Have YOU Been Pwned?

Security maven Troy Hunt has created a web site that allows you to test your email to see if you have been “pwned” by recent security break-ins of user database lists. Check your email address to see if you have been “pwned!”

Introducing “Have I been pwned?” – aggregating accounts across website breaches

“Just after the Adobe breach, a number of sites started popping up that let you search through the breach to see if your email address (and consequently your password), was leaked. For example there was this one by Ilias Ismanalijev, here’s another by Lucb1e and even LastPass got on the bandwagon with this one. When I used the tool to check my accounts, I found both my personal and work accounts contained in the breach. I had absolutely no idea why!

The most likely answer is that I did indeed create accounts on Adobe, perhaps as far back as in the days when I was using Dreamweaver to build classic ASP whilst it was still owned by Macromedia. The point is that these accounts had been floating around for so long that by the time a breach actually occurred I had no idea that my account had been compromised because the site was simply no longer on my radar.

But of course Adobe is not the only searchable breach online, there’s also one for Gawker, another for LinkedIn passwords (emails and usernames weren’t disclosed) and so on and so forth. Problem is, there’s not a tool to search across multiple breaches, at least not that I’ve found which is why I’ve built haveibeenpwned.com”

Have I Been Pwned Web Site

Why is Mighty Microsoft Scared of a Linux Powered Chromebook?

Microsoft is fighting against Chromebooks HARD! Spending tons of holiday ad money on dissing Google’s Chromebook. Why? Isn’t Microsoft the “undisputed leader in the PC world?” Ummm… not anymore. In fact, I have asked Santa myself (ie. ny wife) for a Chromebook for Christmas… sparkling under the Christmas Tree! Why? I want to do my computing in The Cloud to see if I can live there! (More on that if it happens!)

Could it be that the Chrome OS is a version of Linux, and the idea of the world running on a totally non-Microsoft platform means their destruction? Maybe. But, Microsoft is running scared… and you know I love it!

Why is Microsoft scared of Chromebooks?

The Verge – ‘It’s pretty much a brick,’ says Pawn Stars’ Rick Harrison as he rejects a Samsung Chromebook brought in by an actor playing a customer. Microsoft really doesn’t want you buying this thing.

But why? Just how big of a threat are Chromebooks, Google’s oft-ridiculed web-only laptops, to Microsoft’s core business?

In many ways, 2013 has been the year of the Chromebook for Google. From Acer’s $199 C720-2848 to HP’s $279 Chromebook 11, Mountain View has attracted traditional Windows PC makers to build a variety of low-cost laptops in time for the holidays. While Microsoft had largely ignored the threat since the first Chromebook launched some two years ago, it’s been on the attack in recent weeks as part of its ongoing ‘Scroogled’ campaign. Following the Pawn Stars bit, the company has recruited its own ‘Ben the PC Guy’ to hit the streets for comparisons between Windows 8 and a Chromebook.

More like "Linux vs. Mac vs. PC" from the old Novell spoof!Microsoft’s latest effort to undermine the Chromebooks feels more ‘Mac vs. PC’ — Apple’s famous ad campaign from several years ago — than anything else. (More like “Linux vs. Mac vs. PC” from the old Novell spoof! – Dr. Bill) The scenes are reminiscent of the ‘laptop hunter’ ads that Microsoft used to attack Apple following the Windows Vista release — it’s a similar approach nearly five years later. The difference this time is that Microsoft appears to be targeting a threat that doesn’t really exist yet: while consumer-research group NPD claimed earlier this year that Chromebook sales have snared nearly 25 percent of the US market for laptops under $300, that market has been largely replaced by tablets. Rival research firm IDC estimates that Samsung shipped around 652,000 Chromebooks worldwide in Q3. ‘Among other vendors Lenovo, Acer, and HP have shipped, but in tiny volume,’ says IDC’s senior research analyst Rajani Singh. IDC expects Chrome OS devices to reach 3 million units this year — that’s less than 1 percent of all PC sales.

Something has Microsoft spooked, though. Chromebooks have dominated Amazon’s best seller charts in the US, but without hard numbers, it’s still unclear exactly how well Google’s laptops are selling worldwide. There is a threat from well-priced laptops, as we’ve witnessed from Linux-based netbooks years ago, but things appear to be moving slowly for Chromebooks right now. Google’s latest Chromebooks from Acer and HP could help push things further, but Google and HP were forced to halt sales of the Chromebook 11 last month following complaints of chargers overheating. After three weeks, the Chromebook 11 still hasn’t returned to shelves despite the important Black Friday and Cyber Monday shopping days during the busy holiday period.

And in reality, Microsoft’s offensive could backfire, drawing more attention to a platform that many consumers aren’t familiar with. Google has been aggressively pushing its range of Chromebooks with simple ads that focus on the price of the laptop and its simplicity. The devices won’t appeal to every consumer due to their various restrictions, but many potential customers might not even be aware of their existence yet.

