Practical Technology

for practical people.

October 19, 2009
by sjvn01
3 Comments

Windows unsafe for online banking? Shopping?

People, who like Linux, like yours truly, often harp on the fact that Linux is more secure than Windows. And, so it is, but most people still stick with Windows since that’s what they know and like so many bad habits it’s hard to break. That’s especially true when the benefit, improved security, isn’t seen as giving an immediate benefit. In the last few weeks, though, experts who aren’t Linux fans, have been noticing that these days there are so many dangers with shopping or banking online while using Windows that they’re now recommending people use Linux instead.

The most prominent example of this is The Washington Post’s security columnist, Brian Krebs. Krebs recently recommended that after interviewing “dozens of victim companies that lost anywhere from $10,000 to $500,000 dollars because of a single malware infection,” he’s now recommending that, “commercial online banking customers consider accessing their accounts solely from non-Windows systems.”

As Krebs points out, he’s not the only one. The Financial Services Information Sharing and Analysis Center, an online financial-sector security forum recommends business users, “”carry out all online banking activity from a standalone, hardened, and locked-down computer from which e-mail and Web browsing is not possible.”

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October 19, 2009
by sjvn01
1 Comment

SCO fires CEO Darl McBride

No one has taken SCO’s lawsuits against Linux-using companies seriously for years, but somehow or the other SCO kept hanging on like a bad cold that you couldn’t quite shake. The main reason for this was that SCO CEO Darl McBride doesn’t know the meaning of surrender. Time after time, McBride would come up with a new buyer or a re-take on a long dead anti-Linux legal claim and SCO would stagger forward once more. Until now. This morning, October 19th, SCO filed an 8K with the SEC, which announced that the company had fired McBride.

It took them long enough.

To be more precise, SCO, under the order of the Bankruptcy Court, has “eliminated the Chief Executive Officer and President positions and consequently terminated Darl McBride.” That leaves COO, Jeff Hunsaker; CFO, Ken Nielsen’ and General Counsel, Ryan Tibbitts nominally in charge. It’s clear as glass though that it’s the Chapter 11 Trustee, Edward Cahn, former chief U.S. district judge, is the one who’s really calling the shots.

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October 15, 2009
by sjvn01
1 Comment

No, that’s not the Google Chrome OS

I know lots of people who really want to see Google’s Linux-based Chrome operating system. I should. I’m one of them. But, alas, that story going around that there’s been a leak of Chrome isn’t true.

The tales goes that this guy was knocking around Google’s Chromium file archives, when he found the code for the operating system. He then announced his findings and released the code on RapidShare, a pay to download Web site.

Interesting download site choice don’t you think? That’s what I thought. I then looked at the screen shots and I thought this looks real familiar. Of course, it did. I quickly recognized an early version of Google Chrome Web browser for Linux.

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October 15, 2009
by sjvn01
0 comments

Sidekick: The Good News & the Bad News

The good news is that Microsoft says it thinks it can get most of your data back. The bad news is how the problem happened in the first place.

OK, here’s the good news about the Microsoft/Sidekick data loss fiasco: Microsoft corporate vice president Roz Ho claims that “We have recovered most, if not all, customer data for those Sidekick customers whose data was affected by the recent outage.” Here’s the bad news, the data was lost in the first place because of a “system failure that created data loss in the core database and the back-up.”

I’ll get back to why that’s bad, but first, let me point out that Microsoft isn’t saying the problem’s all better now. They’re saying that they think they can get most of the data back for most Sidekick users. Microsoft engineers are working on restoring customer data, starting with contact lists and then moving on to other information. But, “Before Microsoft begins this process, the company must first check the data to make sure it is stable and finalize the data restoration plan.”

In other words, don’t hold your breath. I’ll be interested in seeing how many of the burned Sidekick users actually get all their data back at the end of the day.

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October 14, 2009
by sjvn01
2 Comments

Snow Leopard hungers for your data

Usually, Microsoft makes the big security blunders, but with Snow Leopard Apple shows they can also compete with Microsoft when it comes to making really awful security mistakes. How awful? How about making it possible to easily lose all of your data? Is that bad enough for you?

And, here I was feeling sorry for the Sidekick users who lost all their so-called smartphone data )! It’s one thing to lose all your mobile phone files that should have been kept safely on the cloud, it’s a much bigger disaster when you lose all your PC’s data.

Apple has admitted that Snow Leopard can sometime lose everything a user has in his or her home folder. The company also promises a fix Real Soon Now. Don’t you just hate that?

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October 14, 2009
by sjvn01
2 Comments

Five ways the Linux desktop shoots itself in the foot

I don’t just write about the Linux desktop, I use it every day. At my desk, I tend to use MEPIS and Mint. On the road, it’s Ubuntu on my Dell netbook and openSUSE on my Lenovo ThinkPad. I do this because they work well and they’re as safe as a desktop operating system can get. So why aren’t more people using them?

The biggest reason is Microsoft. Microsoft is a jealous monopoly and doesn’t want to share the desktop with anyone. Desktop Linux is just another target in a long list that has included OS/2, DR-DOS, and, that eternal thorn in their side, the Mac. It’s no surprise then to see that in the history of the Linux desktop Microsoft has always tried to crush it.

For example, the very first attempt at a mass-market Linux desktop, 1999’s Corel Linux Desktop lasted less than a year. Why? Because, in 2000 Microsoft paid off debt-ridden Corel to kill it.

Much more recently, Microsoft, caught by surprise by the rise of Linux-powered netbooks, brought XP Home back from the dead and offered it to OEMs (original equipment manufacturers) for next to nothing to stem Linux’s rise on low-end netbooks.

OK, it’s hard to beat a monopoly that will do whatever it takes to make sure people don’t see that there’s a better, cheaper alternative I get that. At the same time though Linux has shot itself in the foot quite often.

How? I’ll tell you how.

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