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Personal Computer:Last Nightmare

August 24, 2009 xtanleeborx Leave a comment

After sometime, my PC is all done down. I am expecting that all necessary error brings damage to the system. Since the last date of June, I am experiencing some difficulties on my PC. First symptom, an error message on the screen saying about a code that I never know about. My PC routine goes like this: opening music sites then downloading mp3s at Limewire (the site that made my PC goes slow due to virus e.i trojan horse). Truly, I am addicted to pop music that even commercial songs I downloaded with effort and time. The consequence began, my PC is out of control! I can no longer access the entire system because my secondary slave disk had been crash and all files were gone.

Seeing all I have save for the last years event like anniversaries, parties , and special days were all missed and gone. But thanks to Friendster, some of my memorable pictures had been saved and secured. Seeing all my effort and the files that I have saved all up were gone… is like a trash bin eating all up and nothing left. :( This might be my last post… can you see,  my PC is broke and urgently need a technician to repair it again. All I have is a n old laptop that my uncle gave it me last Christmas, version of Windows 98 (might be a laugh and annoyed but it really need help in running faster like turbo machine :D ).

Xtanleeborx :(

P.S

If you have an old laptop (not again with Windows 98) that you can donate please email me at code_eater@ymail.com or text me up 09065099661 :D I’ll be waiting and be happy your present :)

Categories: CodeTech, News, Thoughts Tags:

Evian Roller Babies with backstage pass!

I have seen this commercial in our news report segment here in the Phils. as for the news, it tells on how the new technology come to advertise and animate. Evian (the commercial) starts with a kick on national TV (esp. YouTube – best watched!).

Official Commercial

PS2: Still the Boss!

found itself beaten out for fifth place by an unusual competitor: its predecessor, the Playstation 2.

A 50% leap in Playstation 2 sales accounts for the surprising change, an increase likely prompted by the system’s price cut on April 1, a move which apparently electrified interest in the nine-year old platform.

The PS2’s success was probably the only nugget of April sales news to put smiles on the faces of Sony execs. Nintendo platforms continued their lockdown of the top spots, with the Wii coming second and the DS coming both first and third, courtesy of the just-launched DSi: the DS’s two hardware variations accounted for an astonishing million sales during April.Meanwhile, the Xbox 360 was down slightly over last April, but still managed a solid fourth place and remains on course for a record-breaking year.

But both the Playstation 3 and PSP posted disappointing results, with the PS3 placing sixth with its worst performance in over 18 months, and the PSP limping in seventh with a total of 116,000 sales — down over 30% on March’s numbers.

The news has revitalized persistent rumors of price cuts for Sony’s PS3. The system’s base model is between $150 and $200 more expensive than its competitors, the Wii and Xbox 360. Industry news site Gamasutra predicts we’ll see a $100 cut in the $400 Playstation 3 announced at the E3 video games trade show in Los Angeles in early June.

So if you’re contemplating taking the Playstation plunge — and with top exclusive superhero thriller Infamous just a week away, we’re betting some of you are — you might well want to hold off and wait to see what June has in store.

Categories: CodeTech, News Tags: ,

Fooling April with Conficker C (Prevention Pt. 1)

Here are sites about the Conficker C virus that will explain what they are and how you can protect yourself from them.

http://support.microsoft.com/kb/962007
http://www.microsoft.com/security/por…
http://mtc.sri.com/Conficker/addendum…

What is this devastating computer worm Conficker C?

Win32/Conficker is a worm that infects other computers across a network by exploiting a vulnerability in the Windows Server service (SVCHOST.EXE). If the vulnerability is successfully exploited, it could allow remote code execution when file sharing is enabled. Depending on the specific variant, it may also spread via removable drives and by exploiting weak passwords. It disables several important system services and security products and downloads arbitrary files.

Also Known As:

  • TA08-297A (other)
  • CVE-2008-4250 (other)
  • VU827267 (other)
  • Win32/Conficker.A (CA)
  • Mal/Conficker-A (Sophos)
  • Trojan.Win32.Agent.bccs (Kaspersky)
  • W32.Downadup.B (Symantec)
  • Trojan-Downloader.Win32.Agent.aqfw (Kaspersky)
  • W32/Conficker.worm (McAfee)
  • Trojan:Win32/Conficker!corrupt (Microsoft)
  • W32.Downadup (Symantec)
  • WORM_DOWNAD (Trend Micro)
  • Confickr (other)

Steps on how to prevent Conficker C attacking you!

