Monday, June 30, 2008

Touch over the Internet


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In about 10 yrs. or so well be able to reach out and touch someone over the net. I hold a doll and my other half feels me though the clothing she wearing.

YOU HEAR IT HERE FIRST


And even in 10 yrs. it' going to cost ya. And stop thinking that too.


D, Advising at keen as The WebsterRead my other blog, http://the-peoples-patriot.blogspot.com/ and or http://letslets.blogspot.com

Microsoft to stop selling Windows XP on Monday June 30th 08


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Sun, 29 Jun 2008 08:47 pm PDT
AP - Microsoft Corp. is scheduled to stop selling its Windows XP operating system to retailers and major computer makers Monday, despite protests from a slice of PC users who don't want to be forced into using XP's successor, Vista. Full Story




D, Advising at keen as The WebsterRead my other blog, http://the-peoples-patriot.blogspot.com/ and or http://letslets.blogspot.com

Thursday, June 26, 2008

html code


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Now is the time for all good man to the aid of thier country.

In the abvoe the em tag is used to gave emphasized to text of time, I bolded the "to" useing the b tag and for country I used the i tag to country.
another inportant tag is the ! tag. Anytime you want to put someting in your code that you don't want to show on your finished page it's the tag to use.

Learn more and test yourself at http://www.w3schools.com/html/


D, Advising at keen as The WebsterRead my other blog, http://the-peoples-patriot.blogspot.com/ and or http://letslets.blogspot.com

Gates leaves Microsoft to focus on philanthropy


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Bill Gates moves on, but Microsoft keeps his 'quests' alive
AP - 2 hours, 48 minutes ago

SEATTLE - It is almost unthinkable that any one human could pick up where Bill Gates leaves off when he ends his full-time tenure Friday as Microsoft's leader.

(Reuters)Sensing the start of a personal computer revolution, Bill Gates dropped out of Harvard University in 1975 to start Microsoft Corp and pursue a vision of a computer on every desk and in every home.

Three decades later, Gates is set to step down on Friday from what is now the world's largest software company to work full-time at the charitable organization -- the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation -- built by his vast fortune.

And no it wasn't this news that dropped the Dow Jones Stock market over 300 pts. today,
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Stocks plunged on Thursday, with the Dow sliding about 360 points to a 21-month low as oil hit a record and Wall Street powerhouse Goldman Sachs urged investors to sell bank and automaker shares, escalating concern about the outlook for profits.

Get ready for a new day in these united states. GM & Ford are on the skids and you'll be able to make a living with your computer and alot of elbow grease. Oil hit $140.00 today again. We've got a chance to doing all over again useing something else like air to run our cars. Look it up, you can run a car,and a fast one as well on air. Just do a search on "air car".

It's been 30 yrs. since Bill did his thing and now we can use his computer in every home to do a thing or two for ourselves.





D, Advising at keen as The WebsterRead my other blog, http://the-peoples-patriot.blogspot.com/ and or http://letslets.blogspot.com

A little something on the Air Car


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click twice to run video





D, Advising at keen as The WebsterRead my other blog, http://the-peoples-patriot.blogspot.com/ and or http://letslets.blogspot.com

Thursday, June 19, 2008

About Skype IM and video


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Skype has video for you to use while you talking but as far as I've seen there's only one camera you can use with Skype and that's the QuickCam® Pro 9000 from logitech. Now that's a really good webcam, you should see it for yourself, but it also just under $100 too. Although you may find it for something less if you look around hard enough.
Let me know if anything changes on this, OK?
You do know that Skype is free, right?
A great Instant Messenger and a great webcam, Nice.


Read my other blog, http://the-peoples-patriot.blogspot.com/ and or http://letslets.blogspot.com

OK, to Firefox again or not. Safer now or not. Lets see.


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Yesterday was the FireFox big "Download Day" and they did real good. But is the browser that I once loved back to something to be loved again.

"The new version of the Firefox Web browser was downloaded more than 8 million times in the first 24 hours it was available, the software's developers said Wednesday." per AP.

Firefox comes from Mozilla, an open-source community in which thousands of people, mostly volunteers, collectively develop free products. Firefox is the No. 2 Web browser behind Microsoft Corp.'s Internet Explorer.

Firefox 3 includes enhancements to help users organize their frequently visited Web sites and block access to sites known to distribute viruses and other malicious software.

Users of Yahoo Inc.'s mail service can also use Firefox 3 to send e-mail by clicking a "mailto" link they might come across clicking on a name or a "contact us" link on a Web page. Previously such links could only open a standalone, desktop e-mail program.

Firefox 3 also offers other design and speed improvements.

