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Home>Dig deeper to reveal the secrets of Firefox 3

Windows Secrets Newsletter • Issue 157 • 2008-06-19 • Circulation: over 400,000


Table of contents 
  • Windows Secrets: Get the secret history of the Internet
  • Top Story: Dig deeper to reveal the secrets of Firefox 3
  • Known Issues: There’s more than one way to transfer big files
  • Wacky Web Week: These chocolate eggs are definitely on a roll
  • Best Software: The best deals for sending faxes online
  • Woody's Windows: Help shape the future of the Windows interface
  • Perimeter Scan: The WS Security Baseline: your hardware firewall

 
Windows Secrets

Get the secret history of the Internet

We’ve obtained for our readers a 47-page excerpt from a forthcoming book that has phenomenal inside info on the early days of the Net. On the Way to the Web: The Secret History of the Internet and Its Founders (photo, left) won’t be available in stores for weeks. But Windows Secrets readers can get the best chapters now.

All paying subscribers — and all free subscribers who upgrade to paid — can get our bonus download at no extra charge until July 2.

Paid subscribers: Download your bonus
Free subscribers: Upgrade to get the bonus
Info on the printed book: United States / Canada / Elsewhere

 
Top Story

Dig deeper to reveal the secrets of Firefox 3

Scott dunn By Scott Dunn

The latest version of the leading IE alternative is fresh off the assembly line, with revved-up performance and handy new features.

Firefox 3′s about:config settings let you fine-tune the browser to the perfect mix of speed and security.

Venture into Firefox’s settings repository

Microsoft’s Internet Explorer, the browser built into Windows, is the most popular browser in the world. Yet many in the tech industry — including us here at Windows Secrets — prefer Firefox for our Web browsing.

This isn’t the result of a bias against Microsoft, though there may be an element of that for some Firefox users. Most of us prefer Firefox simply because it offers more ways to customize your browsing experience.

Firefox 3, which the Mozilla Corp. released on June 17, adds many useful new features, though some of my favorites aren’t readily apparent. I’ll show you how to tweak Firefox’s about:config settings to get more out of the Location Bar, zoom settings, and other features. I’ll also describe ways to customize your browser history, work with Web apps offline, and cope with plug-ins that haven’t kept up with the times.

Read all about:config

To view Firefox’s about:config list, type about:config in the Location Bar and press Enter. If you’ve never worked with these settings before, be sure to consult Brian Livingston’s Dec. 2, 2004, “Secrets of Firefox” article for a primer. Several of Brian’s tips still apply to Firefox today.

Follow the steps described in that article to back up Firefox’s config files in the Profiles folder. (Note that changes to about:config settings take effect when you restart Firefox.)

Now you’re ready to remake your browser.

Harness the power of the Location Bar. As with the Location Bar in Firefox 2 (and IE’s Address bar), you can type a Web address and press Ctrl+Enter to have Firefox add www. to the beginning and .com to the end of the address automatically. Press Shift+Enter to append the elements for .net addresses and Ctrl+Shift+Enter for .org sites.

Firefox 3 does away with the need for these key combinations. In many cases, you just type the Web site name and press Enter to open the site. If Firefox doesn’t find a site that matches what you enter, the browser will show search results for the word or phrase.

Here’s a feature I find very useful: enter all or part of the site name and wait before pressing Enter to have the Location Bar display a drop-down list of search results from your history and bookmarks.

Firefox 3's location bar drop-down menu
Figure 1. Get to sites faster by choosing them from Firefox 3′s Location Bar drop-down menu.

I’m not one to gush over software, but one Firefox 3 user referred to the Location Bar as the “awesome bar.”

Resize the Location Bar drop-down. As soon as you start typing in the Location Bar, the search results appear in a drop-down list. To see the entire history list, click the down-arrow control, or press Alt+D to activate the Location list and press F4.

If this list is too big or too small, right-click in the about:config list and choose New, Integer. Type browser.urlbar.maxRichResults and press Enter. When prompted, enter a value lower than the default of 12 if you want to see fewer lines in the drop-down list. Enter a higher number if you want to see more lines here.

The list adds a scroll bar once it exceeds a certain size, so you can scroll through whichever number of items you requested in this setting.

Get more boom for your zoom. Firefox 2 lets you shrink or enlarge text by holding the Ctrl key and pressing the – or + key. You can also zoom by pressing Ctrl while you spin your mouse wheel. To return to the default zoom level in either Firefox 2 or 3, press Ctrl+0.

