Bay Geeks Computer Repair Services

March 8, 2010

Free Facebook iPad beta-test offer is a scam

Filed under: Uncategorized — admin @ 3:16 pm
0
Digg me

Sophos has posted an article about a fake offer regarding the upcoming gadget from Apple, the iPad.

The team behind the spam sets up a Facebook page where it encourages a user to become a fan of its page. Then, it encourage the user’s friends to become fans of the page by letting the user invite them via a handy button. When a user do this process, it would supposedly increase his or her chances of being accepted for the iPad’s “Research Team”.

After all of those things occur, the next step shows a page that looks like an official Apple webpage. However, a pop-up survey would show up right after.

The pop-up survey includes a form to fill in a user’s contact information and it is trying to sign up the user for a premium rate cellphone service that charge approximately $10 a week.

This Facebook page was disabled very promptly after the author of the article Graham Cluley alerted Facebook’s security team.

Scams like these also happen on other social media sites such as Twitter. Five screenshots are included in the article. They show the Facebook page, a user’s invite form, the survey, the twitter post, and the webpage that users would see after clicking on the twitter post.

Source

Add This! Blinkbits Blinklist Blogmarks BlogMemes BlueDot BlogLines co.mments Connotea del.icio.us de.lirio.us Digg Diigo DZone Facebook FeedMeLinks Folkd.com Fleck Furl Google Google Reader icio.de IndianPad Leonaut LinkaGoGo Linkarena Linkter Magnolia Mister Wong MyShare Ask.com MyStuff Ask.com Yahoo! MyWeb Netscape Netvouz Newsgator Newsvine Oneview.de RawSugar reddit Rojo Segnalo Shadows Simpy SlashDot Smarking Sphere Spurl Startaid StumbleUpon TailRank Technorati ThisNext yigg.de Webnews.de ReadMe.ru Dobavi.com Dao.bg Lubimi.com Ping.bg Pipe.bg Svejo.net Web-bg.com Plugin by Dichev.com

November 8, 2009

Filed under: Uncategorized — admin @ 8:07 am
0
Digg me

Seven Improvements in Security in Windows 7
Jayesh Limaye
Nov 05 2009
 

Windows 7 does come with a lot of eye-candy, but the beauty is not just skin deep. This new OS has got some enhancements in the security features and here is a list.

Spanking new Action Center


You can access the various security configurations in Vista by opening Security Center in Control Panel, but Windows 7 has done away with this in favour of a new Action Center. Here, you have security configurations as well as options for administrative tasks such as Backup, Troubleshooting And Diagnostics and Windows Update - everything at one place.

UAC with better malware protection 

Ever since User Account Control (UAC) introduced in Vista, people have been complaining about how finicky it is because it keeps asking for permissions. UAC was designed to provide better protection from malware. Not just standard users, it bothers even administrator accounts when you need to do something requiring admin privileges. The only solution for users was to turn it off completely, which results in exposure to potential threats.

While UAC is still very much present in Windows 7, it can now be configured by the user at four different levels, which decide how bothersome it would be. The four settings are:

  • Always notify when programs try to install software or make any changes to computer settings, or if you try to make changes to Windows settings (UAC completely ON).
  • Notify when programs make changes but not if you make changes to Windows settings (this is the default).
  • Notify you only when programs make changes but do not dim the desktop (turn off Secure Desktop) while the UAC prompt is displayed. (This would be preferred by most users as it is a good balance of protection and nagging UAC prompts)
  • Never notify you. (Not recommended, as it is the same as turning UAC completely off.)

These settings can be adjusted by means of a slider.

AppLocker - Control your applications

To prevent people from running certain applications that may pose a security threat, XP and Vista had Software Restriction Policies, which can be configured by the administrator. This was a bit difficult to use for many people and was therefore not used much. Windows 7 comes with a new feature known as AppLocker, which does exactly the same thing, but it is easier to use and is more flexible to control. AppLocker can be used with domain Group Policies or on the local machine with Local Security Policy snap-in. You can see it in the left pane of the Application Control Policies node snap-in. Please note that old Software Restriction Policies is also still supported in Windows 7.

DROPDOWN__PAGETITLE__Windows 7 security improvements __/PAGETITLE__DROPDOWN

Natively supported Biometric security

One of the best known methods of security authentication is biometrics, which includes the use of fingerprint scans, retinal scan, or other physiological features unique to the user to determine his/her identity. Windows 7 comes with built-in support for fingerprint readers. While you may point that Windows did have this feature earlier, and even Windows XP laptops came with such a feature, they did require a third party application to be installed to achieve this. In case of Windows 7, there is native support for this, so you do not need to install any driver or software. You can configure fingerprint readers in the Biometric Devices applet in the Control Panel.

Improved BitLocker

While Vista did come with BitLocker, it allowed you to encrypt only the drive on which the OS was present, and after SP1 came, it would allow you to encrypt other fixed drives as well. But in Windows 7, you can use BitLocker to encrypt even your removable drives. This is a great feature since it is the removable drives that are likely to get lost or stolen than your fixed hard drive. Therefore, an  encryption of this kind is warranted, especially if there is important data on the drive.

To access BitLocker, all you need to do is open the BitLocker applet in Control Panel, pick the drive you want to encrypt and click Turn On BitLocker. Better still, you can even right-click on the drive icon in Windows Explorer and do this. The removable drive then appears in a section called BitLocker To Go.

