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

Crocodile - 16 Dec 2002 03:59

hewittalan6 - 01 Apr 2008 09:26 - 6709 of 11003

Thanks a lot, guys.
My own research on this shows it to be a very invasive bit of malware that resists all attempts to destroy it and even when one is succesful in finding it and removing it, reports suggest it hijacks the startup so that when the computer is restarted, it installs itself again.
Sounds very nasty from what I read and a complete reformatting might end up as the only answer, so beware out ther!!
Thanks again,
Alan

Optimist - 01 Apr 2008 10:33 - 6710 of 11003

I've seen such viruses before. They tend to be in two be made up of two or three seperate parts each one of which is capable of recreating the others. I would expect them to be trigered by a registry entry at startup. There are a few standard places where those reside, and a lot more potential places. You need to delete all of the files and the registry entries to ge rid of it.

I don't want to frighten you too much, but the last time that I encounterd something like this, it also acted as a password sniffer. I found textfiles on everyones computer with logon url's, names and passwords which the virus would email to someone.

Get your friend to search for all files on his computer, containing a commonly used logon name. If that is what is happening, that might flush out where it is storing the stolen info. In any case, change ALL PASSWORDS.

A good first line of deffence against such an attack is to use an exernal firewall to block all outgoing SMTP port 25 traffic. Which will prevent the email being sent. You will have to allow por 25 traffic to your ISP's mail server or better still use a secure mail server. This will not stop ID theft, but it makes things harder for the low life.

hewittalan6 - 01 Apr 2008 18:13 - 6711 of 11003

Another question, guys (Jeez, what would we all do without you?)

I have finally arranged things so I can dump AOL as my ISP.
From Friday I will be with Sky. They have sent me the activation date, my username and passwords and the router and installation software to set it up.
The question is, can I install the router and software, plug it in to my existing ADSL line and carry on as normal as from now, using the line that on Friday will switch from AOL to Sky, because the problems I have with AOL are terrible?
Thanks,
Alan

ExecLine - 01 Apr 2008 18:36 - 6712 of 11003

hewittalan6

Just in case there are any other problems for you in the doing of this, then Here's a Link

PS. Love your stuff lots. :-)

hewittalan6 - 01 Apr 2008 20:35 - 6713 of 11003

Awww, shucks............

Thanks for the moral support ;-)

I was terrified of the link, expecting a bunch of moaners telling me how bad Sky are, but the general consensus is they are better than AOL. Not hard. I have a crippled homing pigeon with no sense of direction that is more reliable than AOL broadband.
I've only gone to Sky because an acquaintance of mine is responsible for creating the networks O2 use and he said Sky had by far and away the best infrastructure. He also said Vodafone had the best mobile broadband network so I doubt his self confidence but value his honesty.
Okay, I'm a yorkshireman, so cost was an implication.
Thanks for your help everyone.

Mega Bucks - 03 Apr 2008 11:37 - 6714 of 11003

Some more help required please about our Lexmark X4550 printer we have the wi-fi side of the printer working and thanks to you folks for your advice but another bit of information would be most welcome and that is would it be possible to run the printer via a usb cable to a differant pc that we use as a back at the same time.So that the laptop runs it with wi-fi and the back up pc runs it by usb cable.

Mega.........

kernow - 03 Apr 2008 15:32 - 6715 of 11003

Mega - working on the KISS principle I'd say just plug it in and off you go.

Optimist - 03 Apr 2008 21:07 - 6716 of 11003

MB

I guess the only way to find out is to try it but I suspect it will not work.

In any case, why bother? If your printer is already connected to the network, then both computers should be able to use it via the network.

ExecLine - 05 Apr 2008 11:59 - 6717 of 11003

Find out what is really running on your computer! This link is to an excellent web site facility and tool and I personally recommend it.

http://www.fileresearchcenter.com/

Identify what is running on your computer. Then it shows you the list and provides for each thing found, free information about safe and unsafe files, processes, services, spyware, adware, malware, trojans, and other programs that may be on your computer.

