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Archive for the ‘Technology’ Category

Firefox 3.5.1 security update

by: Chris Hudson
17 July, 2009

Mozilla have today released an update to Firefox, their cross-platform browser.

Firefox 3.5 was only released three weeks ago, and Mozilla announced almost immediately that there would be a quick release of the 3.5.1 update as there were a couple of topcrashes that had not been eliminated before 3.5 was released.

However, the discovery earlier this week that there was a critical vulnerability in Firefox 3.5’s Just-In-Time Javascript compiler has meant that 3.5.1 has been released even earlier than intended to fix the vulnerability and restore full Javascript capability to Firefox users.

(Mozilla had advised disabling the JIT Javascript compiler as a temporary cure to the vulnerability. We show you how to turn the JIT Javascript back on here).

In addition to the security fix, the Firefox 3.5.1 update cures a number of topcrashes or stability issues and supplies a few bugfixes. You can find a list of Firefox 3.5.1 bugfixes here.

You can download the Firefox browser for Mac, Windows or Linux here

Windows 7 - UK pre-order price slashed by 66%

by: Chris Hudson
15 July, 2009

Microsoft have launched a stunning pre-order deal on Windows 7 as a “token of our appreciation” for the feedback and help given by users.

win7boxshotYou can pre-order Windows 7 from just £49.99 for the Windows 7 Home Premium E. That is a staggering £100 of the standard pricing. If you want the Windows 7 Professional then it’ll cost you just £99.99, an even bigger saving.

Now there’s two reasons not to hang around; this offer is only available from July 15th until August 9th 2009, and the Microsoft site says that “quantities are limited”.

After 9th August the Windows 7 prices will return to £149.99 for Home Premium E, £219.99 for Professional E, and £229.99 for Ultimate E.

Although Microsoft say that technical requirements may change, here are the current minimum recommended specifications:

  • 1GHz or faster 32-bit (x86) or 64-bit (x64) processor
  • 1GB RAM (32-bit) / 2GB RAM (64-bit)
  • 16GB available disk space (32-bit) / 20GB (64-bit)
  • DirectX 9 graphics processor with WDDM 1.0 or higher driver

Here in the UK, Windows 7 will not come complete with a browser - not just IE8, but any browser! So remember you will need to have a browser saved to a CD/DVD or  USB memory plug-in before you start installing a Windows 7 upgrade.

Browser-less versions of Windows 7 have names ending in a capital “E” to distinguish them from the rest of the world versions.

Here are the release dates for Windows 7

Critical vulnerability discovered in Firefox 3.5

by: Chris Hudson

firefox-wordmark-horizontal_smallMozilla has announced a critical vulnerability in the newly released Firefox 3.5

It is possible that other versions of Firefox have this vulnerability which allows a user’s computer to be exploited by others executing code on it.

The Firefox 3.5 vulnerability arises through a bug in the Just-in-time (JIT) JavaScript compiler. This causes memory corruption by a Javascript code-handling error when faced with certain HTML tags.

To reduce the risk of exploitation it is advised that you disable the JIT for now. Here’s how:

  • Enter about:config in the browser’s location bar.
  • Type jit in the Filter box at the top of the config editor.
  • Double-click the line containing javascript.options.jit.content setting the value to false.

(Or you could use Safari…)

Anyway, as this will cause performance loss, once a bugfix is released you should swith the JIT back on by:

  • Enter about:config in the browser’s location bar.
  • Type jit in the Filter box at the top of the config editor.
  • Double-click the line containing javascript.options.jit.content setting the value to true.

UPDATE: 09:45hrs 17th July 2009: This critical vulnerability has now been fixed with the release of Firefox 3.5.1

The benefits of a Virtual Dedicated Server

by: Chris Hudson
14 July, 2009

Mention a Virtual Dedicated Server and many people will struggle to explain what one is let alone the advantages of one. (This problem is further exacerbated by the fact that they can also be referred to as a VDS, a Virtual Private Server, or a VPS)

However, most people are familiar with the concept a dedicated server; a computer that you share with no one else; to which you have root or superadmin access and can install on it whatever software you what and can reboot it at any time.

The benefits of a dedicated server are clear when compared to shared web hosting; no sharing it with other users’ websites to slow down your website(s), no dodgy websites sharing your IP address, having the ability to install your own SSL certificate for e-commerce and the generally higher level of security that comes with having your own server rather than the traditional shared web hosting where you may be one of hundreds sharing a server.

The major downside to a dedicated server is simply one of cost; all that speed, security and exclusivity comes at a relatively high price.

Wouldn’t it be great if there was a compromise where you had most of the benefits of a dedicated server but much less of the cost?

Well there is: that where a virtual dedicated server comes into its own.

HP ProLiant DL360 G6

HP ProLiant DL360 G6

Essentially, what we do here at Intrahost is take a well-specified dedicated server, the HP ProLiant DL360 G6, and install the VMWare virtualization software on it. This software enables the creation of a number of separate virtual servers on this one computer. Each one of these virtual servers can run its own different OS i.e. Windows or Linux, each can reboot individually as needed, each user has root access to the virtual server so you can install the software that you want on your virtual server.

