How to rescue a wet mobile phone from conking out
June 25th, 2010
Now the rainy season has started.The weather is pleasant. But in this nice and cool weather we have to face some common problems .Rains could spell doom for your mobile phone or any electronic appliance if it comes in contact with the device’s circuits. At times, this occurs in spite of all precautions. Well, in case you are in such a situation, where you think water may have entered your cell phone, here are a few steps you could follow to save your phone from permanent damage.
Some of the points mentioned below can be followed in case of other gadgets as well.
1. Get the phone out of water as soon as possible
This is the first thing you should do. Get your phone to a dry place. Get it out of your rain soaked pants or jeans and place it out in a dry place. If this is not possible, shield your phone and follow the next step.
2. Remove Battery
Open the phone and take out the battery. Do not bother about switching off the phone if you are out in the rain but do remember to shield the phone with your hand so that water doesn’t get into the battery compartment. If you are in a dry place then switch off the phone and take out the battery. Now you can be sure that the phone won’t short circuit and damage internal components.
3. Remove the SIM
Once home, take out the SIM as well. I didn’t ask you to do so earlier because chances of you misplacing the SIM are high. Removing the SIM may seem unnecessary to some, but it sure is important. The SIM is also part of a circuit. Breaking it is very much needed to save the connectors from damage.
4. Drying your phone
Well this is the next part wherein you dry the phone so that all the moisture is out and you could possibly continue using your phone like nothing ever happened to it. To get rid of the water, tap the phone dry with a piece of cloth.
The simplest way to dry the phone is to place it in the open for a couple of days. This way it will dry out but the process is very slow and there is a possibility of corrosion. Many people either have the phone placed under a table lamp or dry it with a hair dryer. Both these options will only do more damage than what the water could have done.
If you got a vacuum use that on a slow mode. This pulls the water out of the phone rather than push the water further in with the use of a hair dryer. After using the vacuum for about 15-20min leave the phone open on a napkin. The napkin will soak whatever water comes out. Put away the phone for about 2-3 hours.
5. Getting rid of Moisture
Next you need to get rid of the moisture in the phone. To do so we need a desiccant; which basically is a substance that absorbs moisture. Do not worry no one is asking you to head to a hardware shop or chemical shop and buy something. The easily available desiccant is rice – uncooked rice. Take a bowl full of rice and drop your phone in the bowl and close it. Leave the phone there for about 2-3hours.
6. Last leg of Drying
After all of the above steps it’s ideal to leave the phone to dry for a day but another 2-3hours on a napkin should do the trick.
7. Starting Up & Problems
Now you can go head and turn on your mobile. If you’re in luck your phone starts and doesn’t act up.
Screen showing lines
Some buttons not clicking
Phone not starting at all
For all such problems it’s now best to hand it over to the experts. You can try to open up your handset and dry each of its components, but that’s at your own risk.
If your earpiece or mouthpiece is acting up then you can try cleaning it with a brush. But not a toothbrush, as you’ll damage the speaker. Use a soft compound water paint brush or shoe polish brush.
Final Words
If you follow these steps, You can save your phone. Hope this information has been helpful. So take care of your gadgets while you enjoy the rains.
Source:www.techtree.com
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Philanthropy Act
June 24th, 2010
Philanthropy can be described in many ways. It is caring and sharing. It is giving and serving. It is our individual response to the human need . We want to help poor or person who is in real need of money. Varshyltech always comes up with a new and innovative ideas. We have so many Charitable firms and helping Aids organizations in our country. We can take help of such organizations and the amount collected can be given to them but our motto is to give money who is in need of it. So I have decided that I will give the money to two needy persons and ask a question if you get a certain amount of money what you will do with it if we are satisfied with the answer we will give that amount to the stranger. Stranger can be anybody He/She can be from any part of the world. This time the stranger was my priest wife , who expired two months back because of jaundice and she is having two kids who are very small so I thought that some amount I should give to her .