PowerShell v2 - Powerful UNIX-like scripting

Windows PowerShell is a tool to automate tasks using cmdlets (commands that perform single tasks) and scripts made up of multiple cmdlets to perform complex and multi-step tasks. It is essentially a powerful UNIX-like command-line shell interface and scripting tool, as can be seen in the figure, and is for those with a penchant for programming. While this tool can be downloaded and run in Windows XP or Vista, it comes bundled with Windows 7. PowerShell v2, which is the newer version that comes in Windows 7, has an additional 240 new cmdlets and new APIs. It also has features such as the ability to invoke PowerShell scripts and cmdlets even on a remote computer. It also lets you manage various Group Policy security settings. PowerShell is considered very powerful because the cmdlets method requires fewer steps than using the GUI method. 

DirectAccess

Another nifty new feature of Windows 7 is DirectAccess. This feature allows remote users to connect securely to their corporate networks over the internet without using a VPN. The administrator can apply Group Policy settings and manage the mobile computers or even update them whenever the mobile machines are connected to the internet. The user need not be logged in on these machines for this. Multifactor authentication with smart cards is also supported by DirectAccess and it uses IPv6 over IPsec to encrypt the traffic. This feature is available only in Windows 7 Enterprise and Windows Server 2008 R2.

Source

Add This! Blinkbits Blinklist Blogmarks BlogMemes BlueDot BlogLines co.mments Connotea del.icio.us de.lirio.us Digg Diigo DZone Facebook FeedMeLinks Folkd.com Fleck Furl Google Google Reader icio.de IndianPad Leonaut LinkaGoGo Linkarena Linkter Magnolia Mister Wong MyShare Ask.com MyStuff Ask.com Yahoo! MyWeb Netscape Netvouz Newsgator Newsvine Oneview.de RawSugar reddit Rojo Segnalo Shadows Simpy SlashDot Smarking Sphere Spurl Startaid StumbleUpon TailRank Technorati ThisNext yigg.de Webnews.de ReadMe.ru Dobavi.com Dao.bg Lubimi.com Ping.bg Pipe.bg Svejo.net Web-bg.com Plugin by Dichev.com

October 29, 2009

Windows 7: Will you or won’t you?

Filed under: Uncategorized — admin @ 7:55 am
0
Digg me

It was almost a year ago, two years into the lifecycle of Windows Vista, that Microsoft Corp. CEO Steve Ballmer acknowledged at an industry conference that many enterprises were likely to skip the company’s latest operating system in anticipation of its successor, Windows 7. With the new OS shipping next month, what kind of reception will it get from IT shops? Will they flock to the new operating system after waiting out Vista? Or will they take a more cautious approach? We asked some of our readers about their plans for Windows 7.

 

Don’t fix what isn’t broken

 

Cris Gheorghiu works as a technical support analyst providing day-to-day IT support for the Kleinburg, Ont.-based McMichael Canadian Art Collection. The art gallery is a small shop, with about 60 to 70 desktops currently under Gheorghiu’s command.

 

While the recession was probably the biggest influence in preventing a Vista upgrade over the last year, the fact that XP has remained so stable and the art gallery isn’t a full-fledged Microsoft shop could be a strike against a Windows 7 upgrade in the near future.

 

“I know Microsoft is pushing collaborative applications with Exchange and if we were really dependant on that, we’d have no choice to upgrade,” he said. “But we’re using IBM Lotus Notes, so we’re still pretty happy with what we have. We don’t need more bells and whistles just to look nice.”

 

To underscore how happy the art gallery is with their current setup, Gheorghiu recalled how easily its offices handled power problems caused by a group of tornados that ripped through the Greater Toronto Area in August.

 

“If it was an Exchange server it probably would have been one day’s work to get it running,” he said. “But we only needed to restart our Domino server to get everything back in business.”

 

Another reason a Windows 7 upgrade in the near future is doubtful, Gheorghiu said, is the indirect costs it will have on the art gallery’s infrastructure. The museum has recently added an environment application that controls the temperature and a building automation system that controls the lights. Both of these applications are untested with Vista and Windows 7 and were developed for Windows Server 2003 and XP.

 

Source

Add This! Blinkbits Blinklist Blogmarks BlogMemes BlueDot BlogLines co.mments Connotea del.icio.us de.lirio.us Digg Diigo DZone Facebook FeedMeLinks Folkd.com Fleck Furl Google Google Reader icio.de IndianPad Leonaut LinkaGoGo Linkarena Linkter Magnolia Mister Wong MyShare Ask.com MyStuff Ask.com Yahoo! MyWeb Netscape Netvouz Newsgator Newsvine Oneview.de RawSugar reddit Rojo Segnalo Shadows Simpy SlashDot Smarking Sphere Spurl Startaid StumbleUpon TailRank Technorati ThisNext yigg.de Webnews.de ReadMe.ru Dobavi.com Dao.bg Lubimi.com Ping.bg Pipe.bg Svejo.net Web-bg.com Plugin by Dichev.com

October 28, 2009

Fraud Alert: Phishing—The Latest Tactics and Potential Business Impact

Filed under: Uncategorized — admin @ 11:00 am
0
Digg me

Overview: The potential impact of phishing can be costly for a business — whether an employee or its customers have been attacked or the company Web site has been compromised. Organizations need to stay current on the latest methods employed by cyber-criminals and take steps to prevent this type of fraud.

This paper highlights the current trends in today’s phishing schemes, the potential impact on companies, and insight into how businesses can apply technology to protect themselves and their customers.

