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

Crocodile - 16 Dec 2002 03:59

Optimist - 26 Jan 2005 21:49 - 2961 of 11003

Maddoctor

Although I use a BT email address, I only use it to forward to a normal email account. I don't use BT because they try to impose their way of doing things on everyone, as you seem to be finding out.

If you have tried clicking No and it does not let you send an attachment then you may as well follow their route and hope that it works. If doesn't then you may have to rconfigure manually.

maddoctor - 26 Jan 2005 21:56 - 2962 of 11003

Optimist , your a star for replying so quickly.

Melissa at ssrt is unsure as well and so am I , i hate clicking on buttons not knowing what the result will be.

doc

Optimist - 26 Jan 2005 22:24 - 2963 of 11003

Maddoctor

I share your concern but you may as well play along with them. It may well work, and if it doesn't, it will be no harder to sort out.

Spaceman - 27 Jan 2005 04:53 - 2964 of 11003

SC, a couple of minor points to add to the above. If you do need to rewire then I would suggest that you use Cat 6 at least, you don't really need it now but its a higher spec cable and will be useful next time you upgrade your network.

Also I would avoid P2P in a business environment. Its harder to control and backup and with the amount of malware around now you need to have as much control as possible. However your main business application is important here, is it multi-user? where does it keep its data? how is the data backed up?

Re wireless make sure you implement as much security as you can.

Try and plan the upgrade for the whole company upfront even if you are not implementing it all at once. Working out what you want to do in advance will be worthwhile.

If your in Kent/Sussex, I could pop in and have a look and give some free advise if you want.

Spaceman - 27 Jan 2005 04:55 - 2965 of 11003

maddoctor, what mail client are you using? Outlook Express? Webmail?

Seymour Clearly - 27 Jan 2005 06:51 - 2966 of 11003

Spaceman, thanks for the advice. Unfortunately I'm in Teesside so the offer is much appreciated but I won't be able to take you up. The application we use is a multiuser but simple one where the program and data are all kept on one machine and terminals can access it. I don't think it would cope with more than a two or three accessing it - however it'll soon be history anyway.

maddoctor - 27 Jan 2005 07:59 - 2967 of 11003

spaceman , I believe its webmail. In internet options OE is grayed out

Spaceman - 27 Jan 2005 08:22 - 2968 of 11003

maddoctor, strange, I dont really have enough info to offer a suggestion. BT/Yahoo should allow you to adda attachements and anyway this sounds like a confiog probem, however I do not use the web interface.

I suggest you setup OE from scratch to handle btyahoo mail. There are config details on the btyahoo web page and there may be other help info there as well.

7thFloor - 27 Jan 2005 08:39 - 2969 of 11003

maddoctor. I use BT/Yahoo. I have had no problems attaching documents, mail etc. All my settings use BT/Yahoo as default.

Have you tried using the Help facilities on BT or Yahoo? They usually guide you through all stages quite well.

maddoctor - 27 Jan 2005 08:39 - 2970 of 11003

spaceman . yes very strange and hoped somebody would shed some light. Reluctant to use OE as never worked properly when i was with wanadoo

7thFloor - 27 Jan 2005 08:43 - 2971 of 11003

I wouldn't touch OE after using Yahoo mail. It's excellent. I particularily like the disposeable email feature and the fact that all my mail is stored off-site.

maddoctor - 27 Jan 2005 08:46 - 2972 of 11003

7th floor , can you shed some light on the attachment problem i outlined above? since you are using yahoo mail

7thFloor - 27 Jan 2005 09:09 - 2973 of 11003

maddoctor: The 'Attach Files' works fine on mine so I can only suggest you click the 'Yes' button to make Yahoo your default. It can always be reversed as Optimist says.

If you're on BTYahoo why wouldn't you want it as your default anyway?

Good luck

maddoctor - 27 Jan 2005 09:13 - 2974 of 11003

7th floor , as i have said before with no IT support within 20 miles i am always reluctant to press anything unless i am sure of the result!

7thFloor - 27 Jan 2005 09:18 - 2975 of 11003

maddoctor: In for a penny ........

Seriously, with the expert guys on this thread (not me I hasten to add) you'd be able get your email defaults back to where you began I would imagine.

Another thought : From the file itself (I use MS Word) have you tried using the 'File' - 'Send To' - 'Mail Recipient (As Attachment)' instead of direct from the email?

" .......reluctant to press anything unless i am sure of the result" Are you a barrister? I thought you was Harold Shipman :-)

maddoctor - 27 Jan 2005 09:24 - 2976 of 11003

Spaceman , have looked at alternatives but ssrt want me to send a pile of files and one at a time would not have been suitable

my description of my location might suggest I am in solitary but it only feels like that here in the winter :-)))

axdpc - 28 Jan 2005 18:52 - 2977 of 11003

ZDNet UK
January 28, 2005, 18:25 GMT

"
The organisation that protects the UK's critical national infrastructure has warned users to prepare for the MySpooler worm, which targets weakly-protected Windows servers running MySQL.

The National Infrastructure Security Co-ordination Centre (NISCC) has issued an alert over the MySpooler worm reported yesterday, which threatens Windows servers with weak passwords for root access to MySQL.

NISCC, which was set up to minimise risk to the UK's critical national infrastructure from electronic attacks, posted the warning on its Web site after its Australian counterpart AusCERT alerted users to the worm. It highlighted that the worm's most destructive feature is its potential ability to facilitate massive distributed-denial-of-service attacks.

..."

http://news.zdnet.co.uk/internet/security/0,39020375,39185935,00.htm

Spaceman - 29 Jan 2005 00:53 - 2978 of 11003

This is for any other IT pros out there.

A friend of mine is IT manager for a major UK company, he recently has an IT security audit done at the request of his Manager. The Audit came back OK but had a comment that there were to many FTP rules in his Firewall. He was a bit confused by this and asked for an explanation. The auditor reported that he had about 30 rules for FTP in his firewall but that the US branch of his company had only one.

My mate checked the US firewall and the auditor was right it only had one ftp rule, "anyone on the US domain could ftp to anyone else anywhere", my mates 30 were a bit more restrictive.

Comforting to know that IT security audits are now being carried out by monkeys !

MightyMicro - 29 Jan 2005 01:28 - 2979 of 11003

Tim: I'd love to know what your mate's firm paid for that security audit. I need to check our rates . . .

chocolat - 29 Jan 2005 12:06 - 2980 of 11003

Just found this in my junkmail..

kelvint@garban.co.za Symantec AVF detected a repairable/quaran...
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