Categories
Uncategorized

“Mommy, Why is there a Server in my House?”

On www.stayathomeserver.com you can find a new series of videos that describe the new Windows Home Server product on MSN Soapbox…

Videos are also available on YouTube:

The team also has a new book out, just in time for the holidays and to help parents answer some of the most difficult questions that parents have to confront… namely that new piece of hardware connected to the home network.

image004Forget about explaining about the birds and the bees, “Mommy, Why is there a Server in my House?” will help parents explain why there is a new member of the family. You can find more info on this new book on www.stayathomeserver.com today, and coming to a major e-tailer near you.

See the new announcements on the Windows Home Server blog… 

http://blogs.technet.com/homeserver/archive/2007/11/30/home-computer-home-network-home-server.aspx

Categories
Uncategorized

Cybercrime: Mercury News on Ghosts in the Browser: Protecting yourself online

It’s a busy time if year for shopping, traveling, spoofing and hacking. Do you know where your credit card number is right now?  And I trust that your ATM card is safely tucked away (PIN secure) and hasn’t been duplicated by an unsavory individual intent on depleting your bank account via a corner store ATM in a far off land.

Check out Ryan Blitstein’s special report in the Mercury News on how thieves are using computers and the Internet to commit cybercrimes.

Part I: How online crooks put us all at risk
A group of high-tech entrepreneurs has turned the Internet into a tool for massive fraud.

Part II: How well are we protecting ourselves?
Businesses, governments, and citizens fail to take precautions, allowing cybercrooks to thrive.

Part III: U.S. targets terrorists as online thieves run amok
The U.S. government isn’t devoting the resources needed to combat Internet crime. 

Additional, related articles and links from the Merc:

  • Online crooks often escape prosecution
  • 10 ways to protect yourself online
  • Anti-cybercrime laws a tough sell in Congress
  • San Jose police fight online crime; resources scarce in other cities
  • Legislation: Watered down, slowed down
  • Digital detective work
  • More from Part I: Storm rages across Web
  • Cybercrook’s dictionary
  • Tool prices for online criminals
  • Categories
    Uncategorized

    Coming December 11: The Windows Cumulative DST & TZ Update for 2008

    Coming December 11th to an Internet connection near you: the 2008 Cumulative Daylight Saving Time and Time Zone update for Windows OSes.  And yes, Venezuela is part of this update.  This update is now available for IT Pros and SysAdmins as a download from Microsoft KB Article 942763.


    Generally, end users do not have to install these updates manually, as updates like this one will be installed automagically via Windows Update beginning on December 11, 2007 rather than download and install these from the Microsoft Download Centre (as noted in the KB article link above).  For end users who have their PCs managed by a central administrator, please contact your IT administrator for information on how PCs on your network will be updated. 


    More about Venezuela. Typically, the government of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela has observed South America Western Standard Time. According to current official reports, the start date for new time zone is yet to be determined, but reported to occur on December 9th, 2007.


    When customers move their Windows clients to the new time zone, clocks will move backwards 30 minutes, from UTC -4:00 to UTC -4:30. This change begins at 2:59:59 PM local time on the start date. Clocks should be moved back to 2:30:00 PM rather than advancing to 3:00:00 AM. For more information, please see Microsoft KB article 942763 for the Windows Cumulative Update.


    For a Web log of the most common questions and answers about moving appointments from one time zone to another for Venezuela, visit the following Web site:


    http://blogs.technet.com/dst2007/archive/2007/10/04/time-zone-move-and-the-outlook-time-zone-data-update-tool.aspx


    Tags: Microsoft, Daylight Saving Time, Daylight Savings Time, DST.

    Categories
    Uncategorized

    Snowing in Seattle

    New Seattle snow + no sitter = no evening out. ;(

    We had to cancel our busy evening plans due to several factors, much of which was due to snow.  Up to a couple of inches in our area, much of which has stuck for the night. (It’s not that common.) 

    Oh, well.

    We made lemonade: the boys loved it and built a couple of snow men in the front yard, followed by cocoa with dinner.