Source

Add This! Blinkbits Blinklist Blogmarks BlogMemes BlueDot BlogLines co.mments Connotea del.icio.us de.lirio.us Digg Diigo DZone Facebook FeedMeLinks Folkd.com Fleck Furl Google Google Reader icio.de IndianPad Leonaut LinkaGoGo Linkarena Linkter Magnolia Mister Wong MyShare Ask.com MyStuff Ask.com Yahoo! MyWeb Netscape Netvouz Newsgator Newsvine Oneview.de RawSugar reddit Rojo Segnalo Shadows Simpy SlashDot Smarking Sphere Spurl Startaid StumbleUpon TailRank Technorati ThisNext yigg.de Webnews.de ReadMe.ru Dobavi.com Dao.bg Lubimi.com Ping.bg Pipe.bg Svejo.net Web-bg.com Plugin by Dichev.com

September 3, 2009

The Top 10 Reasons To Outsource Your Enterprise Email To Gmail Now

Filed under: Uncategorized — admin @ 7:44 am
0
Digg me

Last week, I wrote about how the recent Gmail outage actually draws attention to why Gmail is more worthy of enterprises than it has ever been. That opinion stands in contrast to a story my colleague Antone Gonsalves recently published (see “Google Takes Credibility Hit With Gmail Outage“). My response: If you are currently insourcing your e-mail and, at the very least, notconsidering that system’s replacement with Gmail, I want some of what you’re smoking.

I said “considering.”

For some organizations, Gmail simply will not do. But so long as those organizations are reaching that conclusion based on fact and not FUD (fear, uncertainty, and doubt), that’s fine. For example, some organizations might be prevented by law from keeping their e-mail on systems that are publicly accessible through the Internet.

Unfortunately, it’s incidents like this week’s Gmail outage and the subsequent storm of rage in the press, blogs, and twittersphere that cause many decision makers to irresponsibly turn a blind eye to a solution that, in reality, is almost too good to be true. So, if you’re one of those people who is willing to give Google a chance here, but you need to convince others, here is a top 10 list of reasons that should give any organization (and its CFO) pause for thought.

1. Your e-mail domain: Contrary to what many believe, when an organization embraces Gmail as its corporate e-mail solution, everyone in that organization gets to to keep their existing e-mail address. In other words, they don’t have to accept a new address that’s something like davidberlind@gmail.com.

In order to keep your existing e-mail addresses, your organization must become a subscriber to Google Apps.

2. Who said “Ain’t nuthin’ for free”? There are two primary Google Apps offerings: Standard and Premier (Google also has special offerings for educational institutions, nonprofits, and ISPs). The Standard Edition (what I call GASE) is free. The Premier Edition (GAPE) costs $50 per user per year. Here is a chart that compares the two offerings.

Millions of businesses can make do with the free version. Yes, the free version comes with advertising, but the ads are relatively unobtrusive and living with them in exchange for getting a free service is worth the trade-off. Users of GASE get more than 7 GB of storage (25 GB for GAPE users). Providing that sort of e-mail storage to users (many of whom would kill to have it) is inconceivable to most organizations because of the time, effort, and gear required to keep such a storage infrastructure up, running, fault-tolerant, and backed up.

Even at $50 per user per year, most organizations will find that subscribing to Google Apps just for its e-mail and group calendaring compares favorably with the total cost of running any in-sourced solution (people, gear, software, add-ons for backup, mobility, etc.). Ask your CFO. What would s/he prefer (particularly in tough economic times where staffing levels are constantly in flux?)? An annual cost, some component of which must be written down and some of which may go to waste during downsizing cycles? Or subscription costs that hit the books differently (and more predictably) and that bypass the care and feeding associated with the people, gear, and software that are necessary to keep those in-sourced systems running?

3. “No way. You get that, too?” I’m hearing more and more about knowledge workers who, in lieu of the officially sanctioned Office Suite, use Google Docs (mainly word processing and spreadsheets, but sometimes presentations, too) to effectively collaborate on some document first. Once that document is complete, they must begrudgingly move it into the officially sanctioned legacy solution that requires local software to open the document and, in many cases, requires that the document be inefficiently passed around as an e-mail attachment (that constantly has to be stored locally, attached, and detached).

That was a round-about way of saying that for the same free price or $50 per user per year, you get an Office Suite, too — one that will likely satisfy 99% of users 99% of the time. Never mind that those documents are accessible from almost anywhere and to almost any device because they’re Web-based (see point #8).

To sweeten the deal, that Office Suite has collaboration so baked-in that there’s no checking-out and checking-in of documents or additional infrastructure (servers, software, experts, etc.) that must be added to the equation to fudge collaboration. With Google Apps, when two or more people are looking at the same document at the same time, they can see the changes that everyone is making, in real time (you can also see who else is viewing and editing the document). Whenever people actually experience this for the first time, they usually have that “ah hah moment.” It’s sort of like “Where has this been my whole life?”

Traditional solution providers argue that they can match that functionality. But for the same $50 per user per year (or free) and for the same reduced headaches? I don’t think so. But don’t ask me. Ask your CFO.

4. Hands-free upgrades and patches: OK, I’m lying. I was going to write that neither you nor your users will have to lift a finger to take advantage of the lastest bug fix or new “release” of the service.

But the truth is that, effectively, you may end up lifting a finger. For example, if at 11:59, you’re using the “old” version of Google Apps, and at 12:00, Google updates the Google Apps codebase, your browser will inherit that new codebase the next time you refresh the page (finger required) or Gmail’s Ajax-based code does it for you (no finger required).

No downloads are necessary. No regression testing of patches to make sure they’re not going to destabilize your desktops. No checking up on all your desktops to make sure they received and installed the latest patch. No reboots. No deskside visits. And this doesn’t even take into account the patch/upgrade cycle for your e-mail servers.

