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November 3rd, 2009

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Manual Removal of W32/Small.CCD Trojan » pp11.exe

W32/Small.CCD Trojan Known Files » pp11.exe
W32/Small.CCD is a trojan. The trojan will infect Windows systems.
This Trojan Copies its file(s) to Windows folder as hidden files or active non-hidden files.

This trojan information updated on October 1, 2009.
Other names of W32/Small.CCD Trojan:
This trojan is also known as Trojan.Win32.Small.ccd, W32/Koobface.EP.worm, Trojan.DL.Agent.NVGN.
Download Registry, Taskmanager and Folder Options Repair Tool

W32/Small.CCD Trojan Manual Removal Instructions

Recommended Removal from Windows Safe Mode:

How to Start Windows 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/Small.CCD Trojan Known File Removal Tool by commenting
[In Windows Vista Run As Administrator, After Execution System Will Restart ]


%Windows\pp11.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, 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/Small.CCD 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 UnHookExec.inf,
[ Right Click - Save Target As/Linked Content As ]
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.]
Or Download Regfile to enable Registry editor
Download Registry Enabler [ Right click - Save Target As ]
Open it with Registry editor

W32/Small.CCD 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\Run

Delete file entries from right side
Search Registry For W32/Small.CCD 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 ]

Written by magakos on November 3rd, 2009 with no comments.
Read more articles on pp11.exe and W32/Small.CCD and manual removal and removal of trojan and otherSoftware and Windows.

Dealing with Plug-Ins with Chrome

Web 2.0 is made possible by a lot of cool technology, such as HTML, AJAX, Flash, and Java. Chrome is built to handle HTML and AJAX just fine on its own, but Flash and Java require special software to work properly. The plugins are provided by Adobe and Sun, respectively, and here we show you how to get these plug-ins working in a breeze.


Installing plug-ins automatically
When you open a page that requires a plug-in, such as Flash Player, a yellow bar slides in below the toolbar indicating that an additional plug-in is required. Click the Install Plug-In button on the right side of the bar to begin installation. A confirmation window appears. Click the Get Plugin button. The plug-in installer downloads and runs on your computer. You may have to click a few buttons to allow the installer to run. After you run the plug-in installer, return to your Chrome tab and click the Reload button in the toolbar. The page should now show your added features.


Installing plug-ins manually
Some sites won’t allow you to install plug-ins quite as easily as we describe above. You can still get them working, but it may take a few more steps, listed here:

1. Navigate to the plug-in Web site. We list a few essential ones below.

2. Click the button(s) that say Download. You may have to click through a few screens and accept a license agreement.

3. Open the installer by clicking the icon in the Installer Bar at the bottom of your tab. The plug-in installer opens in a new window.

4. Click the Next and Accept buttons to install the plug-in, and then click Finish. The installer closes.

5. Switch back to Chrome and click the Reload button. Your plug-in should load correctly and show your interactive content. In some cases, you may need to close Chrome completely and open a new tab.

Here’s a list of plug-ins we can’t live without and where you can download them:

• Flash: Enables you to watch YouTube videos and play online games. Many Web sites also use Flash for navigation menus and advertisements, as well. Go to www.adobe.com/go/getflash to download Flash.

• Adobe Reader: Opens any PDF file you come across. PDF files are digital replicas of paper documents, including manuals and eBooks. Download the reader at www.adobe.com/go/getreader.

• Java: This is used on shopping sites for 3D product views, for some online games, and other tools. Go to www.java.com for more info.

• QuickTime: View high definition streaming video and virtual tours. Find it at www.quicktime.com. If you’ve already installed iTunes, you already have QuickTime.


Source of Information : Google Sites and Chrome FOR DUMMIES

Written by magakos on November 3rd, 2009 with no comments.
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Free Kiilki Visual Style for Windows 7


Author: nittiyh.deviantart.com

Download Here

Written by magakos on November 3rd, 2009 with no comments.
Read more articles on windows 7 themes and Shell Modification and otherSoftware and themes.

Free High Quality Lindsay Lohan Sexy Wallpapers

[1.jpg]

Download: Rapidshare

Written by magakos on November 3rd, 2009 with no comments.
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Windows Home Server grows as your needs grow

If you look back at posts from several weeks ago, I wrote about the Top 10 Reasons to use Windows Home Server. Since then, I have been explaining each bullet in more detail including backup and restore , installing your home server , and connecting to friends and family through Windows Home Server’s Remote Access. Today, I will tell you a little more about item number 5 on the list - Windows Home Server’s Drive Extender and how it can provide an unlimited amount of space for your large collection of recorded Family Guy episodes or the thousands or pictures that are sitting unprotected on your PC.