Firefox 2 keeps the same setting for every site, so when you navigate to a new site you have to zoom back out. If you return to the site you zoomed, you need to re-zoom. This gets old pretty fast.

Fortunately, Firefox 3 remembers the zoom level of each site. When you return to that site, the browser reverts to the last magnification level you set for the page.

But maybe you want the same zoom level for each site you surf to. To change this setting in the about:config page, scroll to and double-click browser.zoom.siteSpecific. Toggle the value from true to false. When you restart Firefox, your zoom setting will be consistent from site to site.

Zoom text and images, or just the text. Firefox 3′s zoom mode is more like Internet Explorer’s in that the page’s graphics and other layout elements are magnified or reduced along with the text. However, zooming all elements on the page can cause some information to disappear off the edge of the browser window.

It’s possible to change this setting via about:config, but there’s a simpler solution. To return to the text-only style of zooming, choose View, Zoom, Zoom Text Only.

Expand or limit your zoom options. If you think Firefox’s zoom feature doesn’t let you magnify or reduce your view enough —l; or if you Ctrl+spin the mouse wheel too quickly and zoom in or out too far — you can reset the minimum and maximum amount Firefox 3 will zoom.

Navigate to and double-click zoom.maxPercent in the about:config list. Enter a larger or smaller number to change the maximum zoom amount. Now double-click zoom.minPercent to change the minimum zoom size.

Make your add-ons toe the line. The most popular add-ons for Firefox 2 work fine with version 3. Still, if one of your add-ons acts up, you can instruct Firefox to stop checking the compatibility and security of all your add-ons.

Naturally, doing so could put your system at risk. But if you’re desperate to make an add-on work, try this change at your own risk.

Right-click anywhere in the about:config list of settings and choose New, Boolean. When prompted, type extensions.checkCompatibility and press Enter. At the second prompt, select false and press Enter.

Now right-click in the list and choose New, Boolean again. Type extensions.checkUpdateSecurity when prompted and press Enter. Select false at the next prompt and press Enter.

Reset your history’s maximum and minimum

George Santayana said, “Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeatedly look up the URL.” Or something like that.

To set the maximum number of days shown in your visited-pages history in Firefox 2, choose Tools, Options, Privacy. Set a new value under History.

At first glance, this dialog box looks the same in Firefox 3. However, the Firefox 2 setting controls the maximum number of days remembered (the default is 9), while Firefox 3′s control sets the minimum (the default is 90).

Although the setting in Firefox 3 is arguably more useful, you may want to limit the number of days the browser remembers, especially if you’re concerned about privacy. To apply these limits, scroll to and double-click browser.history_expire_days in the about:config list. Enter the number of days you want your history recorded and click OK.

Work offline by increasing your cache value. Firefox 3′s built-in support for offline applications lets you continue to work in Yahoo Mail, Google Docs, and similar services without an Internet connection. Not every Web application works offline, however; each one has to be coded to support offline access.

By default, Firefox 3 caches 500MB of data from supported offline Web apps. If you need more, you can enlarge your cache. Locate and double-click browser.cache.offline.capacity. Edit the default amount of 512000 (kilobytes) to the amount of your choice and click OK.

Crack open a new Easter Egg. A new about: setting in Firefox 3 can add to your knowledge of cybernetics. For a few fun facts about robots, click in the Location Bar, type about:robots, and press Enter.

There are plenty of other changes you can make to Firefox to suit your individual needs. Maybe you have a favorite Firefox 3 tip of your own. If so, send it along using the Windows Secrets contact page so we can share more Firefox secrets in the future.

Scott Dunn is associate editor of the Windows Secrets Newsletter. He has been a contributing editor of PC World since 1992 and currently writes for the Here’s How section of that magazine.

 
Known Issues

There’s more than one way to transfer big files

Dennis o'reilly By Dennis O’Reilly

Readers respond to Becky Waring’s review of file-transfer services in her inaugural Best Software column with their own favorite transfer methods.

File-splitting programs and alternative file-transfer services take the sting out of moving multi-gigabyte media files.

More ways to get files from Point A to Point B

After reading Becky Waring’s Best Software column from the June 5, 2008, issue, several people wrote in to tell us about their favorite techniques for handling huge file transfers. Among them was Philip Daniels, who uses the $29 WinRAR program from Alexander Roshal and RARLAB:
  • “Why does a media file have to be moved in one chunk? We’ve been moving large files around the ‘net for decades using multi-volume RARs (infamously, I once did this with CICS when the IBM network was being recalcitrant). WinRAR is probably the simplest means of creating such things; most unzippers, WinZip, 7Zip, etc., can reassemble the original file from a multiple-volume RAR.