In the bigger scheme of total cost of ownership, you probably don’t have a dollar-value assigned to this “line-item” since, technically, it’s a soft-dollar cost. It’s hard to pinpoint the real cost. But given the comparative complexity and number of potential points where things can go wrong when upgrading desktops and servers, companies need to ask themselves whether the additional value they’re sure they’re getting by insourcing their e-mail systems is worth the headaches associated with maintaining them.

There’s also a less-talked about but supremely groundbreaking side to this upgrade or patch-the-cloud point (and it’s not just true of Gmail). We’ve all encountered buggy software. The dirty little secret, if you ask me, is that all software is really “beta” software. After all, what’s the difference between some software’s codebase on the day before it’s “released to manufacturing” (”RTM’d”) and the day after it’s RTMed? Maybe fewer bugs. But no bugs? Now you know why, in reality, all software is beta and cloud-based services like Gmail are no different.

What is different from insourced, shrink-wrapped solutions like Exchange and Lotus Notes to outsourced cloud-based solutions like Gmail is the turnaround time when it comes to taking care of those bugs. In the insourced world, if you run into a critical bug with your software, you might pick up the Batphone and call your solution provider and ask them to fix it. That is, of course, if you have a technical support contract that gets you the red carpet treatment. Otherwise, you could be waiting for the next service pack before that bug gets eliminated.

In the case of Gmail (and I’m sure other cloud-based services, but I know this to be true of Gmail), Google has engineers that are monitoring the health of the application 24/7. Behind the scenes, Gmail traps the problems that are encountered by users and, depending on the criticality of the bug, a fix can be made (and pushed to the user base) within hours if need be. So, not only can bugs be dealt with by the solution provider in a matter of hours, applying the fix generally requires a click of the refresh button (and sometimes, not even that).

5. Great anti-spam at no additional cost: So bad is the spam problem that it has spawned an entire industry of solutions that companies must go out and buy (read: pay extra for) in order to have the industrial strength anti-spam police on your side.

Or, with Google Apps (and even standalone Gmail), you can get the industrial strength stuff for free (it’s also included in the $50 per user per month package). Part of an anti-spam system’s effectiveness lies in its all-seeing, all-knowing capability. The more e-mail an e-mail server sees, the better the odds are that it will spot the spam. For example, if you were the Gmail server (yes, I know people cannot be servers, but play along with me on this one), you would see a lot of e-mail passing through you; far more than if you were the e-mail server for one company. The more e-mail you see, the more you get to see how many copies of the same e-mail are going out to the world and who is sending those e-mails.

I’m greatly oversimplifying what happens behind Google anti-spam curtains. But to help you understand the importance of this one technique alone, consider this: The providers of other expensive commercial anti-spam systems use the number of customer installations and the fact that they get to analyze a lot of e-mail across all those installations as a selling point.

6. Break the chains that have bound you: Forgetting for a moment that we’re talking about Gmail and Google Apps here. If there’s one thing that we’ve learned from any of the major Web-based e-mail operators, it’s that the Web is truly the great desktop platform playing field leveler.

Every company has them; the outliers. The people who for one reason or another can’t go along with the rest of the employees and run whatever standard desktop stack that everyone else is running. In some companies, you have to justify the need for something off the beaten path before the purchasing department will even consider buying it for you. Then, if you survive the inquisition, there’s a good chance you’ll be on your own. Maybe the vendor of your e-mail system makes a client for that other platform. But chances are, it works very differently (ahem, Entourage vs. Outlook). So much so that it’s practically a deterrent to buying or using the software.

But once you move to a Web-based e-mail system like Gmail, everyone, regardless of platform, gets the same user interface in such a way that it’s one major step toward not just the sort of platform independence that your users should be entitled to, but also the sort of platform independence that your entire company should be entitled to because of the way it lowers the barrier to switching.

Think back to the days when hardly a month seemed like it passed without yet another major transgression being committed against the many highly vulnerable Windows-based systems of the day. Windows has come a long, long way since those days so I’m not here to dig Windows. But, back then, when asked why they were sticking with Windows in the face of so many security problems, most IT departments weren’t saying “Because we just love Windows so much we can’t fathom anything else.” For most, it was an addiction to certain Windows applications that couldn’t be broken.

Again, this isn’t about being anti-Windows. Addictions to anything are unhealthy and, at times, can be expensive. Moving to Web-based applications helps to break chains that deserve to be broken.

Finally (on this point, #6), keep in mind that most major e-mail systems that you’d insource have Web interfaces as well. So, there’s that option as well. But Gmail’s ability to go offline (point #9) without requiring anything more than the Gears plug-in (available for Firefox, IE, and Safari) should give you pause for thought.

7. Go mobile without the BS: I took some liberties there. I’m referring to the Blackberry Server (normally known as BES or BlackBerry Enterprise Server). The market for smartphone platforms that, one way or another, end up getting connected to corporate e-mail systems is crowded and is only going to get worse.

But even with some brilliant competition in the market, the BlackBerry platform is still king of the corporate hill. The only problem is that integrating it with the prevailing enterprise e-mail systems costs extra. For example, according to Research in Motion’s Web site, if you were to go out today and add a BlackBerry Enterprise Server to your system for 101 users, the cost would be $2,999 (for the BES with one client license) plus $5,999 (for an additional 100 client licenses). That’s approximately $89 per user, which is $39 more than the total cost per user per year for the Premier Edition of Google Apps itself.

Right now, you’re saying “But David, you’re comparing apples and oranges! The licensing terms are different for shrink-wrapped software than they are for subscription services!” Fair point. But consider this; like a lot of shrink-wrapped software, there’s an additional fee for support. How much? It’s not entirely clear because RIM doesn’t publish the pricing for its five different levels of support the way it publishes the retail pricing for its servers and client license fees. But I did find a reseller’s price sheet for the third level of support.

