Posts Tagged ‘computer’

KeyScrambler – Anti-keylogging protection

Tuesday, September 1st, 2009


Remember when everyone wanted to keep computer viruses off of computers because they were simply destructive?  There were those that their sole purpose was to wipe data off of your hard drive.  Some were bold enough to fire off a message on your screen, before continually rebooting your computer or other annoying actions.

Then along came spyware, a separate subset of computer viruses.  Their purpose was to look for information on your computer or direct you somewhere on the Internet in order to get data from you.  Spyware does not always want to harm your computer, although it can in the process of trying to extract information from your computer.

One type of spyware that is incredibly harmful, and typically very quiet, is the keylogger.  What keyloggers do is exactly what the name implies, it logs or records your key strokes.  They sit on your computer and watch what you type.  While recording your key strokes, it will send them off to another computer where they are reassembled, usually by criminals, and put into a format they can use.  Think about it, when you pay bills online, if you access your bank account through the Internet, maybe even an email to friends; they may all be recorded.

“Well I have the latest and greatest anti-spyware, anti-virus, and a firewall protecting my computer.” your friend says.  Fair enough, but how often does he or she update their software?  How often is their computer scanned with their security tools?  What type of Internet sites are they visiting?  How apt are they to open email from anyone?  The better question here would be, “What is the harm in having one extra application that encrypts your key strokes, is light on system resources, and is designed in mind to circumvent even

Read more at Source: Online Tech Tips

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Google Chrome Comes Bundled on Sony Laptops

Tuesday, September 1st, 2009

Google said August 31 that Sony is bundling the Chrome Web browser on its Sony laptop computers, the search engine company’s first such bundling deal to help the now one year-old browser reach more users. Sony did not respond to requests for comment but a Google spokesperson confirmed to eWEEK that Sony is bundling Chrome. The spokesperson declined to provide financial details but claimed: “Users’ response to Google Chrome has been outstanding, and we’re continuing to explore ways to make Chrome accessible to even more people.”

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Antique Radio turned into computer case up for sale

Tuesday, September 1st, 2009

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It’s not uncommon to find various case mods that could easily provoke drool from most computer loving people.  However, what is rare is getting the chance to actually buy that item.  Typically the best you can hope for are some extra pictures as well as some vague instructions on how it was done.  Which is fine, but for those that lack creative skills, it’s not going to be helpful.  Well if you love the look of this antique radio turned into a computer, now you can actually purchase it instead of just drool over a few pictures.

The radio itself is a tombstone style Delco radio with a front dial that can be illuminated by the flip of a switch.  The computer can be flipped on by pressing one of the knobs located on the front of the computer.  Of course with purchasing something like this the look isn’t the only thing that there is to consider.  You have the computer itself to worry about as well.  You can see the full listing of what the computer has to offer through the Etsy seller’s web page.  If you should decide everything is up to your standards it’s going to cost you quite a bit to get your hands on one of these.  It’s currently priced at $625 on Etsy.

Source: CoolBuzz


Coolest Gadgets UK – For all your UK centric tech and gadget news.
[ Antique Radio turned into computer case up for sale copyright by Coolest Gadgets ]




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Cerevo’s New Camera Uploads Pictures to Social Media Sites

Tuesday, September 1st, 2009

cerevo_cnet_2If there is one thing that I cannot stand about taking pictures, it is the time-consuming process of uploading them to social media sites. Lately, I have been doing a lot of video footage, and YouTube’s upload system, simple as it is, seems like a middleman just waiting to be eliminated.

Camera companies have been responding to this consumer needs with supposed “YouTube” ready features, but this is not enough. Social media addicts are demanding that their pictures be uploaded to their Facebook and MySpace sites through the camera itself.

This was the subject of a presentation by Cerevo at the CNET Japan Innovation Conference 2009. The company Cerevo plans to release the CerevoCam, a camera with Wi-Fi and 3G, designed so that photos can be easily put on their photo sharing site known as CerevoLife.

