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Apr 14

Well now there’s a website for the Occupy Movement in Prescott at OccupyPrescott.org.  I suppose I have to give Mr. Adcock some credit for beating everyone else to the domain name and slapping a blog on it.  However, if this is a serious attempt to enable the local 99% to fight the 1%, then I’m disappointed.

But just to make sure I wasn’t being unfair, I thoroughly searched the Occupy Movement’s website for any mention of Prescott.  I found nothing.  Once again, I am disappointed to find that “action” has been limited to a blog and a smattering of Facebook comments.  Once again, I can’t rely on the local groups, local media, and not even CNN.  They’re too busy name-calling.  No sir, I have to go to a foreign media source like Al Jazeera to find out what’s really happening with the 99%.

I’m not saying the 99% are right, or wrong.  I think both sides have legitimate and illegitimate gripes.  There are rich who prey upon the innocent.  There are poor people of good conscious who are powerless to stop them.  Then again, there are beneficent rich people, and poor who reek with the stench of villainy.  Greed is the real problem.  There’s greed on both sides.

If we want to fix greed, then we must make politicians live by the same rules the rest of us do.  Congress is on the take, and everybody knows it.  Congress is owned by the greedy with money.  Force them to stop accepting what I call “bribes”, take away their special privileges and retirement plans. Make them live under the same laws that the rest of us do.  I just wish I knew how to make that change happen.

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Apr 11

The next time you need to connect your $200 Sony Blu-Ray player or $300 Xbox 360 to your $700 Sony Full HD 1080p 120Hz  TV, consider buying the $1,096 HDMI Cable from AudioQuest.  Think about the Dielectric-Bias System that reduces distortion and 100% Perfect-Surface Silver conductors for improved signal clarity, and the Direct-Silver-plated HDMI connectors that provide a simple connection and durability.  Consider it carefully, then laugh out-loud and buy the $6 one instead.

OMG, really?  $1,096 for a 3.3-foot HDMI cable?  Why??  Because Monster Cables was monopolizing the ridiculously overpriced and under-performing cable market?

Once upon a time, I used to be in the Audiophile business.  Audiophiles are the people who take their music very seriously and sometimes spend hundreds of thousands of dollars on their equipment (CD players, amplifiers, speakers, wires).  I’ve even known a few to buy the $6,000 power cord for their turn-table because it sounded that much better than the $4,000 one they already owned.  And believe it or not, it actually can make a difference (if you can hear it).  So if anybody was going to spend $1,096 on that HDMI cable, it would be these guys (or videophiles).

But they don’t.  Why?  Because it’s the signal going through the HDMI cable is “digital”.  That’s important because traditional “analog” audio signals are sensitive to their environment; things like light-ballasts, vacuum cleaners, old electronics, and even electromagnetic waves from other cables can make the audio sound bad.  None of that happens with digital.  Digital is ones and zeros, on and off.  Another way of thinking of digital is you get 100% or you get zero percent, there’s no in-between.  In fact, most Audiophiles hate digital because of the absolute rigidity of the digital signal.

So if there’s no in-between, then why all the buzz about extra-special digital cables?  Because uninformed people are taken advantage of.  My advice to anyone is that before dropping thousands of dollars on equipment, give us a call, or somebody you trust with tech, or Google it at the very minimum.  Do a little fact-checking.

Via: Geekologie

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Mar 31

There’s not a lot of technological growth in the local area that makes the news.  Few are interested in the latest technology used to sell cars or track property taxes, and consequently little makes the headlines.  But tech changes in day-to-day operations of just about anything are interesting, especially when you compare before to after.

In another fine article from the Chino Valley Review, we see that our local friendly ambulance company has upgraded the technology that they employ on a daily basis.  Here’s what caught my eye:

Before the software existed, Kasprzyk said a paramedic took a cellphone camera shot a of the electrocardiogram print out and send that to the Emergency Room, where a doctor would look for abnormalities.

“If the photo was sent, the quality was usually very poor and many times we couldn’t even tell what was going on,” said Yavapai Regional Medical Center Dr. Christopher Lampe. “Now you get these perfect images as if they’re being done in the emergency department.”

I’m just amazed. I see hacks all the time, and just when I think my skin is thick enough, along comes another marvel of “how did it come to this?”.  Seriously, at some point, some EMT had enough creativity and ingenuity to snap a cell phone picture and send it, which was probably far better than what was done previously.  And then it became standard procedure.  I’m certainly glad technology has come far enough along to allow Life Line to upgrade to something that should have existed since the 80′s.

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Jul 27

It’s the most sinister computer virus ever made.  God could not create a more perfect instrument of digital destruction.  It’s the kind of thing science fiction and government conspiracy movies are made of.  It can literally go nuclear.  It’s so evil, even SkyNet said Daaaamn.  It was obviously made by some secret black-ops computer team.  And best of all, it’s open source and free to the public.  Watch the video of how our world is going to end.

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Jul 25

CableOne is now offering 50Mbps business plans as of today.  The old business packages will continue to remain available.  This chart (that I snagged from CableOne’s photocopier) shows their month-to-month pricing.  However, there are bundled rates and other saving available.

It wasn’t that long ago that CableOne made their 50Mbps available to residential customers.  Now with their DOCSIS 3.0 technology fully implemented, both business and residential customers alike will have to seriously consider the power of 50Mbps over the offerings of anyone else.

However, throughput limits are in effect on some of the packages.  Any current CableOne customer can log into their account and see their current throughput to determine if the limits will effect them or not.  Also, CableOne uses an in browser popup warning system to make sure that users are well aware of the potential of exceeding their limit.

