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- Automatic Screenshotter v1.16
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Latest Forum Posts
Trying to Be a Good CitizenIn the beginning, I was only interested in downloading as much free software as possible :) And I was getting all sorts of warez and so on. But, as I matured in my career, I saw that ripping off software or music or video was generally wrong. (I didn't always stop doing it though!) Anyway, when I find a software that I like (Project URL Snooper), now I try to support the developer. I'm currently unemployed at the moment (I got downsized last year) so I'm still trying to be generous to developers who depend on donations for all or part of their living.
M.
Our daily Blog
This page spotlights the most interesting posts collected from our forum every day.
Backup Review Webite: Compare online backup servicesDC Member city_zen found this site and mentioned it on this thread discussing people's favorite online backup tools: Backup Review was established in 2004 to provide objective and timely information to buyers of online backup and storage services. http://www.backupreview.info/ posted by mouser
discovered on https://www.donation....msg137402#msg137402 (permalink) (leave a comment) |
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Free Coding Snack: CHKDSK Assist - Schedule CHKDSK OperationsAfter learning and working with AutoHotkey since February, I'm finally releasing my first script.
CHKDSK Assist is a GUI based script that allows you to schedule CHKDSK operations on your PC. I welcome any questions or comments about it. Thanks! |
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Tabbloid service lets you create your own newsletter from RSS feedsFound on: ghacks.com An interesting free service that allows you to create your own customized newsletter out of RSS newsfeeds. Get Magazine Style RSS News Feeds Delivered To Your Inbox Link to article: http://www.ghacks.ne...vered-to-your-inbox/ I've been experimenting with Tabbloid for a few days, and so far, it does exactly what it says it does. It might not be ideal for every newsfeed you subscribe to, so it will be a while before you can ditch your current feed reader. But for news sites that primarily do daily feature articles (BBC, NPR, etc.), it's pretty much ideal. Great for getting caught up on things when you can't boot a computer. I just have my system print out my custom 'newspaper' each morning and I'm set to go. |
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Newsletter for November 4th, 2008 - Codename "Election Special"...
I hope you'll forgive me for taking up a section of the newsletter this month to focus on recent updates that I've made to some of my larger programs on DonationCoder.com. The most notable update is to "LaunchBar Commander", my program that allows the user to set populate a dock with shortcuts to programs. The update provides a lot of new features and some long requested bugfixes. LBC now has a flexible hotkey system that allows you to assign hotkeys to specific launch bars or subfolders within launchbars, so you can now easily pull up menus at the cursor showing any subset of a launchbar tree. You can also use a hotkey to toggle the visibility of an entire dock. And keeping with this theme, LBC has a totally revamped auto-hiding/sliding implementation, which now works quite well. So you can finally keep your dock hidden offscreen until you need it. Screenshot Captor and Find and Run Robot have also been updated. If you've been manually downloading the beta releases of these two programs you won't see any dramatic changes, but if you've been using the prior stable versions, there are a bunch of new bugfixes for Screenshot Captor, and a bunch of new features for plugin writers for Find and Run Robot. And lastly, a note about the differences between Find and Run Robot (FARR) and LaunchBar Commander (LBC). Lots of people get confused about the overlap between these programs. Both utilities are used to launch programs and documents. The difference is that FARR is for keyboard maniacs, who need to locate programs by typing the name of the program, while LBC is for visual people -- who like to have a reminder on screen of their commonly used programs -- think of it like a souped up customizable version of the windows Start Menu. Personally I use both -- LBC for my more common programs, and then FARR for the less common ones.