It promises to be so good that a consumer could take pictures late at night, then wirelessly transfer them to the Internet. By the time he or she logs onto the Internet in the morning, his or her photos will be on CerevoLife. There is room for about 5GB worth of free space, which is good for 4,000 pictures.

The user can also share pictures on Flickr, Twitter, Picasa, as well as other services. The CerevoCam plans to launch in a few months for about $210, but could launch earlier if things are going well.

Personally, I hope Cerevo perfects their process, and it is imitated by other camera companies. Anything that can relieve me of the USB cable to my computer is always welcome.

Source


Coolest Gadgets UK – For all your UK centric tech and gadget news.
[ Cerevo’s New Camera Uploads Pictures to Social Media Sites copyright by Coolest Gadgets ]




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Voice Recognition in KDE with simon

Tuesday, August 25th, 2009

Over at the dot, they interview Peter Grasch, lead coder of simon. simon provides a unique way of interacting with your computer using voice recognition (not dictation, yet) which integrates well with KDE.

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Wired Warfare in Afghanistan

Tuesday, August 25th, 2009


Sgt. 1st Class Gregory Henson goes out on patrol with a computer on his back and a joystick in his holster. He also carries a rifle, but the military is hoping he’ll soon have less need for it. A wired generation of U.S. soldiers is about to battle-test a high-tech weapon calculated to reduce civilian casualties in Afghanistan. A key component is the “Dragon Egg,” a softball-sized robotic camera that can be thrown over a hill or into a building without endangering troops.

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MSI’s MacBook Air Baiting X-Slim Arrives in US

Tuesday, August 25th, 2009

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In very short order, MSI has gone from a faceless manufacturer of other people’s hardware to a recognized brand that makes some very interesting kit. It started with the little Wind netbook, but now MSI’s MacBook Air-alike, the X-Slim, has come to the US.

The X-Slim is, as the name suggests, thin. At just a shade under an inch thick it’s not MacBook Air thin (0.76 inches) but it’ll slide into a bag easily enough. The five-pound machine also has a 15.6-inch screen (1366 x 768), 320GB hard drive and a hefty 4GB RAM. On top of that it doubles the Air’s number USB ports to two, adds an SD card reader and has both Bluetooth and a webcam. In short. everything you need.

But there’s more. Because there is no built-in optical drive, MSI throws an external one into the box, and there’s also a real graphics card in the shape of the ATI HD 4330 and an HDMI port. The only thing that might put you off is the CPU, and Intel SU3500 running at a stately 1.4GHz. All for $900.

If I was ever in the market for a Windows laptop, I would probably take a close look at this one.

Product page [Amazon. Thanks, Mark!]



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iSuck: Apple’s Five Worst Products, Ever

Tuesday, August 25th, 2009

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Apple, it seems, is all about the hits. The iPod, the iPhone and the MacBook are all phenomenally successful, both as designs and as commercial wins. These highlights, though, lead us to expect a lot of the company, and serve to make the misses stick out all the more. Apple has some embarrassing techno-skeletons in its beautiful white iCloset. Here are five.

The Hockey Puck Mouse

For a company that built itself on the first commercial, mouse-equipped computer, it’s odd that Apple has never made a good mouse. Even the current Mighty Mouse isn’t so mighty, pretending as it does to have just one button while actually sporting two, and inexplicably copying the ThinkPad’s red nipple instead of using a scroll wheel.

But the prize for Worst Mouse Ever goes the the “hockey puck”, which shipped with the original iMacs in 1998. Not only was it ugly, it was hard to hold due to size and shape, and frustrated users with a too-short cord. Rarely for Apple, style not only triumphed over substance, it utterly buried it.

