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How to create an OpenID and use it ?

openid-logo

OpenID

Fed up with creating new accounts for multiple websites, here comes OpenID for the rescue. It allows you to use an existing account to sign in to multiple websites without ‘sign up’. OpenID replaces the common login process that uses a login name and password for every website.

An OpenID is in the form of a unique URL (e.g., http:\\me.yahoo.com\testid), which is authenticated by the user’s OpenID provider. Some of the websites who supports, allows and provides OpenID are Yahoo, Google, ZOHO, Microsoft, AOL, PayPal, Verisign. The OpenID doesn’t rely on a central authority to authenticate the user. The OpenID protocol leaves the type of authentication to the provider, the authentication forms may include passwords and biometrics.

Let us create a OpenID with Yahoo!

  1. Go to Yahoo OpenID website Yahoo! OpenID
  2. Get Started, login with your Yahoo ID

    Yahoo! OpenID

    Yahoo! OpenID

  3. Now Yahoo will display the OpenID URL (identifier) generated for you

    OpenID generated

    OpenID generated

  4. To create custom identifier click on ‘Show customization Options‘. Check for available identifiers, Yahoo recomends not to use mail id as part of the openID as it may expose our mail id. click on ‘Save My Customization‘.

    Custom OpenID

    Custom OpenID

Let us check how to use the OpenID.

  1. Go to Live Journal, click on ‘Login with OpenID‘ in the login page to open the OpenID login page.livejournal-openid-login
  2. Enter your OpenID and click Login (I don’t have account in Live Journal)
  3. This will forward it to Yahoo, where you need to login with Yahoo ID
  4. Now you have logged into Live Journal using OpenID.

The major advantage of an OpenID is you need not create a new account for every website you visit, instead create an OpenID and use the same account to log into all websites you visit.

Popularity: 8% [?]

Process Explorer

It is a advanced process management utility from Sysinternals. It shows you detailed information about a running process like its icon, Image path, command line, current directory, memory statistics, performance graph, network connections, security, environment and more. You can have a closer look of a running process to see the list of DLLs it has loaded or the operating system resource handles it has open.

This utility can be used as a replacement of the standard Task manager of Windows operating system. Like the task manager, you can kill a process or its tree, see the CPU cycles and memory a process takes.

Download the Process Explorer from Sysinternals.

Open the process explorer to see the list of all running processes, its id…

Process Explorer

Process Explorer

Right click on any running process and select ‘Properties’ to see its properties.

In the properties window you can see the process’s icon, image path, command line, current directory.

Process Properies

Process Properies

The TCP/IP tab shows you the network connection status the selected process has made.

Process Network connection lookup

Process Network connection lookup

Process explorer display consists of two sub windows, the default top window shows you the list of all active processes, while the lower pane is shown by selecting View -> Show Lower Pane or CTRL + L or by clicking onProcess Explorer Show Lower pane button icon.

There is two mode of viewing details of a selected process in the lower pane, they are ‘DLL’ mode and ‘Handle’ mode. You can toggle between these modes by clicking on procexp6 toggle button or View->Lower pane view-> DLLs (CTRL + D) ; View->Lower pane view->Handles (CTRL + H).

If the process explorer in ‘DLL’ mode, the lower pane will show the list of DLLs and memory mapped files the selected process has loaded. If it is in ‘Handle’ mode, the lower pane will show the list of handles the selected process has opened.

The Process Explorer also has a search capability that will quickly show you which processes have particular DLLs loaded or handles opened. The process explorer is useful for tracking down DLL-version problems or handle leaks,and provide deep perception of the way Windows and applications work.

Process Explorer does not require administrative privileges to run.

Popularity: 1% [?]

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