Bay Geeks Computer Repair Services

November 27, 2008

Stump the Geeks: Tips for bypassing the Windows login page

Filed under: General — admin @ 1:28 pm
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Q. Whenever I update my system, I have to reboot. I also reboot on my own from time to time. When I reboot, I like to go do something else for a few minutes but I can’t, because I have to click OK to get by the Windows login page. I have no login password on my system. What can I do to bypass the login page and have the system be at the desktop when I get back to continue with my work?

A. The process is very similar for both Windows XP and Vista, said Priscilla Alden with University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill’s Information Technology Services.

First, click on the “Start” button in the lower left corner of the screen. In XP, select “Run,” type “control userpasswords2″ in the box and press “Enter.” For Vista, type “control userpasswords2″ in the “Search” box and press “Enter.” From here, both XP and Vista are the same.

Make sure that the box for “Users must enter a username and password to use this computer” is checked. Select which user account you would like to log in automatically. If you skip this step, the administrator will automatically be selected and this could make trouble for you later. Now uncheck the box for “Users must enter a username and password to use this computer.”

Click OK and you will be prompted to enter the user account password. Double-check here that the correct user has been selected; if not, type in the correct account. Type your password in the boxes; if you have no password, leave this blank.

Click OK again and enjoy your coffee break.

Q. My computer is running extremely slowly; it takes several minutes to boot up and agonizingly long to respond to any command. I believe there may be programs running that I can’t see, but don’t know how to find out which ones I might be able to eliminate from start up or how to do it. Can you help?

A. “A ’slow computer’ makes up about half of our business,” Alden said.

She suggests going back to the “Start” menu and the “Run” box. Type “msconfig” and choose the “Startup” tab to see which programs are set to run when your computer starts. You can disable any that are unnecessary.

Alden cautions against removing programs indiscriminately. If you don’t know what a program does, try searching the Web first or just leave it alone, she said.

If this doesn’t help, you may need to add more RAM to your computer or go to the extreme measure of reloading the operating system and software.

 Source: http://www.venturacountystar.com/news/2008/nov/26/bc-cpt-stumpthegeeksra-8212-business-550-words/

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November 22, 2008

Huge drop in spam as McColo closes

Filed under: General, Uncategorized, spam — Tags: — admin @ 8:13 am
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If you’ve noticed that your spam load has been a little lighter of late, you’ve got one company to thank for it: McColo, a spam-friendly hosting company that shut down early this week.

While you might not think that a single company could be responsible for too much of the Internet’s sewage, you’d be surprised: according to figures from security vendor MXLogic quoted by CNet world spam volume is down by approximately 50 percent – all from that one host.

Benny Ng, marketing director of McColo’s main upstream provider Hurricane Electric, is credited with pulling the plug on the company’s main source of bandwidth – although why it took him quite so long is another matter entirely.

Much of the investigative work that resulted in the spam sewer being plugged was performed, perhaps surprisngly, by Brian Krebs of the Washington Post. Krebs claims that the company, which was hosting command and control servers for hordes of virus-infected Windows machines worldwide, could be responsible for the co-ordination of up to 75 percent of all spam.

While that figure might be a little on the high side, anti-spam outfit IronPort claims that the McColo shutdown resulted in “a drop of almost 2/3 of overall spam volume, correlating with a drop in IronPort’s SenderBase queries” - a dip the company initially thought was due to a technical problem.

Sadly, the reprieve is likely to be temporary: IronPort’s Nilesh Bhandari says his company is seeing a “slow recovery” by the spammers as they relocate the botnet servers to new hosts, and his company “fully [expects] this to recover completely, and to go into the highest spam period ever during the holiday season.” The message is clear: enjoy the quiet while it lasts.

Have you noticed a drop in your own personal spam feed, or have the pill pushers and porn merchants been as busy as ever making sure you don’t miss a single shill? Share your thoughts over in the forums.

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