DW with an Android phone to print photos using Brother's print app.
One other direct wireless printing technique, Near-Field Communication (NFC), deserves mention. NFC enables printing from a mobile device simply by touching it to a compatible device. Most Android phones are NFC-capable, as are a small but growing number of printers. Apple is finally introducing NFC capabilities in its two iPhone 6 models, but at least in the near term, their NFC doesn't support printing.
There isn't a one-size-fits-all wireless printing solution, but there are a greater range of options than ever. Whether you want to print from a laptop or a mobile device to a wireless printer, several solutions will likely available to you. If one doesn't work to your satisfaction, you can always try another.
I hope this tutorial works for you. Sharing is fun, be sure you share this article with your friends. Have a nice day!


السبت، 23 ديسمبر 2017

How to Record your Desktop Screen with YouTube

Morning guys, today I'm  presenting a step-by-step explanatory guide on the means to adopt as to recording a screencast video of your desktop screen with the assistance of YouTube. There is no strict requirement of the installation of any software.
Screencasting is stress free. Just download a software program, then hit the record button and a video of your computer screen will be created, available for you to possibly upload to YouTube. There are a variety of screencasting tools between you could make your choice from but then it is possible you may not still be aware that you can also create screencast videos inside YouTube absent any desktop software! The totality of things you need is a web browser and a YouTube account.
Presented to you in this article is a detailed step by step guide on the means to create screencasts of your desktop windows with the aid of YouTube.
How to Record your Desktop Screen with YouTube
How to Record your Desktop Screen with YouTube
How to Record your Desktop Screen with YouTube

How to Create a Screencast with YouTube
Step 1: By means of your Google Account, sign-in to YouTube. Take the Upload button which appears on the upper left corner; choosing Events under Live Streaming. In the case when you have not done before prior now, there may the slight occurrence of YouTube requiring you to verify your phone number to as to procure streaming.
Step 2: There you are on the Create Event page. Assign a title to your screencast video, make a choice of setting the privacy of the video between Unlisted or Private and then click the “Go Live Now” button.
Step 3: What this does is open the Hangouts on Air page. To turn off webcam recoding, click the camera icon. In the same vein, it is also possible to toggle the microphone icon should you not wish to record audio.
Step 4: At this interval, select the screen share button in the left toolbox and choose a desktop window which you intend to record for your screencast. Do not forget that if you making use of multiple virtual desktops, what it will only show is program windows that are active on the current desktop.
How to Record your Desktop Screen with YouTube
How to Record your Desktop Screen with YouTube
How to Record your Desktop Screen with YouTube
Step 5: To share your screen, click the Start Screenshare button; after which you could Start Broadcast so as to begin recording the screen. Of course, this is a private session, the essence here is nobody will be able to watch your broadcast in the process of it being recorded. Click the Stop Broadcast button when you are through with the recording, and switch to the YouTube website.
There we are. Move to your YouTube video dashboard (youtube.com/my_videos) and there you will be entertained to the sight of new screencast video whose recording you have just finished. It is also possible to download the video to your Google Drive or even share it generously with the world.
Essentially, the videos are recorded in 720p HD and this it would be very nice to resize your desktop window to the 16:9 ratio prior to hitting the broadcast button.
I hope this was really helpful!

الجمعة، 22 ديسمبر 2017

How to connect to Wi-Fi on Windows 10

Here we go through a beginner’s procedural guide on how to connect your Windows 10 laptop, PC or tablet to a Wi-Fi network.
How to connect to Wi-Fi on Windows 10
How to connect to Wi-Fi on Windows 10
As we could easily see with the Windows 10, Microsoft has made significant changes and many of us may not really know what means to go about connecting your device to Wi-Fi. But JustNaira will not abandon you in this as here, we will intensively guide you through the procedures of connecting your Windows 10 laptop, tablet or PC to a wireless network.
Prior to connecting to Wi-Fi, there are some few requirements as to details: the name of the wireless network (which is basically printed on a router on a label) as well the password (here also, usually located on the router). If it is a PC you are using, it is essential to make certain it is fitted with a Wi-Fi adaptor: of course not many PCs could boast of Wi-Fi and have to connect to a router using a network cable or, and in the case when it is quite distant, by making use of powerline adaptors.
How to connect to Wi-Fi on Windows 10: In brief
Simply press the Windows key and A; this will bring up the Action Centre (you could also swipe in from the right on a touchscreen)
To enable Wi-Fi, click on the Wi-Fi icon in the case where it’s grey.
After that long press or right-click ) choosing ‘Go to Settings’
Select your Wi-Fi network from the list after the choice tap on it
Wait for the connection to establish after entering the password.
How to connect to Wi-Fi on Windows 10: In full
In normal conditions, you will be able to notice a Wi-Fi icon which is close to the clock in the taskbar; this runs along the bottom of your screen. Clicking on this has the function of displaying a list of the available Wi-Fi networks.
Should the icon be missing, simply press Windows-A so as to open the new Action Centre where you will able to locate it at the bottom. In the circumstance where it is not still visible, click the ‘Expand’ button; this will function to show more icons.
How to connect to Wi-Fi on Windows 10
How to connect to Wi-Fi on Windows 10