Take the following steps to help prevent infection on your system:

  • Enable a firewall on your computer.
  • Get the latest computer updates for all your installed software, including Security Bulletin MS08-067.
  • Use up-to-date antivirus software.
  • Use caution when opening attachments and accepting file transfers.
  • Use caution when clicking on links to web pages.
  • Protect yourself against social engineering attacks.
  • Enable a firewall on your computer

Use a third-party firewall product or turn on the Microsoft Windows Internet Connection Firewall.

Steps in turning on your Windows Firewall in Windows Vista:

  1. Click Start, and click Control Panel.
  2. Click Security.
  3. Click Turn Windows Firewall on or off.
  4. Select On.
  5. Click OK.

Steps in turning on your Internet Connection Firewall in Windows XP:

  1. Click Start, and click Control Panel.
  2. Click Network and Internet Connections. If you do not see Network and Internet Connections, click Switch to Category View.
  3. Click Change Windows Firewall Settings.
  4. Select On.
  5. Click OK.

-YouTube (Patriotfrosh15)

All New Yahoo Homepage!

March 29, 2009 xtanleeborx Leave a comment

Yahoo will begin bucket testing a new version of its home page this evening with small percentage of users. The company’s last home page redesign was more than a year ago, and earlier this year Yahoo began integrating third party content onto the site via their new Buzz product.

Any changes to this page ripple broadly through the Internet – 314 million people visit the Yahoo home page world wide each month (Comscore, July 2008). 82 million visit it daily.

The new page combines what Yahoo calls “broadcasting” elements, which are the same news and resource links for everyone, with “narrowcasting,” which are highly customized home pages made popular by My Yahoo, iGoogle, Netvibes and others.

A key addition is the introduction of third party services to the Yahoo home page. For now users can log into their Gmail or AOL Mail accounts and view emails right from Yahoo.com. This is similar to what AOL unveiled last week. And like AOL, Yahoo has chosen to leave Microsoft out of the party.

The rest of the changes being launched tonight are largely cosmetic. But Yahoo has plans to roll out new features over time that bring even more third party content to the site.

The rollout begins tonight to a small number of users in the U.S., UK, India and France.

Upcoming Changes

In a briefing today Yahoo also showed a number of upcoming features that may be integrated into the home page over time. These are just prototypes at this point, but they show an inclination to bring even more customization options and third party content onto the site.

The first is integration of news items on the home page from third party sources. Today all news sources in the “In The News” section point to internal Yahoo news pages. But the internal prototype shows links to outside sources like the San Jose Mercury News and the San Francisco Chronicle. Whenever this launches, look for massive butt-kissing by media to get themselves on the home page.

I also got a look at the soon-to-be-released “add application” function that lets users add apps to the left sidebar. The mockup included widgets for Hulu, MySpace, YouTube, Twitter, and Facebook – all third party services. Screen shot:

- Michael Arrington

Categories: CodeTech, News Tags: ,

Conficker C fooling April first!

March 26, 2009 xtanleeborx 1 comment

Beware of Conficker C!

In an event that hits the computer world only once every few years, security experts are racing against time to mitigate the impact of a bit of malware which is set to wreak havoc on a hard-coded date. As is often the case, that date is April 1.

Malware creators love to target April Fool’s Day with their wares, and the latest worm, called Conficker C, could be one of the most damaging attacks we’ve seen in years.

Conficker first bubbled up in late 2008 and began making headlines in January as known infections topped 9 million computers. Now in its third variant, Conficker C, the worm has grown incredibly complicated, powerful, and virulent… though no one is quite sure exactly what it will do when D-Day arrives.

Thanks in part to a quarter-million-dollar bounty on the head of the writer of the worm, offered by Microsoft, security researchers are aggressively digging into the worm’s code as they attempt to engineer a cure or find the writer before the deadline. What’s known so far is that on April 1, all infected computers will come under the control of a master machine located somewhere across the web, at which point anything’s possible. Will the zombie machines become denial of service attack pawns, steal personal information, wipe hard drives, or simply manifest more traditional malware pop-ups and extortion-like come-ons designed to sell you phony security software? No one knows.

Conficker is clever in the way it hides its tracks because it uses an enormous number of URLs to communicate with HQ. The first version of Conficker used just 250 addresses each day — which security researchers and ICANN simply bought and/or disabled — but Conficker C will up the ante to 50,000 addresses a day when it goes active, a number which simply can’t be tracked and disabled by hand.

At this point, you should be extra vigilant about protecting your PC: Patch Windows completely through Windows Update and update your anti-malware software as well. Make sure your antivirus software is actually running too, as Conficker may have disabled it.

Microsoft also offers a free online safety scan here, which should be able to detect all Conficker versions.

-Yahoo

Reshuffling Ipod?

