OS - Windows

Depanare VPN 4 Solutii

instalare printer 50 Solutii

Optimizare pc 49 Solutii

Optimizare PC 103 Solutii

Scanare cu malwarebyte 4 Solutii

shareuire si mapare 14 Solutii

adaugare la domeniu 5 Solutii

Migrare profil 9 Solutii

Instalare/reinnoire certificate 2 Solutii

Personalizare sistem operare 274 Solutii

Configureaza si verifica setarile de boot 11 Solutii

Transfer de date 20 Solutii

Configurare OS 109 Solutii

Reparare OS 47 Solutii

Punct de restaurare OS 8 Solutii

Windows Event Viewer 6 Solutii

Reinstalare/reconfigurare VPN 8 Solutii

Optimizare client e-mail 12 Solutii

Optimizare PC 30 Solutii

Optimizare PC 20 Solutii

Reinstalare / Reconfigurare VPN 6 Solutii

Reinstalare OS 32 Solutii

Reparare sistem de operare 45 Solutii

Programare sistem operare 12 Solutii

Puncte de restaurare sistem de operare 14 Solutii

Instalare imprimanta 44 Solutii

Mapare si partajare 13 Solutii

Modificari firewall 12 Solutii

Migrare profil 8 Solutii

Transferuri de date 32 Solutii

Upgrade sistem operare 12 Solutii

Windows Event Viewer 6 Solutii

Verificare HDD 32 Solutii

Spatiu partitie 31 Solutii

Scanare cu MalwareBytes 5 Solutii

Setari servicii sistem operare 42 Solutii

Setari retea sistem operare 25 Solutii

Setari partitii 19 Solutii

Actualizare sistem operare 15 Solutii

Clonare HDD 11 Solutii

Compatibilitate program 13 Solutii

Instalare / Reinnoire Certificate 6 Solutii

Configurare si verificare setari de BOOT 15 Solutii

Configurare Sistem de operare 1340 Solutii

Identificare DLL-uri lipsa 2 Solutii

Depanare 952 Solutii

Editarea politicilor de grup ale sistemului de operare 13 Solutii

Drivere 50 Solutii

Instalarea Windows pe un computer Mac

Instalarea Windows pe un computer Mac

Boot Camp este un utilitar care este inclus pe Mac și care îți permite să comuți între macOS și Windows. Descarcă Windows 10, apoi urmează pașii de instalare cu ajutorul Asistentului Boot Camp.

Ce îți trebuie pentru a instala Windows 10 pe Mac

Unul dintre aceste modele de Mac:

  • MacBook introdus în anul 2015 sau mai recent
  • MacBook Air introdus în anul 2012 sau mai recent
  • MacBook Pro introdus în anul 2012 sau mai recent
  • Mac mini introdus în anul 2012 sau mai recent
  • iMac introdus în anul 2012 sau mai recent1
  • iMac Pro (toate modelele)
  • Mac Pro introdus în anul 2013 sau mai recent

Cele mai recente actualizări macOS, care pot include actualizări la Asistentul Boot Camp. Vei folosi Asistentul Boot Camp pentru a instala Windows 10.

64 GB sau mai mult de spațiu de stocare liber pe discul de inițializare al computerului tău Mac:

  • Computerul Mac poate avea doar 64 GB de spațiu de stocare liber, dar un spațiu de stocare liber de cel puțin 128 GB asigură cea mai bună experiență. Actualizările de Windows automate necesită acest spațiu sau mai mult.
  • Dacă ai un computer iMac Pro sau Mac Pro cu memorie (RAM) de cel puțin 128 GB, discul de inițializare are nevoie de cel puțin la fel de mult spațiu de stocare liber precum memoria computerului Mac.2

O unitate flash USB externă cu o capacitate de stocare de minimum 16 GB, cu excepția cazului în care folosești un computer Mac care nu necesită instalarea Windows de pe o unitate flash.

O versiune pe 64 de biți a Windows 10 Home sau Windows 10 Pro pe o imagine de disc (ISO) sau alt suport fizic de instalare. Dacă instalezi Windows pe computerul Mac pentru prima oară, aceasta trebuie să fie o versiune completă de Windows, nu un upgrade.

