Archive for March, 2010

Of course, the simplest way to improve your chances of staying safe on the Web is to use a browser other than IE. I’m not saying Firefox, Opera, and other browsers don’t have flaws of their own. It’s just that those programs aren’t targeted by the bad guys as often as IE is.

Step 5: Set the security level of Internet Explorer’s Internet zone to High.

Dennis O’Reilly has covered PCs and other technologies in print and online since 1985. Along with more than a decade as editor for Ziff-Davis’s Computer Select, Dennis edited PC World’s award-winning Here’s How section for more than seven years. He is a member of the CNET blog Network, and is not an employee of CNET.


These days, you’re less likely to encounter a dangerous executable file masquerading as a harmless type of file, but viewing file extensions and hidden files remains a good idea. The steps in the original article for making this change in XP are the same in Vista’s version of Windows Explorer, though you may have to press the Alt key to show the Tools menu.

As the original article stated, this security level will generate pop-ups whenever you try to open a site that’s not on your approved list. To add sites to this list in IE 7, choose the “Trusted sites” icon in the zone box at the top of the Security dialog box, click the Sites button, type the site URLs in the top box one at a time, and click Add. Keep the option on the bottom to require server verification unchecked.

Another option for blocking Flash content in Firefox is by using Nicolas Martin’s Flash Killer add-on. Apart from ensuring that no malware finds its way onto your PC via a Flash file embedded on a Web page, the program speeds up your browsing by blocking Flash ads from loading along with the regular content of the page.

Browse safely using Internet Explorer or Firefox

The second of my three-part update of the 10-Step Security story I wrote three years ago shows that some tech advice stands the test of time. (A post earlier this week freshened up tips one, two, and three from that story, which focus on Windows updates and security features.)

Giorgio Maone’s NoScript add-on for Firefox lets you decide which scripts are allowed to run before the page loads. NoScript was relatively new back in 2005 when that article was written, but the program has stood the test of time. Note that the program’s author accepts donations to offset the cost of maintaining and updating the application.

There’s nothing stale about this advice. Of course, you should now be using IE 7 rather than IE 6, which is much less secure than its successor. The steps to reset your Internet zone security level are a bit different in IE 7: click Tools>InternetOptions>Security, choose Internet in the box of zones at the top of the dialog box, move the security-level slider to High, and click Apply or OK.

Set Internet Explorer 7's Internet zone security level to High.

In my next post, I’ll revisit the last four tips in 10-Step Security, which deal with e-mail safety.

(Credit:Microsoft)

Add the sites you trust to Internet Explorer 7's whitelist.

(Credit:Microsoft)

Step 4: Ensure that you can see file extensions and all Windows system files in Windows Explorer and folder windows.



Step 6: Use the NoScript add-on to block scripts inFirefox on a page-by-page and element-by-element basis.

And another: “Either ditch the Celeron, Pentium and Xeon names completely or embrace them completely. These are fairly well known as the ‘good, better, best’.”

Deborah Conrad, vice president and director of corporate marketing, said there is method in Intel’s madness.



But judging by the tenor of many of the comments attached to Calder’s brand structure blog, you would think the chipmaker had committed high treason.

“First, an important clarification. We are not going to have a lineup of names for each derivative, for example a Core i(n) for every flavor of processor. Instead, there will be just three – Core i3, Core i5 and Core i7. And in each, there will be a few versions, but a consumer won’t need to see that level of detail (unless they elect to, of course),” she said.

In the minds of some, it did. The shortcomings of the current naming scheme notwithstanding, many tech-savvy consumers have gotten used to it. For example, Core 2 Quad means a chip built on the Core 2 architecture with 4 processing cores. Core 2 Duo indicates two cores.

“We’re listening,” Calder said, in a phone interview. He added that Intel is looking at ways to make additional technical information about the processors more accessible.

Last week, Intel announced a new branding scheme for its upcoming processors. In a blog, spokesman Bill Calder wrote that the branding will be “simplified into entry-level (Intel Core i3), mid-level (Intel Core i5), and high-level (Intel Core i7).” Intel calls the “i” suffix an identifier.

Yet another idea was this: Intel/name/number/year, where “name” is the product name, “number” is a bigger-is-better ranking, and “year” the year the architecture was released.

One of the most common criticisms cited in the comments section is that i3, i5, and i7 are too vague. “Above all, I’d like to see…at a glance how many cores and what features they have (or have not),” one comment said. Another comment suggested that Intel add more identifiers. For example, Intel Core i5 4100, where 4 is the number of cores and 100 is a speed rating.

“Right now we have so many variants, with names that are confusing (Duo, Quad, etc), that moving to a simple ‘good, better, best’ approach makes the most sense,” Conrad said.

The upcoming Lynnfield chip for desktop PCs, for example, will be available as either Intel Core i5 or Intel Core i7 depending upon the feature set and capability. The upshot of the new branding is to make it easier for less tech-savvy consumers to readily identify classes of Intel chips based three simple identifiers, according to Calder.

The parenthetical “unless they elect to” means, presumably, that consumers will be able to drill down and get all the details they need via tools such as the Intel Processor Finder.

Brouhaha over Intel branding

Core i3, i5, i7. A straightforward, if not insipid, branding scheme, right? Wrong. Those alphanumeric identifiers are fighting words.

