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PC & MAC CLINIC - On line problem solving. (CPU)     

Crocodile - 16 Dec 2002 03:59

Mega Bucks - 17 Dec 2013 08:51 - 10446 of 11003

skinny,what i done is i went into a shop and actually held one and found the best one for me then went on Ebay and bought the same item for well over a 1/3 off for the same item.

Out of principle i wont buy a high end one made from Apple when another brand like Asus who make the Google Nexus can do basically the same thing for half price.

Maybe its because i am tight with my money :o)

goldfinger - 17 Dec 2013 08:53 - 10447 of 11003

Can anyone help???, using windows XP obviously old on my Pc. Of late had messages from various sites saying need to upgrade to a faster browser so downloaded CHROME and everything fine until I get to STOCKWATCH here on money am where I had to enable java , java 7 update 45, and this is working fine except I cant get the NEWS N articles to open out on the individual stocks, eg, today DXNS reported but when I click the N at side of epic nothing opens out, nothing happens.

I used to before get a message at top of page saying something like click if you trust this site but not getting that now.

Can anyone help please?

skinny - 17 Dec 2013 09:01 - 10448 of 11003

GF - you might find some help (no guarantee) here.

goldfinger - 17 Dec 2013 09:07 - 10449 of 11003

cheers Skinny, its a bit puzzling, well for me it is.

Fred1new - 17 Dec 2013 09:10 - 10450 of 11003

Skinny,

I was given a Kindle by my kids for an Xmas gift.

The major draw back for me was that I like to scan 1 or 2 pages at a time and then re-read more slowly.

(If I have an article longer than half a page to read, I prefer to print it out and read the hard copy.)

I found doing this difficult with the Kindle, but found it more comfortable and easier on larger flat back.

Probably down to age and I know that the Kindle is used by my Kids (in their 50s) for reading travelling to work and they are very happy with them.

---

The idea is good, but it would be nice to have a screen like a book which you can open to 2 pages.

Seymour Clearly - 17 Dec 2013 09:10 - 10451 of 11003

Skinny, I've bought myself a Barnes & Noble Nook HD which you can get from Argos - only a dual core processor but the screen res is superb. 16Gb version cost me £99, cover was £10 and I've stuck a 16 Gb micro SD card in for another tenner. It's a bit low for intensive stuff, but the kindle app is excellent, you can get Google Play on it for all the other apps. Limited if you want to keep updating the OS.

skinny - 17 Dec 2013 09:22 - 10452 of 11003

Fred/Seymour thanks for the input - Fred can't you just rotate the screen to landscape?

ExecLine - 17 Dec 2013 09:30 - 10453 of 11003

My daughter showed me how, by using my finger tip, to drag a whole Samsung phone screen down from the top to the bottom, thereby revealing another (or even more) open screens underneath. She said this was 'standard practice'.

Hmmm? Well, not for me it wasn't. But it is now.

I can now surf and have more open screens on as well, duly opening then with this finger drag trick as and when I need to refer to them.

It's a real cream sick trick. Innit.

skinny - 17 Dec 2013 09:34 - 10454 of 11003

Exec - and I thought I knew nothing! :-)

I recently showed my 27 year old how to close running apps on her Samsung - she hid her indignity well!!

Fred1new - 17 Dec 2013 11:15 - 10455 of 11003

Skinny,

Yes, but I still found it irritating.

Perhaps, I like holding the book.

Good luck.



PS,

My original idea was to download books I thought of reading for I was in the van, instead of carry cupboards full of them, because I am to lazy to give them away.

Why not, borrow one of a few days and try it out.

Shortie - 03 Jan 2014 11:18 - 10456 of 11003

Hi, I'm running windows 8, can anyone recommend a good anti virus thats not too resource hungry?

skinny - 03 Jan 2014 11:36 - 10457 of 11003

Microsoft essentials is fine on W8/W8.1.

Shortie - 03 Jan 2014 11:40 - 10458 of 11003

Thanks Skinny, it came with Norton which I'm still trying to uninstall. Keep getting pop ups saying my computer was once proteceted by them and to click to renew...

ExecLine - 03 Jan 2014 12:00 - 10459 of 11003

As a BT Infinity customer, (as wot I am) you get BT's NetProtect Plus included for Free as part of the package. The service is supplied to BT by McAfee.

My expericnce is that all the AV stuff appears to be all done automatically in the background. It won't let you do a download without checking it. It won't let you go to a dodgy web page without blocking it and giving you a warning on it. Updates are also automatic.

I see it provides me with:

Security Center
Anti-Virus and Anti-Spyware
Personal Firewall
Site Advisor
Parental Controls
and also a Quick Clean and Shredder

You can set it up to regularly scan in the middle of the night. Importantly, if you don't have it set up like this and it starts scanning whilst you are using your PC in the daytime, then it does seem to take priority over everything else and will slow your machine down to slower than a crawl. This is easily sorted.

Shortie, Perhaps that is your main problem? You just might need to change the time when your existing AV software does its scan?

