tekniaxp.com

January 18, 2007

Even if Adobe Software was free…

Filed under: Public Service Announcement, tech — admin @ 11:40 pm

Adobe Software can be replaced by free software and eliminate many annoyances. Besides Acrobat Reader being handily replaced by FoxIt Reader PhotoShop can be replaced by GimpShop instead of paying for an upgrade for PhotoShop as you move to Vista.

The Simple Dollar Quote:
“I see no reason to ever go back, even if Photoshop were free.”

GIMPShop Replaces Adobe Photoshop

This is a version of the GNU Image Manipulation Program that does a pretty solid job of imitating Adobe Photoshop - a regular user of Photoshop (like me) can adapt to it quite quickly. It’s very richly featured and runs quite well - in fact, I see no reason to ever go back, even if Photoshop were free.

December 10, 2006

CES 2007 Consumer Electronics Coverage

Filed under: tech — admin @ 4:37 am

Many of you have wondered about our coverage of CES 2007 this year and our focus will be GPS Fleet Management tools and Home Automation Products and usage.

GPS Fleet Management
It looks like the GPS equipment manufacturers have achieved fair pricing levels for their products so that most businesses can take advantage of this emerging GPS technology as GPS equipment prices have continued to fall and are now in the $400 - $500 range for a unit that will be a good tool for managing people, vehicles and assets.

GPS Fleet Management systems still suffer from usability issues but on-line tracking prices have stabilized in the $30 - $90/month/unit range. The lower pricing is for checking asset location; higher pricing is for constant tracking and dispatch features used by towing, taxi or limo companies.

Last year at CES we saw overpriced equipment and service rates. This year we hope to find ‘asset tracking’ and GPS Fleet Management tools for people that are serious about tracking and managing their wandering assets. We think that GPS Equipment and online tracking has the potential to become one of the most cost effective management tools for small business fleets ever sold or imagined.

Businesses are demanding sensible features and maybe the lights are beginning to go off for some of these GPS vendors. There is finally some acknowledgment that this technology can do more than remotely unlock a car or give someone directions to the nearest restaurant. Not only are these features un-necessary for business owners to have, they are expensive to staff and the features raise the installation costs of GPS units.

We feel that business owners that have a few trucks in their service fleet need less features but better reporting that the current GPS Fleet management offerings. We will be looking for initial service plans that have full time tracking plans for 2 - 3 months then allow you to back-off to a cheaper plan for maintenance, monitoring and theft recovery.

A normal business GPS equipment install should take a half-hour or less. Complicating the install with remote shut-off (not-recommended) or door un-lock can add $150 - $300 to the install cost, not to mention the down-time of your equipment.

GPS Equipment Installation is pretty straightforward and with equipment that takes advantage of your standard ODB Port Installation can take as little as 20 minutes so beware some of the looks you get as the service rep estimates $400 and half a day with a raised eye-brow to justify his price.

No joke $400, use your imagination to figure out which national installer of automotive accessories gave us that bid with a straight face but when challenged, the manager ran out and said, ‘Oh, we could do it for our standard shop rate of $60/hour if you prefer.’ We said, ‘We would prefer a better bid and we’ll get back to you…’

Home Automation Products
We are thrilled with our Control 4 Home Automation system and will compare Control4 to other vendors as CES approaches. More later…

December 9, 2006

Definition: Editor in Chief

Filed under: tech — admin @ 3:32 am

The official ‘Editor in Chief’ for all tekniaXP websites is tekniaXP and
the focus of such articles is high-tech and consumer electronics. From
time to time we write articles to guide people through the tech maze and
voice a common sense opinion about new products.

tech quest | conquer tech

According to info from Wikipedia ‘The Free “Online” Encyclopedia’

Editing
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Topics in Journalism
Professional Issues

Ethics & News Values
Objectivity & Attribution
News Source & Libel Law
News & Investigation
Reporting & Writing
Business & Citizen
Alternative & Advocacy
Sports Journalism
Science Journalism
Computer and video game journalism

Journalism Education & Fourth Estate
Other Topics & Books
Social Impact

Infotainment & Celebrity
‘Infotainers’ & Personalities
News Management
Distortion & VNRs
PR & Propaganda Model
‘Yellow’ Journalism
Press freedom
News media

Newspapers & Magazines
News Agencies
Broadcast Journalism
Online & Blogging
Alternative Media Roles

Journalist, Reporter, Editor, News presenter, Photo Journalist, Columnist, Visual Journalist

From Wikipedia ‘The Free Encyclopedia’:

Editing is the process of preparing language, images, or sound for presentation through correction, condensation, organization, and other modifications. A person who edits, especially professionally or as a hobby, is called an editor.