This latter comment addresses probably one of the most serious transgressions in the minds of tech-savvy consumers. Why reinvent the wheel if it’s not much of an improvement, if any at all? Ford Motor retired the venerable Taurus brand (once the best-selling sedan in the U.S.) and replaced it with “500″ only to reinstate Taurus when new CEO Alan Mullaly took over and realized that it was absurd to squander the brand equity invested in the Taurus name.

Brooke Crothers has served as an editor at large at CNET News, an editor at Dow Jones’ Asian Wall Street Journal Weekly, and a senior editor at InfoWorld. His CNET blog covers chip technology and computer systems, and how they define the computing experience. He also contributes to The New York Times’ Bits and Technology sections. He is a member of the CNET Blog Network and is not an employee of CNET. Disclosure. Follow Brooke on Twitter @mbrookec.


“As I have read today’s posts, I thought it time to clarify a few things, since I am responsible for marketing and branding at Intel,” she wrote in response to some of the comments.

Conrad concludes: “There is no easy way out. We have a lot of products in the market today, with a whole new lineup coming out. We can’t change the names of products that are out there, but we can change the pattern of naming moving forward, and make it intuitive, which is what we did.”

Ms. Abe Tomoko and Mr. Hattori Ryoichi, as well as policy staff members of the party, will discuss the political situation in Japan and the strategies for closing down the U.S. Marine Corps Futenma Air Station and blocking a new base to be constructed in Henoko in Okinawa.

Brown-bag Discussion: Closing Okinawa Bases

The new Japanese government is pushing back against Washington’s plans for a new military base in Okinawa, the southernmost prefecture in Japan. This is a golden opportunity to radically shrink the U.S. military footprint on the island. But we only have a brief window during which to take advantage of this political opportunity.






Last night was great, I loved the Angels blue and red hats. I see the Angels wear last nights 80’s hats in warms ups and pregame interviews, but then that is the only time you see the Angel blue as when the game starts the red hats are on.


BRING BACK THE ANGELS HATS OF THE 80'S  - Halos Heaven

I know this will not make a difference, but I was one who did not like when they Angels went to all red. Reminded me of the old Texas Rangers old uniforms when they went to all Red in the 90’s.

Any one in agree? I know some wil say, they love the crowd in all Red, but I do miss the late 80’s hat and uniforms.

However, it would cost the airline too much to fit similar systems to its current aircraft, Walsh said Wednesday at the Sita Air Transport IT Summit 2009 conference in Cannes, France.

He added the airline currently has no plans to let travelers make mobile phone calls during its flights because its customers are not interested in such a service.

British Airways won't retrofit for mobile communications

British Airways will not extend in-flight mobile communication to any of its aircraft already in service, CEO Willie Walsh says.

“The research we have done on voice tells us that the vast majority of customers do not want it,” he said.



British Airways CIO Paul Coby predicted “exciting” new developments in in-flight passenger communications on new aircraft but warned it is essential for these communications to be “firewalled and separate from the cockpit.”


Nick Heath of Silicon.com reported from London.

He added that Sita is looking at how modern telecommunications capabilities could be used to automatically transmit and log flight data, such as that currently recorded on black box recorders, to airline databases.

Sita, a company that specializes in airline IT and communication, said that its 2009 survey shows 70 percent of the 116 global aircraft carriers surveyed plan to introduce Wi-Fi and GSM/GPRS connectivity for short flights by 2012, and around 65 percent for long flights.

The airline is planning to launch a mobile e-mail, Web browsing, and texting service from OnAir on two new Airbus A318 aircrafts in September.

“That is something we really want to be thinking seriously about with the new technology that is available,” he said.

“We are not planning to retrofit the equipment to existing aircraft because we believe it will be too expensive,” he said.

(Credit:British Airways)

Madam, please don’t worry. We all read Twitter for pleasure. Can there be any other reason?

In any case, who would have thought that they would choose to give up mandatory education about the Second World War and begin teaching their children about Twitter and Wikipedia?

"Very nice, miss. But when do we learn how to tweet our feelings?"

The plans, leaked to the dastardly press (perhaps some devious cove just twittered a tiny URL to a password-protected site), give children relief from having to learn too many dates, place names, and pesky scientific formulas. You can google all that nonsense, anyway.

Naturally, talking–and, presumably, typing–heads have already offered their 60 pence worth on the topic. Teresa Cremin, president of the U.K. Literary Association, worries about a lack of drama and “no emphasis on reading for pleasure.”

But if you can’t tweet your progress in toilet training, what kind of adult can you expect to become?

The creators of Twitter and Wikipedia can only hope to match the enduring quality of some of the great British contributions to history, science, and culture.

While I am aghast that Facebook appears not to be specifically mentioned, my eyes become moist when I see that children will be required to gain “fluency” in keyboard skills and learn to use a spellchecker.

British children to study Twitter in school

The British are looking very hard in the mirror these days. Perhaps it is related to the belief that the country is running out of money.

The plans declare that children must leave primary school (to which children go until the unofficial drinking age of 11) fully conversant with the delights of blogging, podcasting, Wikipedia, and Twitter.



Chris Matyszczyk is an award-winning creative director who advises major corporations on content creation and marketing. He brings an irreverent, sarcastic, and sometimes ironic voice to the tech world. He is a member of the CNET Blog Network and is not an employee of CNET.


(Credit:CC Spiraltri3e)

Other British critics seem to be worried that Twitter and Wikipedia are merely fads. But ladies and gentlemen, you are the great nation that brought us lasting pleasures such as “Dancing with the Stars,” “American Idol,” and the Dyson vacuum cleaner thingy. Things that the whole world marvels at and studies every day.