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User: Brewmeister_Z

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  1. Re:Analog Video Senders make great jammers on What's Killing Your Wi-Fi? · · Score: 2

    It really depends on the age and quality of the microwave oven. I have a client that has a really old beast of a microwave that is pre-1980's old. I have a tool on my laptop to analyze the 2.4Ghz band and I could see that some channels would be obliterated with noise when the microwave was on. This just meant assigning the access points to channels least effected by the noise. In newer and/or higher grade routers, the auto-select feature should pick out a good channel so this would be a non-issue anyway.

  2. Re:Home users don't want to do even that much work on Sergey Brin: Windows Is "Torturing Users" · · Score: 1

    Recently, I have dealt with a couple of Mac laptops that had a malware events.

    In the first case, it was a scareware page through Safari and the user interacted enough to download files that were unable to install but had the scareware load up multiple times within the browser for two weeks. My examination found the history of the events and the Windows-based malware files but no installed malware.

    In the second case, it was scareware page that was brought up and was targeting Apple platforms. The user was smart enough not to believe it and shutdown the system instead of interacting with it or providing any personal info/payment for the fake product. When I checked it the next day, the domain for the scareware page was already taken down.

    If Apple wants more marketshare for Macs, they need to acknowledge the growing security risks and provide legit tools instead of letting third-party vendor provide "mafia protection" type products. The users Apple is converting from Windows are buying in because some other user tells them "Macs don't get malware" and then you see the attacks going after weakest point of the users instead of operating system and other software. They will probably end up with a Mac with the "walled garden" so only software can be installed via Apple and not off other sites or removable media.

  3. Re:Home users don't want to do even that much work on Sergey Brin: Windows Is "Torturing Users" · · Score: 2

    My sig says it all. For those who have sigs turned off: "I Cater to the Needs of Stupid People"

    It is sad that people do not know what anti-virus program they are using yet do understand that they need anti-virus. Some of these saps will keep buying Norton and McAfee products and pay expensive auto-renewals or even install additional anti-virus and firewalls without removing or disabling the old ones. These people will click on anything that says something vaguely close to "security" or "anti-virus" in the name.

    I favor the free (without paid version prompts) for these people since it easier to clean it up later when (not if) they get infected again because no product will stop the user from disabling or ignoring valid security alerts when they want to install the latest crapware that will be filled with adware, malware, or just a POS that crashes any application or OS it touches.

  4. Re:The science of better Guinness on The Science of Stout Beer · · Score: 1

    If Guiness is watered down to you, I would like to hear your opinion of American light beers. Seems like the brewers here are on a race to the bottom by offering beers with less in them. I can hardly wait for Miller to make a beer from the water they use to rinse out their brewing equipment (maybe that is what they serve up now for the low-calorie swill?). Zero-calorie beer will the next abomination (AKA bottled water with a hint of yellow color at twice the price of other overpriced bottled water).

  5. Re:How else do you uniquely identify USAsians? on Why Google Wants Your Kid's SSN · · Score: 1

    I agree that the power that possession of your full name, date of birth, and SSN has is crazy. The government saying to protect it is worthless since that means never using it anywhere and if nobody used it outside of government agency use then it would not need to be protected as much.

    The big problem I see is the credit reporting agencies not doing due diligence to protect your information or at least use better authentication to match the person to the data requests. Identity protection services should be the default protection and various opt-in and opt-outs should be used to protect the data from abuse and inaccuracy. I should not have to monitor 3 reports. I should be able to opt-out of the other two and concentrate on maintaining one accurate report. If that agency does not want to work with me to clean up the report to make it accurate, I can use one of the other two agencies to service my credit report an maybe get better results if they are competing instead of colluding. Also, I should be able to opt-in for more security for that one report so requests must be cleared by me through a predetermined communication channel so an identity thief cannot get get a car loan instantly and drive off with a car before anyone catches on to the fraud.

    I am surprised that the businesses that pay to use the credit reports have not demanded better security and accuracy since this hurts them on lost legit sales due to bad reports and losses due to fraud. It just makes everything more expensive as rates and fees go up to cover the losses instead of fixing the system. Wasn't the last financial fiasco enough to wake up the stupid MBAs to realize they need to fix the system by hiring people who know something about security instead of just the latest buzzwords or only preservation of broken systems.