August 10, 2006

Online Teen Shoppers May Miss Fraud Signs

Filed under: Public Service Announcement, web/weblogs — admin @ 9:44 pm

Yahoo! News

By DAVID KOENIG, AP Business Writer Fri Dec 23, 8:42 PM ET

DALLAS - Online shopping is booming and many marketers are targeting teens, a combination of trends that raises troubling issues for young shoppers during this holiday season.

Teens often overlook extra charges, such as shipping, that add to the cost of products, and might not detect offers that look too good to be true, says Rebecca Whitener, chief risk officer for Plano-based Electronic Data Systems Corp.

Many teens know more than their parents about using the Internet but “they don’t have as much experience recognizing fraud,” said Whitener, who often lectures at schools.

Whitener said teens tend to be looser than adults with passwords, often sharing them with friends, and may be less hesitant to question why a Web site asks for personal financial information, which could open them up to identity theft.

July 13, 2006

Unreal developer says Intel integrated graphics bad for gaming | TG Daily

Filed under: tech — admin @ 8:19 am

Unreal developer says Intel integrated graphics bad for gaming | TG Daily
Unreal developer says Intel integrated graphics bad for gaming

Humphrey Cheung

July 12, 2006 18:55

Brighton (UK) - Mark Rein, vice president of Unreal studio Epic, told a packed audience of game developers that Intel’s integrated graphics is bad for the gaming industry. The surprising statements were given in a keynote speech titled “Avoiding the Pitfalls of the Next Generation,” which kicked off the four-day Developer’s Conference.

Rein said integrated graphics is not good enough to play the latest games and that “We would all be better off,” if Intel exited the graphics market.

June 28, 2006

RFID tags spy on bartenders

Filed under: tech — admin @ 10:25 am

RFID tags spy on bartenders

RFID tags spy on bartenders

Do you know how much money is lost in annual sales of liquors in the US? Capton, a provider of liquor-monitoring technology, estimates that $7 billion is lost from bartenders. The RFID Journal reports that the company has developed the Beverage Tracker system currently tested at a Las Vegas Hotel-Casino which uses tags to keep tabs on liquor. The system, which consists of RFID-enabled liquor spouts, an RFID reader and proprietary software, costs between $10,000 and $20,000, but can save $90,000 per year for an average bar. This might be true, but how many bartenders will lose their jobs because of this system by offering free drinks? Read more…

Here is the opening paragraph of the RFID Journal article.

Treasure Island, a Las Vegas hotel and casino, has installed a system utilizing RFID to track the amount and type of liquor its bartenders pour. The system has been in operation at two of the hotel’s bars for the past month and will soon be added to two more.

This Beverage Tracker software has been developed by Capton, a company based in San Francisco. And here is how the system works.

The Beverage Tracker consists of RFID-enabled liquor spouts, an RFID interrogator (reader) and software. The spouts contain a battery-powered 418 MHz RFID tag and a measuring device. Whenever a bartender pours a drink, the tipping of the bottle turns on both the tag and the measuring device, allowing the spout to measure the volume of liquor poured (in ounces) before the employee tips the bottle back up. The tag then transmits that information to the interrogator’s antenna, attached to the ceiling above the bar.

May 26, 2006

Samsung Still Bans Its Own Hot New Phones From The Office

Filed under: tech — admin @ 6:02 pm

Techdirt: Samsung Still Bans Its Own Hot New Phones From The Office
Samsung Still Bans Its Own Hot New Phones From The Office
from the leave-’em-at-home dept

Three years ago, just as plenty of companies started freaking out about the so-called “dangers” of cameraphones in the workplace, we found it amusing that cameraphone (among other things) maker Samsung had banned cameraphones in the workplace. In other words, employees couldn’t even bring the company’s own product to work. While there were many similar announcements around that time, we hadn’t heard too many similar stories lately. The hope was that companies were calming down and recognizing that it was both silly and pointless to completely ban cameraphones in the workplace. Apparently, not everyone has figured this out. Samsung is still banning some of their own phones in the workplace. This time, it’s the new SCH-B570 because it comes with an 8 GB hard drive that the company is afraid will be used to swipe confidential information. Of course, we’ve discussed in the past just how pointless such restrictions are. There are so many ways to get confidential data off a computer. Banning portable hard drives throws out plenty of baby with just a little bath water. Anyone who’s serious about taking confidential corporate info will figure out a way to do so. Completely banning phones with hard drives due to the fear of potential espionage goes way too far, punishing everyone to stop a risk that won’t be stopped anyway. Of course, it also makes you wonder, if they’re so concerned with it in the workplace, wouldn’t they assume others would be as well — therefore drastically shrinking the potential market for such phones?

