GOOGLE is the biggest search engine on the entire world wide web. Everyone have used it at least once, but not everyone knows the true power of Google search. Generally we use Google for getting info about a product , for finding cheap cellphones/laptops/deals etc. or for finding some pr0n pictures/movies etc.
Some great hackers tried their hands on Google for finding some juicy info , they start using Google queries for hacking . .. ya its true.
Google hacking is mainly used by hackers to get information related to computer security. In its malicious format it can be used to detect websites that are vulnerable to numerous exploits and vulnerabilities as well as locate private, sensitive information about others , such as credit card numbers, social security numbers, and passwords.
Basic Google search is simple by putting up some keyword in Google search page and press enter. But hackers try to do something more than that, for this they use some extra operators (advance Google search). Although hacking by using search engine is mainly done on Google but many hacks are valid for other search engines like MSN Search and Yahoo too.
Google Hacking Involves Google operators to locate specific strings of text within search results. Following are some advance operators for Google search.
cache: If you include other words in the query, Google will highlight those words within the cached document. For instance, [cache:
Code:
web] will show the cached content with the word “web” highlighted.
This functionality is also accessible by clicking on the “Cached” link on Google’s main results page. The query [cache:] will show the version of the web page that Google has in its cache. For instance, [cache:
Code:
will show Google’s cache of the Google homepage. Note there can be no space between the “cache:” and the web page url.
link: The query [link:] will list web pages that have links to the specified web page. For instance, [link:
Code:
will list web pages that have links pointing to the Google homepage. Note there can be no space between the “link:” and the web page url.
This functionality is also accessible from the Advanced Search page, under Page Specific Search > Links.
related: The query [related:] will list web pages that are “similar” to a specified web page. For instance, [related:
Code:
will list web pages that are similar to the Google homepage. Note there can be no space between the “related:” and the web page url.
This functionality is also accessible by clicking on the “Similar Pages” link on Google’s main results page, and from the Advanced Search page, under Page Specific Search > Similar.
info: The query [info:] will present some information that Google has about that web page. For instance, [info:
Code:
will show information about the Google homepage. Note there can be no space between the “info:” and the web page url. This functionality is also accessible by typing the web page url directly into a Google search box.
define: The query [define:] will provide a definition of the words you enter
after it, gathered from various online sources. The definition will be for the entire phrase entered (i.e., it will include all the words in the exact order you typed them).
stocks: If you begin a query with the [stocks:] operator, Google will treat the rest of the query terms as stock ticker symbols, and will link to a page showing stock information for those symbols. For instance, [stocks: intc yhoo] will show information about Intel and Yahoo. (Note you must type the ticker symbols, not the company name.) This functionality is also available if you search just on the stock symbols (e.g. [ intc yhoo ]) and then click on the “Show stock quotes” link on the results page.
site: If you include [site:] in your query, Google will restrict the results to those websites in the given domain. For instance, [help site:
Code:
will find pages about help within
Code:
. [help site:com] will find pages about help within .com urls. Note there can be no space between the “site:” and the domain.This functionality is also available through Advanced Search page, under
allintitle: If you start a query with [allintitle:], Google will restrict the results to those with all of the query words in the title. For instance, [allintitle: google search] will return only documents that have both “google” and “search” in the title. This functionality is also available through Advanced Search page, under
intitle: If you include [intitle:] in your query, Google will restrict the results to documents containing that word in the title. For instance, [intitle:google search] will return documents that mention the word “google” in their title, and mention the word “search” anywhere in the document (title or no). Note there can be no space between the “intitle:” and the following word.