I'll do my usual thing and wait and listen and investigate for awhile yet. But if you feel like going for it now, http://www.mozilla.com/en-US/firefox/


Read my other blog, http://the-peoples-patriot.blogspot.com/ and or http://letslets.blogspot.com

Yahoo's new e-mail addresses with new domains


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SAN FRANCISCO - Yahoo Inc. is offering free e-mail accounts under two new designations in an effort to attract Web surfers unhappy with their current addresses.

Yahoo expects to begin registering new addresses under the domains of "ymail" and "rocketmail" around noon PDT Thursday 6-19-08 at http://mail.yahoo.com.


Read my other blog, http://the-peoples-patriot.blogspot.com/ and or http://letslets.blogspot.com

Saturday, June 14, 2008

My video stuff is at stickam.com small


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You tell me which one you like, OK?





Read my other blog, http://the-peoples-patriot.blogspot.com/ and or http://letslets.blogspot.com

Friday, June 13, 2008

My "Hello" broadcasting at Stickam.com on "safe tech"


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Drop by http://www.stickam.com/the_web_ster




Read my other blog, http://the-peoples-patriot.blogspot.com/ and or http://letslets.blogspot.com

My video broadcasting site at Stickam.com


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This is my "hello" broadcast at Stickam.com . And just so you know I'll be broadcasting on "Tech safety" from there. I'll try to embed most thing here as well or join stickam.com with me and listen to live.

Looking for me at Stickam go to http://www.stickam.com/the_web_ster


Read my other blog, http://the-peoples-patriot.blogspot.com/ and or http://letslets.blogspot.com

Wednesday, June 11, 2008

Tech you should know: No key to your own laggage?


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And yes, your not the only one that can do this to your laggage. It can be done at airports, hotels, etc. I just thought you should know about it to...


Read my other blog, http://the-peoples-patriot.blogspot.com/ and or http://letslets.blogspot.com

Saturday, June 7, 2008

Hong Kong's websites the world's riskiest: survey


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Thu Jun 5, 12:28 AM ET

HONG KONG (AFP) - Hong Kong websites are the most likely to hit visitors with unwanted ads, viruses and spam, research from an Internet security company has found.
More than 19 percent of websites using the ".hk" domain name pose a security threat to visitors, the research by United States software firm McAfee found.

China-based sites are the second most risky with 11 percent, while those from Finland and Japan are the two safest. Romanian and Russian sites were also a threat to web users.

For the rest of the story, click here.



Read my other blog, http://the-peoples-patriot.blogspot.com/ and or http://letslets.blogspot.com

Lost cameras "phones home" to catch thieves


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Reprint of Franklin Paul's Reuters newspiece.
Fri Jun 6, 12:28 PM ET

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Alison DeLauzon thought the snapshots and home videos of her infant son were gone for good when she lost her digital camera while on vacation in Florida.

Then a funny thing happened: her camera "phoned home."

Equipped with a special memory card with wireless Internet capability, DeLauzon's camera had not only automatically sent her holiday pictures to her computer, but had even uploaded photos of the miscreants who swiped her equipment bag after she accidentally left it behind at a restaurant.

"I opened up the Eye-Fi manager on the computer and, lo and behold, there are the guys that stole our cameras," said DeLauzon, a native of New York's Long Island suburb. "Not only is it the guy who stole our camera ... but the guy took a picture of (his accomplice) holding our other camera."

DeLauzon received the Eye-Fi, a 2-gigabyte SD memory card that fits into millions of digital cameras, as a holiday gift to go with her Canon camera.

Priced at about $100, the card automatically uploads pictures to a home computer or online photosharing service as soon as the user is linked to a familiar wireless network.

Luckily, the culprits passed by an unsecured network, whose factory-installed setting matched that of DeLauzon's home system, and the Eye-Fi automatically shipped the photos: first baby pictures, then the snap-happy scoundrels.

Her experience reflects the rise of technology that empowers everyday gadgets to protect themselves or the priceless personal data -- from family phone numbers to business budgets -- that consumers keep on portable electronics devices.

MACS E-MAIL VIDEO TO VICTIMS

Cameras are perhaps the most common home-phoning gadget used to thwart criminals.

An eerie case occurred last month, when a Japanese man set up a hidden camera because food was disappearing from his kitchen. While he was out, the camera sent pictures to his mobile phone of the intruder -- an unknown woman living secretly in his closet.

A few years ago, there was a well-publicized case of a Sidekick mobile phone that was first lost in a New York taxi, then found by a 16-year-old who used it to take pictures and send instant messages.

But the device's mobile service provider automatically backed up such data on remote computers, allowing the owner's friend, Evan Guttman, to uncover a trail -- and launch an online shaming campaign against the 16-year-old, who was eventually arrested.

While passive systems have helped reunite missing gadgets with their owners, more aggressive measures can be employed to protect everything from laptops to iPods and BlackBerrys.

GadgetTrak, of Beaverton, Oregon, sells software that can be loaded onto any of those devices. If a BlackBerry, for example, falls into the wrong hands, the software grabs information from the new user's SIM data card and e-mails it to the rightful owner.

