Wednesday, 16 November 2011

Anatomy of Viruses


What is a computer Virus and how do they work?
Viruses can create a technological holocaust for millions of computers around the world. Businesses fret over the potential for a catastrophic meltdown of networks. Individual consumers worry about zapping their computer's hard drive simply by clicking the wrong e-mail attachment. Experts say such worries are well-founded, but emphasize that a combination of the latest anti-virus software and common sense will drastically reduce the odds of being infected. The cost of not taking such precautions can be high.
How they work, and what to look for.
Dreaded computer viruses, you hear all about these nasty nasties, but do you really know what they are and what havoc they can wreak? The mere thought conjures up devastation and turmoil and can get your imagination rolling. Tall tales, such as the Good Times Virus and other hoaxes, have made it hard for most of us non-anti-virus researchers to determine fact from fiction.
The following description seeks to get to the bottom of just what viruses are, how to avoid infestation, how to determine if you've caught one, and what to do if you have.
In the simplest of terms, a virus is a computer program that reproduces itself and attaches that copy to other computer programs. It does so in such a way that its instructions (viral code) are carried forward when the infected program is launched or when an infected disk is left in the disk drive and allowed to boot. The most troubling part about this is that it is done without the consent or knowledge of the computer user.
Viruses can be as benign as a minor case of acne, such as those that display pleasant or annoying messages, or as malignant as a full spread disease, such as those that destroy your data files and system.
Rest assured, only a small percentage of viruses are of the latter type. In fact, there are nearly 20,000 known viruses for the PC (There are a lot less Mac viruses.) of which only 500 are currently "in the wild" (circulating on unsuspecting computers). Of that, only 20-50 are known to cause serious damage. For more information on the prevalence of viruses, visit http://www.virusbtn.com/WildLists.
All viruses follow pretty much the same course of action. When the virus code is run it reproduces and infects other programs. When it starts to spread is usually a characteristic of that particular virus. Some infect each time they are run. Other more tricky ones infect when triggered by a certain time, date, function, or other external event.
Then some have an attack phase, otherwise known as a "payload," associated with them. A payload is the damaging effect of the virus that runs the gamut from deleting files or randomly changing data on your disk to playing music or creating messages or animations on your screen. When the virus inflicts its damage is also characteristic of the particular virus.
But most delay doing so only until after they've had time to spread. Some are written to spread only which is bothersome as well because they take up space and slow down your system.
A graduate student at MIT, as part of a controlled experiment he was conducting, wrote the first virus in 1986. A year later, hackers caught on and began writing and spreading viruses. By 1990-1991 the number of viruses found in the wild started to flourish. There are several types of viruses: Boot Sector, File, Macro, Polymorphic, Stealth and Resident viruses. Some viruses can possess characteristics of more than one of these types.
"Many people will get a virus at one point or another, and some of them will be harmed by it," said Bruce Peters, a anti-virus and data recovery expert. "Some will lose data, some will suffer no damage other than the time, effort, and stress it takes to remove the virus. Some will spread the virus to others and damage the most valuable thing: their reputations."


Anatomy of a Virus
Though most computer users have learned to fear viruses, few really know what they are. Viruses are programs that replicate themselves inside a computer. The malicious bug cannot do its damage when a user simply surfs the Web or opens a plain text message such as an e-mail. However, viruses are unleashed when they are hidden in attachments to e-mail messages and someone opens that attachment. After viruses replicate, many carry out damaging instructions that have been programmed into them.
The Melissa virus from March 1999 is a good example of how viruses inflict damage. Melissa lurked inside an e-mail Microsoft Word attachment. The person who received the message had no reason to suspect anything dangerous; in fact, the e-mail's subject line appeared to be from someone the recipient recognized.
However, once the recipient clicked on the attachment, Melissa fused itself to a Word object and began rifling through the poor victim's address book. Soon, Melissa was e-mailing tainted attachments to the first 50 names in the recipients address book.
"Some viruses do nothing except replicate," Peters said. "Some will do damage, but not intentionally. Then again, there are those that attempt - and sometimes succeed - in destroying all files on the computer, or subtly altering data in documents, or whatever nasty thing you can conceive that a computer program is capable of doing."
To make matters worse, those who create viruses continually add new twists to their method of attack. Late in June, the Stages virus struck. Before Stages, computer users were assured that viruses could not be spread through text files. So, when Microsoft Outlook users saw an attachment that appeared as "LIFE_STAGES.TXT," many figured it was safe to open. When they did so, a humorous test file about dating appeared.
What users didn't realize was that the attachment was not a text file but had a hidden .SHS extension, which meant it contained infected computer code. Soon, the virus was on the loose and e-mailing itself to everyone in the recipient's address book.
Peters hopes the recent wave of high-profile viruses will cause lawmakers to treat the problem as the potentially serious crime that it is. However, he said the war on this scourge requires vigilance.
"Yes, we'll become more successful overall," he said. "But yes, things will get worse, too: my prediction is that while more viruses will be prevented on a percentage basis, there will always be a few high profile successes by the virus writers.
"Those successes, however, will be short-lived, because anti-virus companies will be quick to create a solution to each new threat."