There are a lot more questions to answer for any business considering a move to CableOne.  What are the bundles?  What are the potential savings?  If phone service is added, will that save money?  What about existing contracts?  The thing to do is to speak with a CableOne Business Account Representative.  Every business has unique needs, and they are the only ones qualified to fully answer any question for any situation.

The CableOne Business Account Representative that we do business with and prefer is Maryanne DeMarco.  She prefers to be reached on her cell phone at (928) 202-1963.  Tell her Hill Top IT sent you.  :)

 

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Jul 24

Google recently introduced a new service to detect if a user’s computer was infected with malware and then inform the user. The warning appears as an in browser pop-up above the Google search bar. The warning is bright yellow and contains a link to another Google page where the user can learn what to do about their possible malware problem.

The service is the product of an investigation to determine the source of unusual activity patterns that were detected in Google’s data centers. It turns out that the activity was actually coming from machines that were infected with malware. Since it was a simple matter to detect the individual activity patterns, Google’s engineers capitalized on the opportunity to warn users of the potential threat in real time. Continue reading »

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Jul 03

The Daily Courier posted an article about the E-mail accounts of a few police officers getting hacked and posted online for the world to see.  While I generally disapprove of crap like Wikileaks or the posting confidential information in any online forum, here’s what caught my eye:

“This leak has names, addresses, phone numbers, passwords, social security numbers, online dating account info, voicemails, chat logs, and seductive girlfriend pictures belonging to a dozen Arizona police officers. We found more internal police reports, cops forwarding racist chain emails, k9 drug unit cops who use percocets, and a convicted sex offender who was part of FOP Maricopa Lodge Five,” the [hacker] group said.

Now technically I don’t think any of that is illegal, but the statement does certainly paint the police in a bad light.  In my personal opinion, the police should hold themselves to the highest standard of morality and ethics and should be ready to stand inspection and be accountable for anything found to be less than exceptional.  However, cops are people too and they have a reasonable expectation to privacy that should not be violated by anyone.

Never the less, this is a lesson and prime example to the rest of us to not trust anything connected to the Internet.  If the cops can get pwned, where does that leave the rest of us?  My personal rule:  If it can transmit, don’t trust it.  Of course, it also helps if one is not a racist drug-abusing sex offender.  :)

Via: Daily Courier

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Jul 02

I’m being a little sarcastic in this post.  For those of you who don’t know what sarcasm is, please read this article.  In any case, I love piracy because it’s big business for me.  Why?  Because I know something that a lot of people don’t know.  Here’s what it is:

First, watch the anti-piracy PSA I’ve posted.  The moral of the story is “if you download free movies, some innocent boom operator loses her job”.  Ok, now that you’ve watched the video and realized that some people have no souls, here’s the secret knowledge: Continue reading »

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Jun 13

This Saturday 18th from 10:00am to 2:30pm, we are hosting an official Grand Opening and Meet and Greet at our store in Prescott Valley.  There will be free Hot Dogs and sodas, and possibly some other fun stuff.  Some of our business partners will be there as well.  Come meet us and find out why everybody uses Hill Top IT.  Here’s a map, and you can let us know you’re coming through the Facebook event page.

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May 27

Mac Defender is a fake anti-virus program for the Mac OS and it’s designed to steal people’s credit card information and other personal information.  It’s MalWare.  It’s on a Mac.  It’s very real.  I know there’s a lot of people that think that Mac’s are virus-proof, but that’s simply not true.  Apple has removal instructions on their website.  The 1st virus for Mac OSX appeared in February 2006:

Experts at SophosLabs™, Sophos’s global network of virus, spyware and spam analysis centers, have announced the discovery of the first virus for the Apple Mac OS X platform. The virus, named OSX/Leap-A (also known as OSX/Oompa-A) spreads via instant messaging systems.

How is Apple responding to the flood of customer calls about installations of the Mac Defender malware?  Apple continues to tell support reps: do not help with Mac malware.  Now that may sound bad, but in reality it’s not Apple’s responsibility to teach users how to use a Mac properly or how to secure it. 

We see this kind of thing on Windows all the time.  Fake anti-virus programs that suddenly appear warning of massive infections that can only be corrected with a Visa or MasterCard.  They can instantly disable Internet access, interrupt normal program function, erase system recovery points, lock users out of administrative access, and transmit confidential information.  They all have one thing in common: no significant anti-virus protection, which is exactly where most Mac users are at.

Mac users have enjoyed virtual immunity from the cyber-criminals who have focused almost all of their efforts on Microsoft products.  But now that Apple has become a tech name bigger than Microsoft, and the Mac OS is now on millions of computers, that time is no more.  Cyber criminals have no brand loyalty, they are only motivated by theft and greed.  The Apple is ripe for the picking.  Mac Defender isn’t going away.  It will be copied, changed, altered, replicated, and will inspire other cyber criminals to succeed where Mac Defender failed.

While there is a small part of me that will enjoy watching that smile getting slapped off the smug faces of those self-important Apple religious-fanatics (you know who you are), I also feel a great swell of pity for the many innocent people who will be victimized in the near future because some fool told them Mac’s were virus-proof.  Well, if you own a Mac, you can now switch to a Linux because it’s “virus-proof” too.  Or you can get a real anti-virus program for the Mac OS.  Here’s what I found that’s available:

Avast! Mac Edition, $39.95/year
ClamXav, Free
PC Tools iAntiVirus, Free (basic version)
Intego VirusBarrier, $49.95/year
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