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HTMLfixIT Archive for the ‘General’ Category




Wednesday, March 23rd, 2005 by Don

Mike Davidson posts today about this project called Our Media that boasts it will forever host your digital works for free without bandwidth or other costs. Sounds great? Is it truly sustainable? For something that says it is soon to leave beta status and will shortly hope to become a 501(c)(3) charitable organization – a designation that means United States donors may deduct the donation from income subject to tax – those are pretty big promises. Someone has to pay the bandwidth bill and pay for the software to find and store the media. And indeed, how long before the thing is bogged down with junk (you know the creative content that may not deserve to see the light of day? – just kidding art is all good – even spam and advertising content …), or at least different versions of the same thing? The concept is good, but the promises sound Utopian to me.

Until this is funded by a major endowment it is just big talk. If it works off of an advertising model, then it isn’t really free, because your work may be carried under an advertisement for something that you dislike immensely. So while it is without monetary cost, you are supporting something you don’t care for – arguably a cost. That doesn’t mean it shouldn’t be attempted, but rather that it is likely to fail as those currently giving of time and talent are likely to shift focus, lose interest, and some will even die. The commenters over there (that I didn’t read until I was almost done with this post) seem equally rosy as I am. Maybe if enough of us tell them how silly they are, that will be just the ticket to get them motivated to get over the hump.

It will be interesting to see how usable the indexing is. To archive without reasonable retrieval is of no real value.

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Tuesday, March 22nd, 2005 by Franki

ScanIT, a web consultancy company, is showing statistics reflecting that Internet Explorer was unsafe for 98% of 2004, verses 15% for Mozilla based browsers like Firefox. This puts to rest arguments that Internet Explorer is a security problem only because it is more popular at the moment. The Inq article is well worth reading as it explains some of the reasons why, and the implications of, the IE security problem.

Run the browser security checker yourself at http://bcheck.scanit.be/bcheck/ to find out if your protected, I just ran the test myself using Firefox and it found zero known vunerabilities. Good to know.

Comments Off on Internet Explorer “unsafe” for 98% of 2004.

Tuesday, March 22nd, 2005 by Franki

Even though people are getting more aware of the Spyware issue, it still amazes me how many computers end up in front of me with stability and speed problems caused by an abundance of spyware on them. To that end here is a list of the top ten spyware programs to watch out for.

For those of you that want your system to run as fast and stable as a Windows machine can (It’s not much, but you have to start somewhere right?), head over to tips.littlehosting.com and grab yourself some free protection.

Comments Off on Top ten Spyware to watch out for.

Tuesday, March 22nd, 2005 by Franki

US senators have introduced a new “Spy Block” bill designed to target deceptive spyware tactics. Thus far such laws have been only partially successful but we can hope right?

Word has it that the latest target of scammers is Internet phones, which are used via techniques like senderID spoofing to collect credit card numbers from unsuspecting customers, (by pretending to be banks for example). The low cost of Internet VOIP (Voice Over Internet Protocol) makes this sort of thing almost as cheap as SPAM. I guess we can call this “Phoice” scams? (Phishing over voice).

In related news, Phishing attacks in general are on the rise, Symantec says that one in every two hundred emails was a phishing scam and 60% of mail was SPAM between the months of July and December last year. From our own server statistics, I’d say that about matches what we’ve found here also. Phishing is the process where users are lured to a fake website (usually a copy of a banks website) in the hopes of stealing their username/password for the real site.

To help protect yourself from online threats using all free software, see tips.littlehosting.com

Comments Off on Spyware, scams and phishing.

Monday, March 21st, 2005 by Franki

Microsoft was found guilty of anti-competitive behaviour by the US DOJ a few years ago, and got what many see as a slap on the wrist as punishment for their crimes. Their punishment didn’t really do much good, but it didn’t actually do any damage either. Now flip to 2005 where Microsoft have again been found guilty of anti-competitive behaviour, this time by the European Commission. Microsoft have appealed the decision, but in the mean time they are being forced to comply with the punishments which include a half a billion Euro fine, offering a version of Windows without their Media player (and not being allowed to call it “reduced media edition”) and most importantly, to offer information on their protocols to third parties who wish to create software that is interoperable with Windows on the client and server.
That last one is where this little story kicks in. Microsoft appear to have viewed this ruling as a way of excluding their biggest competitor (Open Source) from being being compatible with their products, and to create another huge revenue stream by selling licenses requiring royalties on each product sold that used the information covered by the license. Does anyone there remember that this was supposed to be a punishment for their anti-competitive behaviour?

