We support Microsoft .NET Framework 2.0 & 1.1, all versions of Access, SQL 2000, SQL 7.0, SQL 2005 Express, SOAP, FrontPage 2002, 2003, Visual Studio 2005, Index Server, XML, UDDI, & Mobile device support. We also offer great third party tools like SmarterMail, Merak Mail, SmarterStats, PHP, Perl, MySql, DeepMetrix Livestats XSP 8.0.   We support Microsoft .NET Framework 2.0 & 1.1, all versions of Access, SQL 2000, SQL 7.0, SQL 2005 Express, SOAP, FrontPage 2002, 2003, Visual Studio 2005, Index Server, XML, UDDI, & Mobile device support. We also offer great third party tools like SmarterMail, Merak Mail, SmarterStats, PHP, Perl, MySql, DeepMetrix Livestats XSP 8.0.
 Monday, May 19, 2008

Are you overwhelmed by your own inbox?
Do you use outlook as your mail client?

Then there is a must have plugin application for you. There simply is not much more to say accept get it now. Xobni is inbox spelled backward.

5/19/2008 7:07:22 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 
 Saturday, May 17, 2008

Mozilla warned Wednesday that a malicious program inserted adware code into a Firefox plugin that has been downloaded thousands of times over the past three months.

Because of a virus infection, the Vietnamese language pack for Firefox 2 was polluted with adware, Mozilla security chief Window Snyder said in a blog posting. "Everyone who downloaded the most recent Vietnamese language pack since February 18, 2008 got an infected copy," she wrote. "Mozilla does virus scans at upload time but the virus scanner did not catch this issue until several months after the upload."

Mozilla is now going to add additional scans of its software to prevent this kind of thing from happening in the future.

The malware in the language pack is from the Xorer Trojan, according to discussion on Mozilla's Bugzilla developer Web site, which indicates that Mozilla developers first discovered the issue on Tuesday.

Mozilla missed the code during its initial scan because antivirus vendors had not yet added detection for Xorer into their products. Antivirus vendor Panda Security first detected Xorer on Feb. 28, 10 days after the infected plugin was published. Firefox developers have now scanned all of their plugins.

The open-source browser maker does not know how many people were infected with the adware, but the plugin was downloaded more than 1,200 times in the past week and has been downloaded 16,667 times since November.

5/17/2008 7:23:30 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 

The first public release of Moonlight, which provides a Linux client implementation of Microsoft's Silverlight rich Internet application (RIA) technology, was made available this week.

Moonlight, an open source project, supports the Silverlight 1.0 profile for Linux.

According to a blog post by Novell Vice President of Engineering Miguel de Icaza, the lead on the Moonlight project, Moonlight comes in two forms. In one form, no media codecs are supported but it is easy to install. In the other form, source code compilation is featured with users able to optionally compile FFMpeg codecs themselves.

Moonlight is intended to work on the Firefox 2 and?? Firefox 3 browsers, but recent changes in Firefox 3 prevent Silverlight and Moonlight from working on that browser. A Greasemonkey script is available that will work around this bug for some sites, de Icaza said.

5/17/2008 7:16:01 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 

A major problem has been revealed in Debian Linux and derivative packages, such as Ubuntu. Debian revealed the other day that a fix they made back in September 2006 had the unintended consequence of crippling the strength of their OpenSSL distribution.

OpenSSL is used, of course, for Secure Sockets Layer which provides authentication and encryption for web traffic, but it's also used for other cryptography functions. OpenSSL is a very important package that brought public key cryptography to the masses; prior to OpenSSL, https web sites were expensive and complicated to build.

The strength of public key encryption relies, in large part, on the large number of potential keys that could be used to encrypt data. Keys are often 1024 or 2048 or 4096 bits long; these store very large numbers so a brute force attack, trying all of the possibilities, could take a prohibitive amount of time.

But the bug introduced by Debian effectively reduces the strength of the key to 32768 permutations, which is 16 bits. Famed security researcher HD Moore has actually already pre-calculated all of the potential keys for the most common cases. It took mere hours. So now you can be hacked even without someone brute-forcing your encryption.

Because of it's centrality, Linux sites are often deeply-reliant on certificates generated by OpenSSL to encrypt network traffic. Fixing the problem is not just a matter of updating the software; you also have to go back and generate new certificates and have them signed. This is complicated stuff, not for the novice Linux user. Expect tools to come along soon to help.

5/17/2008 7:06:30 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 

In a letter sent Friday to the judge overseeing the case in Delaware, a lawyer for the shareholders argued Yahoo is trying "to whitewash embarrassing documents" because the company thinks the information will damage the board's efforts to repel a challenge by activist investor Carl Icahn.

Angered by the board's handling of Microsoft bid, Icahn has nominated an alternate slate of candidates to oppose Yahoo's 10 current directors — including Chief Executive Jerry Yang — at the Sunnyvale-based company's July 3 annual meeting.