Then next day when i went to the slum area where I have saw a kid who was picking garbage , then I asked him where you live then he take me to his place where I have saw his father sleeping , so I asked what you do , he said I am a worker but nowadays I am not well and suffering from T.B. so I have given some amount to him by that he can buy medicines for him. So he was happy that he can spend some amount on himself.
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Now, a wafer-thin TV that can be rolled up : WATCH THIS SPACE
June 21st, 2010
Helsinki: “Can you imagine a television that can be rolled up?” asked a research scientist in the Finnish capital.
Curiosity led straight to Richard Friend of UK’s Cambridge University, a knighted scientist who was among the invitees to Finland’s Millennium Technology Prize event, often touted as the Nobel for innovation.
“Plastic electronics are now the starting point for a whole new research field. It has tremendous potential now and in the future,” said the professor, explaining the finer points of his research work. Organic light-emitting diodes are already used in MP3 players and the latest mobile phones. The next generation will be on the wall side television and large area wall-to-wall low-energy lighting,” he explained.
Unlike the traditional liquid crystal display technology, organic light-emitting diodes do not require backlight because of the self-luminous polymer used. This means lower power, larger viewing angle, brighter displays and very high resolution.
Mark Allen, a scientist at VTT, Finland’s premier technical research centre, said Friend’s plastic electronics will have far-reaching impact. “Well we are talking about that kind of future where TV sets can be rolled up. It is not possible now, but as technology improves, we will look at more advanced and energy efficient TV sets.”
Richard has also set up a company, Cambridge Display Technology Ltd, to capitalise on the technology and bring to the market first products using this latest innovation in semiconductors. IANS
Source : Times of India
21 June 2010
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Cybercrime: The FIFA World cup could be your cup of woe
June 16th, 2010
Even if you’re an ardent soccer fan and see phrases like ‘FIFA 2010’, ‘2010 FIFA’, ‘Football World Cup’ or ‘FIFA World Cup’ in your emails, you have to think twice before opening such mails. At least for another month, till July 11, when the football World Cup comes to an end.
The reason is simple. There are millions of football fans in the country — 1.95 million viewers across six metros watched matches on the first day alone, according to aMap. Spam is bound to increase proportionately. Globally, spam based on the FIFA 2010 World Cup has surged by almost 27 per cent according to Symantec, an internet security company.
Cybercriminals thrive on sporting events (and natural disasters) by sending e-mails that include offer for fake tickets, attached malware in videos containing “FIFA highlights” and fake FIFA merchandise offers. The 419-styled scam messages (similar to the lotterystyle scams which send unsolicited e-mails asking for help and used for phishing bank account numbers) are cases in point.
This time around, though, cybercriminals are using smarter ways to avoid detection. For instance, search engine manipulation is being used to lure users into searching for video clips and news towards scareware.
WatchGuard security analysts see an explosive growth of online threats, including spam, spear phishing (where attacks are directly targeted to small populations with sociallyengineered messages to entice victims to open an executable or click to a site that harbours malware), PDF attacks, SEO (search engine optimisation) poisoning (that allows malicious websites to be highly ranked in search strings relating to the World Cup. As poisoned websites, they pack a malware punch) and malware through social networks.
The Websense Security Labs ThreatSeeker Network, too, “has detected a new wave of interesting malicious emails”. It has seen over 80,000 e-mail messages in this new campaign, which uses a hypertext mark-up language (HTML) attachment with an embedded JavaScript. Upon execution, this script leads to a malicious website. Websense is protecting its customers “with our real-time analytics in our ACE engine”.
This is not all. It was relatively uncommon to see targeted attacks using excel documents, noted Dan Bleaken, malware data analyst, Symantec Hosted Services, in his post.
“Normally, we see PDF or Word documents or straight exe files. For the targeted attacks intercepted since the start of April, the attached file types — .pdf 41%, .exe 18%, .doc 14%, .xls 7%, .scr 4%, and .ppt 1% — have been used,” he said. It’s also relatively uncommon to see malicious documents contained in a zip archive.
