Sunday Tech Reading - tech
(hx) 10:45 PM CET - Jan,09 2005
- Post a comment
SECURITY...
- Analysis of the Troj/Winser-A Malware - The main program,
ccEvtMngr.exe is a trojan that spreads via the WINS MS04-045 vulnerability,
and it does so via outbound connections to port 42/tcp. When a new machine is
compromised, the infected machine "phones home" back to the attacking machine
to port 37264/tcp, and then spawns a command shell, waiting for input. The
attacking machine sends what amounts to a small batch file that launches an
FTP program. It calls back to the attacking machine on port 36010/tcp, which
is listening with a pseudo-FTP server. It downloads and installs itself on
that machine.
- Mozilla XBM Image Vulnerability - Mail client and Web Browser
allows the usage of XBM graphic files and
a
security flaw in the way softwares handles those images, allow a malicious
user to perform a denial-of-service attack. The X BitMap data is stored as
ASCII data, and files begin with '#define' statements in substitution of a
header.
- Extremely Critical IE6/SP2 Exploit Found - Secunia is reporting
another three vulnerabilities in IE6 running on WinXP SP2. Any of these,
in combination with an inappropriate behaviour where the ActiveX Data Object
(ADO) model can write arbitrary files, can be exploited to compromise a user's
system.
This vulnerability is far worse however: it makes command lines run on the
user's machine. Why is that bad? Because someone can make that command be "del
C:WindowsSystem32*.dll" or something equally sensitive, causing Windows to
crash... permanently. The solution? Switch browsers; stop using Internet
Explorer.
- MS AntiSpyware vs Ad-Aware vs SpyBot -
It was time to pin Microsoft AntiSpyware against SpyBot S&D by first
scanning with SpyBot then checking to see how many files SpyBot had left
behind. SpyBot's initial scan resulted in 358 problems detected. After running
SpyBot a second time to make sure it did not report any other problems, we ran
Microsoft AntiSpyware. AntiSpyware was able to detect 659 infected files on
the machine with 2.223 registry keys infected.
OFF-TOPIC...
- Does the Brain Work Like the Internet? - Computer scientists
studying the stability of Internet connections may someday find their research
used to help patients suffering from schizophrenia, Alzheimer's disease or
stroke. Recently published research indicates, for the first time, that
networks in the human brain work similarly to those in the World Wide Web
and other apparently unrelated networks. Thus, techniques to optimize one kind
of network could potentially be applied to another.
- Video games with heroes make kids aggressive - Computer games in
which
children can identify with a hero or heroine who attacks his or her
enemies are more likely to make them aggressive than games featuring
indiscriminate violence, according to a recent survey.
TECHNOLOGY...
- PSP to launch this spring in the US - Sony officials said at the
CES in Las Vegas that
the game player will hit U.S. stores in March. Sony executive Howard
Stringer said the console will sell for less than $200. Sony hopes U.S. demand
will be strong for the black-and-silver console, which also plays music and
movies. Stores in Japan sold out of the 200,000 PSPs they had in stock within
hours of its debut Dec. 12.
- Yahoo! Unveils Year's Top Sites - The Yahoo! Search team have
looked at thousands of websites, braving the weird, the wonderful, and the
downright obscure to track down
the
ten best sites of 2004.
- CES 2005 coverage -
@ TheTechLounge |
Phantom Game Service @ Legit Reviews |
NVIDIA Powered
Intel SLI? |
Another
Nforce 5 board makes a showing |
CES
2005 photo journal @ FiringSquad |
Behind the Scenes at the CES Keynote |
Best of CES 2005 in Photos |
Samsung launches speech-to-SMS phone |
Fatal1ty
cock of the gaming pile again
- Studios announce HD DVD movie release lists - While games publisher
Vivendi Universal was touting its support for the Blu-ray Disc format
yesterday, the movie business in which it owns a 20 per cent stake,
Universal Studios, was announcing plans to release 16 HD DVD titles in the US.
It was joined by Paramount, which will ship the first titles from its initial
20-strong list of HD DVD products in Q4 2005, and by Warner Bros., which plans
to lead the field with a catalogue of 50 HD DVD titles, again commencing Q4
2005.
- Intel promises to "upgrade your life" - In a keynote at the
Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, Intel chief executive Craig Barrett
said: "We are going to upgrade your life and upgrade some of the equipment in
your life." The appliance transports PC applications to the living room,
notifying the user when they have been outbid at an online auction or
forwarding alerts from a home security system. The Intel chief went on to
demonstrate a
prototype of a living room PC using a dual-core processor. The device
featured a touch screen and 3D user interface that allows easy navigation
through the content offered, both locally and through online services.
- AOL testing free 100MB storage locker - Called the service My
Storage,
AOL will give a 100MB digital locker to every subscriber and up to seven
additional screen names that each account holder can create. Because the
locker is accessible on the Web, subscribers will be able to retrieve files
using any Web-enabled device. AOL will allow subscribers to place files in
public storage and share with other users.