Meanwhile, to get Google Apps Gmail (and Calendar) on a BlackBerry, Google offers a free download. Updates to Google’s BlackBerry software are free as well. Google charges no additional support fees. For $50 per user per year, Google includes 24/7 support (listed on the bottom of this page).

Just as important, though, going back to my last point (#6) about breaking the chains that deserve to be broken, you don’t necessarily need a download to read your Gmail on a mobile device. Provided the mobile device has a robust-enough Web platform, Gmail’s mobile Web interface gets the job done.

8. Any time. Anywhere. Pretty much any device: Given the other points that were listed already, maybe this point goes without saying. But then again, it’s such a powerful point that it deserves to be listed separately in the top 10. Since becoming a Google Apps convert, I can’t tell you how many times I have checked my mail from a device other than my own.

In fairness, before I moved to Google Apps, I was able to do this with my corporate e-mail account because it was available through Outlook Web Access (a.k.a. OWA).

But the question IT departments need to ask themselves is whether they want to be responsible for providing and supporting a Web interface to the enterprise e-mail system at whatever expense it ends up costing (in hard and soft dollars). Or, would they rather that a reputable provider be on the hook for providing the service. Keep in mind that Google isn’t the only company that offers hosted Web-based e-mail using your domain. Microsoft offers a service called Exchange Online starting at $10 per user per month and even though it’s more expensive than Google Apps, it will still be worth it in the long run to let Microsoft instead of you worry about running your e-mail systems.

9. They (the Google Engineers) pulled a rabbit out of their hat: Dating back to May 2006 when Sun’s Francois Orsini was showing off JavaDB, I have very publicly been an optimist about the idea that, one day, someone would figure out how to make browser-based applications work offline. Plenty of people told me I was dreaming. They said it couldn’t be done and that the offline problem (aka “the airplane problem”) will always hold browser-based applications at bay.

If that’s the case, then will someone please wake me up? Because, if I’m not mistaken, Gmail can now be accessed offline from the comfort of my browser (Firefox, Safari, and Internet Explorer all supported). If you haven’t tried this, here’s a ScreenCast that shows how easy it is to set up (text continued below the screencast):

Video

I’ll concede that right now, the offline functionality is currently in an experimental mode (Google calls these experimental features “Labs”) and that it lacks one very important capability to some — the ability to attach a file to an e-mail while working offine. The problem is easily worked around.

But, for an experimental feature, it works pretty darn good. Good enough that I’ve finally been able to give up my installation of Outlook (that ran on a Windows Vista-based virtual machine using VMware’s Fusion). The only reason I had that copy of Outlook set up was so that I do integrated e-mail and calendaring while working offline (and in a way that both my e-mails and my appointments synced back to my Google Apps-based Gmail and Calendar).

10. Gmail account aggregation. We all have them — those personal e-mail accounts that we use for personal business. The ones that we send our friends to because we know that those accounts may actually survive the e-mail address that’s associated with our current job. Many people use regular Gmail for those accounts. But what many people don’t know is that Gmail can be configured so that not only can all mail flowing through all of your Gmail accounts be funneled to one in-box, but from that one in-box, you also can send outbound mail from any one of those accounts.

The net net is that you can have a whole bunch of Gmail and Google Apps accounts. But to check them, or send mail from them, you only need to login to one of them. This is a killer feature that’s hard to appreciate until you’ve actually experienced it.

Bonus Point #11. Google’s Labs: Useful. Fun. As mentioned earlier, a “Lab” is Google’s parlance for experimental feature. Some Labs are graduated into full-blown features. Others are decommissioned and never make it to the big leagues. Gmail’s Offline Lab will very likely graduate to a production feature of Gmail.

One point the Labs really drive home is point #4 (the one about the hands-free upgrades). Technically, these aren’t upgrades. They’re sort of like plug-ins or add-ons. The only difference is that they’re basically a radio-button away from being added to your Gmail account. When you think about what it would take to have similar functionality for locally installed shrink-wrapped software, having Labs takes all the complexity out of trying out new features and then either keeping them or leaving them behind.

Perhaps just as important is how the entire idea behind Labs draws the users of Gmail into the conversation about the technology. With previous generations of software, the idea that vendors would promote an open and public dialog with engineers was ridiculous. A suggestion box was practically unheard of. But, for every Lab that Google makes available to Gmail users, there’s also an associated Google Group threaded discussion area where users of the Labs can comment on them, interact with the engineers, and suggest other useful Labs.

At last count, there were more than 35 Labs that, with the click of a radio button, could be added into any Gmail user’s user experience. In addition to the offline functionality, there are Labs for rearranging Gmail’s layout, creating canned responses, adding a task list to Gmail, adding keyboard shortcuts, the now infamous Mail Goggles, and, going back to Top Ten Point #10, there’s a Lab for looking at multiple in-boxes simultaneously (if you’d rather not funnel them all into one).

Some Labs are incredibly useful. The Canned Response Lab is one of my favorites. I’ve created about 6 canned responses and they’ve increased my productivity because of how much faster re-usage of text allows me to respond to certain e-mails. There’s another Lab that embeds access to Google Documents directly into the Gmail interface (very cool) and another one of my all-time favorites is the addition of a Send & Archive button that sends an e-mail and archives it (takes it out of your in-box) in one fell swoop (OK, guys, now give me a Send & Delete button and you’re really talkin!).