With Windows Home Server, storage space grows as your needs and digital possessions grow. Thanks to Windows Home Server Drive Extender , you are able to add internal or external hard drives of any size so which will create an unlimited amount of storage space for your HD movies, pictures, or huge collection of Family Guy episodes. Users will no longer have worry about disk drive letters (C:, D:, E:, etc. etc.) as they add more hard drives to their home server, since Windows Home Server treats the disk space as a large pool of available space. Windows Home Server also monitors the health of each hard drive that is added. The lights on the outside of the server will turn Red if a drive is failing, Purple if there's a drive but it's not configured and Blue if it's configured and healthy.

image

*Screen shot of a Windows Home Server with over 3TB of space

In a recent satisfaction survey completed by Windows Home Server users, we found that 54% of people using the English version of Windows Home Server have 4 or more hard drives connected to their server! Some more fun facts about how people today are getting the most out of their Windows Home Server’s Drive Extender include:

  • The largest number of hard drives currently attached to a home server is 30, there are lots and lots of people with more than 10 hard drives attached to their home servers
  • The largest amount of available disk space that we have seen (so far) is: 36.603516 terabytes
  • The largest amount of used disk space that we have seen (so far) is: 24.093750 terabytes

 image

*Fans in a home-built Windows Home Server that are being used to cool 13 hard drives.

Windows Home Server Drive Extender provides the reliability benefits of RAID (Redundant Array of Independent Disks) without the complexity. Windows Home Server supports reliability by duplicating designated shared folders – so important data (e.g. your Photos, Music, etc.) will be stored on separate hard drives helping to provide protection against hard drive failure.  Folder Duplication is configurable on a per shared folder basis, so a given shared folder can have multiple copies, with each one being stored on a separate hard drive.

How is it different from RAID solutions?

  • Any hard drive, any time. You are not restricted to simply adding more hard drives of the same type and size. When you want to grow your home server storage, you just buy whatever hard drive you like and add it.
  • Internal and external hard drives can be used to grow your storage. No space in your home server case? No problem, plug in one or more USB 2.0 or FireWire hard drives.
  • Hard drive removal, as explained above. With time, it will be important to remove the older smaller hard drives and put in new larger hard drives so you can store more stuff.

To see how easy it is to add and remove a hard drive first hand, take a look at the screen cast below:

 

-Nicole

Written by Nicole Berett on November 3rd, 2009 with no comments.
Read more articles on Organize and drive extender and Protect and otherSoftware and Data Recovery and Windows Home Server.

Migrating from Windows XP to Windows 7 - Guidance for IT pros

Every day this week long-time Springboard technical contributor and Windows deployment insider, Jeremy Chapman, will post a blog about how to think about Windows 7 deployment projects.  We debated on making this a whitepaper or a feature article, but to keep things less formal, we went with a multimedia blog series. This series won't just cover steps to publish images in your Windows Deployment Services environments, instead it goes much broader into the major steps of deployment all-up; from figuring out what applications and hardware you have to migrating files, managing applications, building images, incorporating drivers and automating stuff end-to-end. Jeremy has been a veteran member of the Microsoft Deployment Toolkit team and while he won't be posting the classic "1500 pages" of how-to content, he will stay on his quest for the elusive and often escalated-for "one-page paper" to migrate enterprise customers from Windows XP to Windows 7. Let's see if he can do it!

Part 1 is already up and parts 2-5 are coming each day this week:

  1. The "One-Pager" for Moving from Windows XP to Windows 7 (Overview)
  2. Migrating User Files and Settings from Windows XP to Windows 7
  3. Application Management and Preparing for a Windows 7 Deployment
  4. Choosing and Image Strategy and Building Windows 7 System Images
  5. Automating the migration from Windows XP to Windows 7 End-to-End

Subscribe to the RSS feed or check back for the rest this week. If you are coming to TechEd Europe next week, Jeremy will be delivering multiple sessions on Windows deployment and application compatibility. Please let us know what you think about these blogs, the longer multimedia format and whether you would like to see other topics covered.

 As always, thanks for reading and I hope to see some of you next week at TechEd!

 Stephen Rose

Written by Stephen L Rose on November 3rd, 2009 with no comments.
Read more articles on otherSoftware.

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