Terry's Computer Tips - Newsletter
May 25, 2008
Terry's Computer Tips Newsletter
http://www.terryscomputertips.com
A computer tips newsletter for users of PC's.
Volume 3, Number 50 — Sunday, May 25, 2008
IN THIS WEEK'S ON-LINE ISSUE:
1. Create PDF Files for Free
2. My Computer Security Software Recommendations
3. Using Multiple Tabs in Firefox
4. Recommend my Terry's Computer Tips Newsletter to Your Friends
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1. Create PDF Files for Free
One of the easiest ways to document web pages and other printable content is to "print" them into a PDF file. Adobe's Acrobat program provides a printer driver to create such files from anything that you can print.
Of course, Acrobat is out of reach for many people, or at least, we don't have any desire for the program once we find that the price is $250 for Acrobat Standard or $400 for Acrobat Professional.
Fortunately, there are some cheaper options.
I've used the program Click2PDF ,(Click2PDF review) for about six years and been very happy with it. Click2PDF allows me to print multiple times, even from multiple programs, change the order of the "prints" and then save the resulting PDF file. If I don't like any of those prints, I can uncheck them and print again. My main use for Click2PDF is to document purchases on the 'Net.
I've recently found a free, open-source program called PDFCreator. It still hasn't quite made the version 1.0 release yet, but has a lot of nice features. PDFCreator is licensed under the GNU Public License.
Like Click2PDF and most of the other PDF creation programs, PDFCreator installs as a pseudo-printer. To use it, you just click on a print icon or File > Print from a program's menu bar.
There's an optional advertising toolbar included in PDFCreator. I chose to uncheck the toolbar option during the installation (it is selected/checked by default).
Altough PDFCreator will let you print multiple documents and let you change the order of items to be saved in the file, the version I installed (v0.9.5) was unable to save these items. Further, it wanted to save them in .ps (PostScript) format rather than .pdf (Portable Document Format).
Bottom line: It's an interesting program and is planned to do the functions I need, but isn't quite there, yet. I'll use it on my desktop, but stay with Click2PDF on my notebook. My notebook is my primary computer.
You can get the latest version of PDFCreator at its home at http://sourceforge.net/projects/pdfcreator/.
2. My Computer Security Software Recommendations
I review my security software recommendations and update them, for each weekly newsletter issue, if I think they need to change.
My Philosophy: Many people want to pick their most economical solution and prefer an all-in-one anti-virus, anti-spyware and firewall solution. In concept, that's a great idea. In actual practice, this type of package is not likely to be the best in all the protection categories you need.
Other people want to pick the best of each type program. I'm one of the these folks. Read about my security software choices.
Anti-Virus
I'm often asked about several other popular anti-virus or anti-virus combination packages. Yes, I realize that they are not in my recommendation list. "Enough said..."
My personal choice is the ESET's small, fast NOD32 anti-virus program, which offers a FREE 30-day evaluation license. I consider NOD32 to be the cream of the crop in anti-virus protection. Unlike some of the others, ESET offers multiple-year licenses also, including updates to the program in the multiple-year license.
Many antivirus programs will offer you an anti-virus signature subscription renewal when your subscription renews. I strongly recommend against this option — buy the full program or make sure you get program updates with the subscription renewal (like NOD32 does). Vendors routinely improve the capabilities and speed of the programs, too.
If you update only the signatures, you miss any program improvements. Fortunately, NOD32's subscriptions include both program updates and signature updates.
Read more about anti-virus programs on my web site.
Related articles:
- Anti-Virus Programs and Online Scanners
- Free Online Antivirus Scan
- NOD32 Anti-Virus Review - A Look at NOD32
Firewall Software
While the Windows XP firewall is much better than no firewall at all, don't count on the Windows XP firewall to meet your needs. You need a two-way firewall, which the Windows XP firewall is not!. Microsoft woke up and supplied a two-way firewall with Windows Vista.
The Windows XP firewall does not control outbound communications originating from your computer — and you should want to have control if adware/trojans/spyware or even commercial products want to talk to the Internet. Whether they are calling home or spewing spam, you want to be able to control your computer.
Do you want Windows Media Player to call home every time you play something? It does! Do you use the Search function in Windows Explorer to find things on your hard drive? Did you know that every time you search, Windows Explorer talks to Microsoft?
I didn't know that when I ran ZoneAlarm, but the Sunbelt Personal Firewall flags that to me, and I can stop it or allow it to happen. Many other programs try to call home when you run them, too.
I recommend my choice for a firewall program, which is Sunbelt Personal Firewall.
You can try the full-featured "paid version" of Sunbelt Personal Firewall free for 30 days — after that, you can register it or, if you're using it on a home non-business computer, you can let it revert to the free, lesser-function license.
Sunbelt Personal Firewall is regularly $19.95 (with discounts for multiple computers and/or multiple years!) for a non-expiring license for the program and includes one year of their updates subscription.
Related articles:
Anti-Spyware / Anti-Adware Software
CounterSpy, from Sunbelt Software, has received many kudos from the computer press for its always-running and periodic full system scans. It is also my personal choice for my PC's and my family's PC's.
Sunbelt released their CounterSpy v2 in February 2007 and I promptly updated my computers to it. Version 2 greatly improved CounterSpy's performance and reduced its load on the computer when it was scanning.
In July, 2007, Sunbelt released v2.5 of CounterSpy, which again both improved CounterSpy's performance against malware and reduced its impact on system resources and responsiveness when its scanning.
