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Wednesday, 28 February 2007

Dell says No to XP, Recommends Virtual PC

Posted on 13:33 by Unknown

My sister-in-law is shopping for a new laptop and has been customizing a nice little unit on Dell.com.  Only problem she’s had is trying to get a system without Windows Vista.  Like many people she’s been happy with XP and isn’t ready to switch.

Unfortunately, Dell only offers Vista on new machines!

Select your operating system on Dell.com

So, I braved the online chat with a Dell representative and asked she could order her system with Windows XP.  The answer was No!  She can’t have XP installed on her new Dell but he recommended downloading Microsoft Virtual PC.  That way she could still create a partition and install Windows XP on it.

Forget getting your new PC without having to install Virtual PC

I went to Gateway.com and asked somone named Shayla the same question. I was much happier with their response.

BillP says:   Hi Shayla, quick question. My sister is looking for a new laptop. Can she still order one with Windows XP installed?
Shayla says:   We do have that as an option on most of our systems
Shayla says:   Would you like me to help you customize a system?
BillP says:   So Microsoft isn't forcing companies like Gateway to push Vista?
Shayla says:   Not yet
Shayla says:   It's recommended but we do have XP as an option for right now

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BCC and Other "old" AOL Secrets

Posted on 08:37 by Unknown

I’ve been seeing BCC or Blind Carbon Copy mentioned a lot lately including a mention in a newsletter from the folks at Cloudeight Information Avenue who included instructions on adding BCC to Outlook Express.

Open Outlook Express (or Windows Mail if you're using Windows Vista) and start a new message. When you're in the message compose window, click "View" and check "All Headers". The BCC line will appear in the message you're now composing and in all future messages unless you go back in to "View" and uncheck "All headers".
Click for more info

Blind Carbon Copy allows you to send the same Email to multiple people, but hides the names and addresses from others receiving your Email.
In most cases, I prefer to use BCC when sending Email to multiple recipients.

It’s a benefit to the sender.
You may not want everyone on the list to know who else you think is important. Perhaps you don’t want your husband to know you still include an old boyfriend’s Email when sending out a dirty joke.

It’s a benefit to your recipients.
You may have given me your personal Email addresses. If I just CC or Carbon copy the Email, everyone else on the list will now know your Email address.
The less people who have your Email address on their computer the better.  If anyone on the list gets infected by some kind of worm, your Email address may be sucked up off their machine into a malware database.

It’s a benefit to the world.
Using BCC saves less informed people from making the mistake of clicking on “Reply All” and sending their response to everyone on the list. This has been known to cause an avalanche of Reply-All’s that result in angry “Take me off your $#%& list” responses.

When the basic AOL Email form was first created some 20 years ago there wasn’t room on the form to include a BCC input box. There’s only Send To and Copy To. 

The secret?   Surround the names in your Email list with double parentheses.  On the AOL Email system this is still interpreted as a Blind Copy.

Using Blind Carbon Copy on AOL

While I’m on the topic of AOL secrets, I’m reminded of another undocumented feature we created over 20 years ago and still remains.  Want to temporarily block everyone from sending you an Instant Message?  Send a message, any message to the user name “$IM_off”.  This will put you into a private mode where no one can reach you.  Want to turn it back on?  You can just sign off or send another message to “$im_on”.

You can even include someones screen name so they’ll still see you on their buddy list, but they can’t IM you.  Just use  $im_off screen_name.

 

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Friday, 23 February 2007

Who Owns the Rights to MP3

Posted on 07:54 by Unknown

MP3 LogoIt seems like it happens overnight doesn’t it? Google was suddenly the principal search engine. ZIP became the chief compression tool for downloads. JPG turned into the standard format for cameras and photo files. MP3 developed into the most popular format for storing and listening to music files.

So who owns the rights to the MP3 format? According to a jury in San Diego, Alcatel-Lucent(Bell Labs) holds the patent to MP3. They are so convinced they ordered Microsoft to pay $1.52 Billion in damages for including MP3 in Windows without paying royalties.  Yes, “Billion” isn’t a typo.

As you might guess, Microsoft disagrees with the jury and will seek relief and appeal if necessary.  My guess is they can hold this up in the courts until the patents expire. 

Microsoft thought they had full rights after paying the German based, Fraunhofer Institute $16 million to license MP3 technology. Apparently, the Fraunhofer Institute helped develop MP3 with Bell Labs but key patents were filed by Lucent.  According to MP3Licensing.com the format is owned by Fraunhofer Institute along with Coding Technologies, Agere and Thomson(RCA).  They have a list 453 other licensees who may be the next target of Alcatel-Lucent.

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Wednesday, 21 February 2007

DDoS Attack on CastleCops.com

Posted on 08:21 by Unknown

You know you must be doing something right when the bad guys gang up on you and try to shut you down.  This happen recently to our friends at CastleCops.com. On February 13th, the attack on their servers began and was able to disrupt service for almost a week.