But in addition to some of the more productive Labs, there are some that are just fun. For example, a random signature Lab that randomly picks famous quotes to append to the end of your e-mails. Or, the Old Snakey Lab that diverts you to a game of “Snake” when you could use a diversion. There’s also a texting Lab that lets you text any phone in the United States without having to leave the Gmail interface.

No doubt, more labs will be on the way. For example, Gmail has an autocomplete feature for adding e-mail addresses to the TO:, CC:, and BCC: fields. Unfortunately, it doesn’t work if all you can remember about someone’s e-mail address is their domain (eg: techweb.com). So, I’d love to see a Lab that enhances the autocomplete feature in such a way that I only need to enter the domain name.

And, for that additional functionality that might never show up as a Lab, some of it may actually already be available from third parties who’ve created a library of paid add-ons that you can enhance Google Apps with.

Conclusion
If you’ve made it this far, then clearly, you’re interested enough to give the idea some consideration. If that’s all you do, it’s a step in the right direction. Google Apps isn’t for everybody. But, if you ask me, it’s very worthy of a great many businesses who so far haven’t given it much thought, if any at all.

Source

Add This! Blinkbits Blinklist Blogmarks BlogMemes BlueDot BlogLines co.mments Connotea del.icio.us de.lirio.us Digg Diigo DZone Facebook FeedMeLinks Folkd.com Fleck Furl Google Google Reader icio.de IndianPad Leonaut LinkaGoGo Linkarena Linkter Magnolia Mister Wong MyShare Ask.com MyStuff Ask.com Yahoo! MyWeb Netscape Netvouz Newsgator Newsvine Oneview.de RawSugar reddit Rojo Segnalo Shadows Simpy SlashDot Smarking Sphere Spurl Startaid StumbleUpon TailRank Technorati ThisNext yigg.de Webnews.de ReadMe.ru Dobavi.com Dao.bg Lubimi.com Ping.bg Pipe.bg Svejo.net Web-bg.com Plugin by Dichev.com

August 31, 2009

Obama’s ‘emergency’ powers over Internet: Cybersecurity Bill S. 773

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: — admin @ 3:45 pm
0
Digg me

Disclaimer: Now, at Bay Geeks we’re not particularly political in our endeavors. We have on ocaision found some articles that we thought were interesting and may be of some value to our clients. We may or may not agree with the content of these articles but thought you may appreciate seeing them.

It’s proposed that the White House should have emergency powers to control the Internet. A bill [1] would give Barack Obama ‘cybersecurity’ authority to disconnect users and professionally certify IT people. In IT Blogwatch [2], bloggers get really spun up about it.

By Richi Jennings [3]. August 29, 2009.

Your humble blogwatcher has selected these bloggy morsels for your enjoyment. Not to mention boycotting Scotland…

Declan McCullagh takes liberties:

Internet companies and civil liberties groups were alarmed this spring when a U.S. Senate bill proposed handing the White House the power to disconnect private-sector computers from the Internet. They’re not much happier about a revised version. … CBSNews.com has obtained a copy.

The new version allows the president to “declare a cybersecurity emergency” relating to “non-governmental” computer networks and do what’s necessary to respond to the threat. Other sections of the proposal include a federal certification program for “cybersecurity professionals,” and a requirement that certain computer systems and networks in the private sector be managed by people who have been awarded that license.more [4] 

Paul Boutin adds:

Senator John Davidson “Jay” Rockefeller IV — the Democratic great-grandson of oil mogul John D. Rockefeller — has been said to be working for months on … S. 773, a bill whose stated goal is “to ensure the continued free flow of commerce within the United States and with its global trading partners through secure cyber communications, to provide for the continued development and exploitation of the Internet and intranet communications for such purposes, to provide for the development of a cadre of information technology specialists to improve and maintain effective cybersecurity defenses against disruption.”
 
Translation: It means the White House can order companies to disclose information, and possibly take control of their networks and computers, if the President declares them “critical” to an emergency involving the Internet.more [5] 

Michael Masnick scratches his head:

The bigger issue is why the government should be taking control over private networks. This is the same gov’t that doesn’t let people in the State Department use Firefox and which thinks that RealPlayer is the state of the art in online video streaming. Even if there were a “cybersecurity emergency,” I would think the last people I’d want to take charge would be the federal government.more [6] 

David Risley ponders trust:

Some would argue that this is about protecting infrastructure. But, do you trust the government with authority over private networks? Remember, this is the same government who consistently gets failing grades on cybersecurity. Not only that, who defines what this “emergency” is? And what constitutes a “critical network”?

All it would take is some event that the administration declares an “emergency”, they could then stir up public fears, and begin quickly taking new authorities in the name of the public security.more[7] 

But Xeni Jardin mocks the alert:

Well, this little viral number didn’t take long to become the stuff of screaming Drudge sirens. The analogy the bill’s authors use is that of the president’s power to order all aircraft to land in the event of a systemwide emergency. That power is — powerful! — but we’re generally OK with it. The Internet, of course, is different, in kind and expanse.

Maybe the White House should have this power in extreme emergencies, but it had better be clear about what those emergencies entail, and it had better accept accountability if it oversteps its authority. There is, aside from the obvious definitional issues, an inherent trade-off in codifying this power, and it’s going to be tough to find a balance that satisfies everyone.more [8] 

And Nicholas Deleon offers some balance:

If we can trust the president to declare federal states of emergency—think hurricanes and the like—why can’t we trust him with the ability to declare a “cyber” state of emergency? … And then the government will make you eat fruits and vegetables! Tyranny!

Remember: it’s just a bill, and one that has already been revised in the past few months. Don’t be surprised if nothing at all comes from all of this. … The point is, freaking out at the drop of a hat cannot be healthy.more [9] 

So what’s your take?