Vonage future looks troubled | CNET News.com

Filed under: tech — admin @ 5:42 pm

Vonage future looks troubled | CNET News.com
Vonage future looks troubled
By Marguerite Reardon
Staff Writer, CNET News.com
Published: May 26, 2006, 4:00 AM PDT
Tell us what you think about this storyTalkBack E-mail this story to a friendE-mail View this story formatted for printingPrint

news analysis After a difficult two days as a publicly traded company, Internet telephony provider Vonage Holdings has a tough road ahead as it faces mounting losses, increased competition and potential shareholder lawsuits.

On its first day of trading on the New York Stock Exchange, shares in the company slid to $14.85, almost 13 percent below the initial offering price of $17. Losses continued on Thursday as shares closed at $13. Many on Wall Street have predicted the stock could finish the week in single digits.

Thanks. No.

Filed under: Public Service Announcement — admin @ 5:12 pm

Thanks. No.
Thanks. No.

Hi. The person who sent you this link is a friend who likes you a lot but who wants you to respect their email address, their privacy, and their time.

Chances are, this person asked you to visit this page because you did one of these things:

* Forwarded a funny story, a virus warning, or a photo that you enjoyed
* Sent email to lots of people using the “To:” line (instead of the “BCC:” line), thereby exposing your friend’s email address to strangers
* CC’d your friend unnecessarily on something you had sent primarily to someone else

December 29, 2005

Fixing Your Network’s Five Worst Bottlenecks

Filed under: tech — admin @ 5:09 am

Networking Pipeline
November 14, 2005

Got a bogged-down, sluggish network? The problem likely isn’t that you’ve outgrown your infrastructure — you have some serious bottlenecks. Here’s how to fix your network’s five biggest bottlenecks.

By Matthew Friedman Networking Pipeline

It’s so plaintive that it can be heartbreaking: “Why is the network so sloooooowwww?” plead users in just about every organization in North America. The inability of a network to keep up with the expectations and demands of its users seems, at times, to be the defining characteristic of networks.

“Everyone, at some point, complains that the network is too slow,” Info-Tech Research analyst Carmi Levy says. “Very often, organizations think that they’ve outgrown their network, without considering that the real problem is that it’s a bottleneck,” that is causing the problem.

Indeed, network bottlenecks are so common that they’re almost a fact of life. And because of the nature of the problem, many organizations simply fail to address the problem, choosing instead to simply throw money at upgrades and hope for the best. “It’s not usually a big-bang problem,” Levy says. “Organizations aren’t experiencing massive bottlenecks that compromise their ability to do business.

But they are experiencing slowdowns that can often stimulate unnecessary spending, and that can affect the bottom line. “Instead of dealing with the problem, companies often just go out and buy new stuff. That’s spending inefficiently because they’re not doing a cause analysis.”

And without taking a close look of the fundamental causes, the bottlenecks are unlikely to go away, no matter how much money you throw at them. The key to really solving the issue of course, is to know where to look and, although there is a staggering variety of them, some kinds of bottlenecks are both more common and more pressing than others.

1. Poorly Tuned Servers: While it’s easy to think of the network solely in terms of the plumbing, it’s important to remember that its purpose is to move data around, and where that data reside can be a big source of network slowdowns. “The problem is that servers are being asked to do more than ever before,” Levy says. “They’re handling all kinds of data and applications and multiple layers of traffic, and they’re expected to do it all well.”

The key to server performance is to understand just what it is that you expect each server to do, and set them up accordingly. Despite the promises of out-of-the-box performance, the real world is never quite that simple. “You have to configure for optimum performance for every job that every server is supposed to do,” Levy says. “It’s can be time consuming, particularly is you’re running a whole lot of servers, but the network performance gains are worth the effort.”

2. Constellations of Appliances: Every network function, it seems, has been condensed into an appliance, and that can be a problem. “There are more devices on networks today than ever,” Levy says. “Every time we need some kind of new functionality, we toss new stuff on the pile.”

Security appliances, firewalls, Blackberry servers, the Google search appliance: Each appliance that does what used to be managed in software adds processing time to the network signal. “Vendors are selling a solution in a box,” Levy says. “That can screw up your network balance. It’s worse that it was, and it’s only going to get worse.”