- Phone biz agrees on $1 DRM levy - The mobile phone industry has
already agreed on a DRM standard for
locking down media - and it'll cost $1 per handset, plus a percentage of
each piece of media downloaded. The money will be divided out between patent
holders ContentGuard, Intertrust, Matsushita, Philips and Sony.
HARDWARE...
- Acer TravelMate 382TM - At the heart of the system lies
a
low power Pentium M 725 processor happily purring along at 1.6GHz. This
CPU is based on the newer 90nm process technology and packs in a full 2MB of
on-die Level 2 cache along with a 400MHz FSB. Backing this up is 512MB of
DDR266 memory which is expandable to 2GB, although my unit came with two 256MB
modules with no more room for expansion at a later date. If you want more
memory I'd recommend stating that at the time of order.
- PQI Turbo Memory
PC4000 -
It's
rated at an aggressive 2.5-3-3-7. It used to be that if you wanted PC4000
memory, you'd have to give up your latency to do so. This appears to no longer
be the case with PQI's new PC4000 sticks.
- Mushkin 1GB PC2-5300 (667) DDR2 Dual Pack -
The PC2-5300 (667) picks up where PC2-4200 (533) left off with bandwidth
of up to 5400 GB/s. This dual pack consist of 2 x 512mb PC2-5300 modules and
is rated at CL 4-4-4-11. According to CPUZ's SPD utlity, these modules uses
A-Data chips
- ATI X800XT PE Comparison - 5 Cards - If you
look closely to all benchmarks results you may notice that ASUS is on top,
after that Gigabyte and third Sapphire.
The
results between all five cards are almost the same and one or two frames
difference is not much.
- Gigabyte GeForce 6600 GT (GV-NX66T128D) PCI-E -
Hi-Tech Reviews posted
a review on the Gigabyte GeForce 6600 GT (GV-NX66T128D) PCI-E video card.
- Hitachi 5K80 80G & Samsung MP0402H 40G HDDs -
The Samsung drive is within a decibel of the quietest hard drive we've ever
listened to or tested. Such a close measurement makes it difficult to give
much weight to the difference; slight variances in testing conditions,
procedure or samples might even flip the results. The Hitachi Travelstar 5K80
also turns in a great showing, with noise lower than the quietest 3.5" hard
drive, and even better performance than our particular Samsung SP80 7200 rpm
desktop drive sample.
- Plextor PX-716A DVD recorder -
The Plextor
PX-716A is shorter than its brothers, the PX-504A, PX-708A and the
PX-712A. This is good news for people with a barebone computer, such as the
one we're using in this review, because space is always limited in these kind
of machines.
- Corsair Flash Voyager USB 2.0 Drive 256MB - OCTools
take a look at one of
Corsair's USB 2.0 Flash Drive offering.
- OCZ ModStream OCZ-520 12U
Power Supply -
The OCZ ModStream OCZ-520 12U PSU is marketed as a high-power, low-noise
unit. With a handsome chrome finish and a 120mm blue LED fan, it is obviously
aimed at those who appreciate style in their computers as well as well
regulated power or, in the case of most SPCR fans, quiet power. One of the
main selling points of this PSU is the OCZ EZMod advanced cable management
system, a fancy name for detachable cables (with blue plugs!). Its cables are
all shielded for superior power regulation. They also glow under UV light.
-
PDP System Patriot XBL PC-3200 DC Kit -
Patriot's Dual Channel (DC) 1GB and 512MB 3200+ solutions offer XBL
performance. XBL solutions enable user's flexibility to determine their
system's optimal performance settings. Patriot's 3200+XBL solutions provide
Extreme Bandwidth performance up to PC4200 with timings of 3-4-4-8 or Extreme
Low Latency timings of 2-2-2-5 at PC3200. Patriot's Dual Channel kits are
composed of two (2) 256MB or 512MB modules, manufactured, tested and then
immediately packaged to ensure reliability and stability.
- Waffer AirCon
PAC 400 PC cooling device -
This device is essentially a peltier cooling system, which the company
terms as bringing the idea of "Air-Conditioning System" into computer cooling.
Does this idea really work? Yes, with a but. In the process of the review, I
discovered several issues that lead me to believe that this device is not for
everyone.
- Asetek VapoChill XE II -
Plug and play subzero cooling for your CPU, is it possible? The latest
generation of asetek's VapoChill Xtreme Edition promises easy installation
combined with great performance, all wrapped up in an attractive package. We
thermally accelerate an Athlon 64 and P4 up to speed
beyond air and water cooling limits. - Dell 2005FPW 20 LCD - It may
not be the best one money can buy,
but it has a price much lower than the competition's. During the holiday
season, if one searched around, it was very simple to find this for under
$600. For a 20" widescreen monitor, this is an absolute steal. The
backlighting problems did not detract that much from the overall value of this
LCD. Unless you have cash to literally throw around, I wouldn't spend the
extra few hundred dollars to get a comparable NEC or Samsung model.
