MJ writes to us that her machine runs updates around lunch time and she keeps getting the prompt do you want to restart now?
Not only is it annoying – sometimes she clicks yes by accident and her whole world comes crashing down. (See the fix for this at the bottom of the post – not [...]
January 20, 2009 - 12:00 am
Tags: networking, Question
Posted in How To, Questions | No comments
Almost 3 weeks in to the New Year and the Admin needs some rest – maybe a day off?
Yeah right we have even more emails today and I am studying for my 2008 Microsoft Certs! This has been a big year for the AtA gang – stay tuned for more of our geeky flavored content [...]
A reader from Idaho was seriously freaked out after a late night at the computer and sent us a picture of their task manager in a strange state.
They asked for their identity to be with held so here is a screen-shot of a random person’s task manager in a similar mode.
Have you seen this before? [...]
Jodi writes in:
I wasn’t sure who I should contact about this, so i am sending this to you. As of late, word attachments coming from my friend on a Windows XP Machine appear as “winmail.dat” files.
When I try to open these, the text runs about 150pp long, (it’s a 4page doc) and the [...]
“…Perhaps you think your email is legitimate enough that encryption is unwarranted. If you really are a law-abiding citizen with nothing to hide, then why don’t you always send your paper mail on postcards? Why not submit to drug testing on demand? Why require a warrant for police searches of your house? Are you trying [...]
November 25, 2008 - 9:00 am
Tags: Question
Posted in Questions | 14 comments
We got this message from Fred early in the AM. I guess its great for him that we don’t sleep past 7AM anymore!
I am using Outlook 2007. When I get email the pictures show as Red boxes with “X”’s in them. I used to be able to right click on the boxes and download the [...]
October 24, 2008 - 12:00 am
Tags: Question
Posted in Admin's Arsenal, How To, Questions | 4 comments
Good Morning,
I just saw the link to ask you a question and here is mine. Admin do you know of a way I can configure Vista to let me know if a specific error or event happens while I am AFK?
I hear Vista can hit me on my Blackberry when an event occurs and it’s [...]
“…Perhaps you think your email is legitimate enough that encryption is unwarranted. If you really are a law-abiding citizen with nothing to hide, then why don’t you always send your paper mail on postcards? Why not submit to drug testing on demand? Why require a warrant for police searches of your house? Are you trying [...]
July 18, 2008 - 11:24 am
Tags: Free, Security
Posted in How To, Questions, Security | 19 comments
So there you are at Starbucks sipping on your latte, and surfing on their incredibly high priced wi-fi with your brand new Alienware laptop thinking to yourself, “Self! This is a mighty good latte!”.A few minutes later, you slip into a latte induced coma (Work
with me here.)
After about an hour or two you [...]
May 10, 2008 - 8:20 am
Tags: backup, How To, Question
Posted in General | 7 comments
So I got a frantic phone call yesterday from a buddy of mine who lost his PST file due to a crashed hard drive.
The thing is this guy normally backs up EVERYTHING! I was shocked he didn’t have another copy ready to go.
When I asked him why he didn’t back up his PST file regularly [...]
June 24, 2007 - 12:24 pm
I found this By Stefanie Olsen
Last November, Ryan, a high-school sophomore, figured out a way to outsmart the Web filters on a school PC in order to visit the off-limits MySpace.com while doing “homework” in the computer lab.
A teacher eventually spotted the social network on the screen in front of “Ryan,” a fictitious name for a real student attending school in Phoenix, Ore., a small town with a population of about 5,000. The teacher flagged the activity for the school’s technology expert, who then followed Ryan’s tracks online through the school network.
Ryan had apparently set up a so-called Web proxy from his home computer so that when he was at school, he could direct requests for banned sites like MySpace through a Web address at home, thereby tricking the school’s filter. (Web, or CGI, proxies can be Web sites or applications that allow users to access other sites through them.)
“I eventually tracked down the (Internet Protocol) address, so that it doesn’t work for him anymore,” said Don Wolff, tech coordinator in the Phoenix-Talent School District, adding that Ryan didn’t face disciplinary action. “It’s against our acceptable-use policy, but he’s not going to quit trying, (and this way) we can keep learning.”
“This is a hot new trend among kids for getting around Web filters,” Wolff said.
“It’s going to be the constant battle. No matter what you put up, kids are going to work around it.”
