Archive for March, 2008

The Wayne Show on Podshow.com
After a four month hiatus, the “Wayne Show” podcast will finally return to the newly redesigned Podshow.com If you haven’t listen to it I’d like to invite you to give a try. The format of the podcast is tech tips done in a radio broadcast style format complete with music.
-Wayne

Virus encyclopedia served up script-injection infection

Antivirus vendor Trend Micro confirmed Thursday, March 13, 2008  that “some portions” of its site had been hacked earlier this week, but hedged when asked if those pages had been serving up attack code to unsuspecting visitors.

“I can’t confirm or deny the details,” said Mike Sweeny, a spokesman for the Tokyo-based security company, on Thursday afternoon. “Some pages were compromised, but we took those pages down and took corrective action hours ago.” When pressed for more information, Sweeny would only say that the attack was “under analysis.”

The English-language edition of the Yomiuri Shimbun, one of Japan’s largest newspapers, said Trend Micro’s site was hacked around 9:00 p.m. Sunday, Tokyo time (7:00 p.m. Eastern, on Saturday, in the U.S.).

“When users viewed any of the modified pages, they were reconnected to other sites without realizing it, and a type of virus was installed on their computer that causes them to download other viruses in a series,” said the Yomiuri Shimbun.

  This is scary stuff to me because I used Trend Micro’s sysclean product in my day to day tech work and I’m on their site all the time!

-Wayne

I just read this article and had to pass it on as it is so typical Microsoft.

—————————————————————————————————-

Users who try to reach Windows Update with Internet Explorer 8
(IE8) Beta 1 are greeted with a message stating, “To use this site, you
must be running Microsoft Internet Explorer 5 or later.”

IE8 Beta 1 was released last week after an unveiling at MIX08, the Web developer conference Microsoft hosted last week in Las Vegas. The preliminary version runs on Windows XP , Vista, Server 2003 and Server 2008.

Users
were understandably confused when IE8 refused to call up Windows
Update. “After updating my IE7 to IE8 today, I tried to update my Windows Vista by visiting the Windows Update Web site, but then I was redirected to an error page,” said a user identified as zkyboy on a Microsoft support newsgroups. “Why? IS IE8 not the latest version browser?”

How to Rectify

To
reach Windows Update, IE8 Beta 1 users must click on the “Emulate IE7″
button, which switches the new browser into IE7 mode. That requires a
restart of IE8, however.

“Windows Update is updating their site to support IE8,” said a Microsoft employee named Eric Law in a comment to an IE development team blog
post last Thursday. “For now, click the Emulate IE7 Button, restart all
IE windows, and visit [Windows Update]. Sorry for the inconvenience.”

Computerworld confirmed that the IE7 emulation mode within IE8 allowed access to Windows Update.

Other Problems

Elsewhere, users have reported problems accessing or rendering other sites with IE8 Beta 1, including Facebook, Google Inc.’s Gmail and Microsoft’s own Windows Live Mail.

Of
course, quirks and bugs are common in beta software, a fact
acknowledged by some who left comments on the IE development blog.
“Reading a lot of those crash ‘victims’ above, I hate to say it, but
this is a Beta,” said a user labeled as IT_guy. “I would not be
surprised to learn that they have a gazillion array of add-ons,
toolbars and utilities blighting the browser. Those vendors are going
to have to shape up and re-tool.”

IE8 Beta 1 can be downloaded from Microsoft’s site.

Gregg Keizer, Computerworld

-Wayne

 

In the past few days you probably have noticed articles appearing and disappearing. This was due to multiple system failures and the need to restore site from backup. Everything should be back to normal!

-Wayne

I just read this article and just had to pass it on as it is so typical Microsoft.

—————————————————————————————————-

Users who try to reach Windows Update with Internet Explorer 8
(IE8) Beta 1 are greeted with a message stating, “To use this site, you
must be running Microsoft Internet Explorer 5 or later.”

IE8 Beta 1 was released last week after an unveiling at MIX08, the Web developer conference Microsoft hosted last week in Las Vegas. The preliminary version runs on Windows XP , Vista, Server 2003 and Server 2008.

Users
were understandably confused when IE8 refused to call up Windows
Update. “After updating my IE7 to IE8 today, I tried to update my Windows Vista by visiting the Windows Update Web site, but then I was redirected to an error page,” said a user identified as zkyboy on a Microsoft support newsgroups. “Why? IS IE8 not the latest version browser?”

How to Rectify

To
reach Windows Update, IE8 Beta 1 users must click on the “Emulate IE7″
button, which switches the new browser into IE7 mode. That requires a
restart of IE8, however.

“Windows Update is updating their site to support IE8,” said a Microsoft employee named Eric Law in a comment to an IE development team blog
post last Thursday. “For now, click the Emulate IE7 Button, restart all
IE windows, and visit [Windows Update]. Sorry for the inconvenience.”

Computerworld confirmed that the IE7 emulation mode within IE8 allowed access to Windows Update.

Other Problems

Elsewhere, users have reported problems accessing or rendering other sites with IE8 Beta 1, including Facebook, Google Inc.’s Gmail and Microsoft’s own Windows Live Mail.

Of
course, quirks and bugs are common in beta software, a fact
acknowledged by some who left comments on the IE development blog.
“Reading a lot of those crash ‘victims’ above, I hate to say it, but
this is a Beta,” said a user labeled as IT_guy. “I would not be
surprised to learn that they have a gazillion array of add-ons,
toolbars and utilities blighting the browser. Those vendors are going
to have to shape up and re-tool.”

IE8 Beta 1 can be downloaded from Microsoft’s site.

Gregg Keizer, Computerworld

-Wayne

The Wayne Show Episode # 20

 Discussion about The Apple iphone. Features the music of Strangers in Wonderland, Party Ben, and Michael Stephens

 

Enjoy -Wayne

 

 
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