How to Silence Your Noisy Computer (and Keep It Cool as a Cucumber)

How to Silence Your Noisy Computer (and Keep It Cool as a Cucumber)
So you've got a kickass computer, but the summer heat means a warmer office, which means a hotter computer, which explains why your computer's been impersonating a jet engine lately. If your computer's generating a bit too much heat and noise, here's how to give its cooling system an overhaul for cool, silent operation.
Whether you have an old desktop or a brand-new home-built machine, you can reduce the noise in a number of ways. What you'll need depends on your case, your hardware, and your own personal preferences, so we'll go through each tweak separately to help you put together the perfect cooling system.

Understanding Heat

Like most electronic devices, your computer heats up when it's in use. Your processor, graphics card, motherboard, and power supply all get hotter the harder they work. Without some sort of cooling system, they'd quickly overheat and fry themselves. So, we traditionally use large metal heatsinks to direct the heat away from those components, and then blow that hot air out of your computer with fans. The problem is, fans can be noisy, and the fans that come with your computer are often cheap, loud, and ineffective.
So, the first step in silencing your computer is improving your cooling. The more efficient your cooling system, the fewer fans you'll need running at full blast. We're going to take a look at hardware that can make your cooling more efficient, fans that run a little bit quieter, and a way to control it all so you can keep it quiet when your computer isn't working hard.

Step Zero: Clean Your Computer

Price: $5

Before you do anything else, make sure your computer is clean and dust-free. If you've had it for more than a year, chances are it's built up some dust on the fans and heatsinks, which will make it run hotter (and thus louder), so grab a $5 can of compressed air and clean that sucker out. When you're done, you may find that it's gotten a little quieter already.

Step One: Get a New Heatsink (or a Water Cooler)

Price: $30-70 for a heatsink, $40-400 for water cooling
How to Silence Your Noisy Computer (and Keep It Cool as a Cucumber)
Some of the loudest components in your computer are the CPU cooler and the fan on your graphics card. Often, the ones that come with your computer are super loud, and they aren't all that great at cooling in the first place. So, one of the best things you can do to keep noise andtemperatures down is to buy an aftermarket cooler. You have two choices: heatsinks and water coolers.
Heatsinks are large, metal constructs that conduct heat away from your hardware and then blow it through a fan to keep everything running cool. Aftermarket heatsinks can be quite inexpensive, costing only $30 for a simple CPU cooler and $43 for a smaller graphics card cooler. If your CPU or GPU fan is very loud, adding a higher quality heatsink with a quiet fan can keep everything much quieter (not to mention much cooler). Photo by Robert Freiberger.
How to Silence Your Noisy Computer (and Keep It Cool as a Cucumber)
If you want to get a little more extreme, you can try water cooling your hardware, which runs water over the components and cools them through a radiator. The radiator still requires fans, but is so effective at cooling that you can often use fewer fans in your case, and run them at lower speeds. We'vetalked about this a bit before, so I won't get into it too much here, but it can be a great alternative to air cooling if you're looking for something quiet. You can use an inexpensive all-in-one cooler like the Corsair Hydro Series, or put together a loop yourself. A homebrew loop will require a lot of maintenance and cost a lot of money (at least $200 or $300), but it will be very effective and very quiet. Photo by Dave Linger.