Source

Add This! Blinkbits Blinklist Blogmarks BlogMemes BlueDot BlogLines co.mments Connotea del.icio.us de.lirio.us Digg Diigo DZone Facebook FeedMeLinks Folkd.com Fleck Furl Google Google Reader icio.de IndianPad Leonaut LinkaGoGo Linkarena Linkter Magnolia Mister Wong MyShare Ask.com MyStuff Ask.com Yahoo! MyWeb Netscape Netvouz Newsgator Newsvine Oneview.de RawSugar reddit Rojo Segnalo Shadows Simpy SlashDot Smarking Sphere Spurl Startaid StumbleUpon TailRank Technorati ThisNext yigg.de Webnews.de ReadMe.ru Dobavi.com Dao.bg Lubimi.com Ping.bg Pipe.bg Svejo.net Web-bg.com Plugin by Dichev.com

August 5, 2009

Glenn Beck: Cash For Clunkers is a government scam to gain access to your computer

Filed under: Computer Advice, General, Malware, Security, Uncategorized — Alden @ 2:59 pm
0
Digg me

Very interesting and scary news article about the Governments wide reaching privacy policy on the cash for clunkers website.

Basically, what’s happening here is by signing up for the cash for clunkers program: you’re authorizing the feds to view, copy, transfer and more… basically your data is their data. Plus as an added bonus, when you are connected to their systems… your computer and all of the data contained on it become property of…. (drum roll anyone?)… you guessed it! Uncle Sam! Woo Hoo!!!

So, they can view, intercept, read, analayze any data with the use of some really sophisticated spyware that apparently exploits some vulnerabilities that Microsoft hasn’t closed for some unknown reason.

Check it out here and remember, Big Brother’s Always Watching!

Add This! Blinkbits Blinklist Blogmarks BlogMemes BlueDot BlogLines co.mments Connotea del.icio.us de.lirio.us Digg Diigo DZone Facebook FeedMeLinks Folkd.com Fleck Furl Google Google Reader icio.de IndianPad Leonaut LinkaGoGo Linkarena Linkter Magnolia Mister Wong MyShare Ask.com MyStuff Ask.com Yahoo! MyWeb Netscape Netvouz Newsgator Newsvine Oneview.de RawSugar reddit Rojo Segnalo Shadows Simpy SlashDot Smarking Sphere Spurl Startaid StumbleUpon TailRank Technorati ThisNext yigg.de Webnews.de ReadMe.ru Dobavi.com Dao.bg Lubimi.com Ping.bg Pipe.bg Svejo.net Web-bg.com Plugin by Dichev.com

July 28, 2009

Western Digital Unveils 1TB Laptop Hard Drive

Filed under: Uncategorized — admin @ 10:02 am
0
Digg me

Western Digital (NYSE: WDC) on Monday introduced a 1TB hard drive for laptops, intended to meed the ever- increasing storage demands of users with growing archives of data files generated by digital cameras and video cameras.

The WD Scorpio Blue SATA 2.5-inch drive also is available with 750 GB of storage. The two models are targeted at laptops and mini-desktop PCs, such as the Apple Mini. The drives are likely too big to fit in netbooks, mini-laptops that are selling faster than any other PC category.

Along with the new internal drives, WD also introduced two external USB drives with the same amount of storage. The My Passport Essential SE drives feature a titanium silver finish and fit in the palm of a hand.

Scorpio Blue drives have a 3GB per second transfer rate and provide a maximum capacity that’s double what was previously available. The new products include WD’s WhisperDrive technology for quieter operation. The drives also include WD’s shock-resistant technology, which includes parking the recording heads off the disk surface during spin up, spin down and when the drive is off.

The 1TB Scorpio Blue has a manufacturer’s suggested retail price of $250 and the 750 GB model has an MSRP of $190. Both drives are covered by a three-year limited warranty. The 1TB My Passport Essential SE has an MSRP of $300 and the 750 GB model $200.

Western Digital also makes network storage drives for consumers. In February, the company introduced a 1TB and 2TB My Book World Edition backup. The drive plugs into a network router and can begin backing up files from all computers on a network after only a few clicks with the mouse. The 1TB model sells for $230, the 2TB version for $450.

Add This! Blinkbits Blinklist Blogmarks BlogMemes BlueDot BlogLines co.mments Connotea del.icio.us de.lirio.us Digg Diigo DZone Facebook FeedMeLinks Folkd.com Fleck Furl Google Google Reader icio.de IndianPad Leonaut LinkaGoGo Linkarena Linkter Magnolia Mister Wong MyShare Ask.com MyStuff Ask.com Yahoo! MyWeb Netscape Netvouz Newsgator Newsvine Oneview.de RawSugar reddit Rojo Segnalo Shadows Simpy SlashDot Smarking Sphere Spurl Startaid StumbleUpon TailRank Technorati ThisNext yigg.de Webnews.de ReadMe.ru Dobavi.com Dao.bg Lubimi.com Ping.bg Pipe.bg Svejo.net Web-bg.com Plugin by Dichev.com

July 8, 2009

Google Is Already Working With PC Makers on New Chrome OS

Filed under: Uncategorized — admin @ 8:51 am
0
Digg me

Google plans to announce within the next day or so the names of PC makers in Taiwan and China that have already signed on to work with its new Chrome operating system, a spokeswoman said Wednesday.

The list will be similar in style to that made for Google’s Android mobile operating system, on the Open Handset Alliance Web site.