With an Apple Mac computer, the software instructs the built-in camera to take video of the thief and sends to the owner, along information about nearby wireless networks.

Some 20,000 GadgetTrack licenses have been purchased in about one year -- including 10,000 from storage company Seagate.

"The reason we have been so successful is that people are not expecting this kind of software to be installed," said Ken Westin, the company's founder. "No security solution is 100 percent -- there are always going to be work-arounds. But your average thief is not going to be a computer expert."

DeLauzon didn't want to press charges against the people who had her camera: Both were employees at the restaurant where she dined and accidentally left her photo equipment.

Sure, they were fired -- but getting justice was not as important to her as retrieving her memories of her baby boy.

"When we finally got it back, my husband and I spent the night just sitting and watching the videos -- stupid videos, like him feeding himself for the first time or him pulling himself up in his crib for the first time. We sat down one night and just relished it."


Read my other blog, http://the-peoples-patriot.blogspot.com/ and or http://letslets.blogspot.com

Welcome to my tech blog on safely useing a computer 'N' the net.


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    This is not a new blog per say. I been blogging or emailing on How to stay safe while on your computer and or the Internet for many yrs.
    And away we go...



Read my other blog, http://the-peoples-patriot.blogspot.com/ and or http://letslets.blogspot.com

Friday, June 6, 2008

Lost cameras "phone home" to catch thieves


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Reprint of Franklin Paul's Reuters newspiece.
Fri Jun 6, 12:28 PM ET

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Alison DeLauzon thought the snapshots and home videos of her infant son were gone for good when she lost her digital camera while on vacation in Florida.

Then a funny thing happened: her camera "phoned home."

Equipped with a special memory card with wireless Internet capability, DeLauzon's camera had not only automatically sent her holiday pictures to her computer, but had even uploaded photos of the miscreants who swiped her equipment bag after she accidentally left it behind at a restaurant.

"I opened up the Eye-Fi manager on the computer and, lo and behold, there are the guys that stole our cameras," said DeLauzon, a native of New York's Long Island suburb. "Not only is it the guy who stole our camera ... but the guy took a picture of (his accomplice) holding our other camera."

DeLauzon received the Eye-Fi, a 2-gigabyte SD memory card that fits into millions of digital cameras, as a holiday gift to go with her Canon camera.

Priced at about $100, the card automatically uploads pictures to a home computer or online photosharing service as soon as the user is linked to a familiar wireless network.

Luckily, the culprits passed by an unsecured network, whose factory-installed setting matched that of DeLauzon's home system, and the Eye-Fi automatically shipped the photos: first baby pictures, then the snap-happy scoundrels.

Her experience reflects the rise of technology that empowers everyday gadgets to protect themselves or the priceless personal data -- from family phone numbers to business budgets -- that consumers keep on portable electronics devices.

MACS E-MAIL VIDEO TO VICTIMS

Cameras are perhaps the most common home-phoning gadget used to thwart criminals.

An eerie case occurred last month, when a Japanese man set up a hidden camera because food was disappearing from his kitchen. While he was out, the camera sent pictures to his mobile phone of the intruder -- an unknown woman living secretly in his closet.

A few years ago, there was a well-publicized case of a Sidekick mobile phone that was first lost in a New York taxi, then found by a 16-year-old who used it to take pictures and send instant messages.

But the device's mobile service provider automatically backed up such data on remote computers, allowing the owner's friend, Evan Guttman, to uncover a trail -- and launch an online shaming campaign against the 16-year-old, who was eventually arrested.

While passive systems have helped reunite missing gadgets with their owners, more aggressive measures can be employed to protect everything from laptops to iPods and BlackBerrys.

GadgetTrak, of Beaverton, Oregon, sells software that can be loaded onto any of those devices. If a BlackBerry, for example, falls into the wrong hands, the software grabs information from the new user's SIM data card and e-mails it to the rightful owner.

With an Apple Mac computer, the software instructs the built-in camera to take video of the thief and sends to the owner, along information about nearby wireless networks.

Some 20,000 GadgetTrack licenses have been purchased in about one year -- including 10,000 from storage company Seagate.

"The reason we have been so successful is that people are not expecting this kind of software to be installed," said Ken Westin, the company's founder. "No security solution is 100 percent -- there are always going to be work-arounds. But your average thief is not going to be a computer expert."

DeLauzon didn't want to press charges against the people who had her camera: Both were employees at the restaurant where she dined and accidentally left her photo equipment.

Sure, they were fired -- but getting justice was not as important to her as retrieving her memories of her baby boy.

"When we finally got it back, my husband and I spent the night just sitting and watching the videos -- stupid videos, like him feeding himself for the first time or him pulling himself up in his crib for the first time. We sat down one night and just relished it."