What is Cookies?


All About Cookies
Cookies are usually small text files that are stored on your computer's browser directory or program data subfolders. Cookies are created when you use your browser to visit a website that uses cookies to keep track of your movements within the site, help you resume where you left off, remember your registered login, theme selection, preferences, and other customization functions.
Cookies are often indispensable for websites that have huge databases, need logins, have customizable themes, other advanced features.
Cookies usually don't contain much information except for the url of the website that created the cookie, the duration of the cookie's abilities and effects, and a random number. Due to the little amount of information a cookie contains, it usually cannot be used to reveal your identity or personally identifying information.
There are two types of cookies: session cookies and persistent cookies. Session cookies are created temporarily in your browser's subfolder while you are visiting a website. Once you leave the site, the session cookie is deleted. On the other hand, persistent cookie files remain in your browser's subfolder and are activated again once you visit the website that created that particular cookie. A persistent cookie remains in the browser's subfolder for the duration period set within the cookie's file.
A cookie is a text-only string of information that a website transfers to the cookie file of the browser on your computer's hard disk so that the website can remember who you are.
A cookie will typically contain the name of the domain from which the cookie has come, the "lifetime" of the cookie, and a value, usually a randomly generated unique number. Two types of cookies are used on this website-session cookies, which are temporary cookies that remain in the cookie file of your browser until you leave the site, and persistent cookies, which remain in the cookie file of your browser for much longer (though how long will depend on the lifetime of the specific cookie).
Cookies can help a website to arrange content to match your preferred interests more quickly. Most major websites use cookies. Cookies cannot be used by themselves to identify you

Monday, 14 November 2011

Instalasi DosBox dan Windows di Ponsel Symbian


Uhm, untuk menjawab banyaknya pertanyaan yang pernah gw tulis tentang Windows 3.1 di HP Symbian v.9.3? yang tak sempat gw balas di blog gw ini karena keterbatasan waktu yang gw miliki, melalui tulisan kali ini gw akan memberikan pencerahan bagi netter yang sudah berusaha mencoba menginstalasi Windows 3.1, Windows 95 atau Windows 98 di ponsel dengan sistem operasi Symbian :)
Berikut ini akan gw berikan link download untuk tutorial ( guide ) yang diperlukan saat mengoprek DosBox dan Windows ( jadul ) di ponsel dengan sistem operasi Symbian yang sudah didukung oleh tools tersebut. Untuk cara instalasi ( installation guide ) dapat kamu download disini ya! Kemudian untuk referensi link download aplikasi yang diperlukan dapat di-downloadpada beberapa item dibawah ini :

Sunday, 13 November 2011

Household Appliance Manuals


Household Appliance Manuals

Free Household Appliance manuals and product support information for air conditioners, dehumidifiers and more.

