Sep
That’s me! I love my iPhone, but I don’t consider myself to be one of those blinder wearing fanbois either. I have had various and sundry mobile phones over the years, with one of the best being my Motorola Timeport. That thing lasted me five years and could still get better reception than anything else around it. To bad it finally came apart one too many times for me to put back together, gravity is a bitch lemme tell ya. Anyway, I made the move into “smart” phones with a Blackberry (didn’t everyone else when they came out? LOL). I had, had PDAs before, but this was my first adventure with a PDA/phone combination and I was hooked, I mean I loved it. I went through several Blackberry models both at work and with my personal ones. Including a stint with a Blackberry storm at work, man did that thing suck, it was awful. I had wanted an iPhone and had almost gotten one back in my Blackberry days, but I really figured that they were all pretty much the same. Boy was I wrong! I finally switched from a Blackberry to an iPhone (3GS) and I am never going back. It is an amazing work of art, both the hardware and the software that goes with it, although I am not a big fan of iTunes (not on a PC anyway). Even when I compare it to the Droid side by side, I just don’t see the iPhone killer that everyone talks about. However, that discussion is for another day.
I said all that to say this, the one thing that does bring me down a bit about the iPhone is the battery life. I know, you thought I was gonna say AT&T but that’s not a bad thing either, I already had AT&T and the service is great, way better than Verizon, and the prices are nice too. No, the only thing weak on my iPhone is the maybe 24 hour lifespan of the battery. My Blackberry Curve that I had could go a freakin’ week on a charge, it was awesome! So, to help this, I just ordered a nifty little product called a Mophie Juice Pack Air. It’s essentially a hard shell case for the iPhone with a battery incorporated inside that is supposed to double my battery life. While not a week, I’ll take 48 versus 24 hours any day. Once I get the little rascal, I’ll put up a proper review for anyone who might be interested. If you have one, or have used one, drop a comment and let me know what you thing about it. There are a few options available nowadays, but this one seemed like the best fit for me, and the prices have come down a lot compared to when they first hit the street.
So, check back in a few days, and hopefully I’ll have a cool review and maybe some pics too for ya. Later …
Sep
In yet another new and trendy spammer and phishing ploy, I have been getting a few copies of a message claiming to be from Blizzard regarding Beta access to the Cataclysm expansion coming out soon. This one did give me pause at first because I am signed up for the Beta, waiting to see if I get in. Luckily, I noticed some blatant signs when I inspected the message. The biggest thing was not only the Cataclysm website they wanted to send you to for account information harvesting being wrong, as in the wrong URL (not even close LOL), but I received several of these and they had different URLs between them. One other thing was that I received this to several email addresses, none of which were the one actually associated with my WoW account. Obviously these guys (or gals?) are carpet bombing and hoping they snag a few of the 10 or 12 million or so WoW players. Just wanted to pass this on, be on the lookout if this fits you in any way! In the words of Mad Eye Moody “CONSTANT VIGILANCE!!”
Sep
Thought I would pass this along for anyone wishing to part with some of their hard earned duckets for some software and expected some type of semblance of support from the company that makes it. I purchased a product for video editing from Corel called Ulead Video Studio (I guess they bought Ulead like they bought Jasc with Paint Shop Pro). Now, the product is pretty nice when it works, I say when it works because it’s always been fairly buggy but reliable enough that I didn’t complain. At the very least it always installed fine when I had to rebuild my machine after Windows decided eating itself was a good idea or something of that nature. That is until today … when the actual install completes, but it will not accept my product key saying that it is incorrect. At first I thought it was just one of those situations where I have installed it enough times that I have to have a counter reset somewhere before it will activate again or something like that. I noticed also though, that no patches would install either, saying that it couldn’t find the product installed on my system anywhere. That was pretty odd I thought, maybe it’s a Windows 7 thing, who knows. Either way, even though my product is a couple years old, it wasn’t cheap and we aren’t talking in depth support here (at least on the surface), I just need to activate the thing. So, I go to Corel’s web site and log in, go to the support section, fill out the long ass form with technical details, hardware specs, screen shots, and lots of other stuff. It was a pretty involved form, but that’s OK, it will help get the problem resolved right? Wrong. I couldn’t even submit the form to get an email to the support staff, I was instead immediately presented with a message that any product that is too old, which they define as more than two versions back, cannot be supported. That’s it, zip, nada, nil, nothing. I can’t even ask the damn question. All I want to do is activate my software that I bought and paid for, and instead I get snubbed and told to go away. I can tell you one thing for sure, aside from the fact that I will figure this out on my own, and that is I won’t be purchasing any more products that have anything to do with Corel again. They put out new versions at a frenetic pace, and now I know why. I had wondered in the past why they released new versions of their software with only seemingly minor changes at the rate of one to three per year. I think I have my answer. That being said, beware you don’t get stuck like I did.
