News

Check Your Home Network

Computer Culture Admin - Thursday, November 16, 2017
HP Bitdefender, the home version of our managed antivirus has developed a home network scanner to enable you to check for any dodgy devices on your network, it’s available as a free download.

Bitdefender Home Scanner lets you see all devices connected to your home network. You get an alert every time an unknown device connects to your wi-fi. Which means you can instantly boot out freeloaders and prevent connection slowdowns.

Home Scanner looks for weak passwords, as well as vulnerable or poorly encrypted communications. It correlates the information gathered from your connected devices with online vulnerability databases and gives you a thorough report so you can ensure maximum security for your network.

For more information go to Bitdefenders website here.

Microsoft SharePoint Explained

Computer Culture Admin - Thursday, October 19, 2017
Hacked
Microsoft SharePoint is a private intranet site, a data repository, a smart website, a built-in content management system, a development platform, an extranet site, a collection of websites, best-in-class portal software, a document management system, a project management system, a workflow designer, and more. You can collaborate, communicate, gather decision-making reports and data from multiple resources and publish those online, make visually presentable reports, create and view intuitive and real-time dashboards, do customizations, import theme templates, and do more with your SharePoint site.

Organisations use SharePoint to create websites. You can use it as a secure place to store, organize, share, and access information from any device.

SharePoint Online      
A cloud-based service, hosted by Microsoft, for businesses of all sizes. Instead of installing and deploying SharePoint Server on-premises, any business can subscribe to an Office 365 plan or to the standalone SharePoint Online service. Your employees can create sites to share documents and information with colleagues, partners, and customers.

Bit Defender has been selected as Editor’s Choice by PC Magazine

Computer Culture Admin - Thursday, September 28, 2017
HPPCMAG.COM Neil J. Rubenking - EDITORS CHOICE

Pros
Excellent scores in antivirus lab tests and our own tests. Autopilot mode for no-hassle protection. Best antiphishing score. New ransomware protection. Enhanced password manager. Secure browser. Vulnerability scan.

Cons
Password manager's form-fill ability proved inaccurate in testing.

Bottom Line
Editors' Choice winner Bitdefender Antivirus Plus earns top scores in lab tests and our own tests, and also packs in a wealth of useful bonus features.

The line dividing a simple antivirus utility from a full security suite isn't always clear. Take Bitdefender Antivirus Plus, for example. In addition to every feature you'd expect in an antivirus, it includes a password manager, a hardened browser, a secure deletion utility, a scan for system vulnerabilities, protection against ransomware attacks, and more. However, it doesn't offer a firewall, spam filtering, or parental control, among other features you get with Bitdefender's actual suite products. It's an antivirus, with benefits, and it remains an excellent choice if you're seeking malware protection.

Installation and Appearance
As with many modern security utilities, installation of Bitdefender involves going through your online account. Log into Bitdefender Central, enter your product key, and download protection. During the installation process, it runs a quick scan for active malware.
The product's appearance hasn't changed much since the previous edition, still featuring mostly white text against a dark gray background. A left-rail menu offers access to features: Protection, Privacy, Tools, Activity, Notifications, Account, Settings, and Support. The status panel displays a red warning if your configuration settings put the system at risk. Putting the system back in Autopilot mode should solve such problems, and if you leave Autopilot on, you should always see Protected in green as your status. Autopilot has been a Bitdefender staple for quite a few years now. In this mode, the antivirus takes care of business with an absolute minimum of fuss. It quietly wipes out any malware it finds. It updates itself as needed. If it really wants to communicate with you, it displays a number on the Notifications icon.

Bitdefender Antivirus Plus Main Window
From the Protection and Privacy tabs, you can click to view feature details. Here, you'll begin to realize how this feature-rich antivirus differs from Bitdefender's security suite products. On the Protection Features page, you see that firewall and antispam protection require an upgrade. Under Privacy Features, file encryption, webcam protection, and parental advisor all require an upgrade. The Tools page, furthermore, is filled entirely with features that are only present in Bitdefender's top-of-the-line suite.

Fantastic Lab Scores
Each of the independent antivirus testing labs takes its own approach to testing and scoring antivirus products. The more labs that include a product in testing, the more complete a picture I can get by looking at all their results. I follow five labs, and all five of them include Bitdefender. That's an honor not accorded to many. Of the companies I track, the only others covered by all five labs are Avast, AVG, ESET, and Kaspersky Anti-Virus.

SE Labs attempts to emulate real-world situations as closely as possible in testing, by capturing real malicious websites and using a playback system to hit each product with the exact same attack. This lab offers certification at five levels: AAA, AA, A, B, and C. Bitdefender took the top certification, AAA, along with quite a few others.

Out of the many tests regularly performed by AV-Comparatives, I track results of four. This lab certifies a product at the Standard level provided that it achieves a passing grade. Those that do better, or much better, than the minimum can earn certification at the Advanced or Advanced+ level. Out of four tests, Bitdefender earned four Advanced+ ratings.