Upon opening the excel file, Excel opens, quickly closes and reopens, displaying the World Cup spreadsheet with all the current groups, the teams playing in them and when they are playing, allowing the owner to add in the results as the World Cup happens. “In this time, a file (temp.temp), an executable, is dropped in c:documents & settingsLocal Settings .” When the executable runs, it makes an initial connection to a well-known search engine. After that it made connections to an IP address in Indonesia, noted Bleaken.
“This is a ‘backdoor’ or a method of bypassing normal authentication, which constantly connects to the hacker’s machine to tell it that a computer is accessible,” cautioned Dan. From this point on, the hacker has access to the victim’s computer. This enables the attacker to stealthily access data on the victim’s PC, and/or access other systems on that network. In this scenario, the ’server’ (infected machine) attempts to contact the ‘client’ (attacker).
Jan Valcke, president and COO of Vasco Data Security, said: “Cybercriminals are always looking for opportunities. During the Word Cup, most of the e-betting sites are using vulnerable static passwords. We advocate the use of one-timepasswords to help protect people against cybercriminals, not just during the World Cup, but all through the year.” “The increasing threat to Indians on cyber space is further exacerbated by the fact that 33 per cent of Indian adults do not have security measures in place, according to the Norton Online Living Report 2009,” pointed out Shantanu Ghosh, vice-president (India Product Operations), Symantec. McAfee researchers, too, have noted asignificant number of 2010 FIFA World Cup-themed phishing scams. Cybercriminals have started distributing World Cup-themed phishing scams to trick fans out of their sensitive information.
Indeed, growing internet infrastructure, burgeoning broadband population and rampant software piracy have made India a growing target for cyber criminals. India moved up in malicious activity to fifth position from 11th position in 2008, according to Symantec’s latest Internet Security Threat Report XV. The number is only set to increase.
Source: Business Standard
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Top 10 Computer Virus Innovations
June 8th, 2010
1.Storm Worm (aka Peacomm, Nuwar) – This virus burst onto the scene in 2006/2007 and hit the Internet like a nuclear warhead. It was distributed via an email with the subject “230 dead as storm batters Europe.” The writers of the virus definitely made it look like a news brief that peaked a lot of interest and they altered the subject and news to be timely enough to get the user’s attention. At it’s peak more than 200 million emails had been infected with this virus which created a massive spam email botnet. The innovation here was in the thought that went into the usage of current events to lure its victims (social engineering).
2.Leap-A/Oompa-A – This 2006 virus showed us that all systems can be attacked if a hacker puts effort into it. This was an attack on Apple’s OS X operating system that came pre-installed with an application called iChat for chatting with others over various chat networks (like AOL’s IM). This leveraged a flaw in iChat to infect the MAC with a relatively harmless virus and then used the buddy list in iChat to spread. The main negative impact is that infected applications would no longer launch. The innovation with this virus is really just the platform that it chose to infect.
3 .Sasser and Netsky – These were the brainchild of a 17 year-old from Germany, Sven Jaschan. Here it appears that Mr. Jaschan reversed a Microsoft security update to reveal the bug and then leveraged the bug to create a DoS botnet. The unique thing about this virus is that it spreads without user interaction by scanning IP addresses looking for computers that are vulnerable (those that have not been patched). Once it finds a victim it forces the victim to download the virus and then starts using it to scan for more victims. Sasser was responsible for many systems being brought to their knees including Delta Airlines and multiple hospitals in Europe. The innovation here is the reversing of a security patch to find a method of spreading the virus that didn’t require an action from the user.
4.MyDoom – This worm became active in 2004 and was an attempt by email spammers to send junk emails (spam) through its victims. MyDoom gets transmitted via email and uses subject lines that seem to indicate an error has occurred that requires an action by the user “Error”, “Mail Transaction Failed”, etc. It spreads via peer-to-peer networks like Kazaa as well. The target of this virus was very focused, it was the servers that were running sco.com. The innovation here was in the focused target coupled with the email spamming. It recently resurfaced for another round in July of 2009.