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Tech News Weekly: Edition 45The Weekly Tech News
1. Microsoft and Google to Offer OpenID Spoiler http://dev.live.com/blogs/devlive/archive/2008/10/27/421.aspx http://google-code-updates.blogspot.com/2008/10/google-moves-towards-single-sign-on.html Google and Microsoft plan to offer OpenID services from their current sign-on mechanisms. Currently users are required to create individual passwords for many websites they visit, but users would prefer to avoid this step so they could visits websites more easily. Similarly, many websites on the Internet have asked for a way to enable users to log into their sites without forcing them to create another password. If users could log into sites without needing another password, it would allow websites to provide a more personalized experience to their users. 2. Programming Tools for Cracking Mifare Published Spoiler http://www.heise-online.co.uk/security/Programming-tools-for-cracking-Mifare-published--/news/111807 Practical tools for cracking the Mifare RFID chip have been released onto the internet. A hacker using the pseudonym Bla has published an open source tool called Crapto1 for cracking the encryption of the Mifare Classic RFID chip, as used in the Oyster Card. Besides an implementation in C of the vulnerable Crypto1 algorithm, the archive also contains the C source code for an attack that has been described in a paper by Dutch security researchers at Radboud University. 3. Adobe Acrobat 8 Critically Vulnerable Spoiler http://www.net-security.org/secworld.php?id=6715 Acrobat 8 has a vulnerability allowing a maliciously crafted PDF file to gain unauthorized access to the systems it's running on and assume the rights of the user running it via javascript. Core Security Technologies issued an advisory disclosing a vulnerability that could affect millions of individuals and businesses using Adobe’s Reader PDF file viewing software. Engineers from CoreLabs determined that Adobe Reader could be exploited to gain access to vulnerable systems via the use of a specially crafted PDF file with malicious JavaScript content. Upon making the discovery, CoreLabs immediately alerted Adobe to the vulnerability and the two companies have since coordinated efforts to ensure that a patch could be created and made available to protect users of the program. 4. AT&T Imposes Monthly Bandwidth Caps Spoiler http://www.datastronghold.com/index.php/tech-news/1480-atat-imposes-monthly-bandwidth-caps AT&T is trialing new monthly bandwidth caps in certain areas with the monthly limit based on the speed of a user's connection (read: based on the amount of money they're paying). Bad news off the wire for AT&T broadband customers, as AT&T has announced the fact that they are now imposing bandwidth limits in certain test areas. Currently this market trial was started November 1 in Reno and users will get between 20 GB and 150 GB a month depending on their speed tier. Unlike the bandwidth limitations that were imposed by companies like Time Warner and Comcast, there were only applied to new users this bandwidth cap will be applied to all users including current ones. 5. Virtual Heist Nets 500,000+ Bank, Credit Accounts Spoiler http://voices.washingtonpost.com/securityfix/2008/10/virtual_bank_heist_nets_500000.html http://www.theregister.co.uk/2008/10/31/sinowal_trojan_heist/ RSA's FraudAction Research Lab has uncovered a massive cache of stolen banking details accrued since 2006 via the Sinowal/Torpig/Mebroot trojan. A single cyber crime group has stolen more than a half million bank, credit and debit card accounts over the past two-and-a-half years using one of the most advanced strains of computer spyware in existence, according to research to be published today. The discovery is among the largest stolen data caches ever recovered. 6. Man Gets 21 Months for Recording Movies in Theatre With Camcorder Spoiler http://www.piracyisacrime.org/In-The-Courtroom/man-gets-21-years-for-recording-movies-in-theatre-with-camcorder.html A man has been found guilty of filming up to 100 movies in movie theatres in Washington DC and sentenced to 21 months in prison. He was caught via the use of "A Covert Anti-Camcording System" installed by the MPAA. Michael Logan, 31, of Maryland was sentenced today in federal court in the District of Columbia for filming with a camcorder in theatres, "28 Weeks Later", “Enchanted” and maybe up 100 more movies over the last few years according to the MPAA. 7. Google Abandons Deal With Yahoo Spoiler http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/business/7711429.stm Google has abandoned their advertising deal with Yahoo to avoid the legal rammifications. The deal involved Google providing some of the advertising around Yahoo's search results and would have been worth $800m (£494m) a year to Yahoo. 8. Yahoo Tells Microsoft: 'Buy Us' Spoiler http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/technology/7712298.stm Yahoo's CEO Jerry Yang has commented that Microsoft would still benefit from acquiring the company. His comments come on the tail of Google pulling out of the ad deal with them. The internet portal's co-founder and CEO Jerry Yang made the comment despite the fact Yahoo rejected a $33 (£21) a share offer from Microsoft back in May. 9. French Pirates Face Net Cut-off Spoiler http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/technology/7706014.stm Anyone caught sharing pirated digital media in France will receive warnings before having their internet connection terminated under new legislation. The French Senate voted overwhelmingly in favour of the law, which aims to tackle ongoing piracy of music, movies, and games online. 10. Fire Fear Sparks Battery Recall Spoiler http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/business/7701348.stm Discussion by app103: https://www.donationcoder.com/forum/index.php?topic=15546 Devices containing batteries manufactured by Sony over a period of almost a year will be recalled by the likes of HP, Toshiba and DELL due to overheating fears. Sony said the recall came after 40 instances of overheating, including four cases where users had minor burns. 