The new Chrome OS will compete against Microsoft Windows in netbooks, laptop computers and desktops. Google is developing the Linux-based operating system for heavy Internet users, and it will begin appearing in netbooks in the second half of 2010, the company said in a blog posting.

Chrome’s user interface will be demonstrated by the end of this year, said Caroline Hsu, a spokeswoman for Google in Taipei.

The Chrome OS and Android are distinctly different operating systems, she added. Android was designed for small mobile devices as well as TV set-top boxes and netbooks, while the Chrome OS will work in larger devices, from netbooks to desktops.

The Google initiative poses a significant threat to Microsoft’s software dominance in the global PC industry, but the Windows maker will be very difficult to beat, analysts say.

“Microsoft has such a huge installed base of users and developers, it’s hard to beat that,” said Bryan Ma, director of personal systems research at IDC Asia-Pacific. Google will have to prove it can attract developers to create applications and device drivers to make sure the Chrome OS works with the many computers and peripherals available.

Google’s strong brand name will be one key to its success.

“I think the Google name is going to give it some legs,” said Ma, but the user experience will be the ultimate determiner of victory. Microsoft has been challenged before, particularly by companies offering different variations of Linux OSs, but these rival efforts have failed, he said.

With the Chrome OS, Google wants to run programs through the Internet and the Chrome browser, but that could cause latency problems, Ma said. “How robust will it be versus a Windows software program?” he asked.

Google’s first stab at an operating system found success due to the Google name and the industry it’s aimed at, mobile phones. Mobile phone users often work with different operating systems and that has helped Android. But the computing world is dominated by Microsoft, giving people very different expectations for how their software runs.

Microsoft declined to comment on this article.

The Chrome OS will work on computers with different kinds of microprocessors inside, including the x86 architecture used by Intel and Advanced Micro Devices (AMD), and the ARM architecture, which is commonly found in mobile devices.

Intel’s Asia-Pacific spokesman Nick Jacobs said Google’s new OS further validates the netbook category of mobile devices. He called Chrome an example of innovation creating opportunity in the information technology industry and more choice for consumers.

Acer, the world’s third largest PC vendor, was unable to immediately provide a comment, while Asustek Computer declined to comment.

Source

Add This! Blinkbits Blinklist Blogmarks BlogMemes BlueDot BlogLines co.mments Connotea del.icio.us de.lirio.us Digg Diigo DZone Facebook FeedMeLinks Folkd.com Fleck Furl Google Google Reader icio.de IndianPad Leonaut LinkaGoGo Linkarena Linkter Magnolia Mister Wong MyShare Ask.com MyStuff Ask.com Yahoo! MyWeb Netscape Netvouz Newsgator Newsvine Oneview.de RawSugar reddit Rojo Segnalo Shadows Simpy SlashDot Smarking Sphere Spurl Startaid StumbleUpon TailRank Technorati ThisNext yigg.de Webnews.de ReadMe.ru Dobavi.com Dao.bg Lubimi.com Ping.bg Pipe.bg Svejo.net Web-bg.com Plugin by Dichev.com

Gmail Finally Out of Beta!

Filed under: Uncategorized — admin @ 8:50 am
0
Digg me

OK, so today was a little better for Google (GOOG). Even if its good news was largely semantic.

 

Today, Google announced that its various enterprise applications—Gmail, Calendar, Google Docs, and Google Talk—work well enough to no longer be prefaced by the beta appellation. Apps are considered in beta phase when they’re good enough for the public to use on an interim basis but haven’t quite reached the point where the company is absolutely confident in their utility. No upgrade preceded the announcement; Google’s engineers merely looked over the products and were satisfied that they were ready for prime time. “We’ve focused our efforts on reaching our high bar for taking our products out of beta, and all the applications in the Apps suite have now met that mark,” wrote product management director Matthew Glotzbach in a blog post.

 

Of course, this begs the following questions: Why were so many apps in beta for so long? And why remove that tag now? After all, Gmail has been in beta for a remarkable five years. New York Times scribe Miguel Helft thinks that it all has to do with marketing enterprise software services to companies that are notoriously gun-shy when it comes to changing computer systems. This move, he writes, “could help Google’s efforts to get the paid version of its package of applications, which includes Gmail, Calendar, Docs and other products, adopted inside big companies. Corporate technology managers tend to shy away from beta products, and Google wants to remove any barriers to adoption that it can.”

 

Google Apps already enjoys a nice customer base; the search giant claims that some 1.75 million companies use its suite of enterprise software at the moment. And TechCrunch writer Erick Schonfeld notes that the number of people who use Gmail has grown an astonishing 48 percent in the last year. By removing the beta tag from its products, Google is announcing, in its own unique way, that it’s ready to get serious about this market.

Add This! Blinkbits Blinklist Blogmarks BlogMemes BlueDot BlogLines co.mments Connotea del.icio.us de.lirio.us Digg Diigo DZone Facebook FeedMeLinks Folkd.com Fleck Furl Google Google Reader icio.de IndianPad Leonaut LinkaGoGo Linkarena Linkter Magnolia Mister Wong MyShare Ask.com MyStuff Ask.com Yahoo! MyWeb Netscape Netvouz Newsgator Newsvine Oneview.de RawSugar reddit Rojo Segnalo Shadows Simpy SlashDot Smarking Sphere Spurl Startaid StumbleUpon TailRank Technorati ThisNext yigg.de Webnews.de ReadMe.ru Dobavi.com Dao.bg Lubimi.com Ping.bg Pipe.bg Svejo.net Web-bg.com Plugin by Dichev.com
Older Posts »

Powered by WordPress

Copy Protected by WP-CopyProtect Thanks to Chetan.