5.SQL Slammer – This virus started in January of 2003 and began quickly spreading at a rate of 7,500 victims per minute. It exploited a buffer overflow bug in Microsoft’s SQL Server and Desktop Engine (SQL Server variant). The worm spread over the UDP protocol and was very compact fitting inside a single packet enabling its rapid release. This virus brought down Bank of America’s ATM system and reportedly caused $1 billion worth of damages. The innovation with this worm is around the use of UDP and how it was deliverable in a single packet.
6.Nimda – This worm spread five different ways and that caused it become in 22 minutes after it’s known release, the #1 target of anti-virus companies. Nimda (admin backwards) impacted all version of the Microsoft Windows operating system (servers and client editions). It spread via email, open network shares, browsing to a compromised website, via an IIS exploit, and via backdoors left behind by the Red Code II virus. The innovation with this worm was around the multiple methods with which it infected its victims.
7.Code Red – Code Red and Code Red II came out in July of 2001 and leveraged a vulnerability in IIS’s (Microsoft’s web server) indexing software. It resulted in defacing the sites hosted by IIS and forcing them to display the message “HELLO! Welcome to http://www.worm.com! Hacked By Chinese!” The worm spread by exploiting a buffer overflow and simply searched the web by IP looking for targets and tried to attack literally everything (it didn’t look for IIS specifically). The innovation here was in the payload and the fact that it was setup to target a short list of IP addresses with a DoS attack including the U.S. White House.
8.Klez – This virus originates in 2001 and is a variation of a fairly common theme. It spreads via email however it took advantage of Microsoft Outlook’s Trident layout engine and default HTML view of emails to inject itself thus not requiring the user to do anything but flip through their emails. It used an IFRAME trick to cause Trident to inject the user and then spread via the typical address book fashion to other machines. The innovative portion of this virus was its use of the HTML preview inside of Outlook to launch itself.
9.ILOVEYOU – This worm came into being in 2000 and wiggled its way into the World by using a social engineering trick. It spread via an email with the subject of “I LOVE YOU.” Well who doesn’t want to read that and click on anything inside of it? The second aspect was that they executed a vbscript from an attachment that looked like a standard text document. The innovation was in the social engineering aspect of the email coupled with leveraging Microsoft’s built-in scripting language.
10.Melissa – This is probably one of the most well known virses (next to ILOVEYOU) it was a mass-mailing virus as well. It originally wasn’t written to cause harm and really all it did was bog down email servers which did cause significant problems. Melissa was first distributed in the Usenet discussion group alt.sex. The virus was inside a file called “List.DOC”, which contained passwords that allow access into 80 pornographic websites. The author David Smith was sentenced to 20 months in a Federal prison and fined $5,000. The innovation here was in its simplicity and it was one of what many refer to as the “kiddy scripts” which were simple yet effective worms.
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Preventive Measures Against Cyber Crimes.
June 4th, 2010
1. To prevent cyber stalking avoid disclosing any information pertaining to oneself. This is as good as disclosing your identity to strangers in public place.
2. Always avoid sending any photograph online particularly to strangers and chat friends as there have been incidents of misuse of the photographs.
3. Always use latest and up date anti virus software to guard against virus attacks.
4. Always keep back up volumes so that one may not suffer data loss in case of virus contamination.
5. Never send your credit card number to any site that is not secured, to guard against frauds.
6. Always keep a watch on the sites that your children are accessing to prevent any kind of harassment or depravation in children.
7. It is better to use a security programme that gives control over the cookies and send information back to the site as leaving the cookies unguarded might prove fatal.
8. Web site owners should watch traffic and check any irregularity on the site. Putting host-based intrusion detection devices on servers may do this.