Perhaps most most importantly, unlike shared web hosting (the most common kind), each virtual server has a guaranteed share of the resources of the underlying physical server, i.e., CPU processing time, RAM, hard disk space, and even bandwidth. Just like a dedicated server you can be sure that when you need them the resources that you have paid for are ready and waiting for you. Thus, each virtual server is prevented from hampering the performance of another virtual server on the same host machine.

Security of a virtual dedicated server or VPS is like that of a physical dedicated server. Each virtual server is separate for the others and even if a VDS on your physical server were hacked your VDS would remain untouched.

The cost benefit? Here at Intrahost a Virtual Dedicated Server is available for around a third of the cost of Dedicated Server. Direct comparisons are difficult because of the many options available but suffice to say that the existence of VDSs means that many more businesses, web designers and their customers can enjoy the benefits of a dedicated server without the substantial monthly overhead.

Someone asked me why, instead of creating a VDS, didn’t hosting companies buy less powerful and cheaper servers so that customers could have a server each instead of sharing one physical server as several VDSs?

There are two main reasons: firstly, that approach would still produce an expensive dedicated server rental because that low-powered dedicated server would still cost the hosting company the data centre’s rackspace rental and power charges but those would fall on the just the one dedicated server owner. Whereas, by buying and virtualizing big powerful servers the hosting company will face the same data center rackspace and power costs but those would be now shared by more users and so the monthly rental per user comes down substantially.

Secondly, the more expensive servers used as VDS host machines are far more technologically advanced, powerful and greener than the cut-price, end-of-line, cheap dedicated servers offered by many companies based outside the UK and EU. However, the capital cost of the top-of-the range servers is again shared by a number of VDS clients which keeps the cost down per user when compared to funding the capital cost of even a relatively cheap web server by one user.

Microsoft Silverlight 3 makes early debut

by: Chris Hudson
10 July, 2009

Microsoft have released both the end-user runtime version and Software Developer’s Kit of Silverlight 3 earlier than expected; ahead of today’s official launch product in San Francisco at the Microsoft Worldwide Partner Conference.

Microsoft’s Silverlight 3 media player is seen as their answer to Adobe’s Flash.

However, just as important is that Silverlight 3 will enable the web-based version of Microsoft Office which will be released next week for testing by Microsoft Partners.

The online version of Microsoft Office is called Microsoft Web Office and will be part of Microsoft Office’s 2010 version.

Given this week’s news that Google are releasing a PC OS, Silverlight 3 is even more important as Web Office is effectively Microsoft’s challenge to Google’s online applications suite, Google Apps.

Silverlight 3 is available for Mac and Windows.

Download Microsoft Silverlight 3 player

Download Microsoft Silverlight 3 SDK

Sheffield to get 100Mbps broadband by September

by: Chris Hudson
8 July, 2009

sheffieldH2O Networks have begun the installation in Sheffield of a city-wide, fibre-optic network in city’s sewers.

The fibre-optic network will total over 15km in length in a ring around Sheffiield and provide the South Yorkshire city with broadband speeds of up to 100Mbps.

H20 Networks merely provide the superfast infrastructure, ISPs will act as agents to deliver the actual broadband connections to the consumers of Sheffield.

The network should be complete by September. However, no ISP provider has yet been appointed.

Sheffield is one of five cities in the UK with a data centre where Intrahost has server colocation facilities.

Will the Google Chrome Operating System be allowed in the UK?

by: Chris Hudson

Google have announced that they will release a Google Chrome operating system in 2010.

Google Chrome OS will be an open source, lightweight OS, initially aimed at netbooks, that will begin shipping in 2010.

Google claim they have gone back to basics with the OS to provide the user with a fast, secure environment that will get them onto the web as quickly as possible.

Microsoft will wince when they read Google’s claim that they have completely redesigned the security architecture of the OS so that users won’t have to endure the onslaught of viruses, malware and endless security updates.

However, Apple won’t rest easy when they see that Google are aiming for a lightweight OS providing ease of use and accessibility, with a fast start-up that gets you onto the web in seconds. Those users that love Apple’s OS for it’s relative ease-of-use may be tempted by the Chrome OS, especially if they just want to surf the web and so have no need for all the additions to the Mac OS X that have been bolted onto the basic OS over the last five years.

Inherent in the Google Chrome OS experience is fast and safe web browsing. Clearly that rules out any Microsoft version of Internet Explorer and obviously Google aims to make the Google Chrome browser the heart of their new OS experience. To use any other browser would undermine the new security architecture.

But that begs a question for users here in the UK.

Will the EU allow it?