Action centre expanded:
How to connect to Wi-Fi on Windows 10
How to connect to Wi-Fi on Windows 10

Simply click on the one to which you have chosen to connect,following this kindly ensure ticking the ‘Connect automatically’ box is not ticked . What this means is that your computer will be able to connect to that network at any interval when it is in range.
How to connect to Wi-Fi on Windows 10
How to connect to Wi-Fi on Windows 10
After you have clicked Connect, your passwords will be demanded. Also noteworthy here is keeping an eye to uncheck the ‘Share network with my contacts’ box; the reason been that if you leave it checked (if you used Windows 10’s Express setup option, if it’s enabled by default),this will prompt a situation where all your Skype and Hotmail contacts (who possess a Windows 10 device) will have the capacity to make connection to your network once when they visit you. For a category of persons, this is a big-time impressive development but for that fraction of individuals nursing concerns as to what people will have the capacity to access on your network, it may be a risk too big to ignore.
How to connect to Wi-Fi on Windows 10
How to connect to Wi-Fi on Windows 10
Microsoft is of the opinion that your Wi-Fi password is sent encrypted so that guests will not be enabled to gain access to computers as well as network devices on your network.Most certainly, they would but only when you voluntarily transfer knowledge of password to guests.
Some hotspots routers will add to the table an extra option when you click Connect: the capacity which allows users to press the WPS button on the router so as to connect your computer without the strict need of entering a password.
How to connect to Wi-Fi on Windows 10
How to connect to Wi-Fi on Windows 10
When you are through with entering the password, you will be able to see a message ‘Verifying and connecting’ and – if well the password is correct – a ‘Connected’ message.
After that confirm if you have access to the internet by launching a web browser and visiting your favourite website. It would be best you choose JustNaira, wouldn’t you?

السبت، 9 ديسمبر 2017

How To Restore Whatsapp Messages On A New Phone

Losing your WhatsApp chat history
When you make the purchase of a new mobile phone,there is every possibility that your WhatsApp conversations wouldn’t appear once when finish the installation of the app. Not too much to worry about anyway, for here at JustNaira, we will let you know the means to get your WhatsApp chat history recovered once you get a new phone
Losing your WhatsApp chat history
Backing up your chat history
Losing your WhatsApp chat history
As we all know and agree, WhatsApp is an immensely important medium of maintaining touch with people all over the world, pretty much at a very reduced cost. But then there is a big inconvenience which users get to come across here when they start using a new iPhone 6S or a new Android smartphone generally. The problem here is that they can’t get their previous conversations on the new devices.
This deficiency could be traced to the mode in which the app stores content locally far from on web servers. But then if your old phone is still within reach, and haven’t practically moved on from Android to iOS or vice versa, then there is still a means to remedy this possible mishap and save those old chats moving them to a new home intact. In this piece here, you will see the brief procedure of copying and restoring your old chats.
There are a few different ways to keep your conversations on your iPhone, but the easiest is by using iCloud backup. To realize this, you will be needed to take your previous smartphone, proceed to WhatsApp Settings>Chats>Chat Backup and then tap Backup Now.
Backing up your chat history
Backing up your chat history
On your new handset, go about reinstalling WhatsApp, make confirmations as to your phone number (which should be the same phone number as the one you made use of your old phone) and you then you will be prompted to restore your chat history. Choose to agree to this and then your backup would be installed, well filled with your conversations.
It will also prove handy to go back to the settings and then enable the Auto Backup feature now, so you are likely to have no issues in the event of you upgrading to your next iPhone in a couple of years time.
Restoring WhatsApp messages on an Android phone using an SD card
Should you have the fortune of being in possession of an Android phone with an SD card, then the procedure of making a transfer of your chat history is quite stress free. Simply open the app then click on the Menu icon then proceed to Settings>Chats and calls > Backup Chats.
This series of command will now execute a backup on your SD card, which you can then easily transfer into your new handset.
So you can now embark on the reinstallation of WhatsApp on your replacement device (with the SD card well inserted) and the app should locate your backup and at once prompt a recovery of your chat history.
Restoring WhatsApp messages on an Android phone using a PC
Those phones which don’t possess an SD card (and they are increasing in number these days) still have the functionality of moving their chat history, but there is the strong requirement of a PC to realize that. Attach the USB charging cord to the phone and then plug the other end into your PC. Windows should at once make installation of practically any drivers you require, and then you can locate the phone in the File Explorer’s PC section.
Now in the phone storage, search for WhatsApp folder, then simply make a copy of it onto your PC hard drive. Now eject the phone, after you have ejected it, connect your new handset and then move the WhatsApp folder onto its internal storage. Now eject the phone, reinstall WhatsApp, and when after you finish confirming your number, the backup should be identified and you could go about restoring it. When you have finished with this, you could then have all your previous conversations transferred to your new Android phone.
Restoring WhatsApp messages on an Android Phone using Google Drive
In that very manner in which the iPhone makes use of the services of iCloud, Android devices will expectedly have the ability to make use of Google Drive for automatic backups. We’ve already come to knowledge of the builds of WhatsApp which present this feature enabled. Though the most recent version of the one you can get your hands on there on Google Play Store doesn’t yet have an available option of this. Most probably it will appear very soon.