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July 9th, 2009

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N Computing Technology


For more than 1 year a go, I’m addicted with the Virtualization Technology such Microsoft Virtual PC, Vmware… that drive me found lot of knowledge for today technology.

I don’t remember that one day, I’m watching Cambodia TV showing the news that …” Organization has supports and develop the Cambodia Country side to use computer with no electricity there. They provide a computer with less power needs(Solar System) but can share to many user at the same time.. “

When I heard that, it revise me to the Virtualization technology as Vmware does by virtualize your physical pc to many virtual pc. I’ve try one day to day the ways to make Vmware can share each guest OS to be used on different monitor, Keyboard and mouse.. Finally nothing we can do ! (Vmware doesn’t allow us to run multiple Guest OS with different monitor , key or mouse).

I still not hopeless! Till I found the N Computing Technology that can do what what I want to do. One day look at its website, I could understand and know that we need to buy a complete product suite (Software and Hardware). I have submit through the website in order to try or buy it, but I don’t expect it will be available in Cambodia. Fortunately , about 3 month later there is a Cambodian Guy called me to have an appointment at his office to let me know clearly about NComputing Technology. I really want to know and see the actual working state. But I can’t go that day, cos I’ve gone to my home land.

Few day ago, the same guy called and asked me to their office again.  So yesterday, I went there and see lot of IT guy sitting and listening to the Representative explaining how the product work.

So now I just want to paste all of these to all of you to know about its technology .

Do you have more than one user account on your computer? Maybe there’s a user account for you, a guest, and an administrator. Each person gets their own software, settings, screen colors, and so on, but only one person can use the PC at a time. Until now. NComputing vSpace desktop virtualization software allows multiple user accounts to be used at the same time by efficiently dividing the computer’s resources into independent sessions.

How it works
There are three parts to the NComputing solution.

First is the vSpace software, which allows standard Linux and Windows PCs to be shared by multiple simultaneous users. With vSpace, each person runs their own applications, just as if they had their own PC.
Second is the UXP communications protocol. UXP is the method by which the desktop images and audio are sent to the access device and how the keyboard and mouse data is sent back to the PC. UXP is highly efficient, and excels at multimedia and audio/video synchronization.
Third are the access devices. They are inexpensive, small, low-power, reliable, durable boxes. On one side they plug into the users’ peripherals (such as the keyboard, monitor and mouse). On the other side, they connect via cables to the shared PC.

For more detail click here.

For more information in Cambodia or Buy it, please contact Mr. Sovann : 012 95 12 23.

Posted in Virtualization Tagged: ncomputing, PC Tips, Virtualization

Written by Myhouse on July 9th, 2009 with no comments.
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State of the Blog – A Little Update on Where We Are Today

Brandon Leblanc of the Windows Team Blog, gives us an update about the state of the Windows Blog and the recent additions over the past few months:

We are in an exciting time for Windows. We’re about to launch our best version of Windows yet – Windows 7. In between all the Windows 7 awesomeness, I wanted to take a moment to talk about The Windows Blog and where we are today with the site.

We’ve come a long way since 2006 when we launched as the Windows Vista Team Blog. This last fall we re-launched the site as The Windows Blog. When we re-launched, the focus of the site was to be the ultimate resource for Windows through the use of blogging – and to grow.

In the site’s design, we put an emphasis of multiple blogs existing under The Windows Blog “umbrella” that would cater to different audiences. Our original blog, Windows Vista Team Blog, became one of several blogs under that “umbrella” and we also launched the Windows 7 Team Blog which is where you will find all the latest Windows 7 news and announcements. Also in the fall, we launched the Windows Security Blog featuring blog posts focusing on Windows security from Paul Cooke. Paul blogged live from RSA earlier this year.

Read the rest here

The Windows Blog has been a great place to get the latest in news and information about the platform in its many facets. Whether its tutorials and experiences from Brandon at the Windows Experience blog, resources from  the Windows Business blog, information for developers about harnessing the benefits of Windows 7 in your applications. The Windows blog is an exceptional resource for anyone who is a Windows user.

