
- No tethering between iPhone and iPad. Why not?
- Motorola Backflip getting bad reviews.
- Fake Core i7 chips appear to be floating around.
- Panasonic and Best Buy to push 3D TV sets.
- Apple stores now axing repurposed Apps.
- Energizer Trojan infecting machines for 3 years. How did it get by everyone.
- Cisco quits Wi-Max radio business.
- ZDnet thinks netbooks stink.
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Right click here and select ‘Save Link As…’ to download the mp3 file.
For your “only in Florida” file:
http://keysnews.com/node/21349
I don’t think cheap portable computers with good battery life are going away any time soon. For many people they get the job done.
Yes, you can use a USB thumb drive to get infected with malware. Remember U3? Windows honors it. If you stick a U3 formatted USB drive in your Windows box, it intalls and runs the software contained on it.
Scary….
And of course there is no way to tell if a USB thumbdrive is U3 formatted until you stick it in.
2 Things:
1) These are two links concerning the Eveready USB malware. One from the US Dept. of Homeland Security’s Computer Emergency Readiness Team and the other from Symantec.
http://www.kb.cert.org/vuls/id/154421
http://www.symantec.com/connect/blogs/trojan-found-usb-battery-charger-software
This malware is capable of sending file names AND their contents back to a remote user – it even encrypts this data.
2) Until recently there was only one laptop computer in the entire US that can read the black box data of a Toyota Prius. My question is: Could there be corrupt or malware data in the car’s computer since no one can read the data anyway? The government must insist on a data dump of memory and then a thorough analysis in order to verify statements such as “there isn’t an electronics problem”.