Zone Alarm

Archive - General Tech Category

How to avoid email spam, viruses, trojans, exploits, phishing, adware.

Wednesday, April 25th, 2012

Most people use antivirus to avoid these things, but if you know what you’re doing, you can keep your PC clean without them.

E-mail spam

A big spot for getting infected is through your email. There’s many strange tactics employed, sometimes it’s a package you never ordered, the IRS saying they didn’t get taxes, or something like that. Anyway, they always make it sound urgent and you need to just download this pdf here. Which of course, is an exploit and will install a “virus” on your computer. Monitor your email closely – the IRS doesn’t use email, don’t open PDF files or any files of any sort unless it’s just a jpg from your buddy or something – even then you need to be careful. Many of these messages/files are undetected by antivirus – the people sending these out change up the code/signatures continuously.

Links in email – be very careful and monitor the ACTUAL URL that shows up when you put your mouse over it. Sometimes it’s disguised pretty well if you’re not paying attention – like www.irs.gov.pollywocks.com/exploit. The main thing to remember is that if your buddy has been infected with the email, they might send stuff to you, so don’t trust it just because it’s from your friend. Also don’t trust the sent from address – email is terribly easy to spoof. (make up names)

Most guys sending out these emails don’t care at all if they get in trouble so they will use trademarks from companies and make it look as legitimate as possible. You need to closely examine an unusual email before proceeding to do anything. These are the reasons why a ton of people get infected through email messages.

E-mail Phishing

The guys that do e-mail phishing are employing the same tactics I went over above – but this time they usually use a fake login page instead of trying to infect you – they might mimic a bank login page and steal your details. Again, paying close attention to the URL is a must. E-mail in general is an insecure method of communication so do not send personal details at all through it if it’s requested by an unknown party in a message. Everyone in your email inbox is an unknown party. The only time it’s “ok” is if you are sending it yourself to an address you know.

Online Adobe Exploits

The easiest way to avoid these is to run Firefox with Noscript enabled at all times. If you want to view an object from certain sites you can setup an allow list, and there are pre-made allow lists online for trusted websites. Noscript has saved me many times from being infected. These are just tough to avoid if you’re not being vigilant enough on the web.

Instant Messaging Phishing

Usually they say you’re going to get something for free if you give out your login details. Maybe money, maybe something else, depends on what they’re trying to get out of you. Never send your information to an unknown party.

Adware

Usually adware is for games that are advertised online. They require an install to play. Fortunately they usually play by the rules so if you read the terms of service you will see that the application installs ad supported content. If you want to avoid it simply don’t install it and cancel the installer. Some adware companies are more malicious than others, but the big companies are easy to uninstall if you want and show you the terms up front. These guys really aren’t all that bad to be honest for the most part.

There’s new schemes that come out every day – so just be vigilant while you’re on the web. There’s lots of things that antivirus simply won’t protect you from. Some things it will, it’s good to have but won’t stop everything. Unfortunately if you run windows eventually you will most likely be infected with something at some point. The “best” method is to run linux or mac osx along with antivirus and noscript. This gives you the best chance to not be infected with something – but even then there’s still a chance.

iPod Nano 6G Sucks?

Saturday, January 8th, 2011

There’s a lot of rambling online about the Nano 6G and how it sucks. Most of the complaints are about it not having all the features the previous version had. I think their strategy was just to make it small. It is called a “Nano” after all. The only thing important, in my mind, on a nano would be that it has an ability to navigate to music tracks. That’s what separates it from the shuffle.

I currently own a Nano 1G, but it’s a pain for working out because it bounces around, and I’ve dropped it all over the place several times. I’m surprised it’s not totally broken yet.

So, this is what I think the Nano was designed for – extremely portable, wearable, music player. Nothing else. Why people nowadays expect an MP3 player to do more is beyond me. I remember back when black and white iPods were awesome. So maybe I’m too old to understand, but I didn’t think 20 was really that old.

I do however own a Droid Incredible, everything people are upset about missing from the Nano.

SSD (Solid State Drive) VS HDD (Hard Disc Drive)

Thursday, May 13th, 2010

I picked up some cheap Kingston V Series 64GB SSD from NewEgg the other day because they seem to be all the rage lately. Not just that, but I am performing system wide upgrades, started with the chair, but my final setup is coming close now.

