POSTED BY on 2:48 pm under

Seems there has been a massive breach of security at a Credit Card processing firm in the US. They don’t know how long they have been compromised – could be months or years. As they process 100 million transactions per month that is one hell of a lot of credit card numbers the thieves probably got! With the incredible amount of data that is processed electronically every day world wide it is amazing that we don’t hear more about these things. I think the truth is that the big corporations make so much money on some of these systems they just treat these problems as minor and pay up . The cost of keeping systems really secure is just to high – cheaper to pay out when/if it breaks.

Won’t effect us here in Oz but I bet a few US banks and consumers aren’t having a great day

See the Washington Post article for full details

POSTED BY on 10:48 pm under ,

Check out this cool Transformers inspired vid

Finally the outcome of this age old battle is known – or is it?

POSTED BY on 11:20 am under ,,

Adobe’s PDF document format is pretty popular. I am willing to bet most people have Adobe PDF Reader software installed on their PC.

ADOBE PDFThe trouble with software is the more popular it is the more attractive it is to hackers etc to try and exploit it for malicious gain – can you say Windows! So with Adobe Reader being so common whenever a security flaw is found it is highly likely that there are some internet baddies out there trying to take advantage of it.

Adobe are pretty vigilant about upgrading the product regularly to address any flaws and this is the case now. The only downside is that the program is a pretty big download each time.

To keep yourself safe make sure you upgrade to Version 9 (or at least 8.1.3 or higher)

Alternatively I quite like Foxit PDF Reader. It performs the same functions for most users, includes some unique features that the free Adobe program doesn’t like adding bookmarks. Best of all it is free and a much smaller download. Check out the features in the review linked below. If you do install be sure to say ‘No’ to installing the Yahoo toolbar and eBay icon (unless you really want them)

Links

Adobe Reader 9 download

Foxit PDF Reader download

Foxit PDF Reader review

POSTED BY on 3:13 pm under

David Pogue is a well known Tech reviewer who writes a column, among other things, for the New York Post. I read his blog all the time (yep via RSS)

Here is his list of 5 great tips for (Digital) photography. Well 4 great tips. I don’t think the lampshade thing works in Australia

THE BEST PHOTOGRAPHY TRICKS OF ALL TIME

1. Half-pressing the shutter button (to prefocus) eliminates shutter lag.

Everyone hates shutter lag. That’s the half-second delay between the time you press the shutter button and the time the photo is actually snapped–during which your child, pet, or action photo slips away. (Pocket cams have shutter lag; S.L.R. cameras don’t.)

Shutter lag is the time it takes the camera to calculate focus and exposure. Thing is, you can make it calculate that stuff ahead of time. Aim the camera, anticipating where the subject will be, and half-press the shutter button. When you hear the beep, you’ve locked in the exposure and focus. Keep the button half-pressed; now you’re ready. When the subject appears, push the rest of the way down. Presto: no shutter lag!

2. For the blurred-background effect, back up and zoom in.

In technical terms, what you’re looking at is a limited depth of field. That’s a geek-shutterbug term meaning, “which part of the scene, front-to-back, is in focus.” Subject yes; background, no.

That beautiful, professional effect is easy to get if you have an S.L.R.; it practically happens automatically. (Dial up a wide aperture–a low f-stop number–to accentuate the effect.)

On a pocket cam, choose Portrait mode. Move your subjects away from the background–the farther, the better. Finally, use the back-up-and-zoom-in trick. That is, stand away from your subjects–the farther, the better–and then use the camera’s zoom to “bring you” back up close. Thanks to a quirk of optics, zooming in helps create a shallow depth of field.

You may look like a weirdo, backing way up like that. But it really works.

3. Force the flash outdoors.

It might not occur to you to use the flash when you’re taking pictures of people on a bright, sunny day. It certainly wouldn’t occur to the camera.

Problem is, the camera “reads” the scene and concludes that there’s tons of sunlight. But it’s not smart enough to recognize that the face you’re photographing is in shadow. You wind up with a dark, silhouetted face.

The solution is to force the flash on–a very common photographer’s trick. The flash can provide just the right amount of fill light to brighten your subject’s face–without affecting the exposure of the background.

It eliminates the silhouette effect. Better yet, it provides very flattering front light. It softens smile lines and wrinkles, and it puts a nice twinkle in the subject’s eyes. (It also means that you can ignore the old “rule” about taking photos on a sunny day–the one that tells the photographer to “Stand with the sun behind you.”)

4. Exploit the magic hour.

Hate to break it to you, but serious photographers don’t get a lot of sleep. Show me an award-winning, breathtaking landscape–a pond shimmering in the woods, golden clouds surrounding a mountain peak–and I’ll show you someone who got up at 4:40 am to be ready with a tripod as the sun rose.

That hour after sunrise, and the hour before sunset, is known as the magic hour. The lower angle of the sun and the slightly denser atmosphere create rich, saturated tones, plus what photographers call sweet light. It’s an amazing, golden glow that makes everybody look beautiful, every building look enchanted, and every landscape look breathtaking.

It’s a far cry from the midday sun, which creates much harsher shadows and much more severe highlights. Landscape shooting is more difficult when the sun is high overhead on a bright, cloudless day.

5. Use a lampshade socket as a tripod.

Another chronic problem with pocket cams is getting blur when you don’t want it–which is just about any time you’re indoors without the flash. Yeah, yeah, we know: “Use a tripod.” But come on: for the average person on vacation or at school events, buying, hauling around, and setting up a tripod is a preposterous burden.

Often, there’s a wall, parked car, bureau, tree, pillar, door frame, or some other big, stationary object you can use instead, to prop up either the camera or your arms.

But here’s my favorite trick: It turns out that the threads at the top of just about any lamp–the place where the lampshade screws on–are precisely the same diameter as a tripod mount! In a pinch, you can whip off the lampshade, screw on the camera, and presto: You’ve got a rock-steady indoor tripod.

People might think you’re a genius, a nutcase, or a genius nutcase, but never mind. It works.

There you have it, folks: five tips that can save you from throwing your pocket cam out the window. Happy shooting–and happy holly days!

POSTED BY on 12:21 am under

Refresh Your Google Search Skills In 5 Minutes 
Get the exact results you want from your Google searches

Learn How To Pronounce Foreign Names Correctly 
Hear names pronounced

15 Most useful productivity tips for Windows 
Tips on making your computer use more straight forward

Desktopography 
Beautiful Desktop wallpapers

Make Office 2007 More Compatible 
Change the default formats for better compatibility with earlier version of Office    

60 Really Cool and Creative Error 404 Pages
Websites that say “hey you typed the address wrong” in a really cool way