March 13, 2009 xtanleeborx Leave a comment

The 3rd generation Ipod Shuffle was HOT so sexy LOL :P but I prefer the old one the 2nd gen. BTW, thanks auntie for the ipod!

The third-generation iPod shuffle is here–and by here, I don’t mean in the insubstantial “floating in the air of human knowledge” sort of way. I mean here, at my desk, in the Macworld offices.

To prepare for my briefing Thursday morning with Apple, at which time I received said shuffle, I asked the people who follow my Twitter feed what questions they had about the shuffle. And while some of the questions were quite silly (“Can you wear it as a hair clip?”), most of them were quite perceptive. I asked some of them of Apple’s Greg Joswiak, the company’s VP of iPod and iPhone product marketing, and explored more of them while using the product itself. Here’s the scoop.

What’s the deal with putting all the controls on the headphones?

It turns out that this is a story that begins with Apple releasing its new headphones last fall for the iPod nano, classic, and touch. These headphones have a center button for playing and pausing (one click), moving forward (two clicks), and moving backward (three clicks). According to Joswiak, the headphones were the thing that made Apple’s iPod designers realize they didn’t need to put any controls on the shuffle itself.

“One begat the other,” Joswiak said. “Once we [created those headphones], we saw that these controls actually allow you to do everything [on the headphones] that you could do [on the shuffle itself]–play, pause, adjust volume, even go to next or previous tracks. All those same capabilities. And that’s what allowed us to take all the controls off of the iPod shuffle.”

What about people who don’t like Apple’s headphones and want to use their own? What if I want to plug the shuffle into my car stereo via an auxiliary port?

Apple says that third-party adapters that add control buttons to any set of headphones are on their way (and so are new headphones) are on their way. Not a great answer, but there it is.

However, there is some mildly good news on this front: When you turn on the shuffle with anything plugged into the headphone jack, it will begin automatically playing. So a workaround, especially for car-stereo types, is to pick your playlist and volume on the stock Apple set of headphones, then unplug those headphones and plug in your own cord. The shuffle should start playing automatically after a few seconds, with the same volume that you had set before. (You won’t be able to pause or skip or control the volume, but you’ll be able to hear the music.)

How does the VoiceOver navigation system work?

When you install the shuffle for the first time, iTunes automatically downloads and installs extra software called VoiceOver Kit. On Leopard, iTunes uses the built-in Alex voice to speak everything on your shuffle–artists, song titles, and playlist names. On pre-Leopard systems and various versions of Windows, VoiceOver Kit uses its own text-to-speech engine to generate those sounds. (The sounds are generated on your computer, and then transferred invisibly to the shuffle.)

I speak English, but some of my tracks are by French and Italian artists. Will the VoiceOver voice mangle the track and artist names?

It might, but you can fix it. iTunes attempts to detect what language your track name and artist name are in, and if it’s not English, it will attempt to use an appropriate voice for that language to pronounce things properly. (I tried this on a few Jean-Michel Jarre tracks I own; the ones with French titles were described in French; the ones with English titles were mispronounced in English.) But you can override the language by choosing Get Info in iTunes and clicking to the Options tab. There you’ll see a VoiceOver Language setting, and you can manually force the track into any of the 14 supported VoiceOver languages.

Can the new iPod shuffle speak my music catalog in Swahili?

Sorry, the only languages supported are Chinese (Mandarin), Czech, Dutch, English, German, Greek, Italian, Japanese, Polish, Portugese, Spanish, Swedish, and Turkish.

How can I play from a single playlist instead of the entire contents of the shuffle’s library?

When you hold down the center button on the headphones, and keep holding down after the name and artist of the current track is spoken, you’ll hear a beep. When you let go, the shuffle will begin listing off the names of all its playlists. Press the center button when you hear one you like, and those songs will begin to play. (The shuffle’s power switch can be set to two different positions, which determines if playlist go in a linear order or are shuffled.)

If you’re an impatient person (or have a lot of playlists), there’s good news: You can press the up or down buttons to quickly move to the next or previous playlist in the list.

I load audiobooks and podcasts onto my shuffle. What happens to them?

Each Audiobook you load on the shuffle gets its own playlist in the spoken lists of playlists. Podcasts all pile up in a single “podcasts” playlist, also created automatically.

Is it hard to control the VoiceOver?

No, but using an interface dangling from a cord coming down from your ears takes some getting used to. Personally I’ve never liked those inline cord buttons, but I admit that I may just be an old fuddy-duddy on this point.

Are the earbuds the same size and shape as the 3G iPhone’s?

Basically, yes. But it’s important to note that while these earbuds are the stock Apple style, they are not compatible with the iPhone’s earbuds. If you stick a set of iPhone earphones into a shuffle, you won’t be able to control it–not even playing and pausing. (Presumably this new three-button headphone style will be supported in all future Apple products.)