 

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Written by Teching It Easy: Windows Vista, Live & 7 on July 9th, 2009 with no comments.
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Manual Removal of W32/PrivacyCenter.R Trojan

Manual Removal of W32/PrivacyCenter.R Trojan
W32/PrivacyCenter.R is a trojan. The trojan will infect Windows systems.
This Trojan Copies its files to Program Files\PCenter Folder as hidden files or active non-hidden files.
This trojan information updated on June 24, 2009.
Other names of W32/PrivacyCenter.R Trojan:
This trojan is also known as AdWare.Win32.FakeAV.cp, Trojan.Fraudtool.PrivacyCenter, Trojan.FakeAV.LT.

Damage Level : Medium/High
Distribution Level:
Medium
Download Registry, Taskmanager and Folder Options Repair Tool
W32/PrivacyCenter.R Trojan Manual Removal Instructions
Recommend Removal from Safe Mode:

How to Start in Safe mode:
Restart your Computer, Press F8 Repeatedly, when your Screen turns on, Select Safe mode, press enter.

The Infected Files Can be Seen in these folders and names also Running in Tasks
End the Following Active Process Before Removal
  • [ Kill the Process, Use Killbox if your Access Denied ]
Download W32/PrivacyCenter.R Trojan Known File Removal Tool

[In Windows Vista Run As Administrator, After Execution System Will Restart]

  • %Program Files\PCenter\pc.exe
  • %Program Files\PCenter\agent.exe
  • %Program Files\PCenter\uninstall.exe
    [ No Exact Information about Files, search above related files in Program files Folder ]

    If you have any of these files in running process from task manger, end the process before removal.
    Note: if task manager is disabled, Download the following file, Click to Download - Enable Registry.reg [ Right Click - Save Target As/Linked Content As ]
    Open it with Regedit.exe [%system32\regedit.exe], then it Confirms Add to registry Yes or No, Confirm Yes, then click Ok.
W32/PrivacyCenter.R Trojan Entries Manual Removal From Registry
Click Start, Run,Type regedit,Click OK.

Note: If the registry editor fails to open the threat may have modified the registry to prevent access to the registry editor.
  • Download this UnHookExec.inf, [ Right Click - Save Target As/Linked Content As ]
    and then continue with the removal. Save it to your Windows desktop. Do not run it at this time, download it only.
  • After booting into the Safe Mode or VGA Mode
  • Right-click the UnHookExec.inf file and click Install. [This is a small file. It does not display any notice or boxes when you run it.]
W32/PrivacyCenter.R Trojan modifies registry at the following locations to ensure its automatic execution at every system startup:
Delete The Entries

HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Uninstall
HKEY_USERS\S-1-5-21-XXXXXXXXXX-XXXXXXXXXX-XXXXXXXXX-XXXX\Software\Microsoft\Windows\ShellNoRoam

HKEY_USERS\S-1-5-21-XXXXXXXXXX-XXXXXXXXXX-XXXXXXXXX-XXXX\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Run

Delete file entries from right side

Search Registry For W32/PrivacyCenter.R Trojan File Names listed above to remove completely,
Edit Menu - Find
, enter Keyword and remove all value that find in search.

Exit the Registry Editor,
Restart your Computer.

Recommended Removal Tools:
Kaspersky Antivirus or Internet Security (Shareware)
Spyware Doctor (Shareware)
AVG Antivirus (Freeware)
Killbox (Freeware)
Ultimate Links PC Tips

Written by FireFly on July 9th, 2009 with no comments.
Read more articles on pc.exe and W32/PrivacyCenter.R and w32/agent and manual removal and otherSoftware and removal of trojan and Windows.

State of the Blog – A Little Update on Where We Are Today

We are in an exciting time for Windows. We’re about to launch our best version of Windows yet – Windows 7. In between all the Windows 7 awesomeness, I wanted to take a moment to talk about The Windows Blog and where we are today with the site.

We’ve come a long way since 2006 when we launched as the Windows Vista Team Blog. This last fall we re-launched the site as The Windows Blog. When we re-launched, the focus of the site was to be the ultimate resource for Windows through the use of blogging – and to grow.

