Displaying items by tag: USB key

Google has a lot of tech websites slobbering over its announcement of new security measures for accessing its Gmail email offering today, with all claiming that this makes Gmail the most secure email application on the planet (if not the galaxy).

Published in Open Sauce
Kingston Technology's Australian office has confirmed details of the product recall and replacement of the secured USB drives that weren't very secure.

Published in Security
Thursday, 07 January 2010 09:00

NIST-certified secure USB drives easily cracked

A major flaw in the password handling procedures in some supposedly secure 'thumb drives' makes them trivially easy to unlock.

Published in Security
Dr Taher Elgamal, the driving force behind the SSL protocol explains that intelligent data is the way forward for business to protect confidential company information and simplify infrastructure.

Published in Security
Most netbooks do not ship with an optical drive. Here is how you can make your own bootable USB memory stick with Ubuntu Netbook Remix - the special netbook-optimised version of Canonical's Ubuntu 9.04 Jaunty Jackalope and try out the newest and hottest operating system available today.

Published in The Linux Distillery
Microsoft has made Windows 7 release candidate 1 available. Yet, it is a DVD image - what if you want to try it on a netbook or an ultra-slim laptop without a built-in optical drive? Here is how to make a bootable USB memory stick to install it from.

Wednesday, 15 April 2009 11:07

Wolverine claws his way into your computer

Movie tie-ins aren’t a new advertising stunt, but I have to express my surprise when it comes to Wolverine RAM for your desktop or server!

No matter if you're exclusively a Windows shop, every good IT technician needs Linux in their toolkit. A bootable Linux CD has saved my bacon more than once.

Published in The Linux Distillery
Friday, 05 December 2008 09:29

LaCie coins a priceless design for new USB drives

LaCie have minted two new USB drives that look like bronze and silver coins, giving them the currency inspired name of the “CurrenKey” in 4 and 8GB sizes. Will consumers be impressed and flash their cash for these coin-like flash drives?

Published in Fuzzy Logic
Here are two free Windows utilities worth trying. The first can help protect your laptop from theft, and the other will hide data (up to 1 GB) on your USB keys from prying eyes.

Published in A Meaningful Look

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