Monday, August 25, 2014

Windows 9, Google Chromebooks and DDOS attack takes down Sony Network and Chinese Operating System

Microsoft plans to launch Windows 9 on September 30.

Operating system choices, what to do.  Microsoft will reportedly announce Windows 9 on September 30th.  Presumably the Windows 9 launch will help lay rest to the Windows 8 launch and the references to Vista.  All this after Microsoft announced that OEMs will be allowed to continue to build and ship computers with Windows 7 Professional beyond October 2014.  However, OEMs will not be permitted to ship consumer versions of Windows 7.

Windows 8 really is not bad and represented a vision of 1 OS for all devices.  Young people love it, older users not so much and businesses dislike change.

The following piece by Ed Bott, The Ed Bott report best explains consumer vs business needs.

Sharpen the line between business and consumer Windows.

Remember back in 2001, when Microsoft unified the business and consumer versions of Windows in Windows XP?
That was a good idea at the time. In that pre-tablet, pre-smartphone era, there was effectively no difference between the hardware in a business PC and a consumer PC.
Today there are profound differences between business and consumer devices, and the tension between those two markets explains much of the turmoil that began with the release of Windows 8 nearly two years ago.
You can’t ignore the business market, but you can’t expect much innovation in this legacy business either. Many businesses are buying desktop PCs to serve as single-purpose devices (in call centers or on factory floors, for example). Most conventional business laptops are running Office and a browser and little else. When was the last time you saw a brand-new desktop program or a new class of peripherals for conventional PCs? All the innovation is happening on mobile devices, with software delivered as apps and web services.
And there’s the problem: Enterprise customers, who pay dearly for Windows licenses, want as little change as possible. Consumers, for whom Windows is an increasingly smaller part of the cost of a mobile device, want the newest features and apps without the headaches of managing a PC’s complexity.
I suspect that sometime in the next few years Microsoft is going to have to let these two branches of the Windows line drift apart again. That might be the only way to keep conservative IT pros happy while not slowing down the pace of innovation on consumer-focused mobile devices that happen to run Windows.


I think Microsoft could save themselves a lot of grief by following some of Ed's advice.  I have seen a lot of machines with Windows 7 and 8 that should never have been made.  They are extremely under-powered and that leads to a poor buyer experience.  The non-IT person is not capable of distinguishing a consumer device from a business device.  Chipsets, processors, ram and hard drives all add up to a screamer or a lemon.

The Windows 9 version is code named "Threshold" and is presumably to be a bridge from the desktop to the cloud.   The September 30th launch will allow the public to preview the new OS and the final product expected in the Fall of 2015 will likely be very different.

I've read where it will be a subscription model, $20/year.


as the Shift to the Cloud continues,

Chromebooks, Google's OS based alternatives to PC or MACs continue to gain acceptance.  However without an internet connection their usefulness is limited.  That is supposedly being addressed by new Apps that are less Internet dependent and can add usability without the internet.

I think I am going to purchase a Chromebook this Labor day weekend and find out for myself if I can live at least mobile without the traditional notebook.

Microsoft says not but in a column by Jamil Bryant who weaned himself from IOS he say Redmond is full of hot air.  However to be fair his article (see following link) rankled IOS users as much as Windows people.


the Cloud, "Pandora's Box???"  UPDATE 3-Sony says PlayStation network back online; user data safe

Over the weekend I was communicating with a private board of my fellow BJJ training partners.  One of my friends was lamenting that his internet had been down the entire weekend and he could not view or follow the UFC fights Saturday night.  His cable provider did not carry Fox Sports South and as explained, his internet connection was down.  Justin's does not use a traditional computer but a PS4 for gaming and surfing the internet.


On a side note, a client of mine had been under a DDOS attack on their phone computer the past two weeks.  The offending IP address was attempting to attach itself so frequently that the phone computers logs were filling up and causing the phones to to down.  The offending IP address source was located in France.  I configured a rule in their Sonicwall and blocked the IP range.  All was well for about a week, when the attacker shifted to a different IP range and knocked the phones offline again.  We have created another rule to block this range but the phone vendor says this is happening frequently to lots of companies.  The only reason we can think of for the attacks is disruption of commerce.


As applications, communications and reliance on the Internet increase we must remember of how vulnerable and exposed businesses are with the new standard of doing business.  With all the security issues and problems I'm not sure that the world is ready for this,

Source: China-Backed Operating System to Launch By October



Happy Labor Day!  Safe travels and computing.

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Thursday, August 7, 2014


Latest security breach

If you have not heard already, a U.S. security firm is reporting that Russian hackers have stolen 1.2 billion username and passwords and well over 500 million email addresses.

"The records, discovered by Hold Security, a firm in Milwaukee, include confidential material gathered from 420,000 websites, including household names, and small Internet sites. Hold Security has a history of uncovering significant hacks, including the theft last year of tens of millions of records from Adobe Systems."

http://www.nytimes.com/2014/08/06/technology/russian-gang-said-to-amass-more-than-a-billion-stolen-internet-credentials.html?_r=0#

If you are still using simple non complex passwords to safeguard your financial and other important data you should consider changing and stepping up the complexity of your passwords.  It is not that hard to record your passwords in a paper notebook or a password protected document on your computer.

Keep an eye on reports to see when they publish the sites that were affected so you can change your password(s).

If proper password complexity and security with a multitude of websites is too much of a task, you might consider some of the new password security programs that can evaluate/generate passwords for you and keep them for when you need them.  I don't think I would consider allowing the browser to remember the password for you any longer.


or maybe consider...



In other news affecting the security of your computer, Microsoft is going to block outdated Java version from being installed as add-in into Internet Explorer.


Often Java is required by websites to properly view their content.  Next week's Patch Tuesday updates will include a much-needed fix for Internet Explorer, blocking outdated versions of Java and preventing one of the most popular vectors for installing malware. 

Be careful about what you download and install in the browsers.  Coupon, shopping and emoticon toolbar providers often time install themselves and other PUPs (Potentially Unwanted Programs) in your browser with or without your knowledge.  These programs often use code that can be exploited by malicious programs and hackers to compromise your computer and information and don't think these companies monitor and update to keep your computer secured.

With this update installed, all supported versions of Internet Explorer (IE 8 through 11 on Windows 7, and Internet Explorer for the desktop on Windows 8) will check the server-side block list whenever they encounter an ActiveX control on a web page. If the version is listed as out of date, the ActiveX control will not run, and the user will be prompted to update to the current, presumably safe version.
According to Microsoft, the following Java versions will be on the block list initially:
  • J2SE 1.4, everything below (but not including) update 43
  • J2SE 5.0, everything below (but not including) update 71
  • Java SE 6, everything below (but not including) update 81
  • Java SE 7, everything below (but not including) update 65
  • Java SE 8, everything below (but not including) update 11

Microsoft XP is being pushed harder into oblivion.

Microsoft halted updates for XP beginning April 1, 2014.  A little over 3 months later I have found that you can no longer download the latest version of Adobe Flash player for XP because it does not support IE 8, the last version of Internet Explorer for XP.   As noted above, only the versions of Internet Explorer (including IE8) found on Windows 7 and Windows 8-8.1 will be updated.  As new exploits are being found and patched, XP users will have to continue to operate with the vulnerabilities that have been uncovered and are known by the hackers.  Be careful my friends.



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Kaspersky Ban, Latest Security News

The latest Security News and Anti-Virus options in wake of US Kaspersky ban. With the impending 09/29/24 drop dead date for receiving update...