‘Given Microsoft is currently losing the mobility war by a wide margin, they are turning to defending their laptop turf, and doing it by playing a strong offense,’ says Patrick Moorhead, president and principal analyst at Moor Insights and Strategy. ‘The downside is that by Microsoft going after Chromebooks with broadcast media, they are increasing general consumer awareness and familiarity for Chromebooks versus the more technically savvy who are buying Chromebooks.'”

More Reasons to Love the Google Chromecast!

1) You can watch anything that you can view in your web browser. I have been talking about this feature for a while. But, I am not sure folks “get” this feature even yet! For instance, there are TV shows on CBS, and other TV networks’ web sites, where they have full episodes available to view in your browser. Once you start a show in the Chrome browser window, then you can go “full screen” in the player, and if that is in a tab cast to your TV via Chromecast… guess what? You have a full screen TV show via Chromecast! Want to watch the latest version of RWBY on the Roosterteeth web site, guess what? Full screen on your HDTV in your living room! Now even your web-based shows are available!

2) Watch your own local (on your hard drive) videos. Wait! I thought that you couldn’t do that with the Chromecast! Yes, you can… because anything that you can view in your Chrome browser window, you can watch on your TV screen! So… all you have to do is open a local video file in your Chrome browser using the “Control-O” command in Chrome. It will come up in a player within Chrome, then you can hit the “full screen” button in the lower right corner of the player. (Basically, it is the HTML5 player.) Since Chrome supports file format viewing for such formats as AVI, MP4, M4V, MPEG, OGV, and WEBM videos, you can then watch you own local videos using this hack!

3) Do you want to show your entire PC screen on your HDTV? Maybe you want to show someone how to do something in a training setting? Well, you can! It is an “experimental” feature, but it is available. Just open your Chrome browser, click on the “Cast this tab…” option as usual, then select the drop down menu, and choose to cast your whole screen! As I said, it IS experimental, but, you can do it!

Windows 8.0/8.1 Growth is Slow!

Windows 8.0 and 8.1 is not exactly “taking off!” Could it be Microsoft’s stupid determination to not have a real Start Button be the reason for it? Well, as I always point out, you should use ClassicShell from classicshell.net.

Windows 7 gains more market share than Windows 8 and 8.1

The Inquirer – “Microsoft’s Windows 7 still holds more market share than Windows 8 and Windows 8.1 combined.

Even more disturbing, for Microsoft, is that Windows 7 has actually gained more market share that the newer versions of Windows.

Statistics provided by Netapplications in its Netmarketshare report for November show that Windows 8 and Windows 8.1 have gained a mere 0.05 percent, with Windows 8 reaching a satanic 6.66 percent.

This is hardly market saturation 13 months after release. Compare that to Windows 7, which despite being over four years old and just 18 months from End of Life still has 46.64 percent of the market. That’s just a tiny increase of 0.22 percent, but it’s a clear demonstration that most most PC users are avoiding Windows 8.

There are of course several possible reasons for this. We know that the PC market is slowing quite significantly. There are a lot of computer shops that might have old machines in stock. When we popped down to our local independent shop, it was selling Windows 7 laptops at hefty discounts.

Then there are those who buy shiny new laptops and are so determined not to use Windows 8 that they buy Windows 7 separately and downgrade manually.

The breakdown is as follows:

Windows 7 46.64 percent
Windows XP 31.22 percent
Windows 8 6.66 percent
Windows Vista 3.57 percent
Windows 8.1 2.64 percent

With Windows XP set to reach full End of Life including security updates in a mere four months, we can’t imagine what Microsoft can do to persuade PC users to upgrade their machines, especially since Windows 8 simply hasn’t caught on.”

Geek Website of the Week: RollApp!

Do you want to run LibreOffice on your new Google Chromebook? Well, now you can, with ‘RollApp!’ Rollapp is a service that let’s you run ‘heavy’ programs and view them, in an HTML5 enabled browser. IT is actually pretty cool! Instead of virtualizing a whole desktop, it virtualizes the applications themselves!

RollApp Web Site

What is rollApp?
There are 3 different answers to this question, depending on your point of view

For users
rollApp is a software-on-demand service that instantly delivers existing third-party SW applications to any web-browser equipped device over broadband/3G. Users can find and run online most of the software they need without installing it to their computers or other devices. Think of it as ‘YouTube for applications’ – a place where software authors publish their applications and then anyone can access them using a browser.

For technology professionals
rollApp is an online application virtualization platform. Once a software publisher installs their ‘traditional’ desktop applications to rollApp server, rollApp instantly converts these applications to SaaS/Cloud versions. Then anyone can access rollApp server using regular web-browser and launch the converted applications inside a browser. When executed via a browser, rollApp applications behave the same way as locally installed ones. This works for applications initially developed for any popular platform: Windows, UNIX, MacOS, etc – and regardless of the operating system installed on the client computer/device.

For businesses
rollApp is an application publishing platform that allows end customers to get access to software-on-demand services using freemium model. For software publishers it instantly adds new features to their applications and provides new distribution/revenue channel, for advertisers it brings traditional TV-style advertising model to non-TV devices (desktop computers, laptops, netbooks, smartphones, tablets, etc).”