Find your Household Appliance manual by selecting a product:

  • Air Cleaner Manuals
    Air Ionizer, Air Purifier, Electrostatic Air Cleaner, Furnace Air Filter, HEPA Air Purifier
  • Air Conditioner Manuals
    A/C, AC, Air Conditioner Heater, Air Conditioner Unit, Air Conditioner Wall Unit
  • Boiler Manuals
    Gas Boiler, Gas Fired Boiler, Gas-fired Boiler, Oil Boiler, Oil-fired Boiler
  • Burner Manuals
    Electric Burner, Electric Oil Burner, Gas Burner, Gas Furnace Burner, Home Oil Burner
  • Carbon Monoxide Alarm Manuals
    Battery-powered Carbon Monoxide Detector, Carbon Monoxide Detector Alarm, Carbon Monoxide Detector, Carbon Monoxide Gas Detector, Carbon Monoxide Sensor
  • Carpet Cleaner Manuals
    All Surface Floor Cleaner, All Surface Floor/Carpet Cleaner, All-surface Floor/Carpet Cleaner, Carpet Cleaning Machine, Carpet Steam Cleaner
  • Dehumidifier Manuals
    Air Dehumidifier, Basement Dehumidifier, Commercial Dehumidifier, Compact Dehumidifier, Console Dehumidifier
  • Door Manuals
    Central Door Lock, Combination Door Lock, Deadbolt, Digital Door Lock, Door Bell
  • Electric Heater Manuals
    Baseboard Convection Heater, Baseboard Electrical Heater, Baseboard Heater, Ceramic Baseboard Heater, Ceramic Electric Heater
  • Fan Manuals
    3-speed Fan, Adjustable Window Fan, Air Cooler, Air Evaporative Cooler, Box Fan
  • Fire Extinguisher Manuals
    Home Fire Extinguisher, Kitchen Fire Extinguisher, Portable Fire Extinguisher
  • Flooring Manuals
    Carpeting, Ceramic Tile Flooring, Cork Flooring, Hardwood Flooring, Laminate Flooring
  • Furnace Manuals
    Coal Furnace, Coal/Wood Furnace, Electric Furnace, Gas Furnace, Gas-fired Furnace
  • Garage Door Opener Manuals
    Automatic Garage Door Opener, Carriage Door, Door Opener Remote, Door Opener, Electric Garage Door Opener
  • Gas Heater Manuals
    Baseboard Convection Heater, Baseboard Gas Heater, Baseboard Heater, Compact Convection Heater, Convection Baseboard Heater
  • Heat Pump Manuals
    Electric Heat Pump, Gas Heat Pump, Geothermal Heat Pump, Natural Gas Heat Pump, Package Heat Pump
  • Heating System Manuals
    Central Heat, Central Heating System, Electric Heating System, Gas Heating System, Home Heating System
  • Home Safety Product Manuals
    Crank Flashlight, Emergency Fire Escape Ladder, Emergency Flashlight, Fire Escape Ladder, Fire Safety Ladder
  • Home Security System Manuals
    Home Alarm System, Home Burglar Alarm System, Home Monitoring Camera, Home Motion Detector, Home Security Alarm System
  • Humidifier Manuals
    Air Humidifier, Cold Mist Humidifier, Console Humidifier, Cool Air Humidifier, Cool Humidifier
  • Indoor Fireplace Manuals
    Built-in Electric Fireplace, Built-in Gas Fireplace, Built-in Wood Fireplace, Electric Fireplace, Fireplace Insert
  • Indoor Furnishings Manuals
    Bathroom Lighting, Bedroom Lighting, Ceiling Lighting Fixture, Ceiling Lighting, Ceiling Lights
  • Pet Care Product Manuals
    Animal Clippers, Animal Hair Vacuum Cleaner, Pet Clippers, Pet Hair Upright Vacuum Cleaner, Pet Hair Vacuum Cleaner
  • Plumbing Product Manuals
    Basin Sink, Basin, Bath Faucet, Bathroom Faucet, Bathroom Sink
  • Septic System Manuals
    Effluent Pump, Ejector System, Pump, Sewage Ejector Pump, Sewage Ejector System
  • Sewing Machine Manuals
    Button Sewing Machine, Compact Sewing Machine, Domestic Sewing Machine, Dressmaker Sewing Machine, Embroidery Machine
  • Siding Manuals
    Exterior Home Siding, Exterior House Siding, Exterior Siding, Exterior Vinyl Siding, Vinyl Siding
  • Smoke Alarm Manuals
    Battery-powered Smoke Detector, Beam Smoke Detector, Beeping Smoke Detector, Commercial Smoke Detector, Electric Smoke Detector
  • Stove Manuals
    Cast Iron Wood Burning Stove, Cast Iron Woodburning Stove, Cast Iron Wood-burning Stove, Coal Burning Stove, Coal Stove
  • Thermostat Manuals
    Digital Thermostat, Electric Thermostat, Electronic Thermostat, Furnace Thermostat, Heater Thermostat
  • Vacuum Cleaner Manuals
    All Floor Vacuum, All Floors Upright Vacuum, All Floors Vacuum, All-floors Vacuum, Bag Vacuum Cleaner
  • Water Heater Manuals
    Electric Hot Water Heater, Electric Water Heater, Gas Hot Water Heater, Gas Water Heater, Hot Water Heater
  • Water Pump Manuals
    Centrifugal Pump, Centrifugal Water Pump, Condensate Pump, Condensate Water Pump, Convertible Jet Pump
  • Water System Manuals
    Automatic Water Conditioner, Electric Water Softener, Hard Water Softener, Home Water Filtration System, Home Water Purification System
  • Window Manuals
    Casement Window, Vinyl Replacement Window, Vinyl Window, Windows, Wood-frame Window