  6. Re:Extremely Risky, won't happen. on AMD Sale to Dell Rumored · · Score: 1

    Dell might do better with corporate clients when it comes to service and support but for the average consumer client, it is pitiful at best. I did some Dell hardware warranty work a couple years back and heard the horror stories the customers had to go through to get parts sent out. There were/are way too many middle men in their support model. If you have to spend 5 or 6 hours on the phone with someone who does not speak English in the way the you do while trying to follow directions with technical terms you don't understand, that is not good support. Good support is having local presence that can diagnose and request the parts then follow up to install. The service calls I had were a joke since I had to diagnose the problem to see if the parts delivered were appropriate to solve the problem (the details given to me were usually just the parts sent and few words like WILL NOT TURN ON). This is a case where I see overseas outsourcing as a major failure since it tries to do too much to save money and the customer experience turns off the customer from buying from that vendor again. However, the industry gets away with it since they all typically follow this model.

    Alternatively, always use the chat support for Dell or HP if possible. It is much more efficient since written communication versus spoken can help avoid confusion and no sitting on hold for forever.

  7. Re:It is ethical on Is Setting Up an Offshore IT Help Desk Ethical? · · Score: 1

    I have little respect for the MBA degree by itself. It tells me nothing other than the holder wants to work management for the big bucks. It is nothing more than a check-box for qualifications. That degree says nothing about having the any of the right skills to manage a particular business and without a chance for further inquiry, I assume a stereotype of "money above all else" which leads to short-term gain, long-term loss methods if they get some nice contract with a golden parachute which rewards failure as much as it does success. In short, MBA != Competent Leader.

  8. Re:"Turn off the radio and drive!" on Music Really Is Intoxicating, After All · · Score: 1

    I wouldn't say you would be drunk from listening to Top 40 hits as much as you may need to be drunk to enjoy most Top 40 hits.

  9. Re:Retarded on Major Sites To Join ‘World IPv6 Day’ · · Score: 1

    This could work well to inform users that their ISP is antiquated and even their computers are due for an upgrade. If Google, Facebook, etc. are still allowing IPV4 then information should be provided stating why IPV6 may not work for them before proceeding to the normal pages (they may be doing this but I can't be bothered to RTFA). Downside will be fear created by an unexpected pop-up or page stating this which will make many thing they have some type of malware since these sites did not come up as expected.

    Either way, ISPs and computer services will be getting calls. Hopefully these calls will get appropriate answers and not lead to service offers to solve imaginary problems (Geek Squad anyone?) or upgrades to hardware that are premature.

    Technology advances are great but if it requires scrapping working hardware for little or no benefit to the user then it is a waste of money and adds to the electronic junkyards. Many perfectly good mobile phones are scrapped due to plan upgrade discounts, locking phones to a carrier and carriers refusing to support old phones since they can't lock you into a service plan anymore.

  10. Re:Huh? on Is Mark Zuckerberg the Next Steve Case? · · Score: 2

    The ship Titanic was doing great too... until it ran upon an iceberg. The Facebook problem is that it is over-valued based on what private investors have dumped into it. They don't want to go public since their books would reveal how little Facebook makes of its ads (which I block since many are one click away from malware so the whole lot must be blocked). When Facebook goes IPO, people will buy it up and make money for the current investors and then it will dry up like the last .com bubble burst.

    User base growth is deceptive since many of these accounts are duplicates. Many people have an account for real life friends and then fictitious accounts for games that require and army of 501 "friends" to actually have a chance of advancing and not be beat up by everyone else with a larger army. With these fictitious accounts, the users add only other users active in those games. Farmville and Mafia Wars have driven casual non-gaming users insane with all the requests and status updates. Zynga has probably hurt Facebook more than it has helped for long-term growth and user retention. Granted, changes to Facebook to separate games into there own feed and block applications has helped but the dilemma is still upon the users to either learn the controls or just abandon their account. How many of those 600 million users are dormant and visited less than once a week/month or never again?

