BlackBerry 3G Mobiles
These are the different Blackberry Phone which support 3G.
blackberry-curve-8900
blackberry-bold-9000
blackberry-storm-9500
blackberry-tour-9630
Spiga
Wednesday, March 24, 2010 at 6:04 PM Posted by SONU MISHRA
BlackBerry 3G Mobiles
These are the different Blackberry Phone which support 3G.
blackberry-curve-8900
Labels: 3G, Blackberry 1 comments
Tuesday, March 16, 2010 at 1:25 PM Posted by SONU MISHRA
Oops! This link appears to be broken
Sometimes google Chrome throws the DNS Server error message,saying "DNS Error-cannot find server" when we try to open some sites.But using the different browser we can open the site without showing any errror.Google Chrome browser use its own algorithm to read the web pages.When you visit a webpage (like a search results page), Google Chrome will pre-fetch the IP addresses of all websites that are listed on that page. Since the browser has the IP addresses of all the links in advance, DNS pre-fetching ensures that any links that may you click on that webpage will load faster. However, when pre-fetching fails, something that’s not very uncommon, you may get the “link broken” error.
How To Tackle This Error?
The fix is simple – go to Tools > Options (or Preferences on a Mac) > Under the Hood and uncheck the setting that says “Use DNS pre-fetching to improve page load performance.” This might increase the loading time of certain pages by a few microseconds but you won’t at least see that misleading error message.
Labels: Chrome, Web Browser security 0 comments
Friday, March 12, 2010 at 5:30 PM Posted by SONU MISHRA
Enable Page Rank Button In IE8
To add page rank button in your explorer, you need to install the toolbar,google toolbar is the best one.
If you installed new Internet Explorer 8 or upgraded to IE8 from IE7,Google toolbar does not came enabled by default with pagerank button.But we can manually enable PageRank button for Google Toolbar very easily.
Enabling PageRank button for Google Toolbar in Internet Explorer
Labels: Internet explorer 0 comments
Monday, March 8, 2010 at 3:31 PM Posted by SONU MISHRA
Virus vs. Worm – What’s the Difference?
Below you will find information gathered from several resources on the Internet regarding the differences between viruses and worms.
A computer virus is delivered by e-mail messages, according to most definitions.
But a computer worm spreads through the internet.
Viruses are computer programs that are designed to spread themselves from one file to another on a single computer. A virus might rapidly infect every application file on an individual computer, or slowly infect the documents on that computer, but it does not intentionally try to spread itself from that computer to other computers. In most cases, that’s where humans come in. We send email document attachments, trade programs on diskettes, or copy files to file servers. When the next unsuspecting user receives the infected file or disk, they spread the virus to their computer and so on.
Worms, on the other hand, are insidious because they rely less (or not at all) on human behavior in order to spread themselves from one computer to another. The worm is a program that is designed to copy itself from one computer to another over a network (e.g., by use email). The worm spreads itself to many computers over a network, and doesn’t wait for a human being to help. This means that computer worms spread much more rapidly than computer viruses.
“Malware” is the term used to describe any and all malicious software, including viruses, Trojan horse programs, and worms.
Even though "virus" has become a generic term to refer to all types of computer malware, it actually only applies to one specific type of malicious code/file. A computer virus does the same thing a biological virus does, for the most part. It infects a “host” (a file, boot sector, etc.) and then looks for ways to spread. The major things setting it apart from other malware are that it (1) replicates itself and (2) infects other files instead of existing as a standalone file. Viruses can be very harmful (e.g., erasing or damaging files) or they can be relatively benign (e.g., displaying an obscene message to the user on a given date).
Worms do not attach themselves to a host program or file the way a virus does; worms reside in active memory and stand alone with no need for a host. A worm does replicate itself like a virus, but it doesn’t do so by altering files. Instead, it replicates over computer networks.
A Trojan horse program does not replicate itself, and it does not infect other files. A Trojan horse program (or, simply, “trojan” or “Trojan program”) is a malicious program that is contained within, or masquerades as, an innocent and useful program. The most widespread type of Trojan program is the type that installs “backdoor” access to a computer, through which a malicious person is allowed to remotely take control of the infected computer. The next most popular type is designed simply to steal passwords, credit card numbers, online banking data, or other personal information and send that information back to the malicious party. Often, a Trojan program arrives, unknown to the victim, along with a screensaver or game. When the screensaver or game is run, it is designed to then install the Trojan program that is included with it.
Labels: Virus, worms 0 comments