  • În cazul în care copia de Windows se află pe o unitate flash USB sau ai o cheie de produs Windows și nu un disc de instalare, descarcă o imagine de disc Windows 10 de la Microsoft.
  • În cazul în care copia de Windows se află pe un DVD, poate fi nevoie să creezi o imagine de disc a respectivului DVD.
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Cum poti vedea diferite fusuri orare pe Windows 10

Stim cu totii ca atunci cand avem colegi de munca, prieteni sau apropiati care locuiesc in tari cu diferite fusuri orare este destul de greu sa tinem evidenta lor pentru a ne asigura ca planificam intalnirile la aceeasi ora. Pentru a rezolva acest incovenient, Windows 10 ne ofera posibilitatea de a adauga multiple fusuri orare in functie de interesul avut.

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How to Turn on Two-Factor Authentication for LinkedIn

LinkedIn Logo

Two-factor authentication (2FA) is a great security tool, and we always recommend it. Most apps make it pretty easy to turn on 2FA, and LinkedIn is no exception. Here’s how to enable it and make yourself safer.

You can turn on two-factor authentication from either the LinkedIn website or the mobile app, but either way, you’ll need to be logged in to your LinkedIn account. Go ahead and do this first.

Click on your avatar in the top-right corner of the LinkedIn website. In the menu that opens, click the “Settings & Privacy” option.

The "Settings & Privacy" menu option.

Click on the Account tab, scroll down to the “Two-Step Verification” section, and then click the “Change” link.

The Account tab, and the "Two-step verification" option.

The section will expand. Click the “Turn On” button.

The "Two-step verification" option with "Turn on" highlighted.

You can choose whether to use an authenticator app to generate a code for you or to receive SMS (text) messages with the code. We strongly recommend using an authenticator app as it’s more secure, but two-factor authentication using SMS is still much safer than not using two-factor authentication at all.

Choose your method—we’re going to use an authenticator app—and then click the “Continue” button.

The verification method dropdown.

Enter your password in the prompt that appears and then click “Done.”

The Password entry field and the Done button.

The instructions for adding an account to your authenticator app are displayed. Add a new account in your authenticator app, scan the QR code using your phone’s camera, and once the account is created, enter the six-digit code from the authenticator app into the text box in LinkedIn and click “Continue.”

LinkedIn's instructions for adding the account to an authenticator app.

Two-factor authentication is now turned on. Click on “Recovery Codes” to display the backup codes, so you can still get in if you ever lose your phone.

The "Two-step verification" settings, with "recovery codes" highlighted.

Click “Copy Codes” and save them somewhere secure. You’ll need them to get into your LinkedIn account if you ever lose or wipe your phone.

The recovery codes, with "Copy codes" highlighted.

Now that you’ve turned on two-factor authentication, you’ll need to log in again through any other devices you use, such as your phone.

Turn on Two-Factor Authentication in the LinkedIn App

Turning on two-factor authentication in the mobile app is the same on the iPhone, iPad, and Android. Open the app and tap your profile picture.

LinkedIn's Profile button.

Then select the “View Profile” link.

The "View Profile" option.

Tap on the Settings gear in the top-right corner.

The Settings cog.

Open the “Privacy” tab, scroll down, and then tap “Two-Step Verification.”

The Privacy tab, with the "Two-step verification" option highighted.

Select the “Set Up” button.

The two-step verification "Set up" button.

You can choose whether to use an authenticator app to generate a code for you or to receive SMS (text) messages with the code. We strongly recommend using an authenticator app as it’s more secure, but two-factor authentication using SMS is still much safer than not using two-factor authentication at all.

Choose your method—we’re going to use an authenticator app—and tap “Continue.”

The verification method dropdown.

Enter your password in the prompt that appears and then tap the “Submit” button.

The Password entry field and the Submit button.

The instructions for adding an account to your authenticator app are displayed. Add a new account in your authenticator app and then tap “Continue.”

