Technology

If you support Microsoft products, get a TechNet subscription.  TechNet provides unlimited working copies of every operating system, server and Office product without limitations on time or features. You also get the   entire online TechNet support library.  These copies don’t expire.  Your TechNet subscription also comes with two free support incidents from Microsoft.  I’ve never needed to call Microsoft support, so I generally let the subscription lapse and buy a new subscription every two to three years when I have a reason.

A TechNet subscription can run you $599, but you can get TechNet for $250.  How, you ask?

First, Microsoft offers a download-only version of the TechNet subscription called TechNet Direct. They don’t ship you DVD’s or CD’s.  You can download the ISO files for the Microsoft products in TechNet directly from Microsoft.  You can burn the TechNet ISO images to your own CD-ROM or DVD. You also obtain your Microsoft TechNet license keys online through the same site as the downloads.

Normally, a TechNet Direct subscription is $349 a year which saves you $250 from the standard TechNet Single subscription.  If you use the right promotion code for 2009, you can get this same subscription for only $249 through July 3rd!

To get your subscription for only $249:

  1. Go to Microsoft’s TechNet Subscription Website
  2. Click the “Buy for $349 USD” option
  3. Select the “TechNet Plus Direct” radio button in the left hand column
  4. Enter the promotion code of TEYFY09
  5. Click Continue
  6. Your order will show $249!

The V1 Chair looks awesome (and really comfortable)! You have GOT to check this out:  flagship.jpg (JPEG Image, 1600×1200 pixels).  $2,600 before purchasing a custom automotive seat and before FedEx freight shipping.

Apple released ProtectMac AntiVirus this month. <sarcasm> Curious, I thought Macintosh computers were immune to malware?</sarcasm>

Apple has been running ads with a guy in a suit representing the PC and another actor in jeans and a t-shirt as a Macintosh. Various commercials show the PC character being paranoid about viruses, Apple even goes so far as to dress the PC actor in a white clean room suit (it’s supposed to look like a biohazard suit). This is supposed to imply that a Macintosh computer is immune to security threats like viruses and malicious websites. It’s not.

Since the dawn of Macintosh Time, the original Macintosh computers used Motorola and later IBM processors, neither of which was compatible with Intel processors.  Thus, viruses that ran on a PC with an Intel processor would not run on a Macintosh which used the Motorola or IBM processor.  Modern Macintosh computers now use Intel processors, (yes, you can still buy a Macintosh with a non Intel chip) so that myth bit the dust five years ago when Macintosh made the switch to Intel. Further complicating things is Java, which is a virtual environment that renders the actual processor used as meaningless. Java code runs anywhere there is a java engine to run it, which is all current Macintosh computers and PC’s.

Which brings us to the latest Java vulnerability in the Macintosh browser that lets sites hijack the Macintosh and run any command on it they wish, remotely.  A security professional, frustrated by Apple not patching this bug even after knowing about it for six months and knowing there was code in the wild to exploit this Macintosh Java vulnerability, released a proof-of-concept piece of Java software to prove the Macintosh could be hacked via Apple’s Java engine.  See Computerworld’s article: Angered by Apple delay, hacker posts Mac Java attack code.

CIO magazine’s Ira Winkler felt the hacker releasing the code was a ineffective at best and argued that it’s time for the FTC to investigate Mac Security.

My personal opinion?

I don’t have as big a problem with companies making insecure products, consumers just shouldn’t buy them if they know they are insecure and have a choice. I have a problem with companies misrepresenting products as being secure when they’re not, knowing full well that their consumers are not educated enough to know the difference.

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