Category: Computer Tech

  • Moonlight kicked into touch

    Wow, now this is a turn-around for the books – Microsoft bed-partner Miguel de Icaza saying that Moonlight development is being stopped specifically because a. Microsoft is concentrating on HTML5 and b. because Microsoft has imposed certain restrictions on Silverlight. Never thought I’d see the day … Hooray for the death of non-standard protocols and…

  • Digital rights and your personal freedom

    “We live in a democracy. Or so they told us.” If you take a look at democracies around the world today, you’ll find governments that behave in a completely undemocratic way. One just has to look at the lengths the US has gone to, in undermining the Bill of Rights in the pursuit of terrorism…

  • Google and Oracle

    I’ve been ‘watching’ the Google/Oracle trial since week – a very interesting trial which from Oracle’s viewpoint is not going according to plan. The initial suit was estimated at around $6 billion which is a considerable sum of money, even for Google. That figure has now been revised ( after a push from the judge…

  • Virtualisation part 4: oVirt

    Red Hat’s virtualisation product, RHEV, was slightly hamstrung in v2 seeing as the manager technology ( which had previously been purchased from Qumranet ) only ran on Windows. This requirement is something that has put me off that product until now – RHEV 3 has been released with a JBoss-based management server now and a…

  • iPhone 4S doubles data usage

    While that title sounds alarming, it’s not actually because of any fault in the latest iOS, but more a matter of new services ( like Siri ) causing users to consume more data. And that will be the trend going forward for most smartphone users as vendors up the ante in a tit-for-tat competition to…

  • Internet usage in 2011

    Internet usage is breaking all sorts of records each and every year. The numbers are skyrocketing and to say they’re unbelievable is putting it mildly. Here is a snippet courtesy of pingdom: 107 trillion email sent 294 billion emails per day 1.88 billion internet users 89% of email is spam 262 billion spam emails per…

  • On-line electricity purchases in Cape Town

    I’ve never been a fan of the PayCity on-line site. It’s amateurish and looks like it’s been put together by a group of 5 year olds. In addition, there’s no mobile option ( not SMS ) – an unforgivable missing feature in this age of always on and connected-ness. Powertime is the complete opposite –…

  • It’s phishing and pharming XMas time again!

    Scammers and authors of malicious software will take any opportunity to trick users into doing something they shouldn’t – holidays are a favourite time for the scammer. At Xmas, we all have that warm and fuzzy feeling. But so do  the scammers and they prey on a softening of attitudes towards security at this time…

  • Apple continues to use patents to compete

    The last year has seen a large amount of legal rangling between mobile vendors, more specifically between Apple and everyone else. It seems that according to Apple, they are the only company that can conceive of iPhone- and iPad-type technology. Not withstanding of course the massive amount of prior art that’s out there ( CrunchPad…

  • Internet Explorer the safest browser – yeah right!

    Microsoft has always bigged up their products using whatever mechanisms they can, including paid-for campaigns/ads and sometimes outright lying. The latest statement that IE is the most secure browser ( according to their yourbrowsermatters website ) fits into this latter category. One has to wonder how Microsoft comes about the scores provided on the site.…

  • New security issue: typo-squatting

    Malware, phishing, pharming, typo-squatting, etc. There’s a long list of security issues we have to deal with every day. Keeping track of these and responding correctly in each case is a veritable minefield. That’s after our newly updated anti-virus app has completely missed the threat. Typo-squatting is the well-known practice of serving up scams or…

  • Vodacom’s BIS service adds cap

    One of the primary benefits of Blackberry phones has been the ‘unlimited’ data contract that is supplied as part of the deal. However, it appears that Vodacom has had enough of some thirsty bloodsuckers and is implementing soft capping by downgrading users’ speed to 2G ( GPRS/EDGE ) after reaching the 100MB limit. Anyone who…

  • Are the clouds gone yet?

    It seems that Microsoft ( and others ) is intent on validating my cynical view of clouds. The latest Microsoft outage ( last night and this morning again ) was caused by what the company vaguely called a “DNS issue” and affected not just Office 365 but also the consumer services Hotmail and SkyDrive. The…

  • CA’s get hacked

    Wow, it really has been a bad week for Certificate Authorities. First DigiNotar gets cracked by a seemingly insistent CA cracker called ComodoHacker; now GlobalSign has stopped processing certificate requests due to possible compromise by the same cracker. It all started in March this year with the Comodo CA breach. Next was StartCom the Israeli…

  • CA’s get hacked off

    Earlier this year, one of the biggest names in network-based security, RSA, was hacked. What made the situation a lot worse, was RSA’s hesitance to be forthcoming on the matter. And that unwillingness to disclose seems to be the trend these days. Get hacked. Don’t tell your clients … This lack of openness is becoming…