The EU have constantly attacked Microsoft over it’s bundling of IE with Windows. The EU lawmakers weren’t even satisfied when Microsoft announced that it would not be doing so with Windows 7. However, there are no expensive, pointless lengths to which the highly-paid EU civil servants won’t go in order to promote notional “competition” in the EU. Google may be in for a legal fight to retain the right to supply the whole Chrome package without offering a competitor’s product too.

What if there isn’t a competing product at the time? The EU will probably insist that Google provide developers with enough information so that they can make one! This is the EU we are talking about after all.

What If Microsoft produced a Chrome version of IE? Given the grip that the flawed Internet Explorer has on the psyche on many Windows users you can’t help but think that given the choice a huge number of new Chrome OS users would install and use IE and thereby eliminating the whole security point of the Chrome OS. Why would Microsoft be able to produce a secure browser for Chrome when it has failed to do so in eleven years for Windows?

But being totally illogical and senseless is not something that ever stopped the EU Commission’s work so Google had better be ready for a disappointment.

Palm choose O2 as UK carrier for Palm Pré

by: Chris Hudson
7 July, 2009

palm-prePalm have chosen O2 as their Palm Pré carrier for the 2009 launch in the UK.

Their choice appears to have been influenced by the fact that Telefónica, who own O2, have the rights to the Pré in Ireland, Germany and Spain.

As O2 are the exclusive carrier of the Apple iPhone in the UK it seems strange that Palm would have chosen a company to carry its smartphone that must have be subject conflicting interests. It is difficult to serve two masters.

O2 have been the subject of criticism from UK iPhone users over the recent release of the iPhone 3GS.

Their response to a request for an upgrade path from 3G users was to “pay up your existing contract in full”.

In the US Apple announced that the exisitng 3G phone would immediately cost just US$99, but O2’s price for the old technology remained unchanged at US$154 on an eighteen month contract.

Presently, there is no pricing available for the Palm Pré, either on monthly contracts or pay as you go. But as O2 has both contracts there is little incentive to differentiate in price between the two products.

In the US, Palm chose Sprint and Apple were already with AT&T. The iPhone is about US$20 a month more expensive on similar contracts in the US and so we await with interest to seem whether Palm’s UK exclusive deal will “benefit” UK consumers.

The Palm Pré will be released in the UK in late 2009.

Here are a few basics of the Palm Pré:

  • 3.1″ touch screen (320×480 pixels) display
  • Slide-out QWERTY keyboard
  • GPS built-in
  • Ambient light sensor, accelerometer, and proximity sensor
  • Wi-Fi 802.11b/g
  • 8GB internal storage
  • Bluetooth

Does your iPhone 3G or 3GS suffer from heatstroke?

by: Chris Hudson
6 July, 2009

If your Apple iPhone 3G or 3GS has been misbehaving during the recent sunny weather it may be because you’ve been using it in temperatures of over 95°F (35°C).

The iPhone can be stored in temperatures a little higher, up to 113°F (45°C) but beware, temperatures in cars can easily reach 140°F, even in the UK.

If you do use your iPhone at or above these limits you will find battery-life shortened and the iPhone may stop working altogether.

This is normal were the temperature inside the iPhone has gone beyond these limits; the iPhone will attempt to regulate its internal temperature to protect the components of the phone from damage.

Symptoms of these attempts include:

  • dimming of the iPhone display
  • weak mobile signal
  • the iPhone will not charge or stops charging
  • the most obvious signal of all is the temperature warning screen shown below.

iphonewarning

If you think your iPhone is affected then simply turn off your iPhone and put it somewhere cooler, away from direct sunlight.

Think ahead, if you place it on a desktop in the shade remember the sun moves and it could end up back in direct sunlight again! Don’t put it in a drawer, the heat will be trapped and it will take longer to cool down. Find somewhere open, where the air can get to your iPhone, away from the sunlight.

Although the iPhone can be stored at -20°C we don’t recommend sticking in the freezer for half an hour!

An important point - even if you get the “iPhone needs to cool down before you can use it” message you may still be able to make emergency calls.

Facebook for iPhone 3.0 coming soon

by: Chris Hudson
3 July, 2009

facebook3iphone1The developers of Facebook for iPhone 3.0 have announced that it is about 98% complete and due for release to the App Store very soon.

The developers say that this major update to their popular iPhone app includes:

1. A new News Feed
2. Ability to “Like”
3. Events with the capability to reply to the invite
4. Pages
5. Notes
6. Ability to create new photo albums
7. Upload photos to any album
8. Zoom into photos
9. Easier photo tagging
10. Profile Pictures albums
11. A new home screen for easy access to all your stuff, search, and notifications
12. Add your favorite profiles and pages to the home screen
13. Better Notifications which link to the comments so that you can reply
14. Quickly call or text people right from the Friends page
15. Messages you are typing will be restored if you quit or are interrupted by a phone call.

The only disappointment for fans is their confirmation that Push Notifications will not make it to version 3.0. However, it will be in the 3.1 update which is also planned for this summer.

The free download of the current version 2.5 of Facebook for iPhone is still available