McAfee must be good for BT to first choose it and then also stay with it. For Non BT Clients, you can check their quite good and current 2014 deals out at:

http://www.mcafeeprotection.com/UK/1/index.asp?source=002_mcafee_UK&tid=002&gclid=CJaS--b54bsCFW_MtAodC38AgA

If you shop around, you might be able to improve on those a bit too

Haystack - 03 Jan 2014 12:11 - 10460 of 11003

McAfee is gods, but it slows up your PC quite a bit. I just use Comodo for the firewall and MS Security Essentials for the AV, both free. I also run Malawarebyte once a week again free.

ExecLine - 03 Jan 2014 12:22 - 10461 of 11003

A bit more, all as part of my PC Housekeeping:

1. I regularly use CCleaner (Free) to clear out my machine and get rid of all the rubbish files that it seems to collect.

2. I regularly scan with a program called Secunia PSI (PSI = personal software inspector) to easily keep ALL my software slap bang up to date.

3. I also do the odd Defrag.

4. If you want to make sure all your Drivers are up to date, you can use a Free program called Driver Booster from IOBit. You shouldn't have to mess about with this very often. Once a year or so should suffice.

Take care with any of the above downloads by carefully reading what you are about to download. Sometimes prgrams like these are sponsored. The downloads may try to make you include:
a toolbar addition
changing your homepage
changing your default search engine
adding in another third party program(s)

So.....Please watch the installation carefully to opt out of any of the above and tick (or remove the tick) in the accompanied choice boxes as the download proceeds to installation under your control. You do not have to take these things if you don't want.

5. I also use another Free program called KeePass to store all my UserNames and Passwords and the associated URLs. It also has a 'Notes' facility when you need to store any needed pertinent extra information for particular sites.

This is stored on my machine in a highly encryped format and is accessed by a 'complicated, high number of digits, uppercase/lowercase/alphanumeric master password'.

Anyhow, that's about all wot I do. :-)

ExecLine - 03 Jan 2014 13:00 - 10462 of 11003

And despite all that, I have picked up a piece of shit which seems to be able to even launch my default browser by itself every morning and try to take me to malware sites as well as other more legit ones.

First of all this seemed to be based on a marketing activity from a URL called:

static.homesweethomejax.com

This has now recently amended itself and the activity now seems to now originate from a new URL called:

static.providinginternetnow.com

If anyone can provide me with information as to how I can stop this browser hijack from happening every day, then I would greatly appreciate it.

All that I can do for the moment is 'close it down'. It just happens once each morning and, as the browser opens, usually after a period of inactivity on my part (eg, leaving the machine and, say making a coffee) it moves to about three different web sites. Two of these will be to blatant malware sites (eg, "Your PC is running Slow - Check it now" - type stuff) and which obviously might try to instal a Trojan (I'm not sure whether McAfee would actually allow it to happen - but I am not going to let it get that far anyhow) and the third site would be to a more legitimate web site:

such as say (today's):

www.qtrax.com

or yesterday's:

www.reimageplus.com

I find fighting this sort of thing to be very hard. You do have to be constantly alert to the many scam perpetrations on the Internet these days.

Some of them are blatantly so stupid and easily dealt with, eg: An e-mail from Barclays Bank telling me my Lloyds Bank Account has been suspended. Ridiculous or wot!

Others are very, very much more sophisticated and extemely difficult to spot and deal with. Anyone who hasn't been caught yet by at least one of them, is either extremely lucky or extremely fortunate.

Not everyone reads the Terms and Conditions associated with an Online Order when they are doing one. Not to do so, is one of the easiest methods of getting yourself scammed. You do need to do more than look for little Padlocks and an https.

This is not such a foolish thing to miss. I'm sure there are lots on here who, say, did not read ALL of the Post Office IPO Prospectus but just trusted it not to be dishonest in any way and readily sent off many thousands of £££s with their Application for shares.

That was at one end of the scale. Others at the other end of the scale, generally try to catch you out with 'offers which are too good to miss'. They are more easily recognisable.

And then you have the ones in the middle..............

For instance, have a read up about 'Subscription Scams'.

........and these have nothing to do with malware or spyware!

Shortie - 03 Jan 2014 13:13 - 10463 of 11003

Thanks guys, I have BT AV on another machine (running xp) and it slows it down no end to the point I have to turn it on and leave it to do its thing. I have a newish laptop (win8) which I only use for banking and spreadbetting (no browsing what so ever).

hilary - 03 Jan 2014 14:17 - 10464 of 11003

Doc,

One of the common ways of getting PCs to behave in the manner you describe is through browser toolbars. A particularly nasty one goes by the name of Babylon, but there are several more which do the same kind of thing. You possibly installed one of the bits of free anti-malware software that you referred to in some of your earlier posts, and inadvertently neglected to uncheck the little box which invited you to install something else at the same time.

You didn't mention what your preferred browser was, but you should easily be able to find out what extensions and plugins it has running by hitting either the Tools or the Help tab for that particular browser. Once you know the name of the extension or plugin, you should be able to Google its removal procedure.

If there's a lesson to be learned it's probably to not be so oversensitive about having umpteen pieces of protective software installed and to try going commando.

skinny - 03 Jan 2014 14:19 - 10465 of 11003

Sounds like it's worth a try - Going Commando.
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