  11. Re:But will they listen? on The Right's War On Net Neutrality · · Score: 1

    Dare I say this but does this problem actually work with a car analogy? If you dub the Internet as the "Super Information Highway" which I hate but works for the analogy that stupid people may understand. Your vehicle (make, size, fuel economy, etc.) is the content. The roads are owned and/or controlled by various entities (city, county, state, federal) with correspond to the ISPs, telcos, etc. and you have tollbooths at certain road transitions (ISP controlled or government controlled).

    Pure Net Neutrality is removing all toll booths but allowing stoplights at on-ramps and intersections to keep the flow efficient as possible without favor or penalty to any the traffic.

    Without government control over the ISP's actions, certain cars pay higher tolls or outright banned from their roads. That seems a bit more reasonable if the banned or higher tolled vehicles are overweight vehicles but not if it is Ford cars versus GM cars.

    With government control and the fairness doctrine, the government sets the toll rates and gets a cut and also imposes silly rules like there must be an equal amount of Fords and GMs on the road at any given time so you cannot get past the tollbooth in a GM car until another Ford car comes along so the traffic stays equal. This sounds crazy since some days you will wait in line at the tollbooth and other days you get to go through immediately.

    Many people are fearful of the overreach of government so they would rather be at the mercy of big business. The reality is that big business has control with or without government intervention since they can manipulate the government with their money more than the average person can with opinion/protest/voting power. The government intervention is like gambling though; sometimes you win but mostly you lose.

  12. Snow is not all bad... in moderation on 4chan Declares War On Snow · · Score: 1

    Snow is great if you like to ski, sled, or partake in other wintertime recreation that require it. It is nice to have (but not too much) in December for that effect it gives with the Christmas decor. But come January and February, it gets to be annoying as it turns to icy and an ugly yellow/brown from thaw cycles. Come March and April, it damn near angers many people since it slows the warming of spring. Many times in the past few years in South Dakota, we have gotten big snowstorms in the last couple weeks of April. That late snow does not stay around long but sometimes accounts for a large portion of the total inches of snow for the whole winter.

  13. Re:Warning labels suck on Laptop Heat May Cause 'Toasted Skin Syndrome' · · Score: 1

    If you are smart (or at least concerned) enough to read a manual or know how to look up the correct warnings for your product on a website, then you are not the target audience for most warning labels. Also, most warning labels are probably at a reading level too advanced for the people who need it.

  14. Re:The end of a giant. on Motorola To Split In Two · · Score: 1

    MBA = Masters in Business Atrophy

    I see the appointment of a pure MBA (without any background in what that company makes as a product)to CEO as the sign to get ready to cash out after they do their "Short Term Gain, Long Term Loss" changes that spike the the stocks value and then nosedive it down when there is realization that the cost saving changes hurts the company the most in areas that previously made it successfully.

    I swear some of these MBA's read Dilbert to get "good" ideas from Dogbert and the PHB.

  15. Re:Good for you on Psystar Activation Servers Down? · · Score: 1

    Only one other case I would use Linux. I had a customer that had an old Windows ME PC that had issues. I put Ubuntu Linux on it with the understanding that this computer will be OK for games and using the Firefox browser. Considering Win ME only has IE6, the web experience will improve as long as they don't expect much for Flash-type content. I was upfront about the limitations based on the old hardware and compatibility issues with add-on devices like printers and cameras.

    In the end, this is just an experiment to see what average Joes would think of Linux as a desktop. The biggest problem they have had so far is with the NVIDIA video driver and the resolution getting reset to Auto (a very low res) and having to manually setting it back to something usable like 1024x768.

    Also, in this case, they have a newer PC with Win XP that the wife uses mostly and the old one was the husband's but she doesn't want him messing up hers. He mostly just plays games and goes to websites for NASCAR and local racetracks so it can handle that fine.

  16. Re:We Win! on Malware Threat Reports Are "Apples and Oranges" · · Score: 1

    I am glad that we don't have a Worst Buy in this town. The closest I have to get to their messes is extended service plans people buy for some of the devices like printers. Don't get me started on my experiences doing Dell hardware warranty work.