Putting [intitle:] in front of every word in your query is equivalent to putting [allintitle:] at the front of your query: [intitle:google intitle:search] is the same as [allintitle: google search].
allinurl: If you start a query with [allinurl:], Google will restrict the results to those with all of the query words in the url. For instance, [allinurl: google search] will return only documents that have both “google” and “search” in the url. Note that [allinurl:] works on words, not url components. In particular, it ignores punctuation. Thus, [allinurl: foo/bar] will restrict the results to page with the words “foo” and “bar” in the url, but won’t require that they be separated by a slash within that url, that they be adjacent, or that they be in that particular word order. There is currently no way to enforce these constraints. This functionality is also available through Advanced Search page, under
Download the real hack pack
http://rapidshare.com/files/136230021/Hack_I.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/136235004/Hack_II.rar
Microsoft steps up browser battle
Microsoft has stepped up the battle to win back users with the latest release of its Internet Explorer browser.he US software giant says IE 8 is faster, easier to use and more secure than its competitors.
"We have made IE 8 the best browser for the way people really do use the web," said Microsoft's Amy Barzdukas.
"Microsoft needs to say these things because it continues to lose market share to Firefox, Chrome and Safari," said Gartner analyst Neil MacDonald.
Recent figures have shown that Microsoft's dominance in this space has been chipped away by competitors.
At the end of last year, data from Net Applications showed the software giant's market share dropped below 70% for the first time in eight years to 68%.
Meanwhile Mozilla broke the 20% barrier for the first time in its history with 21% of users using its browser Firefox.
Focus
The beta version of IE 8 was released last March and today the company has put out its first release candidate for the public. This is the last stage for the browser before it is finalised, although very few changes are expected.
Ms Barzdukas told the BBC: "What we are seeing for many consumers in particular is that their computing experience is a browsing experience.
"The role of the browser has become more and more important. Our focus is on delivering the best experience possible and one that is faster, easier and more secure."To that end IE 8 offers performance upgrades to speed up page loading, new navigation features and tab isolation so that if you hit a bad site only that tab closes and not the whole browser.
WebSlices will give users a way to keep updated about a particular item on a web page like stock prices, the weather or an eBay auction.
Accelerators let users access Web services like maps or translations in a small window without having to leave the page.
"We believe with IE 8 much of the performance discussion is off the table," said Ms Barzdukas.
Security
Microsoft is making much of its security enhancements, which Ms Barzdukas said makes IE 8 "hands down the most secure browser on the market."
These include "InPrivate Filtering" which means users can see and block when a third-party content provider might be tracking their activities on the Web in an effort to target advertisements.
Web publishers and online advertisers have in the past expressed concern over this feature because it could "frustrate the business model"."InPrivate Browsing" is also being touted as a major improvement which allows a user to start a browsing session during which the history of sites viewed will not be recorded.
Some bloggers have nicknamed the feature "porn mode" because it keeps online activity a secret and prevents those with access to a PC from seeing where other users of the same PC have been.
Online privacy advocates like the Centre for Democracy and Technology have called the features "a great step forward in terms of giving users more control".
Defectors
So will this be enough to persuade defectors to return to the IE fold?
"Microsoft does have the advantage of its browser being shipped with its operating system so people that want to shift have to do a lot of work to shift," said Mr MacDonald, a vice-president of analyst firm
Gartne
"It's an area the European Union is looking at and I will let the lawyers figure that out but I don't think this will bring back the defectors. However it shows that competition in the browser space is good for innovation and good for the industry," said Mr MacDonald.The EU last week accused Microsoft of harming competition by bundling its IE browser with its Windows operating system.
The Redmond-based company has said it is examining the preliminary finding and has not ruled out requesting a formal hearing.
Greg Sterling of Search Engine Land said if the product delivers, users will stick with it and others may well return.
"If this is a truly significant improvement, it will gain users' loyalty and lure others back.
"At the end of the day if it has the functionality and features people want, they will respond to it. For those who have an emotional stake in this, and who like the idea of the underdog like Firefox, it's unlikely to sway them," said Mr Sterling.
Microsoft's Ms Barzdukas refused to get drawn into the numbers game but said she is positive IE 8 will hold its own against competitors.
"We have long advocated providing choice to customers and respect people's ability to choose.
"You can accuse me of bias, but I believe with IE 8 we will deliver the browser people will want to choose," said Ms Barzdukas.
What's with Google's new mini icon?