The solution is to decide what you can do without and what you can leave to servers. Appliances can be very useful and convenient but, Levy says, when the short-term fix contradicts long-terms goals like network performance, you have a problem. “Slipping a best-of breed solution to address tactical issues only make sense if it doesn’t run counter to long-term needs,” he says. “That’s why you have to stop and think ‘Do I need this device?’”
3. Improper Segmentation: Network performance wasn’t a major issue when you had relatively few users and devices using relatively few resources. But the increasing demand placed on networks has made the plug-it-in-anywhere approach a recipe for bottleneck frustration.

“This is an increasing issue, especially as we’ve become more security conscious and have to set up secure zones,” Levy says. “But a lot of networks are built without a roadmap, so they’re either not properly segmented, or not segmented at all.”

The idea, of course, is that network performance will only suffer when everyone’s traffic is running over the whole network. If the graphics department is doing some heavy rendering, there’s no reason for all of that traffic to clog up the accounting department. Better to give the arty guys their own little patch of Ethernet than have them take over the whole company.

“It’s important to invest in areas that need performance and segmenting them away from areas that don’t,” Levy says. “This is about planning and executing your network as efficiently as possible. You don’t need to build a superhighway to get to the grocery store.”

4. Misbehaving applications: Even if the plumbing is optimized to within an inch of its life, there’s always the danger that your network applications are bigger, more bloated, and more inefficient than they need to be. Anything that runs on the network affects its efficiency, and anything that uses the network inefficiently will have serious performance consequences.

“The sad truth is that a lot of application developers develop applications without understanding, or sometimes not caring, what their impact will be on the network,” Levy says. “Those applications steamroll everything else. A sales force automation application that synchronizes a database by moving the whole database over the wire is going to cause problems. There are more efficient ways to do these things, and applications that don’t do things efficiently are going to cause huge bottlenecks.”

It’s important, then, to try before you buy. Levy says that the promises and benefits of a new application have to be weighed against its network impact, and the only way to measure that is to test it out. “This sis something you need to consider before deploying an application,” he says. “Do you have a testing network where you can analyze network functionality before deployment? You should.”

5. Bad Security: Apart from the very real dangers to your corporate data itself, security is very much a performance issue. “Have you ever tried to run anything on a network where the PCs are running as a zombie net?” Levy asks. “It’s a lesson in frustration.”

With keyloggers reporting home, adware pulling in graphics and data from the Internet and spam clogging mail servers — none of which add anything to your business — you can have a very big performance problem. “Insufficient security does lead to the inefficient use of business and network resources,” Levy says. “It bleeds them dry.”

Whether any of these issues are at the root of an organizations network bottleneck woes is hard to say. However, Levy says that the only way to start to answer the question is to start looking at how the network actually works, and whether there are problems that can be fixed through good management practices rather than technology.

The biggest bottleneck is the lack of proactive network administration. “Before you throw money at anything, you need to do a protocol analysis, and know what’s happening on the network that you have,” Levy says. “Connect sniffers, understand where the traffic is coming from. You can’t manage your network unless you know how its performing, and that should be how you guide your efforts. If that analysis says ‘yeah, we’re at capacity,’ then you can go shopping for new hardware.”

The Worst Network Security Horror Stories

Filed under: current — admin @ 4:55 am

December 19, 2005

Think you’ve had security problems? You ain’t heard nothing yet. We asked the pros to tell us some of the worst disasters they’ve faced.

Here’s what they told us.

By Matthew Friedman
Networking Pipeline

If there’s a law of network security, it is that disasters happen. However, some disasters are worse than others, both because of the causes and the consequences of the error. When the Canadian Air Miles loyalty card exposed subscribers’ personal information on an unprotected website directory in 1999, the situation was a horror story both because the privacy of 50,000 consumers was compromised, but also because it was such a stupid error.

“Dumb mistakes are so common, but the problem is that you don’t have to be dumb to make a mistake,” says Justin Peltier, senior security consultant at Peltier Associates in Detroit. “Once system complexity gets to a certainly level, mistakes are virtually inevitable, and it’s the mistake and not the hacker that’s going to get you. Even then, defenders have to be right all the time, while attackers only have to be right once.”

Although organizations that handle sensitive data — which is to say, virtually all organizations — have become more security savvy in the last few years, the cost of network carelessness continues to be substantial. Unfortunately, the kind of perfection that Peltier refers to is probably impossible. Accidents happen, and doors are left open despite the best intentions of even the most security-aware companies.

