HostsMan - manage your hostsfile

Safin

Forerunner
a very nice freeware... grt for advanced users.

HostsMan is a freeware application that lets you manage your Hosts file with ease.
No Spyware! No Adware! No Malware! 100% Freeware! Clean and simple.
hostsman20beta.jpg

Features:

- online update of hosts file;
- enable/disable usage of hosts file;
- open Hosts file with one click;
- merge two hosts files;
- built-in hosts editor;
- prevent other programs of writing to the hosts;
- scan hosts for errors, duplicates and possible hijacks;
- find how many host names;
- easily install newly downloaded hosts file;
- create encrypted backups of your hosts file;
- resolve host names;
- etc.
What's new in HostsMan 2.0 Beta:

- code optimized;
- added HostsMan Editor;
- added Hosts online update;
- added option to import and merge two hosts files;
- added tool to resolve host names;
- added detection of possible hijacks;
- error detection improved;
- user can now decide what to do when errors and hijacks are found;
- improved 'Find Duplicates' window report;
- automatically protects Hosts on program exit;
- re-added option to maintain main window on top;
- small changes in UI;
- several bugs fixed.

[rank=pwp.netcabo.pt/0413933601/hostsman.html]More Info and Download[/rank]
 
For those wondering wat is a hosts file...here's the answer-
The simple answer:
The short answer is that the Hosts file is like an address book. When you type an address like www.yahoo.com into your browser, the Hosts file is consulted to see if you have the IP address, or "telephone number," for that site. If you do, then your computer will "call it" and the site will open. If not, your computer will ask your ISP's (internet service provider) computer for the phone number before it can "call" that site. Most of the time, you do not have addresses in your "address book," because you have not put any there. Therefore, most of the time your computer asks for the IP address from your ISP to find sites.
The technical answer:
The "Hosts" file in Windows and other operating systems is used to associate host names with IP addresses. Host names are the www.yahoo.com addresses that you see every day. IP addresses are numbers that mean the same thing as the www words - the computers use the numbers to actually find the sites, but we have words like www.yahoo.com so humans do not need to remember the long strings of numbers when they want to visit a site.

For instance, the host name for Yahoo! is www.yahoo.com, while its IP address is 204.71.200.67 Either address will take you to Yahoo!'s site, but the www address will first have to be translated into the IP address. If you type in the IP address directly, your computer will not have to look it up.

A series of steps are used when searching for IP addresses that go with these host names. The first step, and the one that concerns us here, is the hosts file on your local computer. The Hosts file tells your computer what the name is in numbers so the computer can go find it. If the IP address is found in your Hosts file, the computer will stop looking and go to that site, but if it is not it will ask a DNS computer (domain name server) for the information. Since the search ends once a match is found, that provides us with a mechanism to block sites we have no interest in. You may block sites that serve advertisements, sites that serve objectionable content, or any other site that you choose to block.

We can put names and addresses into the Hosts file so your computer does not have to ask a DNS server to translate the domain name into an IP number. This speeds up access to the host site you want to see because your computer no longer has to query other systems on the Internet for the address translation. When you type in a web address like www.yahoo.com, the host name portion of the web address is translated into an IP address before the site is accessed. If you put Yahoo!'s host and IP settings into your Hosts file, it would load a little quicker because your computer doesn't have to ask another to translate where to look for Yahoo!

Computers have a host address of their own - it is known as the "localhost" address, with an IP address of 127.0.0.1 which it uses to refer to itself. If you associate another computer's host name with your localhost IP address, you have effectively blocked that host since all attempts to access it will lead back to you. That is how we will block sites using the Hosts file. We will tell our computer that the IP address of the site we want to block is our own address. That way, our computer will not ever leave and go looking for the site we are blocking - which keeps that site from appearing because the computer thinks it has found the site and displayed it already.
Source: ACCS Net
 
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