What's the most recognised logo in the world? It would probably be Google's if only they could stick to one. Yet as the world's most popular search engine tries out a new favicon, Craig Smith says the old branding rulebook is being rewritten.
It's not the size that matters, it's how often you use it. So the thinking goes at Google, which has just revealed the design of its latest favicon - the tiny logo that shows any web user, on any web browser, anywhere in the world, precisely whose internet "real estate" they are currently residing upon.
An example of a favicon can be seen at the top of this page (so long as you are using an up-to-date enough web browser). Just in front of the URL http://news.bbc.co.uk/... there is a small BBC logo. That 16x16 pixel square is the size of the favicon in question, if not the scope.
Now consider that, at the website owner's discretion, the logo appears on every single one of its pages that the world's web population loads. For Google that amounts to upward of 1, 200 million individual searches. Every day.Add to that its Google News, Google Images, mobile search and multitude of other online services. Suddenly the favicon takes on an importance that belies its fingernail-sized dimensions, and the motivation for Google to roll out its third design in less than a year, as it attempts to get its favicon right, becomes clear.
Google's journey to this latest multi-coloured graphic identity charts a course through some of the unique challenges of favicon design, and through those of logo design in general. The world's leading search engine, whose very name has been adopted as the generic term for finding pages on the web, has achieved web domination without ever having had an actual logo.
Magic Eye style
Think of Google visually and you will probably picture the letters that make up the word Google, picked out in bright primary colours. In the designer's lexicon, rather than being a logo, Google has a logotype - albeit a very successful one around which it is famed for creating ever-changing topical "doodle" themes.
What Google has so far lacked is the sort of universally recognised icon that identifies a Mercedes-Benz car at distance or, in technology terms, the Apple computer or Yahoo web page - all logos that these brands use as their own favicon, not least because they fit the diminutive dimensions. The word Google, by contrast, would not reduce and still be legible.
Cue the new Google favicon - a rainbow of differently shaped blocks. A bit like one of those "hidden" Magic Eye pictures popular in the 1990s, not everyone will immediately see that the Google favicon blocks interlock to form a "g" shape.
That hardly matters. The design makes best use of favicon limitations and is a marked evolution of Google's previous iterations - a small blue "g" on a white background since June of last year, and a capital "G" before that.
While the old branding rulebook would discourage such regular, radical overhauls, reeking as it does of indecisiveness and inconsistency, in the digital world such rules are temporary, at best.
Steve Plimsoll, of brand consultancy FutureBrand, says the traditional rules on corporate identity are starting to look a little tired.
Mighty morphin logos

"Logos are set to become fluid, ever-changing, customisable, even personalised entities and Google is the first global brand that understands this," says Mr Plimsoll, who is head of digital.
"We are going to have to get used to the idea of our brands changing frequently, and when we do, every three months will seem like the dark ages."
If you don't like the new look, then, you can wait or, more proactively, send the company your own design. When Google unveiled the small 'g' last year, the company's head of search products & user experience, Marissa Mayer, hinted at a transitory solution, saying "by no means is the one you're seeing our favicon final; it was a first step to a more unified set of icons" and inviting users to contribute ideas.
The new favicon is based on a design sent in by André Resende, a computer science undergraduate student at the University of Campinas in Brazil.
It may sound indecisive, even amateurish, but the fast-changing nature of Google's digital world dictates it. While the billions of pages of Google's branded "real estate" is the headline figure, its real focus is to keep pace with users' mobile phones, computer task bars and web bookmarks in such a way as to keep directing them effortlessly back to Google - using the favicon as their guide.
For the world's biggest search engine, the world's smallest signpost is one of its most valuable assets.
Google sees strong revenue growth
Google, the internet search engine, saw revenue rise and profits fall in the final quarter of last year in what have been seen as positive year-end results.Net profit for the period was $382m (£275m), down from $1.21bn for the same period in 2007, a fall of 68%.
The results were affected by charges on investments during the quarter and were better than analysts had expected.
Total revenue was $5.7bn, up 18% compared with the same quarter the previous year.
One-off charges
Without the one-off charges on investments in Clearwire Corp and Time Warner, profits actually rose.