The biggest security horror story in recent memory was last spring’s CardSystems breach that exposed the credit card and bank account information of 40 million consumers. The company dotted all of its information “i’s” and crossed all of its technological “t’s” but a hacker was still able to get at them. CardSystems “had passed all their audits, so they thought they were okay,” says Peter Stapleton, director of Computer Associates eTrust Security Management. “The problem was that the audit was very network oriented; it wasn’t an audit of the process vulnerabilities.”

CardSystems had to make the effort because of the sensitive nature of its data, but companies that don’t deal with millions of credit card numbers can often forget that even their data are sensitive. Together with a lack of technological savvy, that can be a recipe for disaster. Peltier recalls installing a firewall at a Midwestern industrial equipment manufacturer and supplier in 2001. The company was still paper-based at the time, so none of its critical systems were then online.

Three years later, the company had networked virtually all of its processes. Unfortunately, it had left those processes swinging in the digital wind. “The old network administrator had left at that point, and he hadn’t given the passwords for the firewall to the new administrator,” he says. “As a result, then couldn’t configure the firewall, but because they were networking more processes, they just decided to put everything out on the raw Internet.”
While the company’s vulnerability is particularly horrific because it showed a blatant ignorance of the basic principle of network security, some problems are ghosts in the machine. Some are mundane, like the apocryphal web-based company benefits system that is secured by secure sockets layer (SSL), but allows users to click the browser “back” button to see what had been entered in previous forms.

While that kind of bad code can have catastrophic consequences to the bottom line, Peltier notes that, in this age of “networked everything,” ill-considered products and network configurations can lead to profoundly disturbing situations. One of the scariest situations he has confronted, involving a petrochemical company’s catalytic equipment, could have been a disaster of truly horrific proportions.

The catalyst featured a network link to the manufacturer to permit periodic monitoring and maintenance. While this was certainly a boon to the company – which could count on an extended warranty and periodic upkeep — the network connection itself was a potential problem that, fortunately, never materialized. “The manufacturer would come in over the network over an unauthenticated telnet system,” Peltier recalls. “That’s wide open, and you’re not just dealing with a security issue if someone decides to change the equipment’s operating temperature. This could have been a bomb!”

Ultimately, the bottom line is that, when dealing with their networks, organizations have to know everything. The testing of new systems and equipment is key, but so too is the attitude toward knowledge. Peltier says that the truly knowledgeable network administrator is the person who keeps asking questions. “The moral is that, if you don’t know, ask,” he says. “And if you don’t know what questions to ask, ask someone who does. No one has all the answers, and there’s nothing worse than fake knowledge. Ignorance about your systems will jump up and bite you.”

December 26, 2005

Yahoo Upgrades Widget Engine

Filed under: web/weblogs — admin @ 11:42 pm

Apple Users have had this on their desktops… forever. Yea, now the rest of us can play. Widgets are awesome!
Yahoo! News
By Antone Gonsalves
InternetWeek Mon Dec 12, 2:21 PM ET

Yahoo Inc. (Nasdaq:YHOO - news) on Monday launched a new version of its widget engine, the portal’s platform for running mini desktop applications built by Yahoo or third-party developers.

Along with the release of Yahoo Widget Engine 3.0, the Sunnyvale, Calif., company also unveiled nine new applications that run on the platform, which is available in a Windows and Mac version. The engine is offered at no charge on the company’s Web site.

A widget is a small application that runs on the desktop without the use of a browser. The software often draws content from a Web service. Yahoo, for example, offers widgets that are tied to its search, photo and mapping services.

Mom Fights RIAA on Her Own

Filed under: current — admin @ 9:28 pm

See tekniaXP News for more articles on how we are losing our legitimate digital rights.
Mom Fights Downloading Suit on Her Own - Yahoo! News
Mom Fights Downloading Suit on Her Own

By JIM FITZGERALD, Associated Press Writer Mon Dec 26, 3:26 AM ET

WHITE PLAINS, New York - It was Easter Sunday, and Patricia Santangelo was in church with her kids when she says the music recording industry peeked into her computer and decided to take her to court.
ADVERTISEMENT

Santangelo says she has never downloaded a single song on her computer, but the industry didn’t see it that way. The woman from Wappingers Falls, about 80 miles north of New York City, is among the more than 16,000 people who have been sued for allegedly pirating music through file-sharing computer networks.

“I assumed that when I explained to them who I was and that I wasn’t a computer downloader, it would just go away,” she said in an interview. “I didn’t really understand what it all meant. But they just kept insisting on a financial settlement.