Microsoft have made it clear (to me at least) that they want to choose their own opposition, and they’ve also made it pretty clear that they want Sun to be their main competitor by making several press releases touting Sun/MS interoperability programs. They want Sun as their “competitor” I suspect, because Sun is a traditional software company that they have proven in the past they can win against. Linux and other Open Source has already proven itself immune to Microsoft’s normal “competitive practices”, it can’t be bought or crushed because it isn’t owned by any single corporate entity, criticizing it seems to hurt Microsoft more then OSS, lawsuits don’t appear to be working (SCO), security is not an effective selling point for your software when your own house is not even made of glass, but rather of sand, and cost comparisons don’t seem to look so good unless Microsoft pays for the research. So what can they do? Why they can make sure that OSS software can’t have access to any of the interoperability data and help along their chosen competitor who is apparently not smart enough to realise that they are but a pawn and that this will only last till MS doesn’t need them any more.

Don’t take my word for it, read this ZDnet article covering the same issue in a more humorous and factual manner then I have here. It should be noted that the EC are not happy with the progress of Microsoft’s compliance, and may end up fining them 5 million a day till they reach compliance with the court appointed sanctions.

Comments Off on Microsoft: Paid to be punished.

Sunday, March 20th, 2005 by Franki

EDS has come out with a scathing review of Linux and it’s potential in enterprise business as part of the “EDS Agility Alliance” saying that it lacked the security, scalability and stability of other offerings and wasn’t really any cheaper to boot. Cracks start to appear however when you look back a little further to some of their other press releases where they tout running Linux and Open Source software themselves “to ensure stability and security while keeping costs low.” Apparently their new alliance with Microsoft and Sun has changed their minds about Open Source’s validity in the market place. Since both Microsoft and Sun are competitors of Linux, it makes sense that you probably wouldn’t get their support if you had a pro Linux stance. Read the EDS anti Linux report and ZDnet’s observations of EDS’s contradictory statements for more detail. It should be noted that EDS was apparently behind the massive outage of most of 80,000 UK government “Department for Work and Pensions” PC’s after a failed patching process late last year.

INSERT: EDS is now in a bit of a scrap with the UK government for failing to get their new systems working correctly on time or on budget and the government has apparently withheld some payments till EDS gets it’s act together. Apparently, the system has some issues that have brought staff to tears as well.

Comments Off on EDS: Do what we say, not what we do.

Saturday, March 19th, 2005 by Franki

It seems that a new generation of hardware/game enthusiasts is learning the hard way what many of us in the IT industry have known for a long time. Microsoft makes some dodgy gear, be it software or hardware and then seemingly absolves itself of liability wherever possible. Early versions of the Xbox are said to have a dodgy connection between the power socket on the power supply and the PSU circuit board to which it is soldered. Rather then fix the real issue, which would be expensive and require people to deliver their Xboxes to repair centers, Microsoft has seemingly offered a band aid fix in the form of power cables with what is essentially a circuit breaker built in. As many have pointed out, that is likely to stop your Xbox burning your house down, but it isn’t going to stop your Xbox from failing. Read a new petition from users upset about the “cover up” and demanding action, and read TheRegisters account of the issue. If you own an old Xbox, head over to Xbox.com to find out if you need a replacement cable, and visit xbox-scene to see a pictures of what is apparently the underlying cause of the problem.

Comments Off on Microsoft getting burned over bad Xbox PSU’s.







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HTMLfixIT Site Stats.

Browser Statistics
Internet Explorer 85.88%
IE 717.63%
IE 62.3%
IE 50.00%
IE other8.6%
Moz Firefox 3.x3.03%
Moz Firefox 2.x0.18%
Moz Firefox 0.x/1.x26.65%
Netscape 8.x0.00%
NS 6+/Mozilla2.73%
Moz Seamonkey0.00%
K-meleon0.00%
Epiphany0.00%
Netscape 4.x0.00%
Opera 9.x0.00%
Opera 8.x0.00%
Opera 7.x0.42%
Opera 6.x0.00%
Opera other0.42%
Safari Mac/Intel5.21%
Safari Mac/PPC0.06%
Safari Windows25.2%
Google Chrome1.51%
Konqueror0.18%
Galeon0.00%
WebTV0.00%


Resolution Statistics
640 x 4800.25%
800 x 60026.14%
1024 x 76836.55%
1152 x 8640.25%
1280 x 80011.68%
1280 x 8540.00%
1280 x 102417.01%
1400 x 10500.00%
1600 x 12001.02%
1920 x 12007.11%
2560 x 10240.00%


OS Statistics
Windows 741.55%
Windows Vista2.4%
Windows 20033.91%
Windows XP20.86%
Windows 20000.36%
Windows NT40.05%
Windows 98/ME0.05%
Windows 950.00%
Linux/UNIX/BSD8.76%
Mac OSX8.03%
Mac Classic0.00%
Misc14.03%



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