Sunbelt continues to release updated program versions. Nicely, they do NOT install the updated programs automatically. You have to use the Update process in the program, which means that you'll know that something significant has changed!
Related articles:
Anti-spam Software
In today's Internet world, the question is not "if" you will get spam, but "how much will you get?"
I use and now I recommend POPFile as my first choice for handling spam. POPFile sits on your computer, between your email program and your ISP mailbox, and handles emial as it downloads.
POPFile uses a different approach to handle spam than some other programs do — it does nothing to reduce spam. It is designed as an email classification tool — you train it to recognize spam and any other type of email that you want to classify. These classifications can help you sort your emails into appropriate folders in your email program.
Sunbelt Software, who makes the anti-spyware program CounterSpy (which I use and recommend) and the firewall that I use and recommend (Sunbelt Personal Firewall) also has a well-regarded, award-winning anti-spam program called iHateSpam for Outlook and Outlook Express. Since I don't use Outlook or Outlook Express for email, I haven't tried iHateSpam.
Mailwasher Pro is my first choice to handle spam before it ever gets into your computer's Inbox. Mailwasher Pro uses on-line Realtime Black Lists mail servers sending spam recently, "training" by you of what you think is spam, and your own "friends" and "blacklist" lists.
Mailwasher Pro can even bounce spam messages, as if your email address was not valid, although the usefulness and appropriateness of this is questionable. There is a free version called "Mailwasher," but it omits the functions that I consider critical for this purpose -- such as safely previewing the emails safely before they ever get to your email inbox.
Related articles:
Cable/DSL Router
If you have a cable modem or a DSL modem, you need to have another layer of inexpensive protection between you and the Internet. A cable/DSL router isolates your computer from direct connection to the Internet. Your computer can easily request your email, web pages, etc. through the router. The responses come back to the router and are smoothly routed to your computer. But, someone on the Internet side of the router can not initiate a connection to your computer — they can only respond to your request.
Even if you only have one computer to connect to your cable or DSL modem, I recommend that you purchase and use a cable/DSL router because of the protection it can give you against attempts to attack through some flaws in Windows itself.
A router isolates your local network, whether it is only one computer or several, from the Internet by actually making it a separate network. The router gets the "public" IP address and handles all your outbound communications and the responses to them. But, it blocks computers on the Internet side from being able to initiate communications with your computer! This will prevent you from falling prey to many worms that try to attack security holes in Windows itself.
For a wireless router, I recommend the Linksys WRT54G wireless router. I'm using the relatively new version 6 of this router.
If you don't want wireless, I recommend the Linksys BEFSR41 wired router. Either way, based on my experience, I recommend Linksys routers for price, reliability and Linksys' habit of releasing updated firmware for their products..
Tech Tip
By the way, if you get tempted by the new "802.11n" routers, please pay close attention. So far, the 802.11n specification has not been approved and finalized.
If you buy one, you may be locked into a specific vendor's implementation of a draft of a standard that never got approved. I recommend choosing 802.11g for now.
See these related articles:
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3. Using Multiple Tabs in Firefox
Opera was the first web browser to offer its users multiple tabs, so that we could have multiple web pages open within one browser window. Well, I think it was the first — it was certainly the first one I found. I loved that feature.
The latest browser to add tabs is Internet Explorer 7, which has implemented tab functions similar to those of Opera, and only a small portion of the functionality that Firefox has.
In IE7, if you hover over a link or bookmark and click your mouse's scroll button, the new link will open in a new tab. That's the same thing that happens in Opera. It also happens in Firefox, but Firefox can do more, too.
Firefox will let you store bookmarks in the Firefox bookmarks folders and even have multiple levels of subfolders within those folders. If you click on a Firefox bookmarks folder by using the center mouse button (most scroll wheels act as a button also), Firefox will open all the bookmarks that are in the folder.
Every once in a while I center-click on the wrong folder -- the easiest thing to do, then, is to close Firefox. Remember that comment about folders within folders? Think what happens when you tell Firefox to open a couple hundred web pages in tabs, all at the same time...
So, I create folders for my Firefox bookmarks toolbar, and then subfolders within them, to create groupings of web site bookmarks that I can easily find. Often, they are also groups of web site bookmarks that I want to open together.
Another feature of tabs in Firefox is the ability to use multiple pages as my homepage.
Firefox will also let you select multiple pages as your Homepage — and all of them open in tabs when you start Firefox. It sounds neat and it is. At first, I thought it was a nice feature, but I grew impatient at waiting for all the pages to open, so now I only have one web page as my Home page.
Tech Tip
Set your "Homepage" to multiple tabs with multiple different web pages displayed. Just open up the tabs you want to see, in the order you want to see them (Firefox lets you drag the tabs left and right, if you like.
Then, Tools > Options > Main tab. In the Startup section at the top of the Main tab, click on the button that says Use Current Pages. It's done. Now, when you open Firefox or click on the Home icon in Firefox, it will open all those web pages.
Do you like to visit several news, comics or tech sites each day?
Just put their bookmarks into one folder on your bookmarks toolbar, or in a folder within one of the folderrs on the toolbar. Then, when you want to open the pages, hover over that folder and click with the mouse's scroll button.
4. Recommend my Terry's Computer Tips Newsletter to Your Friends
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Volume 3, Number 50 — Sunday, May 25, 2008
Copyright © 2008 Terry A. Stockdale. All rights reserved.
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