9. Use of firewalls may be beneficial.
10. Web servers running public sites must be physically separate protected from internal corporate network.
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Frequently Used Cyber Crimes
June 4th, 2010
Logic bombs
These are event dependent programs. This implies that these programs are created to do something only when a certain event (known as a trigger event) occurs. E.g. even some viruses may be termed logic bombs because they lie dormant all through the year and become active only on a particular date (like the Chernobyl virus).
Trojan attacks
A Trojan as this program is aptly called, is an unauthorized program which functions from inside what seems to be an authorized program, thereby concealing what it is actually doing.
There are many simple ways of installing a Trojan in someone’s computer. To cite and example, two friends Rahul and Mukesh (names changed), had a heated argument over one girl, Radha (name changed) whom they both liked. When the girl, asked to choose, chose Mukesh over Rahul, Rahul decided to get even. On the 14th of February, he sent Mukesh a spoofed e-card, which appeared to have come from Radha’s mail account. The e-card actually contained a Trojan. As soon as Mukesh opened the card, the Trojan was installed on his computer. Rahul now had complete control over Mukesh’s computer and proceeded to harass him thoroughly.
Internet time thefts
This connotes the usage by an unauthorized person of the Internet hours paid for by another person. In a case reported before the enactment of the Information Technology Act, 2000 Colonel Bajwa, a resident of New Delhi, asked a nearby net café owner to come and set up his Internet connection. For this purpose, the net café owner needed to know his username and password. After having set up the connection he went away with knowing the present username and password. He then sold this information to another net café. One week later Colonel Bajwa found that his Internet hours were almost over. Out of the 100 hours that he had bought, 94 hours had been used up within the span of that week. Surprised, he reported the incident to the Delhi police. The police could not believe that time could be stolen. They were not aware of the concept of time-theft at all. Colonel Bajwa’s report was rejected. He decided to approach The Times of India, New Delhi. They, in turn carried a report about the inadequacy of the New Delhi Police in handling cyber crimes. The Commissioner of Police, Delhi then took the case into his own hands and the police under his directions raided and arrested the net café owner under the charge of theft as defined by the Indian Penal Code. The net café owner spent several weeks locked up in Tihar jail before being granted bail.
Web jacking
This occurs when someone forcefully takes control of a website (by cracking the password and later changing it). The actual owner of the website does not have any more control over what appears on that website In a recent incident reported in the USA the owner of a hobby website for children received an e-mail informing her that a group of hackers had gained control over her website. They demanded a ransom of 1 million dollars from her. The owner, a schoolteacher, did not take the threat seriously. She felt that it was just a scare tactic and ignored the e-mail. It was three days later that she came to know, following many telephone calls from all over the country, that the hackers had web jacked her website. Subsequently, they had altered a portion of the website which was entitled ‘How to have fun with goldfish’. In all the places where it had been mentioned, they had replaced the word ‘goldfish’ with the word ‘piranhas’. Piranhas are tiny but extremely dangerous flesh-eating fish. Many children had visited the popular website and had believed what the contents of the website suggested. These unfortunate children followed the instructions, tried to play with piranhas, which they bought from pet shops, and were very seriously injured!
Theft of computer system
This type of offence involves the theft of a computer, some part(s) of a computer or a peripheral attached to the computer.
Physically damaging a computer system
This crime is committed by physically damaging a computer or its peripherals.
Unauthorized access to computer systems or networks
This activity is commonly referred to as hacking. The Indian law has however given a different connotation to the term hacking, so we will not use the term “unauthorized access” interchangeably with the term “hacking”.
Theft of information contained in electronic form
This includes information stored in computer hard disks, removable storage media etc.