Video Game Sheds NFL License, Gets Violent

Filed under: current — admin @ 9:11 pm

unreal teknia - Game News
Video20Game20Sheds20NFL20License2C20Gets20Violent20-20Yahoo20News
By20NATHANIEL20HERNANDEZ2C20Associated20Press20Writer20Sun20Dec20252C2033A1220PM20ET0D0A0D0ACHICAGO20-20In20a20gritty20new20video20game20about20a20fictional20football20league2C20players20cripple20their20opponents2C20gamble20and20use20performance-enhancing20supplements.0D0AADVERTISEMENT0D0A0D0A22Blitz3A20The20League2220is20able20to20feature20the20graphic20violence20and20adult20themes20not20usually20seen20in20sports20video20games20because20it20was20produced20without20an20NFL20license20and20the20restrictions20that20carries.0D0A0D0ADeveloped20by20Chicagos20Midway20Games2C2022Blitz2220is20the20first20unlicensed20football20title20to20hit20store20shelves20since20the20NFL20reach20an20exclusive20agreement20a20year20ago20with20Electronic20Arts20Inc.2C20makers20of20the20popular2022Madden20NFL2220franchise.2022Madden20NFL2220and20the20companys20edgier2022NFL20Street2220series20are20both20rated20E20for20everyone.

Yahoo News - By NATHANIEL HERNANDEZ, Associated Press Writer Sun Dec 25, 3:12 PM ET

CHICAGO - In a gritty new video game about a fictional football league, players cripple their opponents, gamble and use performance-enhancing supplements.
ADVERTISEMENT

“Blitz: The League” is able to feature the graphic violence and adult themes not usually seen in sports video games because it was produced without an NFL license and the restrictions that carries.

Developed by Chicago’s Midway Games, “Blitz” is the first unlicensed football title to hit store shelves since the NFL reach an exclusive agreement a year ago with Electronic Arts Inc., makers of the popular “Madden NFL” franchise. “Madden NFL” and the company’s edgier “NFL Street” series are both rated E for everyone.

November 27, 2005

It’s your intellectual property — it’s not your computer.

Filed under: web/weblogs — admin @ 12:16 am

Bush Administration to Sony: It’s your intellectual property — it’s not your computer.
It’s your intellectual property — it’s not your computer.

By Richard Menta 11/12/05

Sony knew they were dead in the water when the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) admonished them on the CD rootkit scandal - at a Chamber of Commerce event on combating intellectual-property theft. According to Brian Krebs of the Washington Post the Department of Homeland Security’s assistant secretary for policy, Stewart Baker, made at the event “a remark clearly aimed directly at Sony and other labels”:

“It’s very important to remember that it’s your intellectual property — it’s not your computer. And in the pursuit of protection of intellectual property, it’s important not to defeat or undermine the security measures that people need to adopt in these days.

Sony’s rootkit mess: the story continues

Filed under: current — admin @ 12:14 am

» Spyware Confidential | ZDNet.com

Posted by Suzi Turner @ 10:34 pm

This story just keeps on giving and giving. Spyware expert Ben Edelman has some thoughts on how Sony could clean up its mess. Ben includes illustrations of how Sony could notify customers with DRM protected (infected) CDs and demonstrates with screenshots and packet logs.

ZDNet blogger David Berlind has an update including a note about several artists who are outraged with Sony and worried about fans’ reactions. David also has links back to 2001 about copy-protected CDs and how history repeats itself. A reader posted a link to this Yahoo! news story about how Sony may have contributed to the demise of DRM.

How to stop ‘Active Scripting’ in home PCs

Filed under: web/weblogs — admin @ 12:08 am

C2BB20How20to20stop20Active20Scripting20in20home20PCs207C20George20Ou207C20ZDNet.com
How20to20stop20Active20Scripting20in20home20PCs0D0APosted20by20George20Ou20402043A2820am0D0A0D0AA20supercritical20zero-day20IE20flaw20has20been20released20in20to20the20wild20by20a20reckless20British20company.2020There20are20no20patches20available20as20of20112F222F2005.2020Here20is20what20you20can20do20now20to20protect20yourself.2020You20must20disable2022Active20Scripting2220on20all20Windows20computers20running20Internet20Explorer205.520or206.020even20if20you20have20Windows20XP20SP220installed.0D0A0D0AOpen20Internet20Explorer20and20hit20the2022Tools2220menu20and20click2022Internet20options22.2020Jump20to20the2022Security2220tab2C20highlight2022Internet2220and20click2022Custom20Level22.