LinkedIn's instructions for adding the account to an authenticator app.

Enter the six-digit code from the authenticator app into the text box in LinkedIn and tap “Verify.”

The entry field for the verification code.

Two-factor authentication is now turned on. You won’t have to enter the two-factor code on your phone, although you will have to enter it if you access LinkedIn on any other device.

Tap the “Recovery Codes” link to display the backup codes, so you can still get in if you ever lose your phone.

The "Two-step verification" settings, with "recovery codes" highlighted.

Tap “Copy Codes” and save them somewhere secure. You’ll need them to get into your LinkedIn account if you ever lose or wipe your phone.

The recovery codes, with "Copy Codes" highlighted.

Now that you’ve turned on two-factor authentication, you’ll need to log in again on any other devices you own using the two-factor code.

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How a Password Manager Protects You From Phishing Scams

Password managers make it easy to use strong, unique passwords everywhere. That’s one significant benefit to using them, but there’s another: Your password manager helps protect you from imposter websites trying to “phish” your password.

What Is Phishing, and How Does It Work?

Phishing is designed to trick you into giving your password or other information to an imposter.

For example, let’s say you get an email claiming to be from your bank. The email says your account may be compromised, and you should click this link to take action. You click the link in the email and end up on a site that looks just like your bank’s real website. In a rush to secure your account, you type your password and possibly other details like your credit card number. Boom, you’ve been phished. The attacker now has your bank account’s username and password, as well as any other information you provided. That wasn’t your bank’s real website. You got an email from a scammer.

Security professionals recommend against clicking links in emails like this. Instead, go to your bank account’s website directly and sign in. Similarly, if someone claiming to be from your bank calls you on the phone, it’s a good idea to hang up and call your bank’s customer service number directly to see if the call is legitimate.

You could end up on a phishing site in many other ways. Maybe you click a link to buy something on the web and end up at what looks like Amazon.com or another legitimate store, for example. Perhaps you click a link to email someone and end up on what appears to be a Google login screen for your Gmail account.

It’s All in the URL

There’s one thing you can do to spot phishing sites: Examine the URL, which is the address of the web page. For example, if you bank with Chase, you’d look to verify you were on chase.com. But phishing sites could be clever—for example, a phishing site might use the domain “secure.chase.com.example.com/onlinebanking/login”.

If you understand URLs, you’ll realize that that particular URL is actually hosted on “example.com” and not “chase.com”.

Similarly, some phishing websites will use characters that look similar to other characters. It’s all part of making the URL look similar to the real one. After all, many people likely don’t examine the URL at all. Even people who do may just be trained to look for something like “chase.com.” Not everyone understands how to decode that line of text.

How a Password Manager Helps Protect You

If you use a password manager, you have additional protection. This is true as long as your password manager can automatically fill your credentials, whether it’s 1Password, LastPass, Dashlane, Bitwarden, or even the password-saving feature built right into your web browser.

If you save a login for a website like Chase.com or Amazon.com, your password manager will remember it and offer to automatically fill it in for you when you’re on Chase.com or Amazon.com. If you end up on a different website, your password manager won’t offer to enter your credentials—after all, you’re on a different website. Your password manager doesn’t fall for the disguised URL.

This protection isn’t fancy, and you won’t see a big red “warning” message pop up. But you will quickly notice that wait a minute; your password manager isn’t offering to sign you in on this website. Why is that? Once you’ve noticed something is amiss, you might quickly discover you’re not on the website you thought you were on.

Peace of Mind When Logging In

Your password manager doesn’t just make it faster to enter your credentials while browsing the web. It gives you peace of mind while it goes about its job.

If you’re signing into your email online, you don’t need to double-check the domain before typing your username and password. You know that, if your password manager is offering to fill your credentials automatically, it’s already checked that the domain is a match with the one saved in your database.

This Works on Smartphones, Too

Of course, the same features are available when you use a password manager on a mobile device like an iPhone, iPad, or Android phone. Use your password manager to enter credentials, and you’ll be protected from phishing on the mobile web, too.

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