Email bombing
Email bombing refers to sending a large number of emails to the victim resulting in the victim’s email account (in case of an individual) or mail servers (in case of a company or an email service provider) crashing. In one case, a foreigner who had been residing in Simla, India for almost thirty years wanted to avail of a scheme introduced by the Simla Housing Board to buy land at lower rates. When he made an application it was rejected on the grounds that the 169 schemes was available only for citizens of India. He decided to take his revenge. Consequently he sent thousands of mails to the Simla Housing Board and repeatedly kept sending e-mails till their servers crashed.
Data diddling
This kind of an attack involves altering raw data just before it is processed by a computer and then changing it back after the processing is completed. Electricity Boards in India have been victims to data diddling programs inserted when private parties were computerizing their systems.
Salami attacks
These attacks are used for the commission of financial crimes. The key here is to make the alteration so insignificant that in a single case it would go completely unnoticed. E.g. a bank employee inserts a program, into the bank’s servers, that deducts a small amount of money (say Rs. 5 a month) from the account of every customer. No account holder will probably notice this unauthorized debit, but the bank employee will make a sizable amount of money every month.
To cite an example, an employee of a bank in USA was dismissed from his job. Disgruntled at having been supposedly mistreated by his employers the man first introduced a logic bomb into the bank’s systems.
Logic bombs are programmes, which are activated on the occurrence of a particular predefined event. The logic bomb was programmed to take ten cents from all the accounts in the bank and put them into the account of the person whose name was alphabetically the last in the bank’s rosters. Then he went and opened an account in the name of Ziegler. The amount being withdrawn from each of the accounts in the bank was so insignificant that neither any of the account holders nor the bank officials noticed the fault.
It was brought to their notice when a person by the name of Zygler opened his account in that bank. He was surprised to find a sizable amount of money being transferred into his account every Saturday.
Denial of Service attack
This involves flooding a computer resource with more requests than it can handle. This causes the resource (e.g. a web server) to crash thereby denying authorized users the service offered by the resource. Another variation to a typical denial of service attack is known as a Distributed Denial of Service (DDoS) attack wherein the perpetrators are many and are geographically widespread. It is very difficult to control such attacks. The attack is initiated by sending excessive demands to the victim’s computer(s), exceeding the limit that the victim’s servers can support and making the servers crash. Denial-of-service attacks have had an impressive history having, in the past, brought down websites like Amazon, CNN, Yahoo and eBay!.
Virus / worm attacks
Viruses are programs that attach themselves to a computer or a file and then circulate themselves to other files and to other computers on a network. They usually affect the data on a computer, either by altering or deleting it. Worms, unlike viruses do not need the host to attach themselves to. They merely make functional copies of themselves and do this repeatedly till they eat up all the available space on a computer’s memory. 170 The VBS_LOVELETTER virus (better known as the Love Bug or the ILOVEYOU virus) was reportedly written by a Filipino undergraduate.
In May 2000, this deadly virus beat the Melissa virus hollow – it became the world’s most prevalent virus. It struck one in every five personal computers in the world. When the virus was brought under check the true magnitude of the losses was incomprehensible. Losses incurred during this virus attack were pegged at US $ 10 billion.
The original VBS_LOVELETTER utilized the addresses in Microsoft Outlook and emailed itself to those addresses. The e-mail, which was sent out, had “ILOVEYOU” in its subject line. The attachment file was named “LOVE-LETTER-FORYOU. TXT.vbs”. The subject line and those who had some knowledge of viruses, did not notice the tiny .vbs extension and believed the file to be a text file conquered people wary of opening e-mail attachments. The message in the e-mail was “kindly check the attached LOVELETTER coming from me”.
Since the initial outbreak over thirty variants of the virus have been developed many of them following the original by just a few weeks. In addition, the Love Bug also uses the Internet Relay Chat (IRC) for its propagation. It e-mails itself to users in the same channel as the infected user. Unlike the Melissa virus this virus does have a destructive effect. Whereas the Melissa, once installed, merely inserts some text into the affected documents at a particular instant during the day, VBS_LOVELETTER first selects certain files and then inserts its own code in lieu of the original data contained in the file. This way it creates ever-increasing versions of itself. Probably the world’s most famous worm was the Internet worm let loose on the Internet by Robert Morris sometime in 1988. The Internet was, then, still in its developing years and this worm, which affected thousands of computers, almost brought its development to a complete halt. It took a team of experts almost three days to get rid of the worm and in the meantime many of the computers had to be disconnected from the network.