How to stop ‘Active Scripting’ in home PCs
Posted by George Ou @ 4:28 am

A supercritical zero-day IE flaw has been released in to the wild by a reckless British company. There are no patches available as of 11/22/2005. Here is what you can do now to protect yourself. You must disable “Active Scripting” on all Windows computers running Internet Explorer 5.5 or 6.0 even if you have Windows XP SP2 installed.

Open Internet Explorer and hit the “Tools” menu and click “Internet options”. Jump to the “Security” tab, highlight “Internet” and click “Custom Level”.

July 1, 2005

Suspected file-swappers arrested in global raid

Filed under: tech — admin @ 2:46 am

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Police in a dozen countries have seized computers and made arrests in a raid of groups that illegally copied more than $50 million worth of software, movies, music and video games, U.S. and Dutch authorities said on Thursday.

Investigators across the globe conducted 90 searches in an effort to disrupt the sophisticated “warez” groups that are responsible for the vast majority of copyrighted material that is available illegally online.

The 22 groups distributed “Star Wars Episode III: Revenge of the Sith,” Adobe Systems Inc.’s (Nasdaq:ADBE - news) Photoshop software, and hundreds of other well-known titles that had been stripped of their copy protection, the U.S. Justice Department said.

Four people were arrested in the United States and three more in the Netherlands, authorities in those countries said.

June 1, 2005

Yahoo Unveils PhotoMail

Filed under: tech — admin @ 9:42 pm

PC Mag

Yahoo Unveils PhotoMail
05.25.05

By Libe Goad

Yahoo on Wednesday introduced its new PhotoMail feature, a free Yahoo! Mail add-on designed to give users an easier way to share photos via e-mail.

The company will begin public beta testing Wednesday and will roll out the feature via viral marketing over the next few weeks.

“We also know from listening to our consumers it is still too difficult [to send photos through e-mail],” said Andy Spillane, vice president of Yahoo Mail. “The idea of being able to locate photos, figuring out how to attach them, [and] worrying about if they’re too large to be sent [or] too large to be received on the other end is standing in the way of sharing photos.”

May 4, 2005

Spying on the spyware makers | Tech News on ZDNet

Filed under: tech — admin @ 8:54 pm

Spying on the spyware makers | Tech News on ZDNet

Spying on the spyware makers
By Declan McCullagh, CNET News.com
Published on ZDNet News: May 4, 2005, 4:42 AM PT

SAN FRANCISCO–Ben Edelman may be spyware’s most dangerous enemy.

The 25-year-old researcher has spent years analyzing how spyware and adware programs work and disclosing his findings publicly. That often results in red faces and, occasionally, lawsuit threats from companies like WhenU and Claria, formerly known as Gator.

When testing spyware and adware, Edelman isn’t about to sacrifice his own Windows XP computer. So he uses the VMware utility to create a virtual Windows box.

“I infect the hell out of it,” he says. “It destroys the infected machine.”

A law student at Harvard University, Edelman also is completing a doctoral degree in economics. CNET News.com caught up with him on after he spoke at a conference Here sponsored by CNET News.com sister site, Download.com.

Repair XP

Filed under: tech, current — admin @ 9:06 am

Repair XP
Repair XP

Following are my experiences with repairing XP. I will not assume any responsibility for problems that may occur to your system from using any of these suggestions. It is always prudent to backup important data before you make any changes to your operating system.