Aug
I have written before about spam and phishing attacks, but I thought it would be a good idea to re-visit this topic since there seems to be a concerted effort by senders out there to blast our collective Inboxes with not only hideous amounts of spam (which is bad enough), but also with a whole new class of phishing emails. I get tons of them “from” Amazon (that’s where the phrase Spamazon came from!), Newegg, Bank Of America, PayPal, and eBay just to name a few. Basically, they are likely to send one of these phishing emails from pretty much any online e-commerce type of store that they think the can trick someone with. That’s why you have to be careful and check these messages out thoroughly! Because the ones I have been getting lately have been really, really well done. They have been pretty hard to tell from the real thing.
The idea here is that the phisher will send you something from … let’s use Amazon, saying that your order went through successfully and your credit card was charged X amount of dollars. Well, you look at that and right away know you didn’t order anything recently (or maybe you did, but the amount charged shows different from what you just ordered) and it makes you think that someone maybe got into your credit card account or your Amazon account maybe. You feel that rush of excitement and fear as your mind starts doing the mental tally of how much money you are losing for every second that ticks off. So you immediately click the link in the email so you can log into your account at Amazon and see just what the heck is going on. Only, that link you just clicked isn’t taking you to Amazon, the phisher sends you to his own web page that looks like Amazon and is counting on that excited fear feeling to get you to rush into action without thinking. Once you are on the version of Amazon that the phisher sends you to, you try to log in. You might get an error or the phisher might go ahead and re-direct you to the real Amazon now, it doesn’t really matter because he has what he wants. He now actually does have your username and password that he just snagged from you attempting to log in at the fake site. Plus, if you use the same password for a bunch of different sites, he now has your password and probably username for those as well!!!
In a case like I described above, be sure to take a deep breath and act calmly. Even if you are sure that the email really is from Amazon, open up your web browser and go to Amazon directly and then log in there to check your account, where you can be sure that it really is the correct site. When you get these suspect emails, check them out closely because as good as I have seen them, there is always something that isn’t exactly right. For example, when I get a legitimate email from Amazon it will start with a greeting that includes my name. In the fake but really good one, one thing that stood out was the greeting was to my email address and not my name. Another was that there was a total dollar amount for the order, but no itemized list. The real ones from Amazon always have an itemized list. So, keep an eye out and use your head and you’ll be just fine. Be safe!!
Aug
We have all seen them, the commercials for fixit web sites that declare all you have to do is visit their site and they will magically fix your computer or make it run faster or any of a number promises. Well, I don’t want to sound like the Grinch on Christmas, but these sites just don’t live up to all of the hype that they promise. When you go to one of these sites, you are going to have to have some type of software to download, you just cannot do all that much solely through the web browser. So, just how much can these guys cram into a small, probably activex plugin? My guess is not near as much as some of the better known and trusted applications like Symantec’s Norton Utilities
, System Mechanic
, and Fix-It Utilities
to name a few.
I am sure that there are some of these web based tune up sites/companies that are legit and are trying to help people, but I would be careful because I have seen a few that look pretty shady and for all we know, instead of scanning for and removing spyware and such, they could be installing more! The real bottom line here is that even if these sites are trying to do right by you, there is a limit on what can be done by software, especially software delivered over the web and made generic enough to work on a wide range of platforms. It’s like the old joke about a mechanic in a can for your car, there just isn’t one, just like there is no magic bullet for your PC. You just cannot beat a trusted technician, who is well trained and experienced, and has your best interests in mind. Someone there looking at the screen, analyzing what they find and making good decisions on what to do to make it better versus a script that boils down to a bunch of If/Then questions and loops.
I just wanted to make sure that people think before they use these sites, and don’t go blindly forth, sucked in by slick commercials and ending up with computers that are worse off than when you started. There may be some good sites out there, and if/as I find them I will post them on the site so everyone will know. Good luck!
Aug
Just in case I am not the only one to run into this, I thought I would post the answer to a problem that vexed me for a while. I run avast! Internet Security for my software host based firewall and anti-virus on my Windows boxes. On some of those I also have VMware Workstation installed. I noticed that when all of the protection settings or “shields” as they are called were turned on, my virtual machines couldn’t talk to anything else on the network when in bridged mode. If I went to NAT mode or turned the avast! shields off, it would work, but neither of these solutions was satisfactory to me. So, I kept on digging, even checked in with tech support to no avail. Finally I found it, something so simple and trivial I wanted to scream, but my family is asleep right now so I didn’t. In avast! Internet Security, there is an option to tell the firewall to allow Internet Sharing. I guess multiple computers communicating in a shared manner like that looks bad if you didn’t plan it that way. Well, when your virtual machines are running, it looks just like Internet Sharing, at least it does to avast! anyway. Simply open up the main window, go to the firewall section and hit the “Expert Settings” button. On the dialog that pops up there is a check box about in the middle (maybe a little lower) of the page to enable Internet Sharing. Turn that on and your virtual machines will be talking like teenage girls with unlimited text plans. Hope that helps someone out there, enjoy!