How To: Install Windows Mobile 6.5 Right Now


The bad news: Windows Mobile 6.5 won't be coming out for a while, and you'll be expected to buy a whole new phone to get it. The good: You can actually install it today, on your HTC phone. Here's how.
Why should you upgrade to Windows Mobile 6.5? Disregarding the mixed coverage the OS has gotten—which tends to compare it to more modern software like iPhone OS and Android—6.5 is much, much better less terrible than 6.1, especially for touchscreen phones You've probably heard about the new graphical start menu and fantastic Titanium home screen; they're great, but there's a lot more to appreciate. IE has been updated; all menus are now finger-friendly; the whole system has inertial scrolling; there's been a system-wide cosmetic refresh. That's not to mention the upcoming Windows Mobile Marketplace, Microsoft take on the App Store. On top of that, at least in my experience, it's pretty snappy.
Dozens of Windows Mobile 6.5 Beta ROMs are floating around the tubes, collected, tweaked and prepared for your use by the kindly souls over at XDA Developers, from whom I've adapted this How To. Despite their unofficial-ness, they're really quite good—the fancy new interface elements are buttery smooth, and as a whole, and enough bugs have been stamped out to make 6.5 solid enough to use as your day-to-day OS.
This How To is based around my experience with a GSM HTC Touch Diamond. The process is largely the same between the few handsets that can run 6.5, but for the sake of brevity, I'm sticking to one handset, and its QWERTYed brother, the Touch Pro. For further guidance on other phones, head over to the XDA forums (CDMA Touch and ProTouch HDSony Xperia,Samsung Omnia)
Also, the necessary disclaimer: this tutorial reaches deep into your phone's software, which means there's a (slim) possibility that you'll brick your phone should anything go wrong. If you're worried, read up on the risks here. Otherwise, follow closely and you—and your phone—should be just fine.
What You'll Need:
• An HTC Touch Diamond or Touch Pro (GSM only. Folks with CDMA handsets—that's you, Sprint and Verizon—go here or here.)
• A (free) account at XDA Developers
• A Windows Mobile 6.5 ROM (Lotsa choices here: DiamondPro)
• A Windows PC, set up to sync with your handset
• A device flashing utility (Both)
• A bootloader (DiamondPro)
• A device radio (DiamondPro—Make sure to download from the "Original" list, not the "Repacked" one.)
Before you get started, you'll probably want to back up your contacts and personal info. I'd recommend PIM Backup, which I've used for years. Or you could try Microsoft's new, free online service called My Phone. This How To will replace all your device's software, so if you have anything worth keeping, you'll need to back it up.
Installing the bootloader:
Many of you have probably updated, or "flashed" your devices before, but this will have been with an official, signed utility from either your carrier or handset manufacturer. What we're doing today is installing unofficial software, something which your handset isn't currently set up to do. Our first order of business, then, is to install a new bootloader, called HardSPL, on the device, which will allow your handset to load software from third parties, i.e., your sweet, sweet Windows Mobile ROM. Let's go:
1. Connect your phone to your PC, and establish an ActiveSync (on XP) or Sync Center (on Vista, or Windows 7) connection to your device. You don't need to set up any sync rules—just makes sure the connection is active. You can check this by looking for a bi-directional arrow in your phone's taskbar.
2. Extract the bootloader you've downloaded, and note the location (see "What You'll Need" for links)
3. Find your extracted files, and run the executable file (usually called "ROMUpdateUtility.exe" or something like that.
4. Follow the instructions, carefully. The software performs lots of checks to make sure you don't goof this up, but make sure you a.) have at least 50% battery left in your phone b.) the correct bootloader c.) a host computer that won't shut off, go to sleep or otherwise interrupt the process. Heed! Or else there may be bricking.