Most of the tests that I follow return a numeric result or a rating level. Tests by MRG-Effitas don't do that. A product either turns in a near-perfect performance or it fails, and many do fail. Bitdefender passed this lab's banking malware test. In the general malware test it received Level 2 certification, which means that while it did not completely prevent every malware attack, it did remediate all attacks within 24 hours.

For the full article click here.

Does your house need a Google Home?

Computer Culture Admin - Wednesday, August 23, 2017
HP
Though there are multiple options for voice-activated smart assistants available in the US, the launch of Google Home marks the first official entry of this exciting new category into Australia.

This cute little speaker essentially acts as a hub for all things Google in your house, performing tasks you might already do on your phone or computer — quick web searches, streaming music and TV shows, interacting with smart home gadgets — but it does it all with a quick spoken request from you.

Given how hit-and-miss voice services are in general, the reviewer was immediately impressed with how naturally you can interact with the Home. It can hear you whispering from across the room, can learn to differentiate different members of the household, and can parse natural-language requests regardless of your syntax, so you don't have to remember many exact phrases to get to what you want.

Just say "OK Google" or "Hey Google" to make it listen — you can tell by the colourful lights that appear on its surface — and then make your request. The Google Assistant replies in a soft, female voice, answering your questions or confirming the operations it's carrying out on your connected devices.

Let the music play
The first query the app suggested to be tried after setup was "OK Google, play some music". Home, of course, had no problem carrying out the simple request, immediately pumping out some 80s rock.

As a music player Home is surprisingly competent, one the nicest sounding speakers of its size, even at full volume. It can be used just like a Chromecast Audio, sending directions from any compatible app to play on the speaker, and an update rolling out soon will let you connect via Bluetooth if the app you're using doesn't cast.

Most convenient though is just asking for what you want to hear. You can be as broad or as specific as you like, asking for genres, moods, artists, albums or songs. If you want a specific version, just add more details.

You'll need Spotify Premium or a YouTube Red / Google Play Music subscription. Once you've trained Home to recognise the voice of each person in your household, it will use their Play Music library to tailor choices to them.

It will also easily pull music you've personally uploaded to your Play library.

You can ask for the radio too. If you have Chromecasts in your home you can also choose to beam your audio to any speaker or groups of speakers you like, as easily as saying "OK Google, play Metallica in the lounge room".

Hidden smarts
Beyond being a media player, Home can connect to a multitude of services — Google owned and otherwise — to quickly fetch info and fulfil tasks in a fraction of the time it would take you on your phone.

This is great for the dozens of quick queries you might usually Google each day — "what time will the sun set tonight?", or "what is 800 ounces in grams?" — but also for information you might get from other apps, like weather forecasts, news on a particular topic, or where the nearest burger joint is.

Home can also read your calendar so you can ask "when's my first meeting", "what do I have on today" or "can you schedule a lunch meeting at 1pm Thursday". Unfortunately this currently only works with the main calendar of your Google account.

It can also be used to set timers, alarms, and reminders.

Smart home pioneers can use Home to interact with certain brands of connected light globes, powerpoints and more as well. The selection is a bit limited, but there is full compatibility with IFTTT, so you can apply your own recipes and, for example, have all your globes turn on when you say "OK Google, lights up".

If you watch TV on a cast-enabled device, Home will also pull down shows from Netflix, and YouTube just fine.

Of course, like any voice-activated tech it's also fun just to chat to it and see what it says. You'll occasionally get a bemused dead end, but there's a surprising amount of simulated wit packed in.

Overall Home has been adapted very well to life in Australia. The language recognition is top notch, the responses are in-depth and conversational, and it makes heaps of tiny tasks a little bit simpler. Future updates will doubtlessly add more functionality as well but if there was one hardware feature I'd like to see in a Home 2 it's a bit of battery power so it could be carried temporarily to a different room.

For the original article click here.

Microsoft Office 2016

Computer Culture Admin - Thursday, July 13, 2017
HP

Please note: Businesses should not be running any version of Office older than 2010


With Microsoft Office 2007’s support due to expire on 10 October 2017, now is a good time to upgrade to a newer suite such as Office 2016.  From October Microsoft will no longer supply patches for security vulnerabilities or fixes for other bugs, nor will it provide company-assisted technical support, whether free or paid, such as by-phone or trouble shooting.

That gives businesses that are using Office 2007 just over three months to drop Office 2007’s applications and switch to a new suite.

Here are the top 6 reasons to upgrade your Microsoft Office Suite to 2016.

1. Built for teamwork

In Word, PowerPoint, and Excel, there's easy sharing right from within the app. You can also see who has access to a given file and who is currently working in it.

2. New Chart Types in Word, PowerPoint, and Excel

Visualize financial or hierarchical data, and highlight statistical properties of your data with new chart types: Treemap, Waterfall, Pareto, Histogram, Box and Whisker, and Sunburst.