They show OpenOffice in this demo, but they have LibreOffice available now. Check it out!

They also have a RollApp File Opener, as shown in this video:

Steam Has a Head of… Steam!

7 million concurrent (all at the same time, for low information folks) sessions! Rock on!

Steam surpasses 7 million concurrent users for the first time

Venture Beat – “Microsoft’s and Sony’s new consoles are the hot items for this holiday season, but the excitement for those boxes isn’t causing any slowdown on the PC side of things.

Game-distribution service Steam just topped 7 million concurrent online customers for the first time in its history. This new record comes in the midst of the annual fall sale that Valve holds for its digital-download platform.

Steam approached the 7-million mark for the past several days, but it peaked at 7.19 million customers around 11 a.m. Pacific time today. In late October, Valve revealed that Steam has 65 million registered accounts. That means that more than one in every 10 Steam members were using the service today. That’s a huge number of engaged gamers.

This new record also represents significant growth over last year. Steam had around 6 million peak concurrent users during its 2012 fall sale. That’s a 17 percent growth in engagement for a platform that was already well established in 2012.

Steam should only continue to grow. Valve announced plans to expand the service out into its own operating system — called SteamOS — based on Linux in the near future. The company will also work with hardware manufacturers to bundle SteamOS on new PCs called Steam Machines.”

Amazon Delivery by Drone?

If this were April 1st, I would blame an April Fool’s joke! But, it seems that they are serious! Check out the video below, as someone orders from Amazon, then gets dleivery in less than 30 minutes via a drone!

How cool is that?!? Delivery’s would be limited to 10 miles or less from the fulfillment center, but this is wild!

Granted it is 5 years out (and that is really ambitious!) And, the “air traffic control” aspects are daunting. But, as an idea, this is actually pretty cool!

Dr. Bill.TV #316 – Video – “Make It Open Source Edition!”

elementaryOS, the simple Linux distro for Mac Lovers, Google voice control via a Goople Chrome Plug-In, Happy Birthday from Google (to me!) GSotW: TAudioConverter! A movement to save Winamp, by making it Open Source!

Links that pertain to this Netcast:

TechPodcasts Network

International Association of Internet Broadcasters

Blubrry Network

Dr. Bill Bailey.NET

TAudioConverter Audio Converter


Start the Video Netcast in the Blubrry Video Player above by
clicking on the “Play” Button in the center of the screen.

(Click on the buttons below to Stream the Netcast in your “format of choice”)
Streaming M4V Audio





Streaming MP3 Audio

Streaming Ogg Audio

Download M4V Download WebM Download MP3 Download Ogg
(Right-Click on any link above, and select “Save As…” to save the Netcast on your PC.)

Available on YouTube at: https://youtu.be/-trfp_tnGB4

Available on Vimeo at: https://vimeo.com/80697070


Dr. Bill.TV #316 – Audio – “Make It Open Source Edition!”

elementaryOS, the simple Linux distro for Mac Lovers, Google voice control via a Goople Chrome Plug-In, Happy Birthday from Google (to me!) GSotW: TAudioConverter! A movement to save Winamp, by making it Open Source!

Links that pertain to this Netcast:

TechPodcasts Network

International Association of Internet Broadcasters

Blubrry Network

Dr. Bill Bailey.NET

TAudioConverter Audio Converter


Start the Video Netcast in the Blubrry Video Player above by
clicking on the “Play” Button in the center of the screen.

(Click on the buttons below to Stream the Netcast in your “format of choice”)
Streaming M4V Audio





Streaming MP3 Audio

Streaming Ogg Audio

Download M4V Download WebM Download MP3 Download Ogg
(Right-Click on any link above, and select “Save As…” to save the Netcast on your PC.)

Available on YouTube at: https://youtu.be/-trfp_tnGB4

Available on Vimeo at: https://vimeo.com/80697070


Save Winamp… Make it Open Source!

Hundreds of thousands have signed the peptition asking AOL to Open Source Winamp.

Winamp lovers beg AOL to open source code

Ars Technica – “Last week, AOL announced the impending death of Winamp, saying that the 16-year-old media player would be shut down within a month.

‘Winamp.com and associated Web services will no longer be available past December 20, 2013. Additionally, Winamp Media players will no longer be available for download. Please download the latest version before that date,’ AOL announced.

But fans of the venerable software have launched a ‘Save Winamp’ website and petition asking AOL either to keep Winamp alive or to open source its code.

‘The history of digital music started with Winamp,’ says the group, which includes nine developers who have pledged to improve Winamp if the source code is released. ‘Our goal is to convince Nullsoft [the AOL subsidiary behind Winamp] to release the Winamp source code and we will take it further in an open-source way.’

The petition was started by Web hosting company owner Peter Zawacki of Australia, and it has more than 12,000 supporters thus far. ‘If AOL allows it to go open source it WILL live on forever and be in the hands of people who love it and use it every day,’ the petition states.

We’ve asked AOL if the company is willing to release Winamp’s source code but haven’t yet received a response.”

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