Thursday, July 16, 2009

A critical security vulnerability in Firefox 3.5



A critical security vulnerability affecting Firefox 3.5 has been discovered and published on the security portal Milw0rm entitled Firefox 3.5 Heap Spray Vulnerability. A proof of concept exploit has been provided. In short, the vulnerability can lead to remote code execution. The good news is that a security patch has already been published by Mozilla Links.

The security vulnerability can be fixed the following way. Type in about:config in the Firefox address bar and hit enter. Now filter for the term javascript.options.jit.content and double-click it afterwards to set it to false which disables the Tracemonkey JavaScript engine. This in turn could (and most likely will) reduce the JavaScript performance of the Firefox 3.5 web browser until an official security patch is provided by the Mozilla Firefox team.

The security patch is expected to be released soon by the Firefox development team. Stay tuned, we keep you updated.

Thursday, July 2, 2009

New iPhone 3.0


iPhone Operating System 3.0



Copy, Cut and Paste: Apple is late with this common feature, but it’s the best implementation I’ve seen on a phone. In a text page, you just double tap on a word, and it is selected with little handles around it that let you expand or contract the selected area. Then, you just click on a copy icon that pops up over the selection. To paste, you tap elsewhere in the page, or even in another app, and a paste icon pops up. Click that icon, and the selected text is pasted in. It worked well in all my tests.

The feature works a bit differently for some Web pages, where you hold down your finger over an area and it selects a whole block of text, like a paragraph, but still has the handles that allow adjusting the selection. It also allows copying and pasting photos. You can also just select a word or a section or a whole page of text and delete it. And if you want to undo a paste, just shake the phone.

Some Web pages and third-party apps don’t yet support this feature, but most do.

Search: Before, you could search only in the Contacts app. Now, there are search features in Mail, Calendar, the built-in iPod and Notes. And there is a way to search the whole phone at once. You just hit the home button, slowly, twice, and a special search screen appears. Type in any phrase, and it brings up every instance in multiple apps.

This is another catch-up feature, but it works well. For instance, when I searched for the word “Phil,” it brought up songs by Phil Collins, a note about Philadelphia, calendar items mentioning people named Phil or Phillips, emails to or from people with those names, and contacts for people named Phil or Phillips.

In email, the search function will even find messages that aren’t on your phone but that are stored on the servers of certain email services. For instance, I was able to almost instantly find emails from two years ago stored on Google’s (GOOG) Gmail.

One downside — in email, search looks for words only in email headers, not in the body of the messages.

Landscape Keyboard: In older iPods, the only built-in program that supported a wider, landscape keyboard, which is better for thumb typing, was the Web browser. Now, you can turn the phone horizontally and use a landscape keyboard in the Mail, Messages and Notes programs as well.

Find My iPhone: If you belong to Apple’s $99 a year MobileMe service, you can now locate a lost iPhone on a map on any computer, send the iPhone a message saying how to return it to you, and cause it to emit a beep, even if the sound is turned off. I tested this and it worked well. You can even remotely wipe all your data off the phone.

Voice Memos: The OS includes a Voice Memo app that lets you dictate reminders or other messages, and then edit and email them. I found it worked well.

Navigation: Another catch-up feature, turn-by-turn navigation with voice prompts, is also now supported. I tested this with a third-party app called Gokivo, and it did OK, though the developer admits to a prerelease bug I encountered.

Auto-Authentication: In the new OS, the iPhone can remember your log-in credentials for commercial Wi-Fi hotspot services, so you don’t have to enter them again and again. Unfortunately, in my tests with the AT&T Wi-Fi service, this failed repeatedly in several Starbucks (SBUX) shops. Apple blames a glitch in my prerelease phone’s SIM card.

Push Notification: To make up for its lack of multitasking, the new iPhone OS has a feature where third-party apps can notify you of new events, like a sports score, or a new invitation to an online game. I tried this with a game called TapTap Revenge, and it worked fine.

Stocks: The built-in stock application now has much more detailed data, including market cap, news headlines and price/earnings ratio for each stock.

MMS and Tethering: I couldn’t test these useful features because my tests were all done on AT&T, which hasn’t rolled them out.

Minor Touches: You can now move an icon among screens with one continuous motion, instead of stopping at each screen. And there are two more screens to house icons. You can finally synchronize Notes with your PC or Mac. You also can now maintain both calendars and contacts synced wirelessly with online services and those synced via cable with your computer. And you can play games and transfer files wirelessly over Bluetooth with other iPods or Touches that are nearby.

Bottom Line: Both the new iPhone and iPhone OS are packed with features that make a great product even better. But, for many users, the software may be enough of a boost to keep them from buying the new model

Wednesday, June 24, 2009

Linux will lead on the USB 3.0?



