Terry's Computer Tips - Newsletter
December 2, 2007

Terry's Computer Tips Newsletter
http://www.terryscomputertips.com
A computer tips newsletter for users of PC's.

Volume 3, Number 25 — Sunday, December 2, 2007

Part 1  | Part 2

 

IN THIS WEEK'S ON-LINE ISSUE:
   1.   What's in This Week's Email Newsletter?
   2.   Updates Last Week
   3.   The Cable Internet Connection Died - A Night Without Internet?
   4.   Computer Buying Tips — Selecting the New Computer
   3.   My Computer Security Software Recommendations
   6.   New Computer Setup & Security — Preparing to Protect Your New Computer
   4.   Recommend my Terry's Computer Tips Newsletter to Your Friends

Welcome to the on-line edition of my Terry's Computer Tips newsletter.

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1.  What's in This Week's Email Newsletter?

Are you subscribed to my free weekly Terry's Computer Tips email newsletter?

If not, you're missing some of the most important and most timely articles. This week's email newsletter included:

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After you subscribe, you'll get an opportunity to get the last two issues mailed to you automatically — of course, that's free, too.

 

2.  Updates Last Week

Microsoft (operating systems, email, web browser, office suites):
Microsoft releases almost all updates once per month, on the second Tuesday. This week did not include Patch Tuesday. It did, however, include a couple of surprise updates from Microsoft, which I wrote about in this week's email newsletter.

Firefox (web browser, http://www.mozilla.com, free):
New version. Version 2.0.0.11 was released on Friday, November 30, 2007. This was a stabilityi update to correct a problem that was found in the previous release, Firefox 2.0.0.10.

Opera (web browser, http://www.opera.com, free):
No new version this week. Version 9.24 was released on October 17th. This release is a recommended security upgrade.

Opera 9.50 beta 1 became available on October 25th. Based on the changelog, there are a lot of changes coming to Opera. But, bewware, if you're using OperaMail, this is a one-way upgrade as it will change your mail storage system.

Netscape (web browser, http://browser.netscape.com, free):
New version this week! Version 9.0.0.4 was released during the week ending December 1st. The new release includes security fixes that were included in Firefox 2.0.0.10.

SeaMonkey (web browser, email, HTML editor, newsreader; http://www.mozilla.org/projects/seamonkey; free): New version! Version 1.1.7 was released during the week ending December 1, 2007. This update includes security and stability fixes.

Eudora (email, http://www.eudora.com):
No update last week. Version 7.1.0.9 was released October 11, 2006. Eudora is now free, with no ads and no "paid mode" option.

The first beta version of v8 (v8.0.0.b1) was released several weeks ago and is available from http://wiki.mozilla.org/Penelope_Releases .

Mozilla Thunderbird (email, http://www.mozilla.com/thunderbird, free):
No new version this week. Thunderbird version 2.0.0.9 was released on November 14, 2007. This is primarily a security update.

OpenOffice (office suite — spreadsheet, word processor, presentations, graphics, web design; http://www.openoffice.org; free): Version 2.3 was released during the week ending September 22nd. This version includes new features as well as bug fixes.


 

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3.  The Cable Internet Connection Died - A Night Without Internet?

I came home from the office one day this week to a surprise — my son was waiting on me with a "I need your help, Dad" message.

In this case, I had purchased a new 8-port network switch to replace an old one that died several months ago. I'd been getting by with a 5-port switch in its place, but I was short by one port. That port needed to provide networking to my wife's SageTV Media Center Extender, which lets my SageTV-based home theater PC provide its recorded videos in her sewing room.

3com 3CGSU08 10/100/1000Mbps Gigabit Switch 8 port
After looking around, I settled on a 3com 3CGSU08 10/100/1000Mbps Gigabit 8-port Switch from NewEgg.com for $61 plus shipping.

Eventually, I expect to put a 10/100/1000 network card in my home theater PC and in my desktop computer, which acts as remote storage for the HTPC.

Well, as luck would have it, we had one of those coincidences that serve to drive people crazy.

He hadn't watched television for a while, nor had he been on the Internet. He installed the new 8-port switch but, then, the computers would not talk to the Internet. Strangely, they could get to the cable router, which meant that they were going through the new switch.

The second, and stranger, event was that the cable TV went out, too. We had enough of a connection that we could see poor quality pictures on all channels, but not good enough to watch. Obviously, the poor signal reception, from whatever cause, was also why the cable Internet connection was down.

I called Cox Cable to report the problem, just in case, and was dismayed to learn that this was not a system problem. We'd hoped that this was something on which Cox was working. But, no such luck, we were the only ones affected and the next service appointment was late the next day. Of course, I grabbed it.

As I realized that I wouldn't be able to check my emails, my first thought was my Internet dialup solution that I had maintained for several years. But, although I never managed to use up my BudgetDialup.com time before it expired ($9.95 for 20 hours that were good for up to a year — that's a total of 20, not 20 per month), my time had expired in September and I hadn't gotten around to buying any more.

Of course, the reason I hadn't was because of my free NetZero account that gives me up to 10 hours per month. This was a time for Free NetZero Dialup!

NetZero's free deal is this: I get up to 10 hours per month for free. In return, I am obligated to let their toolbar and banner bar run while I'm connected through their dialup service. They'll give me ads while I'm connected for free. It's a fair trade, in my opinion.

When I'm not using their service, I use WinPatrol to disable their auto-starting program and use IE7's Manage Add-ons to disable their IE toolbar. When I need to use their service, I turn them back on in order to meet the requirements of the service agreement.

I connected my notebook to the phone line, started Internet Explorer and turned on the NetZero Toolbar, dialed, and then I was connected and operational! I was able to check my email using my favorite email program (Eudora) and use Firefox for web browsing, too.

The connection seemed really slow, which I finally realized that I was doing so many things at one time that the dialup bandwidth was the limitation. In the background, which I didn't initially realize, NetZero was downloading an update to their software. I had the same basic problem that any dialup user has — automatic updates of Windows, anti-virus signatures, anti-virus program updates, anti-spyware signatures and program updates, and anything else like that will kill the connection speed.

In this case, I hadn't logged into NetZero in about six months. I don't recall any significant updates from them on a regular basis — I think it had just been too long between connections. In the early days, I'd connect to them via my cable connection so any updates were at high speeds. I'm going to go back to that practice.

What was the problem? It was a corroded connector at one end of the underground cable from the cable system's box to my house — nothing related at all to installing the new switch. Coincidences can be a pain...

The bottom line: I'm glad I had the free NetZero account. It came in handy for backup when my cable Internet connection was down, which was exactly why I had gotten it. I've got it on my notebook, but this type of free account is just as good and applicable to a desktop PC.

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Part 1  | Part 2

Volume 3, Number 25 — Sunday, December 2, 2007

Copyright © 2007 Terry A. Stockdale.  All rights reserved.


 
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