Crocodile
- 16 Dec 2002 03:59
Kayak
- 20 Jun 2008 09:44
- 6901 of 11003
443 is the standard https port, it will already be open.
Glad to hear the router overheating was the problem, you might like to replace the router before it goes totally belly up.
ThePublisher
- 20 Jun 2008 12:04
- 6902 of 11003
I'm running out of space on my photo studio PC.
I have an assortment of external Maxtor drives and use one attached to the PC permanently and two for removeable backups. I'm happy with them and see no reason to change brands
I've been Googling to see what is now on offer and see
this Maxtor.
What appeals is the Safety Drill element as, if it works, it's a neat way of adding a system restore facility. Yes, I know I should have been using Acronis for ages - but if the Maxtor software works it would get me safer in one step.
Has anyone come across it around here?
TP
ThePublisher
- 20 Jun 2008 13:33
- 6904 of 11003
Opt,
Yes, your's is a better solution. Reading about the Safety Drill it seems it only works if the new hard drive is the same size as the one that failed - and I can see problems in this.
I am not sure that I'd trust myself to swop in a new hard drive and clone the old one - but I am sure I ought to be able to find someone who does it almost daily.
TP
Dil
- 20 Jun 2008 13:39
- 6905 of 11003
Choccie - download free Zonealarm firewall and use instead of McCaffee , isn't that what you use too Kayak ?
Kayak
- 20 Jun 2008 13:52
- 6906 of 11003
No I don't use a firewall. You really don't need one if you have a router since you do not broadcast your IP address to the outside world.
ExecLine
- 20 Jun 2008 13:58
- 6907 of 11003
Try FREE
Avast 4 Home Edition from
http://www.avast.com/index.html
Should you ever need it, there's Technical support and also a
Discussion Forum
I'd also recommend
CCleaner for cleaning out the crap and
SuperAntiSpyware Free Edition to get rid of Spyware and Malware.
Actually, I find that after a sweep with CCleaner, there's not a lot left to be found by SAS Free Edition. Also, SAS Free Edition is tons better, I feel, than Ad-Aware and Spybot Search & Destroy.
For some reason, CCleaner (Crap Cleaner) is my most used program. ;-)
ExecLine
- 20 Jun 2008 14:15
- 6908 of 11003
When I'm shopping on the Internet, first I use the Shopping search facility at
Google.co.uk It absolutely wipes the floor, when compared with anything else.
Next I investigate if there are any cashback facilities available to me from the cashback introduction sites, like Quidco for example, and see if my target Internet shopping web site offers any cashback for the Quidco introduction.
Here's an example of some shrewd Internet shopping utilising the facilities of CCleaner:
Having visited
VirginMedia to investigate
Virgin Broadband as an ISP, I then go to the Quidco cashback web site and find out that Quidco account holders get a
100 cashback from Virgin Media for shopping with Virgin Media via the Quidco route. 100 eh? WOW!
HOWEVER, you wouldn't get the 100 if there is a
Virgin Media cookie already on your machine when you go to the Virgin Media web site to sign on. So....
I would use
CCleaner to housekeep any unwanted cookies out of my machine, such as
any and all Virgin cookies. Next I would go to Quidco and sign on. Then I would click on the Quidco link to Virgin Media and thus ensure the introduction shows as being originated at Quidco and thus ensuring I do actually get the 100 cashback paid out. You can be sure it would not be paid out otherwise because it could be proved by Virgin Media that Quidco introduced the shopper when Virgin and Quidco run their mutual shopper introduction link software checks.
Obviously, I'm selectively deleting cookies. CCleaner makes this extremely easy for me to do.
ThePublisher
- 20 Jun 2008 17:58
- 6910 of 11003
Opt,
That makes it sound easier.
In fact I have two drives in the machine. A smaller drive C which contains the operating system and the programs. A larger drive D that contains some of my photos.
I can live with that drive D as long as I have some external hard disk space and that was why I was looking at the Maxtor.
I suppose one solution is to let Paragon clone me a copy of drive C and to put that somewhere safe for the day when (not if I know) my drive C dies. And then I assume it is simply a matter of swopping the ribbon cable in from the old C to the new one.
I have yet to look but I assume you can get temporary external housings so that the C that I've just bought can plug in to the USB.
And I expand my on line storeage with a big Maxtor.
TP
Dailos
- 20 Jun 2008 21:31
- 6911 of 11003
When i start my laptop, i always get my wifes hotmail window pop up, which i then have to close, how do i stop it popping up automatically?
Thanks.
d.
chocolat
- 20 Jun 2008 22:27
- 6913 of 11003
Thanks again, boys.
Hopefully get sorted over the weekend.
Dailos - I'm exceedingly thick about technical stuff, but I'm pretty sure you need to look at your start-up content and just delete that - sounds to me like a messenger thingie.
Dailos
- 21 Jun 2008 11:26
- 6915 of 11003
Choc
I bet i'm thicker!
Optimist
Thanks do i just untick it and press "apply"?
Or do i have to delete it (how?)
My wife shouldnt need her own password, she has her own laptop, trouble is, she has gone all green on me and wants to save the planet, so says its a waste of resources running two!!
I tried to explain i'm long a whole bunch of oil, coal and metal stocks, to no avail!
brianboru
- 21 Jun 2008 13:49
- 6917 of 11003
Kayak - 20 Jun 2008 13:52 - 6906 of 6916
No I don't use a firewall. You really don't need one if you have a router since you do not broadcast your IP address to the outside world.
----------
Spot on Kayak ! Has anyone on here ever known anyone who's security has been compromised by an external hacker coming in via a router (and also with XPs firewall switched on)?
Instead so many problems seem to occour to those using zonealarm etc... they are just not worth the effort, not to mention the cost IMHO..
Kayak
- 21 Jun 2008 16:01
- 6918 of 11003
A software firewall does also stop suspect outgoing connections (some routers also have the ability to do so) and that of course is where many problems with firewalls originate. However that would only protect you in the case you already had a virus on your machine and the virus was connecting out. There is an argument that the virus could be reporting all your passwords to home base but that is really overkill in my opinion. After all the sort of people who insist on running a firewall will also be running anti-virus software and that will already have been triggered.
tyketto
- 24 Jun 2008 01:55
- 6919 of 11003
In my programs I have listed-
Java 6 update 2
3
5
6
Java SE runtime 6.1.
Can I delete 2,3 and 5?
releasing 336MB of disk.
Tls.
mac.
Kayak
- 24 Jun 2008 07:42
- 6920 of 11003
Yes, through the add/remove programs in control panel.