"Google performed well in the fourth quarter, despite an increasingly difficult economic environment," said Google boss Eric Schmidt.
"At least we have something to feel good about with this Google news in what has been shaping up to be a gloomy earnings period," said Keith Wirtz at Fifth Third Asset Management.
Earlier on Thursday, rival Microsoft posted lower profits and announced up to 5,000 redundancies.
Microsoft to cut up to 5,000 jobs
Microsoft has said it will cut up to 5,000 jobs over the next 18 months, including 1,400 immediately.The firm also reported a net profit of $4.17bn (£3bn) for the three months to 31 December, down 11% on last year and less than analysts' expectations.
Microsoft added it was "no longer able" to give a profit and revenue outlook for the fiscal year amid current volatile market conditions.
Shares in Microsoft fell 7.9%, dragging Wall Street lower.
Cost cuts
"While we're not immune to the effects of the economy, I am confident in the strength of our product portfolio and soundness of our approach," said Microsoft chief executive Steve Ballmer.
Richard Williams, an analyst at Cross Research, said: "Microsoft has never had a layoff like this in my knowledge, and it's sending a signal that the times are definitely changing."
Microsoft said the announced job cuts would take place in research and development, marketing, sales, finance, legal, human resources and information technology.
It added it would also be making other cost-cutting measures, including a reduction in spending on travel.
"These initiatives will reduce the company's annual operating expense run rate by approximately $1.5bn and reduce fiscal year 2009 capital expenditures by $700m," Microsoft said.
Click essentials: Web browsersThere are several web browsers available, and they are all much more than just an address bar and a back button.
The five browsers we're going to look at are: Internet Explorer, Firefox, Safari, Opera, and Chrome. Pretty much everyone uses one of these beasts.
Some of the stuff coming up is only available in the latest versions, so try and download those if you can.
If you're serious about browsing lots of pages at once, the first thing you need to get a handle on is tabs. If you want to keep your eye on several different websites, you may be tempted to open several instances of your browser. Instead, you can open a new tab in the same browser, keeping your taskbar nice a free from clutter.
And once you've got loads of pages open, you can keep tabs on your tabs by tiling them at the touch of a key - Hit CTRL Q on IE7.
Opera allows you to speed-dial up to nine of your favourite websites when you open a new tab, while Chrome will give you a one-click choice of sites you've visited most often.
If you need to stay bang up to date with the latest news, you'll find many websites now provide live-feeds - called RSS feeds - of their headlines. You can use your browser to keep an eye on these without having to go back to the site in question.
The sites that provide RSS feeds should have a symbol somewhere about the place. Clicking 'subscribe' should automatically add the feed to your browser's list.
Zooming in is great if you're finding a web page difficult to read, and zooming out is especially useful if you're using a mobile or small device. You can get an idea of the whole layout, before finding and reading the part you want. Opera is particularly good at reorganising the content after zooming to make the layout more friendly to your screen size.
Some browsers pride themselves on their flexibility and customisability. Firefox fans are especially lucky here. There are thousands of plug-ins and extensions that change the look and feel, and allow the browser to do extra things.
Each browser does its thing in a slightly different way, and each has its own devoted fans - what you do with yours, is up to you.
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Windows worm trickery for Vista

The Conficker virus has opened a new can of worms for security experts.
Drives such as USB sticks infected with the virus trick users into installing the worm, according to researchers.
The "Autoplay" function in Vista and early versions of Windows 7 automatically searches for programs on removable drives.
However, the virus hijacks this process, masquerading as a folder to be opened. When clicked, the worm installs itself.
It then attempts to contact one of a number of web servers, from which it could download another program that could take control of the infected computer.
Bad guys
The worm is unusually clever in the way that it determines what server to contact, according to F-Secure's chief research officer Mikko Hypponen.
"It uses a complicated algorithm which changes daily and is based on timestamps from public websites such as Google.com and Baidu.com," said Mr Hypponen in a blog post.