Windows Update Site Problems - Jupiter Jones MS MVP
How To Uninstall SP2 Using the Recovery Console - S Raj Kumar Rathi (scroll to August 17, 2004)
How To Use The Automatic Recovery Feature to Recover From a Bad SP2 Install - Microsoft
How To Remove SP2 using a Repair Install
How To Access Safe Mode
How To Access Last Known Good Config
How To Backup, Edit and Restore the Registry - Microsoft
How To Create a Boot Disk to Start Windows XP
How To Create a Slipstreamed version of XP
Cannot Start Windows XP if the System or Software Hive Is Missing or Damaged - From Kelly Theriot
Password Problems and Windows XP - From Kelly Theriot
How To Fix The Cryptographic Service Error - Fix for “Error:Setup could not verify the integrity of the file Update.inf. Make sure the Cryptographic service is running on this computer”
System Cannot Access CD-Rom, CD-Recorder or DVD Devices
Error Messages After Removing Easy CD Creator from XP
Introduction to using System File Checker - SFC /SCANNOW
SFC (System File Checker) has a problem running - SFC /SCANNOW keeps asking for the XP CD
How to log on to Windows XP if you forget your password
How To Take Ownership of a File or Folder
How To Access Recovery Console
Recovery Console in Windows XP - From Kelly Theriot. This is a must read
How To Backup, Edit and Restore the Registry in XP - Microsoft Knowledgebase Article.
How To Create a Set of Emergency Floppies - If your computer can not boot from a CD-Rom create a 6 floppy disk set that corresponds to your version of Windows XP. Click here for Home Edition Click here for Pro Edition
How To Repair Boot sector
How To Format
How To Partition
How To Exit the Recovery Console
How To Run a Repair Install
How To Uncover Windows XP Product Key
How To Change The Product ID
A better boot diskette for WinNT/2000/XP
Has XP Been Activated?
NTFS Reader for DOS (freeware) - lets you access an NTFS partition from a floppy and copy files off it
Known Issues with Windows XP Service Pack 1
AIDA32 - AIDA32 is a professional system information, diagnostics and benchmarking program running on Win32 platforms. It extracts details of all components of the PC. You can even uncover your Windows XP and Office 2000/XP Product Keys with this freeware app. READ the FAQ!!!
Tweaks&Fixes - From Kelly’s Korner this is a fantastic set of registry hacks and fixes.
NTBackup Is Missing From My OEM version of XP (download)- Some OEMs don’t include NTBackup - Bob Cerelli has it at his site in his Windows XP Tips section
Knoppix - Ok this might appear to be blasphemy on a site dedicated to Windows but if your system is really hosed and you are desperate to get data off the drive then give Knoppix a go. The download is a whopping 700MB but you get an ISO that, when burned to CD, creates a version of Linux that runs directly off the CD and doesn’t require installation to your Hard Drive. With this CD Operating System you can access your NTFS or FAT partitions and with it’s built in CD Burning software copy your important data off the drive . Or if you have a network you can transfer files to another system. This is a must have!

How to access Safe Mode:
Reboot your computer while holding down the F8 Key. At the Advanced Options Menu select the option for Safe Mode and press Enter.

How to access Last Known Good Configuration:
Reboot your computer while holding down the F8 Key. At the Advanced Options Menu select Last Known Good Configuration.

tekniaXP

Filed under: current — admin @ 9:05 am

a web development company located in metro denver, colorado, usa
targeting small businesses snagged in the technology maze,
we offer common sense web solutions,
maximize limited business resources,
enable communication success,
enhance marketing efforts,
conquer technical issues,

eCommerce, weblog, knowledge management
get yours!

tekniaXP
blogteknia.us
tekniaXP Development

March 22, 2005

My new Favorite Map Site: Google Maps

Filed under: Public Service Announcement — admin @ 9:58 pm

Explore Google Maps
Google Maps

Getting from point A to point B just got a lot easier. Google Maps shows you where you want to go — and tells you what you’ll find when you get there.

Now online maps are draggable

Maps are great for getting around, but online maps could be a lot better. So Google decided to make dynamic, interactive maps that are draggable — no clicking and waiting for graphics to reload each time you want to view the adjacent parts of a map. Want to be able to type in the name of a region or neighborhood and see any part of it as easily as with a regular street map? Now you can with Google Maps.

Since these maps are draggable, you can use your mouse or the directional arrows to pan left, right, up and down to see areas that are hidden offscreen. You can also use the slider to zoom in and zoom out.

It’s like having a huge map you can scroll around in.

March 18, 2005

Add Dig to your own pages

Filed under: current — admin @ 11:15 pm


To include your dug items on your own page, just insert the following into your html:

The html written to your page will be organized as follows:
(you can use CSS with the class names to customize the display)

apple
deals
design
gaming
hardware
links
linux/unix
mods
movies
music
robots
science
security
software
technology
digmandigg here!

top users
top stories
digg news
report a bug

kevin rose dot com

Filed under: current — admin @ 11:10 pm

kevin rose dot com
Best Deal Sites On The Web

Here is my list:

http://www.gotapex.com/
http://slickdeals.net/
http://bensbargains.net/
http://cheap.typepad.com/
http://skimper.com/

If I’m missing one, post it in the comments.

March 16, 2005

Hello world!

Filed under: current — admin @ 3:09 pm

tekniaXP

a web development company located in metro denver, colorado, usa
targeting businesses snagged in the technology maze
we offer common sense web solutions
maximize limited business resources
enable communication success
enhance marketing efforts
conquer technical issues
knowledge management
eCommerce

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