Step Two: Upgrade Your Fans

Price: $10-$25 per fan
How many fans you choose depends on your case, so you need to take a look at what you have before you go buying fans. Let's take a typical mid tower computer case, for example, with two fan slots in the front, and one in the back. We want the air to follow one path through the system, from front to back. That means we'll use our front fans as intakes, and our back fan asexhaust. Air comes in through the front, blows over your hard drives, then to the rest of your hardware and out through the back. Having the back fan at the top is especially handy since hot air rises, so it will blow out hot air first. Your graphics card and power supply will cool themselves on their own, but it's nice to have some of that cool air flowing over them as well—if you have a side intake fan or bottom intake fan, that can help.
Generally, we recommend setting up your fans for positive air pressure—that is, that you have more fans intaking air than you do exhausing them. This not only cools your graphics card better, but coupled with a few dust filters on your intake fans, it can keep a lot of dust out of your case, since you won't have any air creeping in through the nooks and crannies of your machine:
How to Silence Your Noisy Computer (and Keep It Cool as a Cucumber)
That way, the only air that comes in is air through your filtered intake fans, which keep the majority of dust out. For more information, check out this article on Silverstone's web site.
Your case may have more than three fan slots, so you'll obviously need to adjust this plan based on how many fans your case can take and how many you actually want to use (remember: more fans = more noise, but also better cooling). Once you've figured out how many fans you want, you'll need to research what kind of fans you want. As you browse different products online, you'll want to look at a few things:
How to Silence Your Noisy Computer (and Keep It Cool as a Cucumber)
  • Air Flow: This rating, usually expressed in cubic feet per minute (CFM), is how much air that fan will blow—essentially, how good it is at cooling. The higher the CFM rating, the better it's going to cool down your hardware.
  • Noise Level: Expressed in dBA, this tells you how loud the fan will be at its maximum speed. You'll find fans with 20 dBA of noise or less are very quiet, while fans with 25 or 30 dBA are a bit louder.
  • Size: Fans come in multiple sizes, and each fan slot on your case or heatsink will usually only fit one size fan. So make sure when you're shopping that the size of the fan matches where you're going to put it in your case.
If you know what model fans are currently in your case, look them up online and see what their air flow and noise level ratings are—that way you'll know what you need to look for if you want something quieter or with better cooling.
Lastly, if your case doesn't come with dust filters, grab a few filters for each of your intake fans. This will help you keep dust out of your case, which can make your computer run hot and your fans run loud. If you don't want to spend money on fan filters, you could always use some old pantyhose for a cheap, if janky, solution.

Step Three: Invest in a Fan Controller

Price: $20-$60
How to Silence Your Noisy Computer (and Keep It Cool as a Cucumber)
No matter how you arrange your setup, you'll want some way to control your fans. That way, they'll be silent when your computer is idle, and louder when you need the cooling performance (during intensive processes like gaming or video conversion). If you only have a couple of fans,you may be able to control them automatically, but if you have more than a few fans—or if you just want a bit more control over the noise levels—I can't recommend a fan controller enough. It fits in one of your computer's drive bays and lets you adjust fan speed with physical knobs. Some will even monitor the temperature of your hardware for you, which is pretty handy.

Slidelock Brings Notifications to your Android Lockscreen in an iOS Style

There are quite a lot of lock screen replacement apps on the Play Store with the best one being Cover and Active Notifications. While most other lock screen replacement apps require heavy space to run in the background, there are some cool alternatives like Slidelock which are light and minimal.

Slidelock brings all notifications to your lock screen and shows you the notification content so you don’t need to unlock your screen to dismiss or view any of them. Its minimal interface is inspired from iOS 7.
To get started, you can download the app from the link at the bottom of this post after which you will be asked to enable notification access to the app without which it can not function.
 Up next, you will be able to see a list of apps that exist in your device. You get to choose notifications from which app shouldn’t be shown on the lock screen.
 Once you are done with that, you can customize the content displayed on the lock screen which includes some basic options like the date and time format. You can also choose to enable or disable sound on notifications.

 Once you start seeing notifications on your lock screen, you can swipe left to dismiss a notification, swipe right to view it in the app or tap on the top right button which dismisses all notifications on screen.
Apart from replacing your lock screen, the app also introduces notification banners, which looks something like Windows phone notifications. You can see an example of such notifications from the screenshots above. Tap on the banner to open the notification or swipe it away to dismiss. This does save your time as you don’t need to open the notification bar to access the notification.
You can also enable security lock like a PIN, pattern or face lock when you unlock the screen, however I don’t seem to find the option after the app has been configured once. Probably an update should fix that.

CAPSLOCK,NUMLOCK,SCROLL LOCK TRICK

if u manually want to edit states of ur CAPSLOCK,NUMLOCK,SCROLL LOCKyou just need to edit the registry. Start Regedit Go to HKEY_CURRENT_USER \ Control Panel \ KeyboardOpen InitialKeyboardIndicators Change the value to one of the following number
0 - All Keys off
1 - Caps Lock on
2 - Num Lock on
4 - Scroll Lock on
For multiple keys, add their values:
3 - Caps Lock and Num Lock on
5 - Caps Lock and Scroll Lock on
6 - Num Lock and Scroll Lock on
7 - Caps Lock, Num Lock, and Scroll Lock on
Log off and back on again