Resource:http://cybercrime.planetindia.net/frequently_used2.htm
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Five Best Computer Diagnostic Tools
June 1st, 2010
Computers are easier to use and more dependable with each new generation of hardware and operating system update, but that doesn’t mean they’re problem-free. Here’s a look at the five most popular tools for troubleshooting your computer problems.
Photo a composite of images by jimrhoda and Axonite.
Earlier this week we asked you to share your favorite diagnostic tool. Below, we’ve rounded up the top five answers, and now we’re back to highlight the most popular computer diagnostic tools among Lifehacker readers.
SIE (Windows, Free)
If things haven’t gotten bad enough that you’re forced to take refuge with a Live CD, SIW is a Windows-based diagnostic tool that can help you get to the bottom of things. SIW is incredibly detailed in its analysis, next to nothing is left uncatalogued from the timings of your memory modules to the DLL files loaded to what applications you have set to autorun at startup. Even if you’re not currently experiencing any computer issues, SIW gives you a really interesting peek inside your computer.
Hiren’s BootCD (Live CD, Free)
Hiren’s BootCD is an impressive toolkit rolled into one packed DOS-based Live CD. Sporting over a hundred separate diagnostic and repair tools, Hiren’s BootCD can help you do everything from diagnose a memory problem to clone a disk to speed test your video card. If you can’t find out what is wrong with your computer after running through all the tools on Hiren’s BootCD the diagnostic answer you may end up at is “Time to buy a new computer.” A note about Hiren’s BootCD: many of the diagnostic tools gathered on the disc are abandonware or older versions of still produced commercial software. The legal status of Hiren’s BootCD is murky so Hiren doesn’t directly host the disc image himself. You’ll need to search Google to find location like here and here where the disc is hosted. If you’re not comfortable with murky areas of Hiren’s method for assembling the boot disc, you’ll find plenty of other excellent boot discs in this Hive Five that contain only freeware and open-source software.
Google/Search Engines (Web-based, Free)
Your first reaction to the phrase “computer diagnostic tool” might not be “Google!”, but every computer diagnosis begins with the user wondering what the error code or chain of events leading up to the error means. We’ve solved countless problems around the Lifehacker office by simply plugging in an error code or describing the problem in common terms and letting Google do the heavy lifting. Google tirelessly kicks back thousands of web pages, forum posts, and even old Usenet postings to help you drill down to your specific issue. Your favorite search engine isn’t necessarily a diagnostic tool in the traditional sense, but it should be the first place you stop whenever you have a computer issue. Many of the solutions we’ve found over the years using Google were extremely specific and pointed us towards using a just-for-that-problem application or tweak we would have never found otherwise.
Ubuntu Live CD(Live CD, Free)
You’ll find no shortage of Live CDs for Linux distributions, but Ubuntu has a particularly user-friendly Live CD and many people have experience with Ubuntu outside of diagnostic work, both make an Ubuntu Live CD extra appealing. You can use an Ubuntu Live CD totest your computer’s memory, recover data, or scan your computer for viruses among other tasks. Live CDs are great for giving you a platform to work off of independently of your troubled system and an Ubuntu Live CD has the benefit of an enormous community of Ubuntu users and all the accompanying how-to guides and information.
Ultimate Boot CD for Windows (UBCD4Win)(Live CD, Free)
If you’re a Windows user and you’re not comfortable going back to your roots with a DOS-based boot disc and you definitely don’t feel comfortable with a Linux one then UBCD4Win is just what you’re looking for. UBCD4Win’s strongest selling point is the stripped down version of Windows XP—Windows PE—which makes it dead simple for Windows users to jump in and start using the numerous diagnostic tools on UBCD4Win. When your version of Windows is flaking out on you, it’s comforting to jump into a Live CD version of Windows to continue your diagnostic work without having to mess around with the nuances of using a Linux Live CD.