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The iPod Hi-Fi

Apple’s $350 speaker lasted just 18 months before it was taken out back, shot and sprinkled with lime. It was an odd product from Apple, which normally leaves these kinds of accessories to a healthy third-party market. The Bose-designed box had stereo speakers and an iPod dock on the top, and the high price tag and poor performance meant market failure.

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Earbuds

Just like the lack of a good mouse, the dearth of decent headphones from Apple is another paradox. The sound quality may be comparable to or even better than the bundled ‘buds from other manufacturers, but they’ll break, and the $30 Apple wants for a new pair is better spent almost anywhere else.

I have gone through a lot of them, and the longest any set lasted was a few months. This includes the latest, remote and microphone-toting model, which managed to last about six weeks before dying.

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QuickTake

Long before Apple put a terrible camera in the iPhone, it put a terrible camera into a camera: The 0.3-megapixel (640 x 480) Apple QuickTake. The camera had no way to focus, and zooming was done by walking closer to your subject. Neither could you blast away like we do with the digicams of today: The QuickTake 100, built by Kodak, could fit just eight pictures into its 1-MB memory.

The problem was that the market was immature, and the QuickTake was one of the first consumer digicams on the market. Compare this to the successful strategy of Apple since the iPod: Wait until the market has been established, then make a simpler, better product than anyone else.

Photo: Wikimedia Commons

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iTunes

It started so well back in 2001. Apple’s jukebox software was built on the third-party SoundJam which it bought the year before, and was a slick, quick and easy-to-use music player for a long time.

Then Apple decided that iTunes should be the conduit for the iPhone, and kept piling on bloated features. What had started as a pared-down, single-minded and simple application started to sync with Outlook, gained the useless cover flow view and, on the Mac at least, appeared to have a monopoly on the spinning beach-ball of death.

Worse, the iTunes Store, a fantastically user-friendly music store, gained weight in the form of the awful, hard to navigate App Store.

Of course, these days we have a new, simple and fast music app. It’s called Spotify. Apple, though, has shafted itself. The problem with selling a revolutionary device which is an iPod, a cellphone and an internet device, all in one, is that the software to support it needs to be similarly multitasking.

Anything we missed? While these failures are big, we have restricted them to the modern-day Apple, and ignored the Jobs-less wilderness years of beige boxes and overpriced printers. Feel free to add more in the comments.

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i-gotU GT200 Bluetooth GPS Tracker Giveaway

Tuesday, August 25th, 2009

igotu_gt200_gps_travel_loggerThe i-gotU GT200 Bluetooth GPS Data Tracker is a handy little gadget for digital camera users and travelers.

With the i-gotU software, the i-gotU GT200 keeps memory of your own journey by arranging pictures geographically.

It’s a bonus to have with digital cameras and camera phones because the i-gotU software can create a HTML / web file for your friends and families to see the route of your trip on a map and the scenes you have seen will pop up along the route with text introduction.

You can also upload your favorite photos to online Album sites such as Flickr and Picasa in a fast and easy way.

How the i-GotU GT200 Bluetooth GPS Tracker Works:

  • Make sure your digital camera time is correct
  • Power on the GPS Travel Logger outdoors
  • Wait auto-positioning and locate your current position
  • Take the GPS Travel Logger with you when taking photo

Key features of the igotU GT200:

  • Small design with advanced power-saving function
  • Auto-map your photos with GPS location information
  • Compatible with all digital cameras and camera phones, coolest GPS tracking gadget for your journey
  • Organize and present your journey in three-dimensional Google Maps and Google Earth
  • Create and share your live travel blog on-line with all your friends quick and easy
  • 3D Virtual Reality Travel Blogs on @trip are viewable on Windows and Mac computers
  • Share your own @trip journal or your favorite trips with your social networks on Facebook, MySpace, Digg, Delicious, StumbleUpon, Google Bookmarks and Yahoo Bookmarks….etc.
  • Export into multiple file formats (GPX, MHT or KMZ)
  • Automatically upload photos to popular web album like Picasa and Flickr
  • Water-resist hardware design, suitable for rainy days, skiing, water sports
  • Compatible to third party GPS navigation software, can be used as Bluetooth GPS Receiver for your PDA or mobile phone