    Have a good weekend.

     

    More info:

    Categories
    Uncategorized

    Bringo, GetHuman offer ways to avoid phone tree hell

    “Thank you for reading our blog today. Your visit is VERY important to us. Please select from the following options. Please make sure you read through to the entire menu because our options have recently changed.”


    OK, not really.  All options are still available in the left-hand nav. And happy December – we have snow on the ground today.

    I read about an interesting new company featured in the Seattle Times today (courtesy of Craig Crossman, McClatchy-Tribune News Service): Bringo, serving customers calling a company with automated phone trees:


    “(In the automated phone tree) you finally hear the option you want and press it. You are then presented with a sub-menu of choices. “Please select one of the following seven items.” You listen and then make another selection. You then hear “Please select from the following six options,” and so it continues.


    “It is somewhere around the third sub-menu that your mounting frustration makes you either give up or start pressing random phone keys in hopes that you might be connected to a live person who can actually help you.

    When you finally navigate all the appropriate menu options, you discover that you now have to wait 17 minutes. When you do finally speak to a live person, you have to swallow your tongue, least you make a comment you may regret later. There must be a better way to quickly get to a live person on the phone, and now thanks to Bringo, there is.”


    Bringo was featured with Gethuman.com in the Wall Street Journal earlier this year, “two Web sites designed to help callers connect to an employee and bypass automated systems.”

    And I like Bringo. 

    Start by visiting the Bringo Web site and search through the list of companies on their web site that you’re interested in speaking to a live person. Noted as a Chicago health-care technology, Bringo provides nearly a thousand listings.  You type in your phone number and hit a button that says “fetch.” The site rings your phone within seconds to verify that the request is legitimate.

    According to Bringo’s site, here’s how it works:


    1. Find the company you’d like to call by category (credit cards, mortgages, loans, health care)
    2. Enter your phone # (we will never disclose your phone number to anyone, not even your mother!).
    3. Wait a few seconds while we navigate the phone tree.
    4. When we call you back, pick up your phone and you’re done. No more phone trees.

    Ready to get started?


    • Click here to list all categories of companies
    • Click here for an alphabetical list of all companies

    But where are the tech companies and broadband service providers in the list of popular services?  It makes sense that these companies don’t make the top ten list of companies called (but all companies I tried to reach in the last couple of weeks.) 

    Interestingly enough, I found that of the company categories listed, I recently called only one type: Credit Cards.  For most of the others, most of my inquiries are over the web or email, even live chat.

    Oddly, AT&T Wireless isn’t listed (it’s reached via the listing for Cingular), and Comcast isn’t listed in the ISP list.  And on the computer hardware page, Dell numbers occupy more than a third of the listings.  But that stuff is easily fixed.

    Back to what works. 

    Bringo’s site navigates the company’s phone tree for you, and then calls you back when it finally finds a live person (or in the queue).

    So, let’s take a look at Bringo’s main entry for Microsoft:


    Microsoft: Avoid the phone tree and talk directly to a human at Microsoft. Microsoft is leading software company. Its main products are: Windows XP, MS Office, Internet Explorer. Company owns also MSN.com website and manufacturers XBOX 360 game console.

    This company’s operators may answer very quickly after we navigate the phone tree. This may cause them to hang up before you are connected. In the event that this happens, you may try Bringo again, or dial them directly and press “0” at each prompt when connection is established.


    Sweet. 😉

    So, before using the service, try dialing the number that Bringo has listed on their site and see if you get a live person quickly. 

    BTW, for Microsoft Tech Support, call (in the US) 1-800‑642‑7676, and press 0 at each prompt, ignoring messages.  (Thanks, GetHuman.)

    As with gethuman.com, take a look at the telephone number listings on the sites and paths for getting a hold of a live person.  But when you are faced with the dreaded automated warning, “your call will be handled in twenty minutes,” head over to Bringo and see if that works for you.


    Tags: Microsoft, Customer Service, Customer Support.