11. British Tax Website Shut Down After Data Breach Spoiler http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1082402/Tax-website-shut-memory-stick-secret-personal-data-12million-pub-car-park.html http://news.cnet.com/8301-1009_3-10081737-83.html A memory stick found in a pub car park contating the tax details of 12 million people has forced the british goverment to shut down a taxation-related website. Ministers have been forced to order an emergency shutdown of a key Government computer system to protect millions of people's private details. 12. WPA Wi-Fi Encryption is Cracked Spoiler http://www.itworld.com/security/57285/once-thought-safe-wpa-wi-fi-encryption-cracked http://news.cnet.com/8301-10789_3-10083861-57.html WPA has taken a huge security hit as attackers use a protocol weakness and a mathematical breakthrough to break TKIP keys in order to read and/or forge data being sent from an access point to a client machine. Security researchers say they've developed a way to partially crack the Wi-Fi Protected Access (WPA) encryption standard used to protect data on many wireless networks. 13. Porn Breath Tests for PCs Heralds 'stop and Scan' Spoiler http://www.theregister.co.uk/2008/11/05/smut_tests_for_pcs/ New software developed by an Australian University will allow officials to quickly identify illicit images on PCs. Technology that claims to pick up traces of illicit images on PCs has attracted the interest of Australian cops. The software, developed in an Australian University, might eventually be used to screen PCs for pr0n during border inspections. 14. Hackers Jailbreak T-Mobile's Googlephone Spoiler http://www.theregister.co.uk/2008/11/05/google_android_jailbreak/ The Googlephone has already been broken by a hacker who determined you can acquire root privileges in Android by telneting to the device. Hackers have managed to jailbreak T-Mobile's new G1 phone by exploiting a gaping loophole in Android, the open source operating system supplied by Google. 15. Fake Site Punts Trojanised WordPress Spoiler http://www.theregister.co.uk/2008/11/06/trojanised_wordpress/ Wordpress hacker are at it again with a website offering an upgrade to the software which includes a Trojan. The website has spread via a vulnerability in older Wordpress versions which allows an attacker to redirect visitors to another website. Fraudsters have set up a fake site featuring a backdoored version of the WordPress blogging application as part of a sophisticated malware-based attack. 16. National ID Cards Compulsory for U.K. Airport Staff Spoiler http://news.cnet.com/8301-1009_3-10083732-83.html Airport staff in the U.K. will be required to carry one of the new National Identity cards at two airports trialing the new system. A pilot program of the U.K.'s national identity card plan will be compulsory at one of the two participating airports. 17. Remote Buffer Overflow Bug Bites Linux Kernel Spoiler http://blogs.zdnet.com/security/?p=2121 A buffer overflow vulnerability in a common Linux Kernel wireless driver could permit an attacker to remotely execute code with Kernel privileges, or cause a denial of service condition. A remote buffer overflow vulnerability in the Linux Kernel could be exploited by attackers to execute code or cripple affected systems, according to a Gentoo bug report that just became public. 18. EndNote Reverse-engineering Case Looks Headed to Courtroom Spoiler http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20081104-endnote-reverse-engineering-case-looks-headed-to-courtroom.html EndNote has accused the open source Firefox extension Zotero of illegally reverse engineering their proprietary .ens file format. As anyone who works in academia knows, writing and publishing papers involves frequently citing the existing literature. When you're working on a paper with 30 or more references, keeping track of them all can be a downright pain, which is where reference-managing software like Thomson Reuters' EndNote comes in. EndNote is the market leader in this field, but recently it has been facing competition from the open source Zotero, which is a Firefox plugin that lets you manage your bibliographic library and insert references into papers. Right now though, EndNote and Zotero are locked in a legal battle over claims by Thomson Reuters that the developers of Zotero have illegally reverse-engineered aspects of EndNote. 19. FCC White Spaces Decision Kicks Off the Next Wireless Revolution Spoiler http://blog.wired.com/gadgets/2008/11/fccs-decision-t.html The FCC will permit transmissions over unused "white space" spectrum which will allow cheaper wireless. The Federal Communications Commission's decision to open up the 'white spaces' spectrum to unlicensed devices could usher in a new telecom revolution, say analysts. Spoiler http://www.webmonkey.com/blog/Firefox_Hits_20PERC_Browser_Share_Worldwide Adoption of Mozilla's Firefox browser has hit 20% across the globe. Mozilla is reporting that Firefox topped 20% of the worldwide market share for web browsers for the first time ever in October, 2008. Firefox broke the 20% mark twice last month, once during the week of October 5, and once again during the week of October 26. During the other two weeks, its share was around 19.8%, putting the average for the month just above below the 20% mark at 19.9% Ehtyar. |
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Tower Defense Flash Game of the Week: Snafu TDHere's a very nice tower defense game with a military theme. Some nice features:
The only criticisms i would have would be that it doesnt feel like it has enough "progression" -- you start out with enough money to buy one of every tower. That means there is no feeling of discovery in earning enough to buy some new cool tower. The best TD games make it really hard to work your way to earning the super powerful towers. http://www.snafutowerdefense.com/
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