Hardware specifications:

  • Dimension: 46 x 41.5 x 14 mm
  • Weight: 37g
  • Built-in SiRF StarIII low power chipset
  • Built in GPS Patch Antenna
  • Built-in flash memory. 32000 waypoints
  • Built-in 750mAh Lithium-ion battery
  • 2 LED for tracking and battery / charger status Indication
  • Average acquisition time for cold start: < 60 seconds, warm start: < 38 seconds
  • USB 1.1 interface for PC connection
  • Bluetooth V2.0 EDR Class 2 technology for PDA, mobile phone connectivity
  • Operation temperature: -10 to + 50 degrees centigrade

System requirements:

  • PC with Windows 2000, XP, Vista
  • PC with USB 1.1 or 2.0

i-GotU GT200 Bluetooth GPS Tracker Giveaway Details

We’re giving away 2 units to two of our valuable readers in the next couple of days. If you would like to win one, simply leave a comment below on how you would use the i-GotU GT200 Bluetooth GPS Tracker if you had one. Please post your entry in by Friday the 28th August and two winning comments will be selected by the 29th August, 2009. Go for it!

i-gotU GT200 Bluetooth GPS Travel Logger

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Tags: GPS logger, GPS logging, gps tracker, GPS Tracking, i-gotU, igotU, iGotU GT-200, iGotU GT200



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First Look: Windows 7 Shapes Up as Microsoft’s Best OS Yet

Monday, August 17th, 2009

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Good news, everyone! If you’ve been stuck in a time loop using Windows XP, which is nearing eight years old, or Windows Vista, which is just annoying, you can finally break free: Windows 7 is almost here. Microsoft delivers a slickly designed, vastly improved OS that will warp you to the world of today. This upgrade is big, and it’s hugely recommended for Microsoft users.

When we say big, we mean really BIG — so we’re not going to bombard you with an epic overview covering every single aspect. Rather, today we’ll guide you through an early look at some major new features and enhancements we tested in the almost-final version released last week. And in the weeks leading up to the Oct. 22 launch of Windows 7, we’ll continue posting our impressions, testing more features of the OS on various types of hardware.

We’ll start with interface, move on to performance and usability, and then we’ll conclude with the “funner” stuff. Let’s begin exploring, shall we?

Revamped Interface With Improved Presentation
Upgrading from Windows XP to Windows 7 will be like ditching your old Toyota Camry for a sexy, new Nissan GT-R. Everything from the typography to the icons, and from the toolbar to the windows, has been refined with some extra detail, polish and shadows. Finally, Microsoft creates a clean, modern look that competes with Apple’s finely designed Mac OS X Leopard.

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To accompany the new look, there are three new features that make the Windows 7 interface pretty groovy: Aero Peek, Aero Snap and Aero Shake. They’re window-management tools, similar to Apple’s Exposé in Mac OS X. Aero Peek is the most significant: When triggered, the feature displays outlines of all your open windows behind your active window; each outlined box contains a thumbnail previewing its corresponding window to help you choose.

Aero Snap (see screenshot above) is pretty cool, too: Drag a window to the right side of the screen, for example, and Aero Snap will automatically adjust the window into a rectangle that takes up the entire right side (same happens if you drag to the left). And Aero Shake is a cute feature: You click and hold onto a window and give it a shake, and any visible windows behind it will disappear (minimize, not close).

A major change appears in the main toolbar glued to the bottom of the screen. Rather than clutter the bottom of your screen with annoying rectangular tabs, your open applications are instead contained in a small square displaying only the icon of each active app. With AeroPeek activated, you can also preview thumbnails of the activity of apps by hovering over their corresponding taskbar icons. That’s certainly a welcome change now that many of us multitaskers enjoy running a multitude of apps at once

If Internet Explorer 8 is your browser of choice, there’s a bonus: Hovering your mouse over the Explorer icon, you’ll be able to preview all the tabs you have open in a stacked view, letting you go directly to the tab you wish to browse.