Yahoo is trying "to sanitize the public record and maintain a cloak of secrecy regarding unflattering evidence of breach of fiduciary duty," shareholder attorney Joel Friedlander wrote in a letter to Chancellor William B. Chandler III.

The redacted documents include information about an employee severance plan that Yahoo adopted shortly after Microsoft made its initial bid Jan. 31 and notes about a conversation between Yang and Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer, Friedlander wrote.

Yahoo had no immediate comment Friday. Generally, companies often seek to keep parts of publicly available lawsuits under seal for competitive reasons.Yahoo had previously disclosed the plans would give its 13,800 employees anywhere from four month to two years pay. Every $1.4 billion in severance cost theoretically would translate into about $1 per share less that Microsoft would have available to offer Yahoo shareholders.

Ballmer orally offered $33 per share, or $47.5 billion, but then withdrew the bid when Yang held out for $37 per share. Legg Mason money manager Bill Miller, whose fund is Yahoo's second largest shareholder, has publicly said he would have happily supported a Microsoft offer of $34 per share.

Friedlander's letter also indicated the redacted documents include comments that Yahoo's top executives made about the severance plans.

5/17/2008 6:54:36 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 

Charter has told its high-speed Internet customers in four markets about the pilot, which will produce enough information for Web advertisers to target online advertising for individual customers based on their habits.

The ads "will better reflect the interests you express through your Web-surfing activity," Charter senior vice president Joe Stackhouse told the affected subscribers in a letter. "You will not see more ads — just ads that are more relevant to you."

In response to the announcement, Rep. Edward Markey (D-Mass.) and Rep. Joe Barton (R-Texas) asked Charter President and Chief Executive Neil Smit to put the plan on hold until the three can confer.

The tracking is set to begin in June in Ft. Worth, Texas; San Luis Obispo, Calif.; Oxford, Mass.; and Newtown, Conn.

Subscribers can opt out of the tracking, though they must provide their name and address to install an opt-out cookie on their computer.

Should Charter instead offer subscribers the ability to opt in if they want to participate?

5/17/2008 6:48:56 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 
 Friday, May 16, 2008

The bugs in question are crazy raspberry ants, which are named not for their flavor, but for their inscrutable meanderings and for past efforts by exterminator Tom Raspberry to eliminate them.

Supposedly, crazy raspberry ants are fond of electronics.

According to Associated Press writer Linda Stewart Ball, the ants are "are invading homes and yards across the Houston area, shorting out electrical boxes and messing up computers."

"They have been known to short out many different types of electrical apparatuses," says a Texas A&M University Web page about the pests.

Exterminators in Houston are aware of problem but aren't all that alarmed.

5/16/2008 7:26:50 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 
 Sunday, May 11, 2008

Security researchers have developed a new type of malicious rootkit software that hides itself in an obscure part of a computer's microprocessor, hidden from current antivirus products.

Called a System Management Mode (SMM) rootkit, the software runs in a protected part of a computer's memory that can be locked and rendered invisible to the operating system, but which can give attackers a picture of what's happening in a computer's memory.

The proof-of-concept software will be demonstrated publicly for the first time at the Black Hat security conference in Las Vegas this August. The rootkits used by cyber crooks today are sneaky programs designed to cover up their tracks while they run in order to avoid detection. Rootkits hit the mainstream in late 2005 when Sony BMG Music used rootkit techniques to hide its copy protection software. The music company was ultimately forced to recall millions of CDs amid the ensuing scandal.

In recent years, however, researchers have been looking at ways to run rootkits outside of the operating system, where they are much harder to detect. For example, two years ago researcher Joanna Rutkowska introduced a rootkit called Blue Pill, which used AMD's chip-level virtualization technology to hide itself. She said the technology could eventually be used to create "100 percent undetectable malware." Full Article

5/11/2008 9:57:01 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 

After a long period of resistance to Linux in general we have offered Linux specifically CentOS to clients. The response to our offering of CentOS and Virtual-Min has almost been alarming. We have given enough demos to our clients that we have seen the number of machine builds grow by over 300%. Being a exclusive windows host for over 10 years made us wonder if we would be overwhelmed by support.

We have to give alot of credit to the guys at Virtualmin for this lack of support we originally expected. We have many comments from clients who have been exclusive windows people for years. Quotes like; "You have made the web developer enviroment exciting again"! We stumbled on this install tutuorial on the web and thought we woud share it with people looking to setup their own local boxes. "Learn More"

We have also been exploring Ubuntu for desktops with everyone complaining about windows vista. It is clear some of the free alternatives these days are just as good as going out and blowing your wad on a OS. We personally love this article from a MAC user who decided to give Ubuntu a spin. It was a nice read without all the typical lame input. It seemed the writer learned, there are other OS options available that acutally run better than MAC. Go Figure! Full Article.