5. Wait! You'll see paired progress bars on your phone and computer screen. This part of the process doesn't take that long, since you're only updating a small piece of software.
6. Restart your phone. The small text in the corner of your Windows Mobile splash screen will have changed to something unfamiliar, but don't worry about verifying your new bootloader. If you ran the utility to completion and the device restarted on its own, it's more or less a sure thing that you're upgraded.
Installing a new device radio:
This is the most esoteric part of the process, so I'll try not to get too deep into the nuts and bolts. Basically, your device has firmware that manages its various antennae, letting you connect to cellular networks, GPS, etc. Installing a fresh Radio onto your device usually won't make much of a change in how your phone works. it just lets us—or rather, your soon-to-be mobile OS, manage your phone's communication capabilities freely. Some radios can improve reception on certain networks, or even connect to entirely new mobile bands. For more info on that, I'l refer you again to XDA.
You'll probably notice that this process is seems an awfully lot like the last stage: that's because it is. Since we're "flashing" different parts of your phone's software in each step, the core utility, and general technique, is quite similar. Anyway!
7. Pair your phone with your PC, like you did in step 1.
8. Extract your downloaded radio files and note their location
9. If the radio came with its own bootloader, skip to step 12.
10. Extract your downloaded bootloader, noting location.
11. Copy the extracted radio file—it should have an .NBH extension—to the directory where you've put your bootloader.
12. Run the bootloader, as in step 3.
13. Follow the instructions, as in steps 4 and 5.
14. Let the phone restart. Nothing much will have changed, but you may need to perform some minor network setup. Don't worry too much about that now, since you're about to wipe your whole device.
Flashing the ROM, i.e. Installing Windows Mobile 6.5
This is when we get down to actually installing our new OS. This is the step that'll take the longest, and it's the biggest leap of faith, since you're replacing your device's main software. Luckily, if you've come this far, it'll be a snap. Same process, different .NBH file. Onward!
15. Pair your phone to your PC (this is the last time! promise!)
16. Extract your downloaded bootloader, again, to a different location. (Or you can use the same copy you used to flash your radio; just make sure you delete the radio file from the directory)
17. Extract your Windows Mobile 6.5 ROM, which should be an .NBH file of about 80-100MB, to the same directory that your bootloader is in.
18. Run the bootloader, and follow the instructions. Same warnings as before—don't let your PC or phone sever the connection at any point.
19. Sit and wait. This time it'll take a bit longer, but shouldn't top 15-20 minutes.
20. Your phone will reset, and you should see a fresh Windows Mobile 6.5 splash screen. It might look hacked or unprofessional—don't be alarmed! The guys who so graciously put together these ROMs, which often take a good deal of tweaking, leave their marks on the software in various ways. Anyhoo, you'll have to let your phone run through a set of initialization routines for a little while. Just follow along.
21. WinMo should automatically guess your carrier and apply the appropriate connections settings. If not, you can do it from the device's Settings page, found in the top level of the new start menu. As for the settings parameters, Google is your friend.
Conclusion:
How To: Install Windows Mobile 6.5 Right NowCongratulations! You are now the proud, semi-legal owner of a Windows Mobile 6.5 smartphone! It's hard to imagine wanting to switch back, but if you do, just repeat the above process with a different ROM. There are plenty of 6.1 installs, including the official carrier versions, available from the same place you found your 6.5 download.
Resources:
So that's about it! Please add in your experiences in the comments-your feedback is a huge benefit to our Saturday guides. Good luck with your flashing (firmware only, please), and have a great weekend!

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