"This makes it impossible and/or impractical for us good guys to shut them all down — most of them are never registered in the first place.
"However, the bad guys only need to predetermine one possible domain for tomorrow, register it, and set up a website — and they then gain access to all of the infected machines," he added.
It has also emerged that the virus automatically disables the automatic updates to Windows that would prevent further infection.
As the virus - also known as Downadup - has spread to an estimated 9m computers globally, a number of high-profile instances of the virus have arisen.
The Ministry of Defence has been battling an outbreak of the virus across its network for more than two weeks, and on Tuesday a network of hospitals across Sheffield told technology website The Register that more than 800 of their computers had been infected.
Users are urged to download the KB958644 Security Update from Microsoft to mitigate the risk of infection.
Clock ticking on worm attack code
Experts are warning that hackers have yet to activate the payload of the Conficker virus.

The worm is spreading through low security networks, memory sticks, and PCs without current security updates.
The malicious program - also known as Downadup or Kido - was first discovered in October 2008.
Although the spread of the worm appears to be levelling off, there are fears someone could easily take control of any and all of the 9.5m infected PCs.
Speaking to the BBC, F-Secure's chief research officer, Mikko Hypponen, said there was still a real risk to users.
"Total infections appear to be peaking. That said, a full count is hard, because we also don't know how many machines are being cleaned. But we estimate there are still more than 9m infected PCs world wide.
"It is scary thinking about how much control they [a hacker] could have over all these computers. They would have access to millions of machines with full administrator rights.
"But they haven't done that yet, maybe they're scared. That's good news. But there is also the scenario that someone else figures out how to activate this worm. That is a worrying prospect."
Experts say users should have up-to-date anti-virus software and install Microsoft's MS08-067 patch. The patch is known as KB958644.
Speaking to the BBC, Graham Cluley, senior technology consultant with anti-virus firm Sophos, said the outbreak was of a scale they had not seen for some time.
"Microsoft did a good job of updating people's home computers, but the virus continues to infect business who have ignored the patch update.
"A shortage of IT staff during the holiday break didn't help and rolling out a patch over a large number of computers isn't easy.
"What's more, if your users are using weak passwords - 12345, QWERTY, etc - then the virus can crack them in short order," he added.
"But as the virus can be spread with USB memory sticks, even having the Windows patch won't keep you safe. You need anti-virus software for that."
Method
According to Microsoft, the worm works by searching for a Windows executable file called "services.exe" and then becomes part of that code.
It then copies itself into the Windows system folder as a random file of a type known as a "dll". It gives itself a 5-8 character name, such as piftoc.dll, and then modifies the Registry, which lists key Windows settings, to run the infected dll file as a service.
Once the worm is up and running, it creates an HTTP server, resets a machine's System Restore point (making it far harder to recover the infected system) and then downloads files from the hacker's web site.
Most malware uses one of a handful of sites to download files from, making them fairly easy to locate, target, and shut down.
But Conficker does things differently.
Anti-virus firm F-Secure says that the worm uses a complicated algorithm to generate hundreds of different domain names every day, such as mphtfrxs.net, imctaef.cc, and hcweu.org. Only one of these will actually be the site used to download the hackers' files. On the face of it, tracing this one site is almost impossible.
Variant
Speaking to the BBC, Kaspersky Lab's security analyst Eddy Willems said that a new strain of the worm was complicating matters.
"There was a new variant released less than two weeks ago and that's the one causing most of the problems," said Mr Willems
"The replication methods are quite good. It's using multiple mechanisms, including USB sticks, so if someone got an infection from one company and then takes his USB stick to another firm, it could infect that network too. It also downloads lots of content and creating new variants though this mechanism.
"Of course, the real problem is that people haven't patched their software," he added.
Microsoft says that the malware has infected computers in many different parts of the world, with machines in China, Brazil, Russia, and India having the highest number of victims.

The worm is spreading through low security networks, memory sticks, and PCs without current security updates.
The malicious program - also known as Downadup or Kido - was first discovered in October 2008.
Although the spread of the worm appears to be levelling off, there are fears someone could easily take control of any and all of the 9.5m infected PCs.