You can also enter the name of the File, Process, Service, or DLL and locate in FileResearch Center's database. If the item is NOT listed, you can report the file so they can analyze it.

I also use 'SuperAntiSpyeware Free Edition' from this particular web site to look for Spyware, Adware and Malware, Trojans, Worms and other Parasites or harmful software on my machine.

Richgit69 - 05 Apr 2008 17:42 - 6718 of 11003

anyone know of a way of getting FREE access to internet using Wifi with Ipod or Moblie devices while out and about, is there any free ISP or services?

I am thinking of something along the lines of opensource

ExecLine - 05 Apr 2008 20:19 - 6719 of 11003

RG

Once you're on, try this...

Richgit69 - 05 Apr 2008 22:40 - 6720 of 11003

funny (not)

Bolshi - 07 Apr 2008 09:17 - 6721 of 11003

I've been saving a new Excel file (.xls) to my CD drive so I can keep 2 pc's in sync.with a price list. When I amended some stuff on the PC last night & tried to save it to disk it wouldn't let me because there was a file already there with that name. It wouldn't let me overwrite it or delete it either. The file is read only and when I try to click on the properties to amend it, the boxes stay greyed out!
Why did it save the file originally as a read only and how do I change it now it's like that please? Thanks in advance.

Edit: The disk is RW

Optimist - 07 Apr 2008 10:47 - 6722 of 11003

Bolshi

I suspect that although you are using a RW disk, it is seen as RO by the Windows file system as the disk is only writable with a CD burning program.

You can't write to a CD from Excel, so you need to load the file from your CD, and Save As... to your hard disk and then copy the file to the CD.

An easier way would be to use a USB flash drive.

Bolshi - 07 Apr 2008 10:59 - 6723 of 11003

Thanks O.

HARRYCAT - 08 Apr 2008 11:36 - 6724 of 11003

Flash Drives are definitely the way forward, imo. 20 for 2gb drive. No moving parts or damaged surfaces & incredibly easy to use. It seems that 'A' drives are now disappearing from PC's, I wonder how long it will be before CD drives also go?

ThePublisher - 08 Apr 2008 11:41 - 6725 of 11003

I've now got two devices that are not recognised by the USB sockets on my Asus S5 laptop. One is a Ricoh GRD2 camera and the other is a Garmin Nuvi 760 that arrived today.

The camera is not a big problem as my studio PC can connect with it.

However the Garmin is more of a bore as I will need to update the maps and speed cameras via the laptop.

I'm guessing that it is a motherboard problem.

I have fiddled around for too long looking for drivers - and anyway XP Pro, which is what I use, is supposed to recognise everything.

Would the quick fix be to get a PCMCIA card that produced a powered USB socket. There are some here.

But there could be better sites - or someone may have a better suggestion.

Thanks in advance,

TP

Optimist - 08 Apr 2008 12:42 - 6726 of 11003

Harrycat

Whilst I agree that Flash Drives are the way forward, I would caution against their overuse.

As a data transfer medium they are excellent although their size and ease of use brings it's own security issues. The main problem is that they can progressively burn out after repeated use and their long term reliability will not be that good - although it is better than floppies and quite possibly better than writable CD's. Don't trust them for long term data storage.

The other problem is that they can be configured to autorun when plugged into Windows. This is potentially a massive security risk. Always disable autorun before using a device that you are not 101% sure of.

ThePublisher - 09 Apr 2008 10:59 - 6727 of 11003

My USB problems.

I found a suggestion on another forum that the problem may be that my laptop has set the BIOS of my USB ports to USB1.

Can someone tell me how, with XP Pro, I can get to those screens that enable me to alter, if needed, the BIOS for the USB ?

Thanks in adv.

TP

Mega Bucks - 09 Apr 2008 12:25 - 6728 of 11003

Optimist that some interesting information about Flash Drives !!!
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