5/11/2008 9:43:51 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 
 Sunday, April 13, 2008

How it works: The USPTO (US Patent & Trademark Office) gets the initial patent application from the inventor or patent agent. But it can take a while to grant or deny a patent application. They have a heavy workload, examining and publishing thousands of patents each week! However, during the period of waiting for a USPTO grant decision, the USPTO publishes the patent application at some point (usually after 18 months) and the general public may view the full contents and it is in the public domain. (note: FreshPatents.com does not have access to and does not publish confidential and/or non-USPTO-published Patent Applications!)

Next, FreshPatents.com (no affiliation with the USPTO) empowers users with FREE tools to better find and track published patent applications. FreshPatents.com features the latest published US patent applications...which is certainly useful for your business and technology intelligence needs.

4/13/2008 11:13:55 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 

In case you're having a hard time keeping track, here's a brief history of events as they've unfurled in the ongoing Microsoft-Yahoo drama:

May 2006: Some of the earliest rumors that Microsoft is considering an offer to buy Yahoo appear in the New York Post and The Wall Street Journal; at the time such a deal is considered far-fetched, so the rumors are dismissed fairly quickly.

October 2006: Rumors begin to swirl that Yahoo has approached Time Warner about purchasing AOL, a notion that is somewhat more believable than a Microsoft-Yahoo deal.

2007: Microsoft-Yahoo rumors surface from time to time but disappear soon after as there is nothing to substantiate them.

Feb. 1, 2008: In the shot heard 'round the Internet, Microsoft makes a formal purchase offer of $44.6 billion based on Yahoo's stock price of $19.18; Yahoo's stock price starts rising.

Feb. 11: Yahoo rejects Microsoft's offer as too low; Yahoo stock price closes at $29.87. According to the rumor mill, Yahoo is now looking for closer to $40 a share because the value of the company has risen since the offer.

Feb. 12: Microsoft for the first time publicly hints in a letter to Yahoo that it is willing to get hostile in its takeover, saying it "reserves the right to pursue all necessary steps to ensure that Yahoo's shareholders are provided with the opportunity to realize the value inherent in our proposal."

March 5: Reports emerge that Yahoo is stepping up negotiations with Time Warner for some kind of tie-up with AOL. Meanwhile, reports make the rounds that Microsoft will mount a proxy fight if Yahoo won't play ball.

March 11: News Corp.'s Murdoch says publicly that he won't "get into a fight" with Microsoft over Yahoo, because the software giant has "a lot more money" than his company.

April 5: Microsoft sends Yahoo a join-us-or-die letter, claiming that if the two companies can't make a deal in three weeks, Microsoft will take its offer directly to shareholders in a proxy battle. In the letter, signed by Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer, Microsoft basically tells Yahoo board members they've run out of better options, and it would be foolish not to accept an offer immediately. Microsoft also hints that it would consider Yahoo less valuable if it is forced to mount a proxy fight, thus threatening to lower its offer.

April 7: Yahoo again rejects Microsoft's offer on the basis that it is too low. In a letter signed by Chairman Roy Bostock and CEO Jerry Yang, the company calls Microsoft's threat of a proxy battle "unproductive," and says it would consider a deal if Microsoft was willing to pony up more dough.

April 9: Yahoo says it is testing the display of Google search ads in a small number of its search-engine queries, a move seen as a way to stave off Microsoft's advances. Microsoft immediately attacks that notion as anticompetitive and says it would never pass regulatory approval.

April 10: News Corp. is said to be in talks with Microsoft to join forces to buy Yahoo, seen by many as a way that Microsoft can raise its offer without spending any more money. At the same time, the old Yahoo-AOL union talk again makes the rounds.

4/13/2008 10:58:54 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 
 Saturday, April 12, 2008

Dear Rob,

Why does PC Pitstop keep bashing Vista? Isn't it like biting the hand that feeds you?

Your Pal,

While I found many of the issues simply quarks I can say that there are some valid points. Though there is one which no one mentioned which personally I find quite annoying. I know how to shut it off but that is not the point. If I have to approve an execute then don't throw the machine in a tail spin to display a dialog asking my approval.

Honestly the truth is that none of this is necessary in a MAC as there is no need to protect system32 or the OS to this degree from the operator. While a .dll and cab files gain speed the trade off is questionable more every year. It does take a bit longer to execute a process in NIX, but with machines running faster all the time the trade off becomes less important.

I do not care for an operating system wants me to change my behavior, rather than being flexible to mine. Honestly I cannot believe the people inside are ignoring the same things everyone else sees they see. It is simply a case of denial on many fronts, while XP is near its end of life, people are faced with a couple of good choices. This should have MS being aggressive and this is clearly not the case. This too should indicate to those on top there is a problem.

