Home > antivirus firewall software, Blogging > TechBytes: Kindle Sells Out

TechBytes: Kindle Sells Out

December 25th, 2010 Leave a comment Go to comments

It’s the Live Internet TV that just never seems to get easier.
As we spend more of our lives online, we use more of our brains creating and keeping track of Internet paroles.

Becky Worley offers tips for keeping your online info safe.We need them to access banks, e-mail accounts, social networks, shopping sites, travel sites, loan programs, mortgage statements… The list goes on and on. And, to be special safe, we need to have a dissimilar password for each online account.
It’s enough to give any Internet user a World Wide Web-sized vex.
ABC internet tv News asked security experts for their advice on creating and managing online passwords. Check out their tips below:
1. Be Complicated.
With all the passwords you have to remember, it can be tempting to keep it simple. But experts say in brief, basic passwords are a cakewalk for hackers.
“The passwords that are the weakest, that are the easiest for hackers or crackers, are short common words, simple, obvious phrases,” said Jeff Fox, technology editor for Consumer Reports.
Cyber criminals often use software to help them figure out passwords, he said, and most programs can run through the most common words in the English language in just a atomlike or two.

 We’re still doing pretty much the same things, such as electronic messaging and reading news. But Facebook is changing the way we get that information, making it more personalized. For the root time, games beat out e-mail as the second most plain online activity.
 

Apple will unveil updates today to the software that powers the iPhone. iPhone owners are hoping Apple addresses one of the few gripes about the device: extra multi-tasking. There’s no way right now to run more than one program at a time, except for a Choose? few, and those are mostly Apple’s own programs. Any changes to the iPhone will also show up on the iPad because they run on the same software. But the updates probably won’t be available for a few months.

“Some of the productivity suites, people are having a little bit of problem? with because it’s a brand new interface,” Bilton wrote. “You’re literally using something that you probably used for many, many years on a touch-screen device with a pop-up keyboard, and it’s designed for that touch-screen device, so to get used to it actually takes a little bit of work.”

  1. No comments yet.
  1. No trackbacks yet.
You must be logged in to post a comment.