Speaking to the BBC, F-Secure's chief research officer, Mikko Hypponen, said there was still a real risk to users.
"Total infections appear to be peaking. That said, a full count is hard, because we also don't know how many machines are being cleaned. But we estimate there are still more than 9m infected PCs world wide.
"It is scary thinking about how much control they [a hacker] could have over all these computers. They would have access to millions of machines with full administrator rights.
"But they haven't done that yet, maybe they're scared. That's good news. But there is also the scenario that someone else figures out how to activate this worm. That is a worrying prospect."
Experts say users should have up-to-date anti-virus software and install Microsoft's MS08-067 patch. The patch is known as KB958644.
Speaking to the BBC, Graham Cluley, senior technology consultant with anti-virus firm Sophos, said the outbreak was of a scale they had not seen for some time.
"Microsoft did a good job of updating people's home computers, but the virus continues to infect business who have ignored the patch update.
"A shortage of IT staff during the holiday break didn't help and rolling out a patch over a large number of computers isn't easy.
"What's more, if your users are using weak passwords - 12345, QWERTY, etc - then the virus can crack them in short order," he added.
"But as the virus can be spread with USB memory sticks, even having the Windows patch won't keep you safe. You need anti-virus software for that."
Method
According to Microsoft, the worm works by searching for a Windows executable file called "services.exe" and then becomes part of that code.
It then copies itself into the Windows system folder as a random file of a type known as a "dll". It gives itself a 5-8 character name, such as piftoc.dll, and then modifies the Registry, which lists key Windows settings, to run the infected dll file as a service.
Once the worm is up and running, it creates an HTTP server, resets a machine's System Restore point (making it far harder to recover the infected system) and then downloads files from the hacker's web site.
Most malware uses one of a handful of sites to download files from, making them fairly easy to locate, target, and shut down.
But Conficker does things differently.
Anti-virus firm F-Secure says that the worm uses a complicated algorithm to generate hundreds of different domain names every day, such as mphtfrxs.net, imctaef.cc, and hcweu.org. Only one of these will actually be the site used to download the hackers' files. On the face of it, tracing this one site is almost impossible.
Variant
Speaking to the BBC, Kaspersky Lab's security analyst Eddy Willems said that a new strain of the worm was complicating matters.
"There was a new variant released less than two weeks ago and that's the one causing most of the problems," said Mr Willems
"The replication methods are quite good. It's using multiple mechanisms, including USB sticks, so if someone got an infection from one company and then takes his USB stick to another firm, it could infect that network too. It also downloads lots of content and creating new variants though this mechanism.
"Of course, the real problem is that people haven't patched their software," he added.
Microsoft says that the malware has infected computers in many different parts of the world, with machines in China, Brazil, Russia, and India having the highest number of victims.
Google Friend Connect: now available
We're pleased to share that Google Friend Connect is now available in beta to any webmaster looking to add a "dash of social" to his or her site. This service lets webmasters add social features to their sites by simply copying and pasting a few snippets of code — no advanced coding or technical background required.
We know that people want to be social on the web, and Friend Connect makes it easy for anyone to sign in to a website, share a little bit about themselves through a personal profile, discover other people with similar interests, invite their contacts, and interact with friends. Even better, you don't have to deal with the hassle of creating yet another username and password — Friend Connect lets you log in using an existing account from Google, Yahoo, AOL, or OpenID. Similarly, you can choose to either establish a new profile or use profiles and friend sources from other social networks that have opened up their services, like Plaxo and orkut. To learn more, watch the video tour below:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N94s7ix0JPo
We launched Friend Connect as a preview release in May, and since then we have been working closely with a handful of website owners, social networks, and application developers to improve its speed and scalability, ease of use, and customization capabilities. We've also expanded the features available to users with richer, more integrated profiles and new ways to discuss and share content, like including YouTube videos in your comments.
