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Your questions: I can’t find Form Fill in Live Toolbar beta. Where can I find it?

Thanks to Bethany for her question sent via email

"I just installed the Live Toolbar beta and now I can’t find Form Fill.  Do you know where I can find it?"

Well, short answer is you can’t: the Form Fill and Windows Live Favorites add-ins aren’t available on Windows Live Toolbar beta.  This from the Help documentation:

"When you upgraded Toolbar beta, your Form Fill and Windows Live Favorites add-in settings were preserved on your local computer. To use these features, you must uninstall all of your Windows Live beta downloads and reinstall your previous version."

To the Live team: a great beta product but It would be nice if you were informed prior to installing the beta. Maybe you included the notice, but I missed that reference.

How do you get it back? Sadly (for now), the advice is to go back to the release version…

To uninstall Windows Live Toolbar beta:

  1. In Windows XP, click Start, and then click Run.

    –or–

    In Windows Vista, click the Start button, and then click in the Start Search box.

  2. Type appwiz.cpl, and then press ENTER.
  3. Click Windows Live Beta (all programs), and then click Remove or Uninstall/Change.
  4. Click Change, and then click Continue.
  5. Under You haven’t installed these yet, clear all of the check boxes.
  6. Under You installed these earlier, clear all of the check boxes, and then click Continue.
  7. Follow the on-screen instructions

To install the previous version of Toolbar beta:

  1. Go to the Windows Live website, and then click Get it free.
  2. Follow the on-screen instructions.

Tags: Microsoft, Your questions, Windows Live.

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Dude, I’m returning a Dell: the hard drive failed on our new PC

j0414099[1]I wanted to share a very frustrating story with you that happened to me last weekend, one that I shared with Dell’s customer advocate folks.


You may’ve read my post on the poor customer experience at my neighbouhood Best Buy (the good, the bad… you get the picture).  I was in search of a new laptop for my wife and I purchased a new, sealed Dell Inspiron Laptop with an Intel T5750, 3GB, 250GB.  Such a model should be a good, reasonably priced replacement for her Inspiron 600M. 


Over the weekend, I backed up and migrated the files from my wife’s old notebook to this new machine: file transfer was easy using Windows Vista Easy Transfer.  I spent the bulk of my time on installing applications.  All was well, my wife was happy and the kids were thrilled of the promise of a new computer in the kitchen.


After using the PC for a few hours, the machine froze. 


Uh oh.


I restarted by holding the power key and after running through the self test, I found in the diagnostics that the hard disk was no longer recognized, making a repetitive clicking and whirring sound.  To my ear, it sounded as if the drive had fallen and was unable to get up.


So back to Best Buy I went.  After taking the unit behind the curtain, the Geek Squad determined that the unit was in fact unrecoverable, and my only options were to exchange it for another PC (but not a similar 1525, as they were sold out) or return it for a full refund.   could get one form another store a couple of hours away (no thanks) so I opted for the refund.  To their credit, Best Buy’s return staff were courteous, helpful and sympathetic.


Oh, and while I was in line, saw several Dell PCs on the returns table – this didn’t inspire confidence.


One of my concerns about the returns process wasn’t how the credit would appear on our credit card statement, but how Best Buy would ensure that our personal identifying information would be erased/ destroyed from this drive.  After asking, Best Buy’s manager on site assured me that the unit would be returned to Dell and that it would not be resold.  But knowing that Dell has a healthy refurbished sales channel, and lots of stock ends up on Best Buy’s “returns” table, I’m still a little concerned.  How does Dell deal with drives that fail in the field returned for refurbishing?


So far, no word from Dell’s customer advocates (via email).


I am a long time Dell owner (several towers, laptops) and a little upset at the time I spent this weekend migrating my wife’s data to this new machine.  In all, these are steps I will have to repeat when buying a new replacement machine for her 600M. Frankly, I don’t think that I will invest in another Dell personally purchased via box box retail – all my Dell PCs have been built to order (BTO) direct from Dell. 


With back to school and holiday sales on the horizon, there may be a good time to buy coming up, assuming my wife’s trusty Inspiron 600M lasts.  (I expect that it will.)  An added bonus for this tried and true notebook: I purchase the then-discounted four-year, full coverage (“even if you drop it we fix it”) warranty, which has paid for itself a couple of times over: Dell has so far replaced the motherboard, power supply and hard drive.  And it remains quite usable, having upgraded the more than three year old notebook from Windows XP to Vista Home Premium SP1 and Office 2007.


There are 151 days of Dell Complete Care remaining on the 600M. Maybe this notebook will see us happily into the new year.


Tags: Dell, Microsoft, Vista, Windows, Best Buy, retail, whack, Customer Service.


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The OpenX plastic package opener saves me again from nasty plastic cuts

A repost from 2006: I just reread an editorial from John Dvorak that he was ticked off at the plastic packaging that encased most gadgets at retail these days.  Timely, as I was about to open a package of PC memory with a pair of old scissors, a package that you’d think was being packaged for long term storage for the next mission to Mars…

Is anyone other than me sick and tired of the hard plastic packaging that far too many products are encased in nowadays? You need metal shop tin snips to open them. Knives will not cut the stuff. If you tear it you risk cutting your hand wide open, as the plastic turns into a razor blade when torn. Some of these packages have perforated tear-open doors, but often they do not fully release the product. Whose idea was it to develop this sort of crappy package? I hate it! Now I appreciate the fact that in certain European Union countries the law limits the amount of plastic that can be used for packaging.