In the site’s design, we put an emphasis of multiple blogs existing under The Windows Blog “umbrella” that would cater to different audiences. Our original blog, Windows Vista Team Blog, became one of several blogs under that “umbrella” and we also launched the Windows 7 Team Blog which is where you will find all the latest Windows 7 news and announcements. Also in the fall, we launched the Windows Security Blog featuring blog posts focusing on Windows security from Paul Cooke. Paul blogged live from RSA earlier this year.

And in the last few months, we’ve grown quite a bit to cover a broader array of audiences with several other new blogs joining our site:

Windows for your Business Blog: Launched in February by Gavriella Schuster, this blog focuses on our commercial customers for Windows. Most recently, Rich Reynolds who is a GM on the Windows Commercial Marketing Team posted a blog about how our business customers provided early feedback for Windows 7.

Windows 7 for Developers Blog: At the end of March, we launched the Windows 7 for Developers. This blog is run by Yochay Kiriaty from the Developer and Platform Evangelism (DPE) Team here at Microsoft. Yochay blogs about all the really cool things developers can do with their applications to take advantage of Windows 7 features like the new Windows Taskbar. If you’re a developer – this blog is a must read.

Springboard Series Blog: This blog launched in early June and is run by Senior Community Manager Stephen Rose. The Springboard Series is a TechNet portal and is the ultimate Windows resource for IT Professionals. The Springboard Series Blog focuses on calling out those resources for IT Pros. Just recently, a Virtual Roundtable (VRT) discussion was help with Mark Russinovich on Application Compatibility – check it out here!

Soon, my friends over on Windows Mobile will be blogging on The Windows Blog too! Their blog can be found here.

And of course I continue to focus on my Windows experiences on the Windows Experience Blog as well.

What’s great about growing the blogs under The Windows Blog “umbrella” is that we have blog posts talking about a variety of Windows topics relevant to a broad set of audiences.

However what if some of the content being blogged about isn’t relevant to me?

All blog posts from all blogs automatically appear in our main RSS feed. Some people want to see and read everything. This is likely how they are doing so or going to our frontpage. But if you only care about content from a specific blog, you can subscribe to the individual RSS feed for that blog. Here are the RSS feeds for each of the blogs here on The Windows Blog:

Tags we use for blog posts also have their own RSS feeds. If all you care about is our announcements, you can subscribe to the RSS feed for the Announcements tag.

If RSS isn’t your thing, you can also follow The Windows Blog on Twitter and get all our latest blog posts too.

So what’s coming up for The Windows Blog? Well – lots more awesome Windows 7 blog posts of course. We’re also going to be introducing a new menu system in the coming weeks and introducing more new blogs – including some localized blogs in a variety of different languages.

I’m very proud of the community of Windows blogs we’ve built up here on The Windows Blog. Thank you to the millions of visitors who read our posts each month and continue to be excited for Windows!

Digg This

Written by Brandon LeBlanc on July 9th, 2009 with no comments.
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Microsoft Silverlight 3 is now available!

Microsoft just announced the availability of Silverlight 3, its web browser plugin that enables features such as animation, vector graphics and audio-video playback. Silverlight 3 was first announced at the IBC 2008 show in Amsterdam on September 12, 2008. It was unveiled at MIX09 in Las Vegas on March 18, 2009.

Silverlight 3 supports Out-of-Browser experiences, i.e., Silverlight applications can be installed to the system for offline access (provided the application manifest is designed to allow local installation) where they run outside the browser. They are launched using the Start Menu or desktop shortcuts, and run without the browser window. Applications can check whether they are running inside a browser or not. When running out of browser, HTML interop is disabled. In addition, access to the Function Keys is enabled. Locally installed Silverlight applications still run in a sandbox.

Installed Silverlight 3 applications automatically check for updates asynchronously on every launch and updates are automatically installed. Running instances of the applications are informed when updates are available.

You can install Silverlight here

Resources
Don’t expect 64-bit Silverlight anytime soon.
Silverlight still does not support 64-bit IE?

Windows Live Tags: Silverlight, Silverlight 3, Browser Plugins, Internet Explorer, Channel9, Online Video, Web, Microsoft, Compatibility, Scott Guthrie, Windows Vista, Windows 7, Internet Explorer 8

Written by Teching It Easy: Windows Vista, Live & 7 on July 9th, 2009 with no comments.
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