3. Faster, easier ways to get data into Excel

Excel includes a powerful new set of features called Get & Transform, which provides fast, easy data gathering and shaping capabilities. Get & Transform enables you to connect, combine, and refine data sources to meet your analysis needs.

4. Modern Attachments in Outlook

Attach a document from your recent items and share them from OneDrive or SharePoint with email recipients. Also configure sharing permissions so that all the recipients have access to the attached file without having to leave the app.

5. Smart Lookup in Word, PowerPoint, Excel, and Outlook

Fact-check or explore terms in your documents with Bing-powered Smart Lookup. Simply highlight terms in your document and use this feature to bring in search results from the web right into your reading or authoring environment.

6. Tell Me in Word, PowerPoint, Excel, Outlook, Project, Visio, and Access

Simply type what you want to do in the app using your own words, and then Tell Me will guide through the process as well as offer additional resources.

LastPass

Computer Culture Admin - Thursday, July 13, 2017
LastPass
Most of us don’t do very well when it comes to setting and remembering passwords. We also come up short regarding safe storage of our passwords.
Thankfully, there are password managers like LastPass. With a password manager, the app generates unique, complex passwords for each site or app that requires one. When you need to log in, LastPass fills in the correct information, even filling it in in other apps.
LastPass also securely stores your personal information so you can quickly fill out tedious forms, and includes mechanisms to safely share passwords with other people—even after you've departed this mortal realm.
A new pricing structure lets you create an account and sync passwords between all your devices, mobile or otherwise, for free.

Microsoft Surface Pro

Computer Culture Admin - Thursday, July 13, 2017
HP Computer Culture have joined a small select group of companies to become an official Microsoft Surface Product Reseller.  
We are now able to source directly:
  • The New Surface Pro
  • Surface Pro 4
  • Surface Laptop
  • Surface Book
  • Surface Studio
The new Surface Pro is 8.5mm thick and weighs only 786 grams.  Processors options includes m3, i5 and i7, hard drive sizes ranging from 128Gb up to 1TB and memory 4Gb up to 16GB.  Battery life is claimed to be 13.5 hours.

Paying with your face

Steve Hirst - Thursday, June 22, 2017
Facial recognition Face-detecting systems will soon be regularly used to authorise payments, provide access to buildings and track down criminals and terrorists.

Face recognition might transform everything from policing to the way people interact every day with banks, stores, and transportation services.

Already governments in some countries are using software to identify suspected criminals in video from surveillance cameras.

The technology has taken off in China because of the country's attitudes toward surveillance and privacy. Unlike countries such as the United States, China has a large centralised database of ID card photos.

Facial recognition has existed for decades, but only now is it accurate enough to be used in secure financial transactions. The new versions use deep learning, an artificial-intelligence technique that is especially effective for image recognition because it makes a computer zero in on the facial features that will most reliably identify a person.

Samsung Operating System Vulnerability

Steve Hirst - Monday, April 24, 2017
Tizen Samsung's Tizen operating system has been found to be riddled with security vulnerabilities that allow for remote-code execution, and for the delivery of malicious code via the OS' app store.

A security researcher is preparing to reveal 40 zero-day exploits that affect Samsung's Tizen operating system. Commenting on the finds, Amihai Neiderman said Tizen “may be the worst code I've ever seen,” he continued on to slate the code by saying it looks like the handy-work of an undergraduate, rather than that of someone with an understanding of security.

While the criticisms are harsh towards Tizen, it should be made clear that no software is ever perfect and there are always exploitable bugs in every nook and cranny. Samsung will be keen to ensure that it quickly patches the OS, though, because it powers 30 million TVs and hopes to run on 10 million Samsung phones by the year's end.

Neiderman claims “It may be the worst code I've ever seen. Everything you can do wrong there, they do it. You can see that nobody with any understanding of security looked at this code or wrote it. It's like taking an undergraduate and letting him program your software.”

So, what exactly do the exploits allow for? Firstly, there are vulnerabilities that allow a hacker to control a device remotely in what is known a remote-code execution. Another exploit allowed Neiderman to hijack the TizenStore app and deliver malicious code to a Tizen device – namely his Samsung TV.

Last month, WikiLeaks released its first Vault7 leak which showed that the CIA could hack Samsung TVs and listen to conversations even if you thought the TV was switched off; there's every chance that the CIA used one of these newly uncovered vulnerabilities. Samsung has said that it's fully committed to working with Neiderman to fix the vulnerabilities.

Microsoft Windows 10 Support

Steve Hirst - Tuesday, February 21, 2017
Windows 10 If you have steadfastly refused to update your Windows 10 PC to a new build since launch, Microsoft has given you another 2 months reprieve to still get patches and bug fixes.

Build 1507 of the OS was to exit support on the 26th March, but Microsoft has now announced on Technet that version 1507 will continue to be serviced until May 2017.

Currently Microsoft plans to only support the two latest versions of Windows 10, and expect most users to remain current with the latest version of the OS via automatic updates, a practice which has been criticised but which means that more than 75% of Windows 10 users are on the latest public version of the OS.


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