Then there’s the Start button at the bottom left corner — a feature Windows fans have grown to love. It’s very similar to the old one, functioning almost exactly the same. The main difference is the addition of a gradient to give it a fresher aesthetic. As for functions, a very useful addition to the Start menu is a search bar that instantly appears at the very bottom. This will make finding and launching files a snap.

Performance and Usability
You’ll immediately notice Windows 7 feels a lot faster than its predecessors, and that’s because memory management has been smartly re-engineered. In older versions of Windows, every application you have open is sucking up video memory, even if the windows are minimized. This isn’t the case in Windows 7: The only windows and apps using video memory are those visible on your screen. Windows users are accustomed to closing applications to boost performance, but that’s going to be unnecessary with Windows 7.

Smoother performance would be a waste if usability weren’t improved, too. Windows 7 won’t disappoint. Remember in Windows XP when you hooked up an external hard drive and it was unrecognized, requiring you to search the web to find that stupid effing software driver? Windows 7 includes up-to-date files, which should automatically recognize your device, and in most cases it’ll “just work.” If, for some reason, Windows 7 isn’t compatible with your attached device by default, it’ll search a database for you in an attempt to find a file to install.

Similarly, Windows 7 tries to streamline networking of peripherals, such as printers and scanners, with a feature called HomeGroup. Let’s say you’re running Windows 7 on computer B in your household, and computer A is the one hooked up to a printer in another room. If computer B is on the same network as computer A, Windows 7 will search for the printer driver on computer A and share it with computer B. The same networking feature will also allow you to share folders and files between networked computers. There’s a catch to this seamless networking: HomeGroup is an exclusive Windows 7 feature. So if your other machine is running the Mac OS, or Linux, then forget about it.

setupfilesThere are also some annoyances that will remind you, “This is still Windows.” When plugging in a thumb drive, for example, Windows will ask you what you want to do with it: Play audio, play a movie, or open the folder to view its files. It’s a thumb drive, for God’s sake: Recognize it and just open the damn folder! After receiving such notifications you can tell Windows 7 to automatically perform one of the aforementioned functions when a specific type of device is attached (see screenshot at right), but we wish the OS would just know what to do.

We also found the software-compatibility checker to be kind of lame. For example, when we downloaded TweetDeck, a .air file which requires Adobe Air, Windows 7 didn’t recognize the file extension and offered to do a search for compatible software. That search did not discover Adobe Air — a pretty popular format — so we were disappointed.

“Funner” Stuff

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We were vastly entertained by the desktop backgrounds included with Windows 7. They’re freaky, bizarre, fascinating, disturbing and, in some odd way, beautiful at the same time. We’re speaking specifically of the wallpapers in the “Characters” section, illustrations that Microsoft collected from artists around the world.  Take a gander at the screenshots above and below to see for yourself.
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Microsoft improves on the entertainment experience, too. Windows Media Center gets a utilitarian makeover that looks a tad like Apple’s Front Row (and we’re not complaining). The revamped program makes it easy to browse your movies, photos, music and so on by tapping a few keys. Nice big thumbnails display previews of your media to make your collection look nice and perdy.

A feature we have yet to test (once we get the proper hardware) with Windows Media Center is the new media-streaming capability. If you have a Wi-Fi enabled TV, you’ll be able to seamlessly stream your Windows Media Center content onto the television set. This should make piracy a blast.

More to Come
We’ll continue exploring the intricacies of Windows 7 in the next few weeks. Coming up next: Windows 7 touchscreen support; an in-depth look at the Windows 7 Media Center, including NetFlix streaming; and tips on multitasking with Aero. Stay tuned.

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