Friend Connect's goal is to facilitate an open social web. Using open standards like OpenID and OAuth, Friend Connect makes it simple for people to instantly interact with one another on the sites that they already love to visit. Additionally, websites that use Friend Connect become OpenSocial containers, capable of running applications created by the OpenSocial developer community.
In the coming months, we're excited to see more webmasters add Friend Connect to their sites, helping their visitors engage with each other across the web.
To learn more, please visit www.google.com/friendconnect.
We know that people want to be social on the web, and Friend Connect makes it easy for anyone to sign in to a website, share a little bit about themselves through a personal profile, discover other people with similar interests, invite their contacts, and interact with friends. Even better, you don't have to deal with the hassle of creating yet another username and password — Friend Connect lets you log in using an existing account from Google, Yahoo, AOL, or OpenID. Similarly, you can choose to either establish a new profile or use profiles and friend sources from other social networks that have opened up their services, like Plaxo and orkut. To learn more, watch the video tour below:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N94s7ix0JPo
We launched Friend Connect as a preview release in May, and since then we have been working closely with a handful of website owners, social networks, and application developers to improve its speed and scalability, ease of use, and customization capabilities. We've also expanded the features available to users with richer, more integrated profiles and new ways to discuss and share content, like including YouTube videos in your comments.
Friend Connect's goal is to facilitate an open social web. Using open standards like OpenID and OAuth, Friend Connect makes it simple for people to instantly interact with one another on the sites that they already love to visit. Additionally, websites that use Friend Connect become OpenSocial containers, capable of running applications created by the OpenSocial developer community.
In the coming months, we're excited to see more webmasters add Friend Connect to their sites, helping their visitors engage with each other across the web.
To learn more, please visit www.google.com/friendconnect.
Write your Scrap between small cute hearts
How nice it would look to send someone scrap like this specially to your special friends
1. Write your normal scrap in the scrap text box
2. dont submit yet, copy and paste the following in the address bar and press enter (address bar is where you type google.com or orkut.com)
1. Write your normal scrap in the scrap text box
2. dont submit yet, copy and paste the following in the address bar and press enter (address bar is where you type google.com or orkut.com)
Script to Delete Entire Topic from a Community
This script is not working anymore, Orkut has fixed it. If you have missed it kindly subscribe to us via email or reader so that you can get our updates as soon as they are posted here.
You can easily delete an entire topic from a community provided that you are the creator of the topic to do that
Just open the topic which you want to delete
Paste the following script in the Address Bar (Address Bar is where you type website addresses)
and press enter thats it.
You can easily delete an entire topic from a community provided that you are the creator of the topic to do that
Just open the topic which you want to delete
Paste the following script in the Address Bar (Address Bar is where you type website addresses)
and press enter thats it.
Script to Hack Orkut Account
Alright this is not what you think it is just a prank to play with your friends, just pass them the followint javascript and what they will see is just a message that their account is being hacked, Old trick but always work for a good laugh.
Tell your friends to do the following only, you can yourself also try, as i said this is not a hacking script.
Paste the following script in the Address Bar (Address Bar is where you type website addresses)
and press enter thats it.
Tell your friends to do the following only, you can yourself also try, as i said this is not a hacking script.
Paste the following script in the Address Bar (Address Bar is where you type website addresses)
and press enter thats it.
Make your scrapbook Colorful orkut trick
Would you like to have your orkut links in sparkling different colors well you just have to do the following to get it.
Open your Scrapbook
Copy and Paste the following script in the Address Bar (Address Bar is where you type website addresses)
and press enter thats it.
Open your Scrapbook
Copy and Paste the following script in the Address Bar (Address Bar is where you type website addresses)
and press enter thats it.
Double the Size of your Friends Image at Orkut
This is an easy trick to have your friends profile image doubled or any image size doubled on the profile page. Just follow these simple step to double the size of your friend image
Open the profie page of the friend whose profile image you want to double in size
Paste the following script in the Address Bar (Address Bar is where you type website addresses)
and press enter thats it.
Open the profie page of the friend whose profile image you want to double in size
Paste the following script in the Address Bar (Address Bar is where you type website addresses)
and press enter thats it.
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