Anyway, I’m not going to show you a bunch of benchmarks because I’m sure you already know SSDs are fast, depending on which one you get they may be blazing fast. What you may not know is how they change the feel of the overall system. Boot time is cut in half, roughly, but I didn’t really care about that because I don’t even turn off my PC all that often.

What does surprise me is that applications overall feel more responsive!  Any application you put on the SSD for general use pops open faster and feels better in the interface. Not sure why they feel better while already opened, but I have separate windows + apps on the HDD and SSD and I compared how they functioned, the SSD wins hands down. Probably because the program still accesses the hard drive on and off while in use.

Storage: if this is an issue for you (like it is for me) install windows + apps on a 64GB drive and move everything else to a 2TB 72K drive or something. I have about 2.2TB of usable storage other than the 64GB SSD and it works out great.

One thing though.. If you’re sort of a power user and have lots of applications 32GB is definitely not going to cut it. 64GB+ will work. In fact, I cannot install all my games on the 64GB drive, so I’ll have to install/uninstall if I want the loading speed of the SSD. So in my case, I think I’d be better suited to a 128GB+ drive if I wanted to fit everything that needed speed on it.

With the storage issue, not being able to fit all games etc, is it still a worthy upgrade? You bet. Hard drive are obviously the bottleneck in most newer PC configurations, and with an SSD they really pop alive as far as general use :)

Knoll Life Chair Review

Tuesday, April 27th, 2010

I’ve only been sitting on this thing for 5 or 6 hours, but so far I notice it’s about 9000x more comfortable than my old chair. Comfort may not actually be the “right” word for the chair. It’s more like I can sit in it and not have my back screaming in agony. I work from home so I spend many many hours in my computer chair. For the first time in a long time, I’m not hunched over looking at my computer screen. I’m actually sitting upright. That’s what these ergonomic chairs are made for, to make you feel comfortable with good posture, and not hunch over everything and feel like crap.

I really have NO idea why I didn’t get an ergonomic chair earlier. I’ve been on the computer for extended periods of time since I was about 10 years old. Always using crappy wal-mart chairs, that were NOT designed for what I was doing. Even when I did have money, all of it went to processors, video cards, speakers, monitors, and nothing went to my chair. The chair remained a POS from wal-mart at all times.

Now that I’m 19, I’m starting to feel some back issues develop. Those 9 years on wal-mart chairs for countless hours are starting to take hold. However, I think with this chair those problems may go away completely. (Only very slight pain from leaning over all the time has developed)

Anyway, the best way to describe the feeling of sitting on the Knoll Life Chair is “good”. Mine has adjustable arms that go up and down and side to side, which I would recommend. I think these are “High Performance” arms. Adjusting the height of the arms along with forward/backward and side to side really comes in handy depending on how you’re sitting or want to sit in the chair.

The seat moves forward slightly depending on how you sit on it, and you can slide it forward or backward as much as needed. You can of course lean back in the chair as well, and adjust the tension.

Overall, I have to say I’m super happy with this chair, it’s the first time I’ve felt comfortable sitting at my desk in years (No joke.) Even though I did not pay retail for this chair and bought it at an eBay auction, I think it’s actually worth the retail price of $808.

I was actually very scared of ordering a chair online without trying it out in person, and the only reason I got the knoll life chair was because of the auction and I didn’t want to pay more than $400 for my chair. Unfortunately, there really aren’t any shops nearby that sell “performance” task chairs. I was going to get the steelcase leap, but so far I’m glad I didn’t. This chair seems perfect for me. I really like the breathable back, and steelcase doesn’t have that.

Conclusion

Finally, a chair I WANT to sit on.

Update

6/16/10 – After sitting on this chair for a few months, I can form a more full opinion. My opinion hasn’t really changed – it’s still the best chair I’ve ever sat in. :) My back has not hurt since getting this chair. It makes the couch seem uncomfortable due to less ergonomic support :) Has also shown no noticeable wear, usually by now a $100 chair would have plenty of wear.

Definitely worth every penny.