This guide will take you through the steps to easily determine which Apps are sending spam and ads to your Android Notification window, and how to remove them. …
Apple has made the process of completely restoring your Mac from a Time Machine backup very simple. Still, it can be a bit daunting to go through the process, as all the data on your Mac’s hard drive will be erased and replaced with the backup files. This complete step-by-step walkthrough will (hopefully) help alleviate some of the stress. …
If you ever need to figure out the password of a WiFi network that you’ve previously connected to (eg. your friend forgets their network password) – here’s how you can recover the password for that Wireless Network. …
This tutorial will guide you through the process of adding your “owner information” (phone number, email address, name etc) – on your Android phone’s “Lock Screen”. This way if you lose your phone, whomever finds it will be able to easily contact you (hopefully!). …
If you have 3rd-party applications to handle your malware protection, you might want to disable Windows Defender. Here we’ll walk through the process of turning it off.
Whether you want to admit it or not, Macs running OS X can be compromised by hackers. If you’re a longtime Windows user and switching to Mac, you know the importance of having the built in firewall enabled. But did you know OS X comes with a Firewall as well? Here we take a look at how to enable and set it up.
If your concerned about privacy and the way websites and advertisers track your location, there is a setting in IE9 that you can set to stop the tracking. Here we’ll show you how to enable that feature in IE 9.
This tutorial will show you how to enable a setting in Firefox that will enable secure browsing across all of the sites you visit – and when https isn’t available, it’ll warn you first.
Not that long ago, https was much less common than it is now. Mozilla teamed up with the EFF to create an add-on to help boost the usage of https, and it was tremendously popular. Fast forward to 2021 and now Firefox has that functionality built in – it’s just not turned on by default (yet). So – here’s how make sure you’re using the https version of a site, and if one isn’t available, get a warning and confirm you’d like to continue.
Start by clicking the Menu button (the one that looks like 3 horizontal lines on top of each other, located in the top right-corner of Firefox) and select Settings from the list of options.
Select Privacy & Security from the column on the left side of the Settings window.
Scroll all the way down to the HTTPS-Only Mode section. Select the option titled Enable HTTPS-Only Mode in all windows and then close the Settings window. That’s it! Now when you visit a page taht defaults to http (not secure), Firefox will check to see if there’s an https (secure) version of that page, and load it for you instead of the http version.
If there is no secure (https) version of the page, and the only way to visit that page is via the less secure http, Firefox will display an alert asking if you’re sure you want to continue. If it’s a site that you were planning on sharing important information with (a username or password, email address, personal info etc) – strongly reconsider doing so. If you do decide to continue, click the Continue to HTTP Site button.
If you want to create a “rule” so that a specific http page always loads, without warning you, click the lock icon in the address bar (see screenshot below) and switch the HTTPS-Only Mode pull-down menu option to Off. Now when you visit that page in the future, Firefox won’t warning you that you’re visiting a non-secure page – although it will continue to warn you about other non-secure pages.
That’s it! Since you’re all done now, whey not check out some of other other Firefox guides? :)