    “All one does is upload the RARs to one of the many free file-sharing services with the level of protection required (encryption, passwords, etc.)

    “Typically, the providers delete the files once they know the receiver has successfully downloaded them.”
Freeware cuts big file transfers down to size

As reader Gary Vellenzer points out, there’s a free way to make quick work of massive file transfers.
  • “I’m sure that your new contributor, Becky Waring, is familiar with QuickPar (parity file generator/file splitter on the send side, parity checker and corrector/file joiner on the receive side). It’s free and very easy to use. It is useful not just for file transfer. I generate PAR 2 files every time I write a DVD, so that a single point of failure doesn’t render the DVD useless.

    “When you use QuickPar, the file size limits for individual files are irrelevant, as is the time needed to upload the entire file in one piece, because the file can be uploaded in segments. The benefits are obvious — a failure of the transfer affects only one piece, so that you have to redo only that piece. It’s also comforting to be able to check that you got the entire file contents exactly as intended.

    “Since QuickPar makes the max file size irrelevant, it’s worth looking at the major file-storage systems. People who actively share files use Swoopshare, RapidShare, Megaupload, and GigaSize. They generally don’t use any of the services you mention. I’ve never run across any use of AOL’s file share system — it’s probably crippled by restricting its use to AOLers.”
A free, open-source Web file-transfer service

Yet another file-transfer alternative is the free HTTP File Server (HFS) utility from Massimo Melina. Reader Bruce Schau describes the program:
  • “HFS allows you to easily share files between friends and family using your normal browser (usually, Internet Explorer or Firefox). HFS is so small that it fits on a floppy disk and can even run from your USB!

    “Best of all, it’s free and free of adware, spyware, and trojans. It works well and has many control options.

    “Check it out!”
In this week’s Best Software column, Becky takes a look at four services that let you send and receive faxes via your PC and browser, no hardware (or paper) required.

Readers Philip, Gary, and Bruce will each receive a gift certificate for a book, CD, or DVD of their choice for sending tips we printed. Send us your tips or comments via the Windows Secrets contact page.

The Known Issues column brings you readers’ comments on our recent articles. Dennis O’Reilly is technical editor of WindowsSecrets.com.

 
Wacky Web Week

These chocolate eggs are definitely on a roll

cadbury egg Who doesn’t love a Cadbury Creme Egg? With their rich, chocolate shells and their caramel centers, they are a true seasonal classic.

Clearly the creator of this video never took to heart his mother’s admonition not to play with his food. Once these chocolate eggs have completed their Rube Goldberg-like course, all you can say is “Here today, goo tomorrow!” Play the video on YouTube


 
Best Software

The best deals for sending faxes online

Becky waring By Becky Waring

Online fax services let you ditch your landline and fax machine and fax from anywhere via e-mail or the Web.

The paperless office is not quite here, but three services in particular offer low-cost solutions that save a forest full of trees.

Free fax service is severely limited

I recall the day several years ago when my fax freedom started: My fax machine had run out of expensive toner for the umpteenth time, largely thanks to junk faxes offering me low, low prices on that very same toner.

I signed up with eFax, the biggest online fax provider, because the service lets you receive faxes for free via e-mail. Receive-only works for me, because I transmit most of my documents via e-mail, so I rarely need to send a fax.

On those rare occasions when I do need to fax something, I simply plug in my ancient fax machine, which has been tonerless since that fateful day.

(The fact that I still have a landline for the fax machine at all is another story. I’ve retained the landline because it is used by my DSL link, TiVo service, and burglar alarm. The total cost for all three of these services is cheaper than the price of cable service alone. Essentially, faxing doesn’t cost me anything, and that suits me just fine.)

If you’re like me and still have a landline for sending faxes, eFax’s free Limited Account is a perfect fit. Signing up for the free service is quick and easy. Once you receive your number, you can start faxing to it right away.

The service has several limitations, however. Notably, you don’t receive a local phone number and can’t transfer your existing fax number. Also, faxes are delivered as .efx attachments and require the eFax Messenger software to read or print. The program works with Windows 2000, XP, and Vista.

I find that there’s usually a delay in receiving faxes via eFax’s free service, but the wait time is not significant. Another disadvantage of eFax’s free service is that faxes are not saved in your online account. If your ISP’s spam filter traps the faxes or they should otherwise go astray, you’ll have no way of retrieving them. I’ve never missed a fax that I was expecting, but your mileage may vary.

