A simple command-line utility to open the standard Windows Properties sheet by passing the file/folder/drive path to it.
Extract & View Strings in Files via Windows' Context-Menu.
Maybe you're fighting with MiraCast like half the internet is, and have come to realize that one requirement is a WiFi network card that supports at minimum NDIS 6.3?
You've come to the right place (but as a regular GeekDropper, you already knew this, right? ... ), it's cake, just:
Recently I was (re)setting up IIS from scratch on my development machine and kept getting HTTP Error 503 whenever I would try to load up a local web page.
For reference, in my case it's IIS version 8.5, running on Windows 8.1 Enterprise 64-Bit, but that really shouldn't matter.
Looking in the Windows Event Viewer shows:
I have a frustrating problem, I have multiple versions of Photoshop installed on my computer (Windows 7) and I already had Photoshop CS5 added to my "Open With" menu and now that I have CS6 installed I can't add THAT one to my "Open With" menu instead! I've tried using the browse button and selecting the CS6 version but it keeps adding it as the CS5 version. Is there some way to edit the Open With menu so I can replace the CS5 version with the CS6 version? I need to keep CS5 on my computer for the time being or else I'd just uninstall it and I'm sure it'd be no problem then.
Windows doesn't make finding it's own Cleanup Utility very easy, does it? So your friends here on GeekDrop are going to show you how to quickly create a shortcut to it right on your desktop, which of course can then be moved wherever else you want it, if not on the Desktop. So, here are the steps to Create a Shortcut to Windows Disk Cleanup:
Is there some way to disable the Low Disk Space message that keeps coming up in my system tray? OK, I get it, it's low and there's nothing I can do right now to add more space, quit bugging me!!
I have been having crashes in some games like The Old Republic and there's a folder with some .dmp files and some .json files.The .json files are in plain text so they are easily read but the .dmp files look scrambled or like they could be executable files. Does anyone know if there is some way to view their contents? Maybe some program I can download? Or is the information only available for the developers to see?
IObit is running an offer on Advanced System Care Pro 3 for a very limited time. You can get a free license for the pro version.
Windows users should get on this quick.
Recent comments
36 weeks 1 day ago
36 weeks 1 day ago
36 weeks 1 day ago
39 weeks 3 days ago
47 weeks 3 days ago
1 year 26 weeks ago
1 year 26 weeks ago
1 year 27 weeks ago
1 year 27 weeks ago
1 year 27 weeks ago