If we get lucky, a few of these companies will be sued when someone nearly bleeds to death when the plastic slices someone’s wrist. A few lawsuits will do the trick. I’ve cut myself a number of times.

I recall a post I made in late 2006 (during the holidays, actually). I’m mentioning this with no professional endorsement: purely a personal view here.

How many gifts given this year come in those form-fitting clear plastic packages? I know that one present Santa brought to our five-year-old — a new ATM machine — came in such. You know the type: no matter what you do, or what tool you use, you are bound to either a) cut the item or instructions securely bound in the package, b) injure yourself or others in the family to a degree requiring a holiday trip to the urgent care clinic for some holiday-coloured stitches, or c) return the product to the store without opening in quiet protest of such packaging.

slide

I saw that Steve was worried about the same thing, and thought that I would offer this inexpensive, innovative tip: get an OpenX. This is the best thing to hit since the Olfa touch knife I tried to master in my days doing graphic design oh so many years ago. This little device now saves me agonizing injuries (I still have one little scar on my wrist from a plastic shard that continues to give me the willies) and is easy enough to use.

There are packages that are a dream to open (as I wrote about my zune OOBE), and then there are packages that double as medieval torture devices.

IMHO, the OpenX is awesome.

Tags: openx, gadgets.

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Success: I have Windows Mobile 6.1 update on my AT&T Tilt

Earlier this week I twittered that I was going to embark on a perilous effort to (gasp) install Windows Mobile 6.1 on to my AT&T Tilt, given that HTC finally released the update on their site(http://tinyurl.com/5uqey2).  I was about right that it would take an evening — about two hours in fact.

I walked through the set up process fairly quickly as the installer is pretty straight forward.  After downloading the file from HTC’s web site and installing on my PC, I ran the update package and was presented with a series of screens to verify that I in fact was aware that I was updating the ROM.  I ended up updating from ROM image 1.57.502.2 to 3.57.502.2 as noted here…

htctilt1

… and then began the update procedure…

htctilt2 htctilt3

… but then whoops!

 htctilt4

What happened? 

The cable seemed to be fine but the device lost connection during the update.  Luckily, running the installer again from the beginning corrected the problem and my device was updated in less than the estimated 10 minutes.

htctilt5htctilt6

That was the easy part.

Device clearing storage: that took the better part of an hour.

And then reestablishing the partnership with my PC, logging on to the network, installing my contacts and updating mail and my standard applications?  That took another 45 minutes or so. 

All in all, I was done in around two hours and the interface is now updated, the phone’s battery life seems to last much longer, I now have the much envied HTC Home Screen that my wife enjoys on her HTC Touch, and I’m able to send and receive phone calls (always good with a phone).  I haven’t put the phone fully through its paces, with the Video Share Calling and Remote Desktop Monitor, but I’ll get there soon enough. 

For now, I’m quite happy with my new phone, and highly recommend it.

Tags: Windows Mobile, Microsoft, HTC

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Get an ecard today? Watch out for malware, viruses and poor spelling

Be alert as you read your mail today: fake ecards with loaded exe’s are once again making the rounds…

Oooh, look at the mail that’s piling up:

“You’ve received a greeting ecard”

How exciting. Not.

Today, several mails on my email accounts at home reportedly from greetingcard.org (which Outlook displayed as from alien@got.net).

Good day.
You have received an eCard

To pick up your eCard, choose from any of the following options:
Click on the following link (or copy & paste it into your web browser):

http://somerandomurl.com/e-card.exe

Your card will be aviailable for pick-up beginning for the next 30 days.
Please be sure to view your eCard before the days are up!

We hope you enjoy you eCard.

Thank You!

http://www.greetingcard.org

Nope, not gonna do it.

First of all, I’m sure that legitimate ecard companies are better at spelling (‘aviailable’ as you know is spelled available).

Last year, In his post on Not-So-Friendly Greeting Cards, Brian Krebs of the Washington Post calls out the rise of fake online greeting cards that can install keystroke loggers on to your computer, rather than delivering what you thought to be an innocent e-card from a long lost aunt.

Here’s a couple of things to watch for:

  • If a link drives you to an exe file (an executable or application) then think twice. 
  • If the link isn’t from someone you know, think again. 
  • you've been had!If it looks like the mail comes from and directs you to a legitimate ecard site — such as American Greetings.com — be sure that it’s really http://www.americangreetings.com/ by hovering over the URL and verifying the link (see the lower left corner of your browser windows)
  • And when in doubt, copy and paste the URL directly into your browser.

For more about what to do when you see these types of emails, see my post on More greeting ecard spam and what to do about it.  And see my past note on how there’s no immunity from security vulnerabilities.

(Also, here’s the link if the embedded links above don’t work: http://blog.washingtonpost.com/securityfix/2007/07/notsofriendly_greeting_cards_1.html).  You can copy the link as text and paste it into your browser to ensure that I haven’t duped you with a loaded exe. 😉

More info:

Tags: Microsoft, security, antivirus, antispyware, Windows Defender.

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