– Lynn Beebe, school counselor Web proxies are almost as old as the Internet itself as a means to route Web traffic through an anonymous domain name or circumvent content-filters, and they’ve long been the territory of corporate networks and the tech savvy seeking privacy. Nowadays, an increasing number of teenagers are setting up proxies on home PCs to sidestep school filtering traps, in addition to using free proxies set up on the Web, according to technologists at schools and at content-filtering technology providers.
Proxies are just one of many tricks that kids use to break locks put on forbidden material–a pursuit of almost any young generation. As more schools place tight controls on PCs to stop kids from file-sharing, instant messaging, social networking or looking at undesirable material online, the kids are getting more clever, tech experts say.
Google, by far the most popular search site, has a “safe search” feature, for example, that filters out adult material. But kids can circumvent those filters by viewing “cached” links or thumbnail images to look at inappropriate material, experts say. Teens also trick filters by typing in misspelled words or modern slang to retrieve links to racy material. Translation sites Babelfish or Google Translate can deliver sites like Playboy.com translated from another language.
“It’s going to be the constant battle. No matter what you put up, kids are going to work around it,” said Lynn Beebe, a school counselor in Scotts Valley, Calif. Her school, for example, uses filters to block all sites with the word or subject “blog,” in addition to other sites.
But there’s no foolproof solution. Beebe said that a small population of boys at the school use their free time to play games online. Sometimes they’ve shared with her that when they mistakenly type in a URL, an undesirable site appears, she said.
A more popular avenue for teens on school PCs is to visit any one of thousands of Web proxy sites such as Proxify, Guardster.com and Proxy.org to call up banned sites without notice, according to filtering companies.
Kevin Sanders, senior software engineer at Lightspeed Systems, maker of a content-filtering system called Total Traffic Control, said he targets such proxy sites in a master database of thousands of barred sites for school clients.
Proxies can get trickier.
“A far more difficult problem to deal with is when they download a piece of software on their home computer, using a CGI script to (access content). Our product doesn’t recognize it as a known domain, because it’s just going through their home computer,” said Sanders.
Web sites like Freeproxy point visitors to many free downloadable applications like “Hidemyass.com” that let kids work around content filters in a more surreptitious way. Teen blogs can also be found that point kids to proxies for school filters.
How to deal with it? “We block all requests going to unknown sites,” Sanders said. Lightspeed keeps a database of roughly 2 million recognized sites categorized in groups like News, Adult or Violence. School clients or administrators of the product can limit access so kids can access only acceptable categories such as News or Education. For Sanders, if a site goes unrecognized, he simply bans it.
“We also have a new feature coming out very soon which will allow us to dynamically detect the use of CGI-based proxies and block that session and send a notification to the network administrator,” said Sanders.
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June 24, 2007 - 12:34 pm
Exactly and for the people who dont want to read through that great article NinjaAdmin found from:
http://news.com.com/2009-1041_3-6062548.html?part=rss&tag=6062548&subj=news
You can use Google translator service as a proxy to bypass restrictions of your institution, isp or company!
This makes most web filters see your request as being contained within google.
You just need to goto the following URL:
http://www.google.com/translate?langpair=en|en&u=www.BlockedWebSite.com
(www. BlockedWebSite.com should be replaced with the URL you need to go to…)
What you’ll get is the translation (english to english!) of the page you want to see… your connection is directed to a google.com page so this page won’t be blocked (would be blocked if google.com is on the black list), no matter what the content is. HA! Take That!
The URL has been tweaked for our purposes with the parameter being “langpair”(1) is set to “en|en” (english/english) so the page is processed by Google but you can keep the original language of the page.
If you need another language you just need to tweak the parameter langpair to “fr|fr” and you’ll be able to read french pages in french! Or blocked english pages in french etc “en|fr”.
Thanks Google!
http://www.google.com/translate?langpair=en|en&u=www.asktheadmin.com
Like Butter Baby! Posting to main page.
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June 24, 2007 - 2:04 pm
got me through my content filter = u guys rock
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June 24, 2007 - 2:36 pm
HOT TO DEATH!
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June 24, 2007 - 3:17 pm
Google translator is a great idea!
What I did though was setup my own web proxy at home. I will re-post that blog article for everyone to read here in a minute.
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June 24, 2007 - 3:30 pm
I would like to see that pablo
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June 24, 2007 - 5:22 pm
the language translator bit is great worked like a charm through our filter at the office. Can they still track back to this site?
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June 25, 2007 - 12:42 am
Johnblaze: If you haven’t seen it yet, click Here
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