4/12/2008 7:15:25 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 
 Wednesday, April 02, 2008
Linksys RV016 16-Port VPN Router

The Linksys 10/100 16-Port VPN Router is an advanced Internet-sharing network solution for your small business needs. Like any router, it lets multiple computers in your office share an Internet connection, but the 16 ports on this Router feature unprecedented versatility. Two are dedicated Internet ports that let you connect a second Internet line as a backup to ensure that you're never disconnected. Or, you can use both Internet ports at the same time, and let the router balance your office's requirements between them for maximum bandwidth efficiency.
The Virtual Private Network (VPN) capability creates encrypted "tunnels" through the Internet, allowing up to 50 remote office or traveling users to securely connect into your office network from off-site. Users connecting through a VPN tunnel are attached to your company's network -- with secure access to files, e-mail, and your intranet -- just as if they were in the building. You can also use the VPN capability to allow users on your small office network to securely connect out to a corporate network.

Not enough? Up to five of the thirteen full-duplex switched 10/100 Ethernet ports can be reconfigured as Internet ports, for an up to seven-port failover or load balanced redundancy! Finally, a dedicated DMZ port gives you a publicly accessible channel so you can set up a web or FTP server, unimpeded by the powerful security features of the Router. You can find this router as low as $419.99.
4/2/2008 6:10:42 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 
 Sunday, March 30, 2008

Warner Music Group is reportedly considering a plan to have Internet service providers add $5 a month to subscribers' bills for unlimited access to music on the Web. Full Article here.

Now here is a cure to the problem. Have everyone pay, and a totally strapped ISP industry collect and pay for something the media industry cannot control on their own. Lets see with the names like TimeWarner Cable, Comcast, Roadrunner, Cox and Charter holding the lions share of cable networks.

In america the adsl based ISP find it nearly impossible to compete with cable. This due to the amount of bandwidth cable companies provide, this is primarily due to the fact that ADSL simply will not support this type of bandwidth. Now it seems they really want to collect a tax from each of their clients to pay for those who listen to music on the web.

The handful of small ISP's left would simply be driven again by telling the small number of users left they will have to tax them $5.00 so the Music Industry gets their part of the pie. Of course this means nothing to the Cable Companies who already dominate the industry. Seems to me they already make enough money off their user base, without taxing their client base to some 20 billion dollars more.

I currently pay $180 per month for cable TV and internet. If this is typical and 5.00 relates to 20 billion. It does not take a math major to see how big this pie really is.

Does anyone even remember cable TV that was not loaded with commericals? When it is the only game in town, I am sorry but this is nothing more than a monopoly. One which is now seeking to add another $5.00 to the bill.

3/30/2008 7:38:36 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 
 Saturday, March 29, 2008

A blossoming Web attack, first reported by security researcher Dancho Danchev earlier this month, has expanded to hit more than a million Web pages, including many well-known sites.

The number and importance of the sites has increased," wrote Danchev in a where he reported that trusted Web sites such as USAToday.com, Target.com, and Walmart.com have been hit with the attack.

The criminals behind this have not actually hacked into servers, but they are taking advantage of Web programming errors to inject malicious code into search results pages created by the Web sites' internal search engines.

Malicious parties are actively poisoning these sites' search query caching feature to position the keywords among the top ten search results, thereby infecting anyone coming across them," said Danchev, in an instant-message interview.

He believes that more than 1 million Web pages have been infected using this technique.

"The more keywords they submit with [malicious] script, the more pages with popular keywords the high page ranked sites would cache," he said. This increases the chance that someone will see the search results hosted on the reputable site and click on the malicious page.

The Web sites that have been hit with this attack could fix the problem by doing a better job of checking the search queries on their internal search engines to make sure that there is no malicious code in them, Danchev said.

Hackers are increasingly looking for ways to install their code on trusted Web sites. In recent weeks, security vendors have found hundreds of thousands of Web pages affected by this and other similar attacks.

3/29/2008 7:47:14 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 
 Tuesday, March 25, 2008

