Fries and coleslaw in the sandwich.
Number One Best Seller? Iron City Beer, of course!
When you click the Dropbox system tray icon, it may notify you something like, “The [some amount] GB Dropbox promotion you received with [some brand of] device expires in [some number of] days. Upgrade now to Dropbox Pro to keep adding and sharing files.”
Are you concerned about what happens to your existing Dropbox files when the promotion ends?
Here is the explanation found in the Dropbox Help Center:
What happens if my paid account or promotion expires?
If your paid account expires or is downgraded, or the space granted to your account by a promotion expires, all of the files in your Dropbox folder will still be available to you on your computers, phones, and via the Dropbox website. However, Dropbox will stop syncing the files in your account if your usage is now over your new quota. This means that new files added to your Dropbox won’t sync to other computers or be available online until the amount of space used in your Dropbox drops below the amount of available space in your account.
For example, if you have a 1 TB Pro account with 800 GB of data and you decide to downgrade to a Basic 2 GB account, your files will stop syncing because you don’t have available storage space in your account. In this case, you’ll probably want to upgrade your account to ensure all of your files are syncing again.
This article is for installing printer drivers and configuring a Windows 10 Technical Preview PC for printing to LAN-Shared HP LaserJet 2300 Series Printer that is connected and installed on a USB Port of a Windows XP PC and shared on a LAN from the XP PC. The Windows Technical Preview machine (that is, the Windows 10 PC) wants to use this remote printer shared from the XP PC, but the add printer wizard mechanisms on Win 10 refuses to install it as it searches but can’t find an appropriate driver on the Windows Update. And, even if you visit the HP support site and download the 32 or 64 bit Universal drivers for Win 8.1, this does not provide the necessary *.inf or printer drivers to connect to the remotely shared printer.
Here is the Fix or Work Around:
You should now have a working printer!
Windows 10 treats the Printer Device on the newly installed Port like its a local printer, but you have redirected it to the LAN shared printer connected to the USB port of the XP machine.
Print a test page. Set the 2300 as your default printer on Windows 10.
This fix is derived from the Microsoft Tech Net Forum answer proposed by Nic Bunting with regard to a Windows 7 install, posted on Monday, April 26, 2010, 11:52 AM. See Forum Thread at:
social.technet.microsoft.com/Forums/
Apparently, something similar now works for the Windows Technical Preview.