    Most of my customers are referral so I keep busy now that I have been doing this business for 3 years. I have no problem with being honest with my customers since I can fix a problem and tell them how to prevent it instead of trying to drain them of their cash by fixing the same problem over and over again. There are always other upgrades and repairs that I would most likely be considered for later and happy customers give referrals. Operations like Worst Buy prey upon consumer ignorance and try to get as much as they can before the customer can get wise.

    Thanks for software and tool suggestions. I am always on the lookout for other tools that make my job easier and more efficient.

  17. Re:We Win! on Malware Threat Reports Are "Apples and Oranges" · · Score: 1

    Well, when Worst Buy, as you call it, bought Geek Squad they took an service of flamboyant (VW bugs and nerdy uniforms) technicians and over time replaced educated technicians with sales monkeys shown how to run canned programs and charge about half the value of the computer to fix the simplest problems. They have a bunch of the sales monkey at the counter and possibly a real technician working in the background on machines not fixed (or made worse) by the sales monkeys.

    We don't have a Best Buy in my town but I have visited a good computer shop in a town that does. Their rates are much more reasonable than Geek Squad and they shared a few stories of computers brought to them after being taken to Best Buy.

    I provide home and small business computer support (mostly Windows, occasionally Mac, and experimenting with Linux for some customers). I find that most malware will disable most anti-virus programs (Norton and McAfee for sure). Why pay a yearly cost for software that slows down your computer worse than the malware and gives you less protection than a free competitor? I used to like AVG Free but have been using the MS Security Essentials instead since people get annoyed with AVG changing versions and requiring a manual upgrade.

    My philosophy anymore is to have some type of firewall enabled (Windows Firewall or another free one), an active anti-virus (MS Security Essentials or another free one), and preferably Firefox with ABP instead of IE. Most malware not prevented by these is something obtained by a socially engineered attack (e-mail attachments, web browser ads, etc.) and usually lead to a fake anti-virus program that asks for money to fix the problem it created and will block most methods that can remove it. I find that most can usually be cleaned up with Malwarebytes Anti-Malware running in Safe Mode.

    The vendors and the manufacturers are both guilty of selling products and services that are not secure but give the customers a false feeling of being safe from everything. This leads to reckless behavior that those who understand security would avoid doing even with a secure system.

    Computer security software is no match for the behavior of ignorant users that will disable or circumvent security provide by others. Computer education related to security doesn't hit home until these people have to pay someone to clean up the malware mess.

  18. Re:Integration means it is still there on EU Accepts Microsoft's Browser Choice Promise · · Score: 1

    True that.

    But the GPS navigation and diagnostics system are not part of the CD player (IE) but they make use of the screen and controls on the deck (integrated OS features). That being said, your after-market CD player (Firefox, etc.) might be able to work with a GPS navigation and diagnostic system but that could be more difficult if this deck only uses certain standards and these other systems are using something proprietary.

    Few carmakers do such setups unless they are high-end models to the point that the customer would rather pay whatever the factory would offer instead of the more reasonably priced after-market equivalent. Buying an Apple computer is more like this than a PC where many more parts are available and competitively priced.

    Your intent of modification/upgrade, desired appearance, required functionality, and willingness to pay will influence car and computer purchases to varying degrees so this analogy works sometimes when discussing consumer motivations.

  19. Re:oh dear on EU Accepts Microsoft's Browser Choice Promise · · Score: 1

    The diffeence? Three letters for you:

    ABP

    I have put Firefox with ABP on a few computers for users that seem to have problems with ads and will click anything without concern of the linked site installing malware (like those lovely fake anti-virus programs that Norton and McAfee do nothing to stop). I usually show them the difference using Facebook (if they use that and play game apps) so they see the difference.

  20. Integration means it is still there on EU Accepts Microsoft's Browser Choice Promise · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Since Internet Explorer is integrated into the OS, does this mean they changed the OS significantly or just removed the interface? If you just get rid of the icon and/or executable for IE, the operating system would still use the underlying functionality of IE for Internet access so some exploits would still exist and would require continued patching. This change does protect the user on behavior abuses involving the user when the browser is in use but not other Windows features using the underlying functionality.