Things to know before you download Windows Vista SP1

  • Windows Vista SP1 is available in English, French, German, Spanish, and Japanese. Other languages will be made available soon.
  • Microsoft strongly recommends using Windows Update to download and install Windows Vista SP1 on single PCs:
    • The download size from Windows Update of Windows Vista SP1 for x86 is 65 MB (compared to 450 MB from the Microsoft Download Center).
    • The download size from Windows Update of Windows Vista SP1 for x64 is 125 MB (compared to 745 MB from the Microsoft Download Center).
    • Windows Update will recognize PCs with known problematic drivers and postpone downloading Windows Vista SP1 until the PC has updated drivers or other applicable updates. Using Windows Update will help ensure you have the most trouble-free update experience possible.
    • Some Windows Vista users may encounter an issue with a small set of hardware devices that may not function properly after updating a Windows Vista PC to Windows Vista SP1.   This is an issue with the way the device drivers were re-installed during the Windows Vista SP1 update process, not with the drivers themselves—these drivers worked on Windows Vista RTM and they work on Windows Vista SP1.  This problem is typically corrected by simply uninstalling and reinstalling the driver. We are working with the manufacturers of these devices to get the known problematic drivers and their install programs updated, and also on other solutions we can use to ensure a smooth customer experience when updating to Windows Vista SP1 using Windows Update. For new PCs provisioned with Windows Vista SP1, this is not an issue.
  • If you choose to install Windows Vista SP1 via the standalone installer available on the Microsoft Download Center, Microsoft advises that you first visit Windows Update and install all optional drivers. Read Knowledge Base Articles 948187 and 948343 for more information.
  • If you have a prior version of the Windows Vista SP1 beta installed, you must uninstall it prior to installing the final version. Use the Control Panel applet "Programs and Features" and select "View installed updates" from the top left of the task pane. Under Windows, look for "Service Pack for Windows (KB936330).
3/25/2008 6:38:04 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 
Starting at $75,000, the Nexus 7000 will ship in the second quarter with a new advanced operating system, the Nexus Operating System (NX-OS), said Jayshree Ullal, senior vice president of Cisco's data center, switching and services unit.

Cisco also announced a new Trusted Security architecture and an expansion to the Catalyst family of switches, which have helped the company corral 70% of the global switching market.

More than 1,500 patents were used in creating the Nexus platform, which cost Cisco more than $1 billion in research and development, Ullal said in an interview.

The Nexus 7000 will deliver up to 15Tbit/sec. of switching capacity in a single chassis, with 512 ports for 10Gbit/sec. Ethernet, she said. In the future, Cisco will deliver 40Gbit/sec. and 100Gbit/sec. ports.
Nexus 7000 also incorporates Cisco Trusted Security for the first time to integrate identity- and role-based security across data centers. Also, a new Data Center Network Manager is designed to give administrators visual information that will improve efficiency and awareness.

Cisco also unveiled a 16-port 10 Gigabit Ethernet module for the Catalyst 6500 Series Switch, which can help reduce power consumption by up to 50% per port, Cisco said. Pricing was not disclosed; the new module ships in the second quarter. "Learn More"
3/25/2008 6:24:25 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 
 Saturday, March 22, 2008

I liked this article so much I felt compelled to acknowledge once again just how ignorant people actually are about spam. Let's first divide the posts into groups. For the referenced article "Click Here"


1. The Questioned:  The person who thinks they should have a free email address and filtering should be Enterprise level and they should behave any way they want. Love the post from the person who said I get 1000’s of emails a day.  Personally if this is true your activity on the web is certainly questionable.

2. The Silly: “Is it legal, if I write an anti spam eraser that goes back to the source and simply removes the spam from their hard drive(s)?”

3. The Lost: “I have gone so far as to chase down the owners of blocks of addresses and emailed them about spammers and the email was returned.” Ever hear of spoofing? One can spoof a email address, IP address and even a MAC address. Ever hear of a zombie?

4. The Confused:  “I use a bounce program. Every spam email gets sent back ten times. It’s reduced my spam by at least 50% which is a real relief. The big problem now is bogus addresses. About 20% of my spam now comes from non-existent addresses.” You are as much the problem as the solution. You have assumed you have the target in the first place. You only aggravate the situation by thinking you are fighting back. If it were a real source on the bounce then they are now certain they have a good email address. After all you have made sure they know. Also a good read of the RFC’s concerning backscatter specifically will point out the error in your ways.

5. The Knowledgeable: “I’m an IT Director at a small hospital with a mature domain name (12 years old). SPAM accounts for over 99% of all e-mail handled by my system - and that’s a calculation, NOT an estimate. I spend about $12,000 per year managing SPAM.”  What can you say the person who wrote this has a firm grip of the magnitude of the problem, and the costs associated to good spam filtering.

6. The Diluted: People who believe something on their desktop is the solution. Please it is over! The best this can do is decide whether to keep it or trash it. The transaction is over when it reached the server. The point where you want to stop it is deciding whether to accept or delete it on the server. 

Any install of MailScanner on a server configured correctly can get the top 90% of spam. It is that number between 90% and 99.9% which is hard to reach. What is so amazing is some novice on a desktop seems to think they have the solution to a problem which is so complex there is simply no single answer to. There are millions of professionals fighting this problem every single day, yet they have the solution. Also they do not seem to understand that the person they are defending against are as good at their job.

Has anyone complained once to your postman that it should be their job to filter your mail? Have you stopped those stupid phone sales calls when you are at home trying to relax? With everything on the web even things that are free, people think it is a right to be protected in a world that is honestly quite dangerous. Your protection ended when you connected that cable directly to the web really. If you want to be really secure just unplug it.