If faxing is critical to your business, or you don’t have a landline for sending faxes, you can sign up for eFax’s paid service. eFax Plus prices start at $17 per month, which is far more than competing fax services cost.

After testing several fax services, I’ve found the best for low-, medium-, and high-volume faxing: TrustFax, MyFax, and OneFax, respectively.

Note that all the services I looked at charge about 10 cents per page for usage that exceeds your rate plan. They may also apply per-page charges for international faxes, depending on the country.

Most of the fax services define a “page” as any data that takes less than 60 seconds to transmit. If you’re faxing a lot of graphics, each page you receive will likely count as several pages toward your monthly total.

None of my three favorite fax services charge setup fees. All three also offer free trials, so you can try them out before you spend any money, although TrustFax is especially stingy in allowing you to fax only five watermarked pages for free.

Unlike eFax, none of the three services require installing any software, an activity I avoid whenever possible. You send faxes via the Web or e-mail and receive them as standard PDF attachments, which you can save to disk and make searchable with various tools (the topic of my next column).

The top choice for low-volume faxing

The economy-fax winner is Comodo’s TrustFax, whose plans start at just $29.95 per year for sending as many as 50 pages and receiving up to 150 pages. By contrast, MyFax’s $10-a-month service lets you send up to 100 pages and receive as many as 200 pages to and from locations in the U.S. and many foreign countries each month. OneFax’s $8.95-per-month plan offers unlimited faxing in the U.S. but costs more internationally and is not as easy to use as either TrustFax or MyFax.

TrustFax offers several other low-cost fax plans, including a $4.95-per-month option that lets you receive up to 100 fax pages per month and send as many as 50 pages. The service’s reasonable international rates are drawn from a prepaid credit balance that never expires.

Signing up for TrustFax is easy. You can choose either a local or toll-free number, or transfer a toll-free number you already have. TrustFax’s Web control panel is laid out well, although the TrustFax interface is not as foolproof as MyFax’s.

On my first try at sending a fax via TrustFax’s Web interface, I uploaded my attachment and clicked the Send button, but only the cover sheet came through — not the attachment. It turns out you need to check separately, from a list at the bottom of the screen, each of the files you want to attach AFTER they are uploaded.

TrustFax has many handy features, such as the ability to copy faxes from your inbox and resend them. You can also send faxes to a combination of fax and e-mail recipients at the same time.

Sending a fax via TrustFax’s e-mail option uses a process similar to MyFax’s e-mail transmissions, but TrustFax requires that you label certain elements in the body of the e-mail — such as your account name, code, and cover letter — and put them in a particular order.

While not quite as well designed as MyFax, TrustFax comes reasonably close and has by far the most economical fax plans.

The quick and simple way to fax online

MyFax is the winner on the usability front, hands-down. The service features a polished interface, a setup wizard, and a deep feature set.

I took advantage of a 30-day free trial that was not advertised on the main MyFax site. To find it, enter “MyFax trial” in your favorite Web search engine and click to the next page of results, if necessary, until the free trial appears.

Security alert: Be sure you are clicking a link that goes to MyFax.com. There is also a MyFaxTrial.com site that took me through the whole sign-up and credit-card-entry process with an interface exactly like that on MyFax.com. Suddenly, the session timed out. MyFax confirms that the MyFaxTrial domain is a phishing site.

MyFax offers both toll-free and local numbers, the latter using many different exchanges around the U.S. If you currently have a fax number, you may be able to transfer it to the service.

After you sign up, the MyFax setup wizard lets you designate your send and confirmation e-mail addresses. Up to five addresses can be associated with a fax number, so your whole family or small office can share a single account.

You also determine whether you want incoming faxes sent as e-mail attachments or notifications, a handy option if you normally check your e-mail from a cell phone.

MyFax’s process for sending faxes via the Web is streamlined yet full-featured (see Figure 1). Just log in and click Send Fax. This opens a form you use to select up to 50 recipients from an address book, attach as many as nine documents, and add a cover page if you wish. You can even schedule when you want your fax to be sent, and you can include a billing code, which is useful for accounting and tax purposes.

MyFax web interface for sending faxes
Figure 1. MyFax Central lets you send, receive, and monitor your faxes from any Web browser.

To send a fax via e-mail, just enter faxnumber@myfax.com as the recipient, attach your documents (178 different file types are supported, according to a MyFax listing), and enter your cover letter in the subject and body of the message.