Resource Link :http://lifehacker.com/5551188/best-computer-diagnostic-tools?skyline=true&s=i
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Philanthropy Act
May 31st, 2010
Philanthropy is the effort or inclination to increase the well-being of humankind, as by charitable aid or donations. We want to help poor or person who is in real need of money.Varshyltech always comes up with a new and innovate ideas. We have so many Charitable firms and helping Aids organizations in our country. We can take help of such organizations and the amount collected can be given to them but our motto is to give money who is in need of it. So we have decided that we will give the money to strangers and ask a question if you get a certain amount of money what you will do with it if we are satisfied with the answer we will give that amount to the stranger. Stranger can be anybody He/She can be from any part of the world. This time the stranger was our Office Guard, Many times we noticed that he is not having a fan in his room and still he is managing with the Delhi Hot and Humid temperature. So we decided if we help a guard by giving a certain amount he can buy the fan it would be really helpful to him, but as we always do we ask the question and found out that his financial condition is very bad and hardly he is managing the things. So our philanthropy act this time helps the office guard and we can see smile on his face. It was a little contribution from our Varshyltech family but our little combined effort help the person who really needs it and we are satisfied that amount given to a person is in right hand and right use.
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SILICON SCARE :Man a ‘carrier’ for computer virus
May 27th, 2010
Contaminated Chip, Inside User’s Body, Can Transfer Virus To Electronic Systems That Interact With It
In what is being touted as a world first, a British scientist says he has been infected with a computer virus.
The scientist, Mark Gasson, claims to have been infected with the virus after he contaminated an electronic chip which was inserted into his hand.
Gasson, of the University of Reading, said the device was programmed with a virus which could transfer itself to other electronic systems it came in contact with, the BBC News website reported on Wednesday.
Any other chips that interacted with the infected systems would also contract the virus, he said, raising the possibility that in the future, advanced medical devices such as pacemakers could become vulnerable to cyber attacks.
Gasson’s computer chip, a refined version of the ID chips used to track animals, has been programmed to open security doors for him and to unlock his mobile phone automatically.
The chip in Gasson’s hand is a high-end radio frequency identification chip, a sophisticated version of the technology used in shop security tags and for identifying pets. The device, the size of the grain of rice, allowed him secure access to University buildings and his mobile phone.
Once infected with the virus, the microchip contaminated the system that was used to communicate with it. It would also have infected any other devices it was connected to.
Gasson deliberately introduced a computer virus into an electronic chip that had been implanted into his left hand last year, in order to study its effects.
The results allegedly prove the principle that in future, human implants like this could contaminate increasingly complex medical devices such as pacemakers and cochlear implants.
“With the benefits of this type of technology come risks. We may improve ourselves in some way but much like the improvements with other technologies, mobile phones for example, they become vulnerable to risks, such as security problems and computer viruses,” Gasson was quoted by BBC News as saying.
Implanted technology has become increasingly common in the United States, where medical alert bracelets can be scanned to bring up a patient’s medical history.
Professor Rafael Capurro, of the Steinbeis-Transfer-Institute of Information Ethics in Germany, added: “If someone can get online access to your implant, it could be serious.
“From an ethical point of view, the surveillance of implants can be both positive and negative. Surveillance can be part of medical care, but if someone wants to do harm to you, it could be a problem.”
Gasson, however, said technology with surveillance capabilities could in future become widely used for non-medical purposes. “If we can find a way of enhancing someone’s memory or their IQ then there’s a real possibility that people will choose to have this kind of invasive procedure,” he said in the BBC interview. AGENCIES

Resource – Times of India
27 May 2010