3/22/2008 9:43:24 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 
 Monday, March 17, 2008

Websense Security Labs has discovered that Google’s popular web mail service Gmail is being targeted in recent spammer tactics. Spammers in these attacks managed to created bots that are capable of signing up and creating random Gmail accounts for spamming purposes.

Websense believes that from the spammers’ perspective, there are four main advantages to this approach. First, signing up for an account with Google allows access to its wide portfolio of services. Second, Google’s domains are unlikely to be blacklisted. Third, they are free to sign up. And fourth, it may be hard to keep track of them as millions of users worldwide are using various Google services on a regular basis. Learn More

3/17/2008 9:01:20 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 
 Sunday, March 16, 2008
Do you have  multiple domain names that all lead to the same web site? Valid reasons for doing this include helping visitors who may type a domain name with spelling mistakes, hyphens, no hyphens or confuse different names, as well as preventing competitors and name squatters from using a similar domain name. For a few dollars per year per domain name, it often makes sense to buy all the obvious mistakes and permutations of your valuable domains.


With Apache servers
use mod_rewrite

When you attach multiple domain names to a site, search engines can become confused and your rankings may suffer. If they find the same page at two or more different URLs, the search engines will sometimes filter out the extra listings, but there's no guarantee of which ones they filter. You also don't want people linking to your site with non-standard domain names because that will tend to divide your inbound link strength. Google themselves say,

With Microsoft Windows
Internet Information
Services
(IIS) servers
use ISAPI_rewrite

"If your site is appearing as two different listings in our search results, we suggest consolidating these listings so we can more accurately determine your site's PageRank." 1

Why leave it to chance? With a few lines of code you can make sure all your URLs use consistent domain names. When we have multiple domain names on one site, we set up a permanent 301 redirect for any extra domains, as well as the www subdomain or the non-www domain. If you have an Apache web server, add the following code to a .htaccess file in the top level directory, replacing the test domain name with yours:

Options +FollowSymlinks
RewriteEngine on
RewriteCond %{HTTP_HOST} !^www\.test\.com
RewriteRule ^(.*) http://www.test.com/$1 [L,R=301]

If you are using a Microsoft IIS web server, we recommend using ISAPI_rewrite to simulate Apache's .htaccess feature. To begin, you or your hosting provider needs to install ISAPI_rewrite on the server. Then you would create a httpd.ini file in the top level directory as follows, replacing the test domain name with yours.

RewriteCond Host: (?!^www\.test\.com$).*
RewriteRule (.+) http\://www.test.com$1 [RP,I]

These solutions assume you prefer to use the www subdomain for your website. If you would rather have a non-www URL, simply remove each instance of "www\." and "www." from the rewrite conditions and rules. As with all code, please test thoroughly before deploying to your live server.

If your host does not offer ISAPI rewrite you could create a second IIS entry and redirect all the similar names to the primary (i.e.) www.domain.com. This method does take two IIS entries but will certainly achieve the same thing without the need for ISAPI rewrite if your host does not offer it.

SEO
3/16/2008 7:54:20 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 
 Thursday, March 13, 2008
The Cost-effective Alternative to Microsoft Exchange™

SmarterMail 5.x is a feature-rich Windows mail server that brings the power of enterprise-level functionality to small businesses and hosting environments. SmarterMail 5.x builds upon a solid reputation of stability, performance, and value to bring industry-leading features and security to customers at a competitive price. SmarterMail is designed to be effective in small businesses with a handful of email accounts and within large ISP/hosting environments managing thousands of domains and tens of thousands of users per server.

Learn more.

3/13/2008 4:13:59 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 
 Monday, March 10, 2008

How do I move my dns server from one machine to another?

If you transfer all the files from the default path C:\windows\system32\dns specifally all the zone files.

Then export the key values below to .reg files then move them and add them to the new machine you should be up and running in a flash.

HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows NT\CurrentVersion\DNS Server

HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\System\CurrentControlSet\Services\DNS

HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\System\CurrentControlSet\Services\DNS\Parameters

HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\System\CurrentControlSet\Services\DNS\Zones

3/10/2008 7:14:25 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 
 Tuesday, March 04, 2008

Smartertools Changing prices for New Major versions !

SmarterTools announced Major version changes. SmarterMail will be changed to version 5. SmarterStats 3 has a pricing change. These are due to take effect on March 13 2008 for SmarterStats and SmarterMail. SmarterTicket will have not only a version change but a name change to SmarterTrack 3.This product is set launch on April 23 2008. We will be releasing our pricing for these products on March 10 2008.

3/4/2008 9:33:38 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 
 Friday, February 08, 2008

On deck for release Feb. 12 is a dozen security bulletins, seven of them rated critical.

After a relatively light Patch Tuesday load in January, Windows administrators are bracing for a barrage of security updates from Microsoft.

