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Monday
Feb052007

How Long Does It Take To Catch A Computer Virus?

 Would you believe only 8 seconds?

By Clive Maxfield
Programmable Logic DesignLine

I just read an incredibly scary article on the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) website in the UK on Computer Viruses.

As described in this article, reformed ex-hacker, Jacques Erasmus, demonstrated just how dangerous things have gotten these days. Basically they took a Windows XP computer and connected the poor little scamp to the Internet without providing it with a firewall or any anti-virus software.

This brings to mind an image of staking a goat in the middle of a field and waiting for the wolves to come (or the dinosaurs in the case of the movie Jurassic Park). So how long did it take for the wolves (viruses) to attack? Days? Hours? Minutes?

In fact, after only 8 seconds, the unsuspecting little rascal was undergoing the machine equivalent of being turned into a “Pod person from the planet Mars!” First, it was hit by Sasser, one of the fastest spreading worms on the Internet. Then it started downloading strange programs from mysterious internet addresses. Then it started looking for other machines to infect.

Within five minutes, the little rapscallion was running so many malicious programs that it was running totally choked up and its CPU was 100% occupied performing virus-related tasks.

Personally, I think governments around the world should start taking this much more seriously than they appear to be doing. If someone gets caught embezzling say $100,000 from a company they go to jail. Now consider that the folks who release viruses can cause tens of millions of dollars in damages; affected companies can go bankrupt; people can lose their jobs; and the effects spread onwards and outwards.

But there’s more to it than this, because virus creators are not making the world a better place. When someone loses their work to a virus, it makes them angry, frustrated, and unhappy. This ripples on to the folks they come into contact with. One way to view this is that the sum total of unhappiness around the world increases. This is not a good thing.

I’m on my high-horse at the moment. I think that if people who were caught creating viruses were jailed for say 10 years, then at a minimum it might discourage someone else from doing the same thing. And, apart from anything else, it would bring a smile to the lips of those of us who have lost months of work to one of these nefarious creations (I feel like the lion in the Wizard of Oz – “Let me at ‘em, let me at ‘em!”).

Source: How Long Does It Take To Catch A Computer Virus? - News by InformationWeek

Friday
Feb022007

Playa Cofi

Free jukebox, arranged by year and genre. Listen to music at work/or home. 
 

 

Link to Playa Cofi
Thursday
Feb012007

Learn photography with free online course

Freelance photographer Jodie Coston offers a free online course in photography, covering everything from aperture to zoom.

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The course is divided into 10 lessons, each presented with loads of sample photos and assignments at the end. Coston employs a friendly, personal style and provides plain-English descriptions of complicated subjects. Even better, host site morgueFile maintains a separate discussion board for each of the lessons, so you can ask questions, share info with your “classmates,” etc. This course is actually a couple years old, but it’s still an excellent introduction to photography. It’s too bad you can’t download the lessons as PDFs—they’re HTML only—but that’s a minor gripe. You won’t want to miss this one. — Rick Broida

Jodie Coston’s Free Online Photography Course

Source: Learn photography with free online course - Lifehacker

Monday
Jan292007

Create printable business cards at Businesscardland

 

Printable business cards at Businesscardland

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Whip up a batch of business cards in a hurry at Businesscardland, then print them on your own printer.

The site provides a handful of basic templates to choose from, then lets you fill in as much personal information as you’d like (business name, phone numbers, etc.). Next, you choose from a palette of about 100 colors for the text, accents and background. The biz-card maker then produces a downloadable PDF with either a full sheet of cards for home/office printing or a single card you can give to a commercial printer.

The latter isn’t too useful, as it doesn’t include color separations. But if you’re heading out the door to a trade show or some other event and need a batch of business cards pronto, this site gets the job done. Thanks, Susy! — Rick Broida

Free Business Card Maker [Businesscardland]

Source: Create printable business cards at Businesscardland - Lifehacker

Friday
Jan262007

Microsoft Photo Info tool: Digital Photography Review

 

Microsoft has today released a new ‘Photo Info’ tool designed specifically for digital photographers. After installation this tool provides a new option of ‘Photo Info’ on the Explorer context menu. The Photo Info dialog enables you to edit both EXIF and IPTC information in compatible image formats as either a single image or a collection. The Photo Info tool works on either Windows XP or Vista and is a free download.

Click here to download the Microsoft Photo Info tool

Microsoft Photo Info tool

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Source: Microsoft Photo Info tool: Digital Photography Review