Well it looks like Google is going to phase out their support for Internet Explorer 6. If you are still using IE6 then you should know you are using a browser with many well documented security flaws. What you probably didn’t know is that a lot of web sites are phasing out their support for IE6 including Google. Google says that as of March 1, 2010, you will not be able to access Google apps with IE6.
Here is what Google sent me today:
Dear Google Apps admin,
In order to continue to improve our products and deliver more sophisticated features and performance, we are harnessing some of the latest improvements in web browser technology. This includes faster JavaScript processing and new standards like HTML5. As a result, over the course of 2010, we will be phasing out support for Microsoft Internet Explorer 6.0 as well as other older browsers that are not supported by their own manufacturers…
It is very important that you consider upgrading your Internet Explorer browser to IE8 (via windows update) or moving to another browser like Mozilla Firefox , Google Chrome or Apple Safari . If you are working at a corporate office I suggest you consider a portable version of Firefox or Chrome from Portable apps which runs without the need to install anything to your PC. You can install it directly to your USB drive or to a folder on your desktop.
I use a portable version of Google Chrome at my office for several reasons:
- Google Chrome uses the proxy settings setup in IE by my IT team so I don’t have to worry about having to configure Chrome myself.
- Google Chrome is based on Webkit, one of the best HTML rendering engines and it’s as fast as Safari.
- If I open multiple tabs in Chrome, they all run with seperate processes so a crash in one tab only kills that tab and not the entire machine. Also it has better memory managment then IE and Firefox and will not crash my computer.
- I can run it from my USB drive and Google Chrome will save all my cache there so when i disconnect my USB drive, I leave no trace on the host machine I ran it from.
- Google chrome has lots and lots of screen real estate.
So I don’t know if my solution is the one for you, I only know that everyone needs to let go of IE6.
Cheers, Paul
It appears that for a number of years, a person has been creating torrent sites that require a login and password as well as creating forums set up for torrent site usage and then selling these purportedly well-crafted sites and forums to other people innocently looking to start a download site of their very own. However, these sites came with a little extra - security exploits and backdoors throughout the system. This person then waited for the forums and sites to get popular and then used those exploits to get access to the username, email address, and password of every person who had signed up. Additional exploits to gain admin root on forums that weren't created by this person also appear to have been utilized; in some instances, the exploit involved redirecting attempts to access the forums to another site that would request log-in information. This information was then used to attempt to gain access to third party sites like Twitter.Yet again a good reminder to choose strong (and different) passwords for each site—and if you have a hard time remembering all of them, stick to a secure password management solution.
Saving something as a PDF file is a great way to preserve it for future reference or for sharing with others, without risking the site changing before you look at it again. PDFMyURL makes it easy to convert sites to PDF.
Point PDFMyURL at a website URL and it will convert the site into a PDF document. Not only can you do a simple conversion just by plugging in a URL but you can also modify the PDF with a wide variety of flags—see the advanced menu for a full list—that let you set the page orientation and size, header information, print orientation, and more. PDFMyURL also has a bookmarklet you can drag to your toolbar for easy access to the PDF creation service.
PDFMyURL is a free service and doesn't watermark or otherwise alter the site you are converting to PDF. Have a favorite tool for PDF conversion or a bookmarklet that makes life easier? Let's hear about it in the comments.
Windows/Linux: It's one thing to be able to quickly search through file names using a program like Everything, but it leaves you out in the cold when it comes to deep searching documents. DocFetcher can help by indexing document contents.
If you need to search within a text document instead of simply searching for the name of the file, DocFetcher is a great application available for both Windows and Linux to do so. DocFetcher doesn't simply index the words and leave you to pick through them, you can use a variety of parameters like including or excluding search terms using the +/- signs, searching metadata, using wild cards, and specifying file extensions.
More well known document search tools exist, like Google Desktop, but for those who don't want the bulk or potential invasion of privacy that comes with using software like Google Desktop, DocFetcher is a lightweight alternative. DocFetcher is freeware and available for Windows and Linux. Have a favorite tool for deep massaging your data? Let's hear about it in the comments.
Tagged Document management, Document Search, Downloads, Featured Download, Linux, Search, Windows



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