OR



What should your business know about USB 3.0? It's almost ready for the mass market, it's extremely fast -- and Linux will be the first OS to support it.

Last November, the USB 3.0 Promoter Group finished work on its "Super Speed" standard. USB 3.0 has been a long time coming, but it will be worth the wait: The new spec will deliver bus speeds up to 5 Gbps, or more than 10 times the bandwidth of a USB 2.0 connection.

It will be a while before USB 3.0 motherboards hit the market, but hardware vendors are already on board. NEC will begin mass-producing USB 3.0 host controllers this summer, and vendors at CES 2009 last January were busy showing off storage devices using the new standard.

You can also bet that USB 3.0 PCI Express add-in cards will hit the market fairly soon. Those PCIe x1 slots that sit unused on so many modern motherboards have a bus speed of around 5Gpbs, making them perfect for add-in USB 3.0 cards.

USB 3.0 will clearly have a dramatic impact on the storage market. The new standard, unlike USB 2.0, delivers more bandwidth than most conventional hard drives are capable of using. Newer solid-state storage devices, however, are capable of far higher bus speeds, making both USB 3.0 and the new SATA 6 Gbps standard extremely important for solid-state disk performance.

So much for the hardware. What about USB 3.0 driver support?

READ MORE.......

Tuesday, June 23, 2009

Wubi -Ubuntu Installer

Wubi is an officially supported Ubuntu installer for Windows users that can bring you to the Linux world with a single click. Wubi allows you to install and uninstall Ubuntu as any other Windows application, in a simple and safe way. Are you curious about Linux and Ubuntu? Trying them out has never been easier!



> No need to burn a CD. Just run the installer, enter a password for the new account, and click "Install", go grab a coffee, and when you are back, Ubuntu will be ready for you.

> You keep Windows as it is, Wubi only adds an extra option to boot into Ubuntu. Wubi does not require you to modify the partitions of your PC, or to use a different bootloader, and does not install special drivers. It works just like any other application. Wubi is free of spyware and malware, and being open source, anyone can verify that.

> Wubi keeps most of the files in one folder, and if you do not like it, you can simply uninstall it as any other application

> Wubi and Ubuntu cost absolutely nothing (free as in beer), but yet provide a state of the art, fully functional, operating system that does not require any activation and does not impose any restriction on its use (free as in freedom).

Requirements
-256 MB memory
-Harddisk Space 5 GB harddisk space
-Operating System Windows 98,2000,XP,Vista


Download Now!

Saturday, June 20, 2009

gOS 3.1 Gadgets

gOS 3.1 Gadgets
Linux for the rest of us






The most beautiful and easiest to use Linux operating system on the market.

Download here..

PCLinuxOS 2009.1 Final Released

PCLinuxOS 2009.1 Final Released




This release features kernel 2.6.26.8.tex3, KDE 3.5.10, Open Office 3.0, Firefox 3.0.7, Thunderbird 2.0.0.14, Ktorrent, Frostwire, Amarok, Flash, Java JRE, Compiz-Fusion 3D and much more. We decided to use kde3-5-10 as our default desktop as we could not achieve a similar functionality from kde4. We will however offer kde4 as an alternative desktop environment available from the repository once we stabilize it. PCLinuxOS is an rpm based distribution utilizing apt-get with a Synaptic Software Manager frontend. In addition to the above PCLinuxOS comes with mklivecd GUI, a nice utility to build a custom live CD from your install. Install or remove what you want then remaster your own cd. Great for backups or to give to friends. PCLinuxOS is also known as as rolling release distribution. What that means is you install once and update it when new applications become available from our repository.

More details..

Friday, June 19, 2009

Yet Another Linux Desktop - Linux Mint 7 (Gloria)


Linux Mint 7 (Gloria)


Linux Mint 7 (Gloria) desktop that is a full-fledged replacement for a Windows desktop, i.e. that has all the software that people need to do the things they do on their Windows desktops. The advantages are clear: you get a secure system without DRM restrictions that works even on old hardware, and the best thing is: all software comes free of charge. Linux Mint 7 is a Linux distribution based on Ubuntu 9.04 that has lots of packages in its repositories (like multimedia codecs, Adobe Flash, Adobe Reader, Skype, Google Earth, etc.) that are relatively hard to install on other distributions; it therefore provides a user-friendly desktop experience even for Linux newbies.

You can get complete guide from here

Monday, June 15, 2009

Portable Software Collections

If you want a portable collection of softwares, try going to LiberKey. They have provided 3 compilations for users to choose from:


* LiberKey Ultimate (202 packages)

* LiberKey Standard (106 packages)

* LiberKey Basic (28 packages).

The total number of portable wares is 264 divided in categories such as Audio, CD, Education, File Management, Graphic, Internet and etc.



via [ gHacks ]

You can also take a look at PortableApps and WinPenPack which offer portable apps as well.