It’s worth noting that Apple does sell a pair of in-ear headphones with the same set of buttons for US$79.

I lose or break my headphones all the time! How much will it cost to replace them?

Apple sells the headphones that come with the shuffle separately for $29.

How’s the audio quality?

Too early to tell. We’ll be testing the audio quality shortly, and will get back to you with the results.

Does the stainless-steel clip on the back scratch easily?

It’s a stainless steel clip–it’ll scratch just as easily as any other stainless-steel iPod would. (Which means, yes, it’ll scratch, and it’s a fingerprint magnet.)

Can you use the iPod shuffle as a flash drive?

Absolutely. It’s just the same as with previous generations. There’s a box you can check in iTunes that allows you to enable Disk Mode, at which point the shuffle will mount on the desktop.

Is the iPod connector the same as all other iPods?

No, this is a new connector. It’s basically a small cord with a USB port at one end and a mini headphone jack at the other. And if you bought one of those slick adapters that connected the second-generation shuffle via USB without using its awkward included dock, I’ve got bad news: they won’t work on this third-generation shuffle.

What does the bottom look like?

The bottom is just anodized aluminum. The only seam on the case is beneath the clip on the back side.

-PCworld.com

I badly need a COMPUTER TECHNICIAN!

The title looks so problematic, eh :(

So creepy WORM!

http://www.clipartheaven.com/clipart/computers/computer_with_virus_1.gif

As Facebook works to make itself more relevant and timely for its growing member base with a profile page makeover, attackers seem to be working overtime to steal the identities of the friends, fans and brands that connect though the social-networking site.

Indeed, Facebook has seen five different security threats in the past week. According to Trend Micro, four new hoax applications are attempting to trick members into divulging their usernames and passwords. And a new variant of the Koobface worm is running wild on the site, installing malware on the computers of victims who click on a link to a fake YouTube video.

The Koobface worm is dangerous. It can be dropped by other malware and downloaded unknowingly by a user when visiting malicious Web sites, Trend Micro reports. When attackers execute the malware, it searches for cookies created by online social networks. The latest variant is targeting Facebook, but earlier variants have also plagued MySpace.

Koobface’s Wicked Agenda

Once Koobface finds the social-networking cookies, it makes a DNS query to check IP addresses that correspond to remote domains. Trend Micro explains that those servers can send and receive information about the affected machine. Once connected, the malicious user can remotely perform commands on the victim’s machine.

“Once cookies related to the monitored social-networking Web sites are located, it connects to these Web sites using the user log-in session stored in the cookies. It then navigates through pages to search for the user’s friends. If a friend has been located, it sends an HTTP POST request to the server,” Trend Micro reports.

Ultimately, the worm’s agenda is to transform the victim’s computer into a zombie and form botnets for malicious purposes. Koobface attempts to do this by composing a message and sending it to the user’s friends. The message contains a link to a Web site where a copy of the worm can be downloaded by unsuspecting friends. And the cycle repeats itself.

An Attractive Face(book)

Malware authors are investing more energy in Facebook and other social-networking sites because that effort pays off, according to Michael Argast, a security analyst at Sophos. Facebook alone has more than 175 million users, which makes it an attractive target.

“Many computer users have been conditioned not to open an attachment from an e-mail or click a link found within, but won’t think twice about checking out a hot new video linked to by a trusted friend on Facebook,” Argast said.

Argast called the Koobface worm a mix of something old and something new. The new is using social networks as a method to spread malware. The old is using fake codec Trojans linked to a saucy video to induce the user to install the malware.

Argast said people can protect themselves by running up-to-date antivirus software, restricting which Facebook applications they install, thinking twice before clicking on links from friends and never, never installing a codec from some random Web site in the hopes of catching some celebrity in a compromised situation.

“I would expect to see more attacks on Facebook,” Argast said. “As long as this is a successful propagation method, the bad guys will double down and invest more. They are entirely motivated by financial gain. If it pays, they’ll continue to romp in your social playgrounds.”

25 Things Why Julian Smith hates FACEBOOK!

This is funny! LOL :)

Add me on facebook!
http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?i…

If this video made you laugh or nod your head, post it on your wall! Share it with your friends!
(Copy and paste this description so that others can to do it too!)

WANT THIS VIDEO ON YOUR IPOD/IPHONE? GO HERE:
http://www.juliansmithproductions.com…

Want duct tape over the obnoxious Facebook sidebar (like I mention at 2:54)? Well if you’ve got Firefox, you can do it with this free plugin! (credit: pconigs)
http://iamawesome.net/2009/02/faceboo…