According to the software maker's advance notice mechanism, there are 12 bulletins slated for release Feb. 12. Seven of the 12 will be rated "critical," Microsoft's highest severity rating.

Four of the seven critical bulletins will contain fixes for code execution holes in Microsoft Office, the company's flagship desktop productivity suite.

These fixes will most likely cover known -- and already exploited  -- zero-day flaws affecting Microsoft Excel. Microsoft has already issued a pre-patch advisory regarding the Excel attacks, so it is a safe bet that the February Patch Batch will cover holes in Excel 2000, Excel 2002, Excel 2003 and Excel 2004 for Mac.

The widely deployed Internet Explorer browser is also getting a cumulative update to fix holes that could cause drive-by malware installation attacks.

High-risk bulletins are also slated for users of the Windows operating system, VBScript and JScript.

In addition to the critical bulletins, Microsoft also gave notice on five "important" updates covering holes in Windows, Active Directory, ADAM, ISS and the Office Works suite.

Some of the "important" bulletins provide fixes for code execution, privilege escalation and denial-of-service vulnerabilities.

Four of the seven bulletins will contain patches for Windows Vista, Microsoft's newest operating system.

As is customary, Microsoft will release an updated version of the MSRT (Malicious Software Removal Tool) to add detections for new strains for bots, Trojans and viruses.

2/8/2008 12:38:55 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 

Are Apple sales in trouble? Two research analysts have reported in recent days that Apple is aggressively cutting back production on iPods and iPhones, while increasing production on Mac computers.

It seems that the iPod Touch may have seen the weakest sales. Berger reported production orders for the Touch have fallen the most. The device may suffer from being less than an iPhone, since it has no phone capabilities but is substantially more expensive than Apple's music-playing iPhones. The touch relies on Wi-Fi for connectivity, so users who aren't in range of a Wi-Fi connection simply can't get online.

Meanwhile, Asian production facilities indicate that production is going up for Macs, down for iPods, and the iPhone situation is volatile.

For MacBooks and iMacs, production has moved up more than 20 percent so far this quarter, Banc of America said, which indicates Apple is replenishing inventory and seeing solid demand. Banc of America predicts continued growth through March.

After severe production cuts in December and early January, production is now up for iPhones. Banc of America expressed concern that production and demand for the innovative phone remain lackluster.

Meanwhile, Net Applications released new numbers on its operating-system statistics, which revealed that Macs accounted for the largest percentage of Internet traffic ever -- 7.57 percent. iPhone-based traffic nudged up from 0.12 percent in December to 0.13 percent in January. More importantly, Net Applications' numbers show that iPhone traffic is coming from many more countries than have official wireless carriers for the phones, indicating substantial gray-market sales.

"We've heard the rumours that many iPhones are being used outside the officially sanctioned countries. So we decided to check it out and surprise, surprise, it's true. The iPhone has a presence in almost every country on Earth," Net Applications wrote in its report.

2/8/2008 6:16:57 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 
 Wednesday, February 06, 2008

Google on Tuesday began marketing new online tools for protecting email from spam and other problems as it continued to encroach on the terrain of software king Microsoft.

Google unveiled email security services built with technology from Postini, a start-up the California Internet titan bought last year for 625 million dollars. The software protects, filters, encrypts and archives email, and is compatible with Microsoft Exchange, Lotus Notes, and Novell Groupwise.

Google said subscription pricing for email security starts at three dollars a year per user to "accommodate the budget of any business." Premium online services that include virus protection and saving messages is priced at 25 dollars annually per user.

"As threats rise in volume and complexity, and compliance requirements pile up, IT is struggling to find the resources to keep up," said Google director of product management Scott Petry. "Now, Google can take care of this for you."

2/6/2008 7:26:02 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 
 Sunday, February 03, 2008

A third underwater fiber-optic cable was cut today in the Persian Gulf, off the coast of Dubai, United Arab Emirates, according to its owner Flag Telecom, compounding Internet problems in the Middle East and India, the BBC reported today.

The third cable, known as the Falcon cable, comes after breaks in two cables off the Mediterranean seacoast on Wednesday.

Those breaks required carriers to reroute Internet traffic from the U.S. to India and other nations in the Middle East the other way around the world, across the Pacific Ocean, leading to some Internet delays.

The cause of the first two breaks is believed to be a result of a ship's anchor that dragged and snapped the cables, and a similar cause might be involved in the third incident. Flag Telecom will start repairs next week on one of the first two cables linking Egypt and Italy, the company said today. A repair ship is expected to reach the site of the damage, 8.3 kilometers (about five miles) from Alexandria, Egypt, on Tuesday. The repair will take a week to complete.