    As for a car analogy, isn't removing IE like removing a factory stereo CD deck that also does the GPS navigation and diagnostic interface then replacing it with an after-market stereo CD deck to gain the MP3 playing feature but without those other features. If the user expects to use those other features, they cannot replace the factory deck and would be better off to add a portable player (Firefox, Chrome, etc.) via the AUX input and never use the CD player part (IE).

  21. Re:DON'T LIKE iT? DOn'T USE IT !! on Facebook Masks Worse Privacy With New Interface · · Score: 1

    This fakenamegenerator could be a great resource for those who want to play Facebook games that require "friends" to gain credits or other capabilities without annoying real people. Now my fake Facebook account can have its own fake friends! And Facebook can inflate the number of users to gain more imaginary value even though nobody pays for the service except advertisers who use the ads as a malware vector (Facebook + IE = Malware Apps and Ads; Facebook + Firefox + ABP = Malware Apps only).

  22. Re:You can't steal *published* data on Recession Pushes More Workers To Steal Data · · Score: 1

    Very punny! Maybe I can dig up a few more produce analogies on some other topic. Thanks for sowing the seed of thought on that.

  23. Re:The New Ethics in America on Recession Pushes More Workers To Steal Data · · Score: 2, Interesting

    All kinds of businesses do shady employment practices.

    My wife works for "one of the better paying" manufacturers in this small town. This plant was spared when they closed a plant in another city and they ended up taking on some of that closed plant's work.

    They have been on and off mandatory overtime for the past few months. It is odd since only a few of the lines have enough work (parts to complete orders) available to keep them busy. So far it has been an extra hour per day and will vary between the just the lines with a backlog of work to the whole plant.

    My wife told me yesterday that the are now required to come in for 5 hours on the first two Saturdays of December. There is no consideration of previous plans made by employees and this can not be excused. This seems like a gross abuse of manager power and I am not aware of any state or federal laws that forbid it. However, common sense would tell you that this would hurt employee morale since stressing people out with overwork and taking away their days off during the Holidays and Flu season will result in less productivity since more will be sick and come back to work still sick and contagious. Also, when employee morale drops, employees do two things-- 1) quit or 2) if quitting is not an option, they become anti-productive by working slower and making more mistakes which creates more scrap loss and bad product being shipped.

    This manager is a douche-bag. He openly refers to the employees as "bodies" and cares more about attendance than productivity. I don't know what he is trying to achieve by these actions. However, my wife is planning to quit when she goes on maternity leave. In the meantime, she is planting the seeds of employee disgruntlement by opening the eyes of the sheeple types to realize how bad the management treats them.

    I don't like what strong unions can do to hurt a company but I also dislike what the lack of laws for protecting employee rights can cause in the other extreme such as this.

  24. Re:You can't steal *published* data on Recession Pushes More Workers To Steal Data · · Score: 1

    Try looking at music CDs as pumpkins. My wife and I buy some pumpkins for Halloween and/or Fall decor. After the pumpkins start getting mushy, I take them and throw them in the back yard behind a shed. The next spring, the seeds spread around from the squirrels scavenging through the pumpkin mush grow into a pumpkin vine. I let the pumpkin vine do it own thing and maybe water it occasionally. The next fall I now have a few nice free pumpkins to use for Fall decor. Since I have these free pumpkins, does that mean I am stealing from the pumpkin seller since I will be buying less pumpkins? I actually did this and I still bought a couple of pumpkins to carve for Halloween.

    The recording companies would love to make it impossible to copy music or rip CDs to MP3 or simular formats but that would come at a price of more expensive music formats and compatible players which would actually further reduce sales.

    Back to the pumpkin seller, they could create a variety of pumpkin that was seedless or that the seeds were unable to grow into a vine. However, some other seller would still sell the other kind so they would just lose sales to them.

    The reality in both situations is that a product must be priced correctly that balances profit and theft loss by offering the product at a price that makes it more convenient or making it more feature rich than its alternative. The idea of spending a lot of money to stamp out theft and then tacking that cost onto the item is crazy.

  25. Obligatory Matrix reference on Italian Scientists Put Robot Spiders In Your Colon · · Score: 4, Funny

    Why do I get visions of doctors that look like FBI agents inserting this device into me via my belly button?