-
NB-30 battery-free wireless optical mouse - As the name suggests,
the BatteryFREE mouse is a wireless mouse that does not use any batteries.
It works under the principal of electrical induction. A brief overview of how
this works is when an electric conductor moves through a magnetic field.
Electronic current is then "induced", or created, in the electronic conductor.
For the BatteryFREE mouse, the mouse houses an electric conductor in the form
of copper wires. Below the gray surface of the mouse pad is another coil that
causes the surface of the pad to become a magnetic field. As the user moves
the mouse across the mouse pad, current is induced for the mouse; thus, it has
enough electricity to power its red LED and optical sensor. The induction also
creates enough power for the mouse's transmitter to broadcast weak signals to
the nearby receiver which is located at the top of the mouse pad. The weakness
of the signal will not cause it to interfere with other RF devices. Another
reviews can be found on
nVNews and
MikhailTech.
- Saitek R440 Force Feedback Wheel and pedals - Force
Feedback on the R440 is also top notch. Games such as Need For Speed
Underground 2 and Colin McRae Rally 2005 feel spectacular as not only road
surfaces and impacts, but also acceleration, changing gear with the paddle
gearbox and heavy breaking are faithfully simulated. Should you not like the
feedback in any particular title Saitek's software will allow you to adjust
the sensitivity of the R440 independently in Windows.
- AKG K 271 Studio headphones -
AKG K 271 Studios
headphones are not really expensive - well, not if you've already adjusted
your attitude to accept that a couple of hundred bucks US is not an excessive
amount to pay for quality 'phones, anyway. $US179 is an excellent price for
sealed headphones of this quality.
- Rio Forge 256MB Sport MP3 Player -
It has superior sound quality, compared to most MP3 players. In fact, its
sound quality surprised me. The bundled earbuds are amongst the best stock
earbuds I've ever tried. The GUI (Graphical User Interface) is easy to use and
understand. It also has FM capabilites as well as customizable equalizer
settings.
- Konica Minolta DiMAGE Z3 camera -
This camera hosts a number of features including a 4.2 megapixel CCD, 12X
optical zoom and anti-shake support are just a few right off the bat. Let's
take a more in-depth look at this model and see what makes it so different
from the DiMAGE Z2.
- Samsung DuoCam SC-D6040 - The digital camera on
the Samsung
DC-D6040 uses a 4.13 Megapixel CCD, which corresponds to a resolution of
2592 x 1944. The camera offers a 3X optical zoom and a 12X digital zoom as
well as a pop up flash. Samsung includes a USB cable, a 16 MB memory stick, a
battery pack and a remote control for the DuoCam in addition to a special "A/V
cable" that connects to a television so that you can display pictures using
S-Video or composite on your television display.
GUIDES...
- AnandTech's buyer's guide -
Most people looking for a budget computer don't have a lot of money, and
the last thing that they want is to have to go out and replace parts (or buy
additional parts) because of some issue that comes up. Performance would be
nice to have as well, of course, but that's a distant concern
SOFTWARE...
- Microsoft Services for Netware 5.03 SP2 and FPNW 5.02 -
Services for NetWare 5.03 SP2 is a free download which simplies the
adoption of Windows Server 2003 by reducing overall network administration and
facilitates the migration to Windows Server 2003 from NetWare, NDS and
eDirectory. It consists of two tools - Microsoft Directory Synchronization
Services (MSDSS) and Microsoft File Migration Utility.
- Kazaa Lite Resurrection 0.0.7.6F -
Kazaa Lite Resurrection is a P2P file sharing program based on the client
that is developed by the Kazaa Corporation. Kazaa Lite Resurrection has been
edited so that it does not include spyware, malware or ad-aware.
- MAME v0.90 -
MAME stands
for Multiple Arcade Machine Emulator. When used in conjunction with an arcade
game's data files (ROMs), MAME will more or less faithfully reproduce that
game on a PC. MAME can currently emulate over 2600 unique (and over 4600 in
total) classic arcade video games from the three decades of video games -
'70s, '80s and '90s, and some from the current millennium.
- AnyDVD 4.5.1.1 beta - Slysoft has just released
another beta
version of its popular AnyDVD. This new beta fixes problem with Autoplay
and adds information window which shows you what AnyDVD is doing.
- Adobe Reader SpeedUp 1.32 - As with the previous versions, this
version works with
Adobe Reader (Professional included) 7.0. But it doesn't support any 7.0
tweaks.
- Torrent Searcher 4.1 - With
Torrent Searcher 4.0
(download)
you can search for torrents. It's very small and easy to use. There are no ads
included at all.
|