The breaks on Wednesday were to the Flag Telecom Europe-Asia cable, owned by India's Reliance Communications Ltd., and on the South East Asia-Middle East-West Europe 4 (SEA-ME-WE 4) cable, owned by a consortium that includes Verizon Communications Inc. in New York. The cable damage disrupted the Internet and other communications to the Middle East and India.

Flag said the Europe-Asia cable was cut at 8 a.m. GMT on Wednesday. The company also said it was able to restore circuits to some customers and was switching to alternative routes for others.

2/3/2008 7:31:47 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 

The US Congress Judiciary Committee will hold a hearing next week to scrutinize Microsoft's multi-billion-dollar bid to acquire Yahoo in order to take on Internet goliath Google. Leading members of the committee scheduled a February 8 hearing after Microsoft's announced it is courting California-based Yahoo with a 44.6-billion-dollar offer.

"Microsoft's bid to acquire Yahoo is certainly one of the largest technology mergers we've seen and presents important issues regarding the competitive landscape of the Internet," Congressmen John Conyers and Lamar Smith said in a written statement.

"The Committee will hear from experts who will weigh in on whether this proposed consolidation works to further or undermine the fundamental principles of a competitive Internet." Yahoo has yet to say whether it will accept the offer, but analysts believe it is too good a deal for the struggling Internet veteran to refuse and that US regulators are unlikely to find grounds to stop it.

2/3/2008 7:02:52 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 

Sun Microsystems purchase of MySQL for $1 billion is not only the largest open-source deal yet, it's almost bigger than all previous open-source deals combined, including RedHat's $326 million buy of JBoss, Citrix's $500 million purchase of XenSource and Yahoo's $350 million acquisition of Zimbra.

But the deal raises a number of questions for Sun. Was that $1 billion well spent? What will Sun do with its new database? And will the purchase improve its standing in the enterprise? More important than the $1 billion price tag, however, is whether Sun can execute its strategy of taking a database that's popular in certain circles and successfully move it into the enterprise accounts, where they are a well-respected vendor.

Whatever technical issues Sun may face in integrating MySQL into its current stack pale in comparison with the marketing challenge.In the scheme of things, the most important IT issue for large businesses is reliability. For databases, companies need to know product is solid, can scale and won't go down if they make severe demands on it.

2/3/2008 6:56:54 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 
 Saturday, February 02, 2008

Barracuda Networks, a maker of e-mail and Web security hardware, has sent out a distress call to the open source community to save it from patent litigation at the hands of Trend Micro, a competing security company. On Tuesday it asked for help from anyone who can provide information that can invalidate Trend Micro's patent on gateway antivirus scanning.

Barracuda Networks has framed the dispute as an attack not only on itself but on the open source community and the free Clam AntiVirus software by "commercial patent holders attempting to unjustly hinder the free and open source community," as Dean Drako, president and CEO of Barracuda Networks, put it in a statement issued on Tuesday.

Trend Micro spokesperson Mike Sweeny said the litigation isn't an attack on the open source community. "This case is really about two companies, Barracuda Networks and Panda Security, that are selling products in the U.S. that we feel infringe on our time-tested patent," he said. Drako disagrees with this assessment. "If you read the legal documents from Trend Micro, all of the infringement claims they make are about Clam AV," he said in a phone interview. "They may be legally suing us but ... it's pretty clearly an attack on Clam AV."

It may also be an attack on the disruptive price points of products based on open source software. Drako pointed to a recent article that he said found Barracuda's hardware to be a tenth the cost of competing boxes. Trend Micro in early 2006. Sweeny from Trend Micro confirmed that both Symantec and McAfee have licensed the patent as well.

Following demands from Trend Micro in 2006 to pay a royalty that Drako characterized as onerous, Barracuda Networks sued Trend Micro in March 2007 seeking a declaratory judgment that it was not infringing upon the '600 patent. Toward the end of 2007, Trend Micro countered by filing a claim with the International Trade Commission (ITC) seeking to block the importation and inclusion of Clam AntiVirus software in Barracuda's security appliances.

"Trend Micro is seeking an interpretation of its '600 patent such that would give it exclusive control of gateway antivirus scanning," Barracuda states on a Web page it has posted about the case. "Scanning for viruses at the gateway is an obvious and common technique that is utilized by most businesses worldwide. Such an interpretation would mean that anyone, including the owners of the more than one million active ClamAV installations, could potentially be sued by Trend Micro."

"They're accusing us of importing open source software," said Drako. "How can you accuse someone of importing open source software? It's written everywhere." Nonetheless, Trend Micro appears to be doing just that it. If it prevails, Drako predicts trouble for companies that rely on open source software. "If Trend Micro is successful in claiming that we import Clam AV, and therefore that the ITC is the appropriate court, I could go claim that Linux is imported by IBM ... I could start suing them in the ITC. It could reinvent how patent litigation is done for open source software. It's a pretty bold move."

2/2/2008 8:30:46 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  |