CastleCops recently announced its 5th anniversary with a collection of over $130,000 in security related prizes they plan to giveaway. I even donated 50 WinPatrol PLUS memberships to the celebration. Apparently, someone doesn’t want CastleCops celebrating their success and has generated a worldwide DDoS attack

A DDoS or Distributed Denial of Service attack is orchestrated by bad guys who have infiltrated a large number of computers around the world. Software hidden on machines is used to send millions of requests to a single site in hopes of overwhelming it and preventing normal users getting help. Most folks have no clue that their computers are being used in such attacks.  Forums like Castlecops help normal users identify and get rid of these infiltrations.

Unfortunately, the only solution for folks like Paul and Robin at CastleCops is to pay more to their server provider.  This can become a big expense for forums who provide services thanks to volunteers and donations from users.

I frequently donate to forums like CastleCops.com and I recommend all my friends do the same.  A small donation of $25–$50 can pave the way for hundreds of users to receive help for catastrophic computer problems.  So, if you’re a regular at one of the helpful online forums, show your support today and click on that donate button.

Tags: castlecops, phish, ddos, donations, bots
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Sunday, 18 February 2007

Direct Revenue's Cost of Doing Business

Posted on 10:28 by Unknown

I’ve written about Direct Revenue before including their troubles with New York State’s Attorney General’s office.  No matter what they’re accused of they wiggled their way around it and accept a little slap on the hand now and then.

Last week Direct Revenue settled with the Federal Trade Commission to the tune of 1.5 million in “ill-gotten gains”. 

“Federal Trade Commission charges that they used unfair and deceptive methods to download adware onto consumers’ computers and then obstruct them from removing it, in violation of federal law.

In addition, the FTC charged that DirectRevenue deliberately made it difficult to identify, locate, and remove the adware once it was installed.”

Kudos to commissioner Jon Leibowitz who was the only one of five to vote against the settlement.  Commissioner Leibowitz pointed out ‘…it apparently leaves DirectRevenue’s owners lining their pockets with more than $20 million from a business model based on deceit.”

In my business about 5% of any sale goes to PayPal or other credit processing companies. It’s one of the costs of doing business.  For Direct Revenue, there’s the similar cost of doing business but in their case, it’s something that is unethical and illegal. 

Until the FTC steps forward and padlocks the doors of these companies, more business’s will be created with model’s based on deceit.

Read More…
BusinessWeek: The Plot to Hijack Your Computer

InfoWorld: Adware maker settles with FTC for $1.5M

AdPulp: Pop Ups Popped by Feds

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Thursday, 15 February 2007

Problems with your Book? Call the Helpdesk

Posted on 09:26 by Unknown

PC World’s Steve Bass always seems to find the best of the best. Yesterday, he clued readers in on a new video on YouTube which puts computer support in true perspective.

It’s from a Norwegian show called Øystein & Meg and while you have to read the English subtitles, you’ll easily get the message.  Anyone who has ever done computer support (or needed support) will relate and laugh their butts off. 

 

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Wednesday, 14 February 2007

Vulnerability in Live OneCare and Defender

Posted on 07:05 by Unknown

Yesterday was another “Patch Tuesday” and millions of computers were automatically updated with fixes to critical vulnerabilities found in various Microsoft Windows components.

To many it was just another security update but it was one of the most important updates I’ve seen and one of the most embarrassing for Microsoft.  Click here for more details.  I’m surprised Microsoft didn’t announce a ZunePhone or MicrosoftTV this week to distract the press.

A number of updates were for components used by thousands of non-Microsoft applications.  The ActiveX HTML Help component, the RichEdit Text Control component and even the underlying code for many applications, Microsoft’s Foundation Classes were found to include vulnerabilities.

The most embarrassing has to be a critical vulnerability in the Microsoft’s own Malware Protection Engine.  This reminds me of the company who made bike locks only to discover they could be unlocked by using a ball point pen.

Affected Software:
•

Windows Live OneCare

•  

Microsoft Antigen for Exchange 9.x

•

Microsoft Antigen for SMTP Gateway 9.x

•

Microsoft Windows Defender

•

Microsoft Windows Defender x64 Edition

•

Microsoft Windows Defender in Windows Vista

•

Microsoft Forefront Security for Exchange Server

•

Microsoft Forefront Security for SharePoint

If a scan runs into a specially crafted PDF file, the target computer could allow remote execution of malware.

At this time we haven’t seen any threats using this vulnerability but it’s only a matter of time. I commend Microsoft for their honestly, but computers which have not been updated are at immediate risk. 

This basically tells the bad guys which mat to look under for the keys. If users don’t change the locks by downloading this weeks updates their doors will be wide open. 

 

Tags: vulnerability, patch, onecare, defender, update, MFC
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      • Dell says No to XP, Recommends Virtual PC
      • BCC and Other "old" AOL Secrets
      • Who Owns the Rights to MP3
      • DDoS Attack on CastleCops.com
      • Direct Revenue's Cost of Doing Business
      • Problems with your Book? Call the Helpdesk
      • Vulnerability in Live OneCare and Defender
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