You get an e-mail confirmation once the fax has been sent. All my test e-mail faxes were received within 10 minutes of clicking the Send button, even those with multipage attachments.

MyFax integrates with Microsoft Office 2003 and 2007, so you can send faxes directly via the Send To command from within Office apps. Also, all of your received faxes are stored online for a full year.

The one MyFax feature that will seal the deal for many people is the ability to fax for free (within your regular page allotment) to a huge number of foreign countries, including most of Europe and Asia and a sprinkling of South America (but, notably, not Mexico).

The all-you-can-fax alternative

If you send a ton of faxes, consider OneFax, the only truly unlimited Internet fax service I know of. You can send and receive as many faxes as you like within the continental U.S. for just $8.95 per month for a local number or $12.95 for a toll-free number.

This is an incredible value. By comparison, MyFax costs $40 a month for up to 400 inbound and 400 outbound pages, while TrustFax charges $18.95 per month for up to 800 inbound and 250 outbound faxes.

OneFax’s international rates are steeper than those of the other services, but if you don’t fax much to countries other than America, the service’s unlimited U.S. faxing is hard to resist.

While there’s no catch to the unlimited faxing (you can even receive incoming faxes to unlimited e-mail addresses), OneFax’s interface is simply not as polished or feature-filled as that of MyFax. Also, customer support from OneFax is limited to its business hours rather than the 24/7 support offered by MyFax and TrustFax.

On the plus side, when I tried OneFax’s live chat support, I got a prompt response to my questions.

Sending from OneFax’s Web interface is simple: Enter your recipient(s), attach a file (either uploaded from your PC or chosen from your OneFax storage area), and include comments for your cover letter. You won’t find any of MyFax’s fancy cover letter templates, however, and only 12 common file formats are supported for attachments.

Still, the OneFax service worked just fine when I tested it: All faxes sent from the Web were received promptly, and e-mails confirmed their receipt.

Using OneFax to send a single attachment via e-mail is similar to the easy MyFax procedure, although you have to click a separate authorization message before the fax will actually be sent — a big hindrance if you send a lot of faxes.

This is probably OneFax’s way of making sure that its unlimited system is not abused by spammers, but the extra step is an inconvenience for regular users. If you’re not certain you’ll be around to authorize your fax via e-mail, be sure to use the Web interface to send it instead, because that method requires no extra authorization.

OneFax’s Web control panel offers the essentials, such as an address book, a fax log, a fax inbox, and the ability to store the files you upload for future faxing. However, you can’t review the contents of sent faxes, as you can when you use MyFax.

While OneFax is definitely a bare-bones service, it works well and can be a huge money-saver if you send a lot of faxes.

Becky Waring has worked as a writer and editor for PC World, NewMedia Magazine, CNET, The San Francisco Chronicle, Technology Review, Upside Magazine, and many other news sources. She alternates the Best Software column with Windows Secrets contributing editor Scott Spanbauer.

 
Woody's Windows

Help shape the future of the Windows interface

Woody leonhard By Woody Leonhard

Windows guru Long Zheng has undertaken an important project that may bring some consistency to the user interface in the next version of Windows.

You can contribute by voting on the most egregious problems in the current Windows user interface in hopes that Windows 7 shows some improvements. Maybe.


Vista’s got the look we don’t like

If you think Windows Vista has a reasonably good — or at least consistent — user interface, you haven’t been looking hard enough.

In my books on Vista, I jump through many hoops trying to explain how similarly worded options in different parts of Windows evoke very different results. I also have to explain how features readily accessible in one corner of Windows sit in obscurely identified locations elsewhere.

Every version of Windows has had consistency problems and design mistakes. Unfortunately, many of the sins of the fathers have been visited upon the Vista son.

Take the Add Fonts dialog, for example. It’s hellaciously difficult to use — and it hasn’t changed one iota in the past four versions of Windows. Also, the Safely Remove Hardware dialog must’ve been designed by a programmer with a graduate degree in obfuscation. While Windows stores lots of information that can be useful in identifying which “device” needs to be shut down, none of the details appear in this dialog.

This article is part of our paid content. Subscribe.

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Perimeter Scan

The WS Security Baseline: your hardware firewall

Ryan russell By Ryan Russell

Your hardware firewall is your primary security defense, but today’s products are also differentiated by their performance and functionality as wireless access points.

I’ll be updating the Windows Secrets Security Baseline over my next few columns, and today I focus on your first line of defense: the hardware firewall.


Stop PC attacks in their tracks

The main purpose of your hardware firewall is to prevent attackers from being able to connect to your computer at all. If you were to reinstall a version of Windows older than XP SP2 from an unpatched installation CD and connect to the Internet without a hardware firewall, your computer could be compromised before you had a chance to download your first Windows patch.

All versions of Windows are at risk, because new attacks against the OS are being devised all the time. This is where a hardware firewall comes in.

Before making any connection to the Internet, install and activate this firewall, which is the first box your ISP connection plugs into on its way to your PC or home network. (The firewall nearly always doubles as your network router and wireless access point, or WAP.) Then download all your software patches before you open your browser or e-mail and venture onto the big, bad Internet.

A hardware firewall is a lifesaver if you have to disable your software firewall temporarily. Some malware is designed to disable software firewalls, which is one reason you need both a hardware firewall and a software version.

This article is part of our paid content. Subscribe.

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YOUR SUBSCRIPTION

The Windows Secrets Newsletter is published weekly on the 1st through 4th Thursdays of each month, plus occasional news updates. We skip an issue on the 5th Thursday of any month, the week of Thanksgiving, and the last two weeks of August and December. Windows Secrets is a continuation of four merged publications: Brian's Buzz on Windows and Woody's Windows Watch in 2004, the LangaList in 2006, and the Support Alert Newsletter in 2008.

Publisher: WindowsSecrets.com, 1218 Third Ave., Suite 1515, Seattle, WA 98101 USA. Vendors, please send no unsolicited packages to this address (readers' letters are fine).

Editor in chief: Tracey Capen. Senior editors: Fred Langa, Woody Leonhard. Copyeditor: Roberta Scholz. Program director: Tony Johnston. Contributing editors: Yardena Arar, Susan Bradley, Scott Dunn, Michael Lasky, Scott Mace, Ryan Russell, Lincoln Spector, Robert Vamosi, Becky Waring. Product manager: Andy Boyd. Advertising director: Eric Gilley.

Trademarks: Microsoft and Windows are registered trademarks of Microsoft Corporation. The Windows Secrets series of books is published by Wiley Publishing Inc. The Windows Secrets Newsletter, WindowsSecrets.com, Support Alert, LangaList, LangaList Plus, WinFind, Security Baseline, Patch Watch, Perimeter Scan, Wacky Web Week, the Logo Design (W, S or road, and Star), and the slogan Everything Microsoft Forgot to Mention all are trademarks and service marks of WindowsSecrets.com. All other marks are the trademarks or service marks of their respective owners.

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Copyright © 2012 by WindowsSecrets.com. All rights reserved.

Table of contents

Top-scoring articles in the past 12 months
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  • Time for a .NET update we can’t ignore 4.30
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  • Revising printing habits saves money and trees 4.25
  • Upgrades end in erratic, partial hangs 4.25
  • Pros and cons of a ‘keyfile’ password 4.21
  • Beating back Duku and a plethora of other threats 4.20
  • Office 2007 gets its final service pack 4.19
  • Putting Registry-/system-cleanup apps to the test 4.19
  • One year and 99 security bulletins later 4.18
  • 1.8TB external drive goes down hard 4.17
  • Don’t pay for software you don’t need — Part 3 4.16
  • Internet Explorer gets another round of patches 4.15
  • Is your free AV tool a ‘resource pig?’ 4.15
  • Vacation’s over; it’s a big round of patches 4.15
  • Remote access leads to remote attacks 4.15
  • Keeping you up to date: say no to .NET — again 4.14
  • Take control of Google’s privacy policy settings 4.14
  • Office File Validation patch leads to problems 4.14
  • The advanced system-recover toolkit 4.13
  • New “419″ scam involves PayPal and Western Union 4.12
  • Readers’ best personal-privacy tips 4.11
  • Getting the most from Windows Search — Part 2 4.11
  • Re-examining Dropbox and its alternatives 4.10
  • Easily edit Windows’ right-click context menus 4.09
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Trademarks: Microsoft and Windows are registered trademarks of Microsoft Corporation. The Windows Secrets series of books is published by Wiley Publishing Inc. The Windows Secrets Newsletter, WindowsSecrets.com, WinFind, Windows Gizmos, Security Baseline, Patch Watch, Perimeter Scan, Wacky Web Week, the Logo Design (W, S or road, and Star), and the slogan Everything Microsoft Forgot to Mention all are trademarks and service marks of iNET Interactive. All other marks are the trademarks or service marks of their respective owners.
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