Jumat, 09 Oktober 2015

How to Mount ISOs and Other Disc Images on Windows, Mac, and Linux

How-To Geek Newsletter
Did You Know?

Not only does the common cold make us individually miserable, but collectively it comes at a great cost; the common cold is estimated to generate over 20 billion dollars worth of cold-related work loss, 150 million work days missed by employees (direct suffering from colds), and 22-189 million missed school days for children (with 126 million days of work missed by parents caring for their children), all in the U.S. alone.

Geek Trivia

The Screenplay For The James Bond Film You Only Live Twice Was Written By Which Children’s Author?
C. S. Lewis →
A. A. Milne →
Roald Dahl →
Lloyd Alexander →


Advertisement
Download Salary & Skills Roundup for Today's IT Professional
This exclusive kit will teach you how to make more money in your career as an IT professional. Click here to download
Thoughts from the Geek

This is a daily column written by Lowell Heddings, the founder and owner of How-To Geek. If you prefer, you can read this column in a web browser instead.

Firefox is Killing Support for Browser Plugins, and That’s a Very Good Thing


Mozilla to Disable Browser Plugins (Except Flash)

Mozilla intends to remove support for most NPAPI plugins in Firefox by the end of 2016. Firefox began this process several years ago with manual plugin activation, allowing users to activate plugins only when they were necessary. This decision mirrors actions by other modern browsers, such as Google Chrome and Microsoft Edge, which have already removed support for legacy plugins. Moreover, since new Firefox platforms do not have to support an existing ecosystem of users and plugins, new platforms such as 64-bit Firefox for Windows will launch without plugin support.

Because Adobe Flash is still a common part of the Web experience for most users, we will continue to support Flash within Firefox as an exception to the general plugin policy. Mozilla and Adobe will continue to collaborate to bring improvements to the Flash experience on Firefox, including on stability and performance, features and security architecture.

Firefox used to lead the charge when it came to making a better web experience, but these days they are a little behind — thankfully the good news is that they are catching up quickly. Google Chrome and Microsoft Edge have both abandoned plugins and integrated Flash in a more direct way to make sure that it stays updated, and now Firefox is joining the party.

Browser plugins are the biggest security risk on your computer at this point. If you download and run something bad, nothing can really protect you, but most people aren’t downloading and running sketchy software all the time. So the people creating malware to infect your computer have changed tactics, and now they try to infect people using vulnerabilities in the Java, Silverlight, Reader, or Flash plugins in your browser.

They generally either try to trick you into visiting a malicious link — which isn’t all that hard to do, since very few people know where a link is going to go when they click it, or they hack popular (or lots of less popular) websites to insert malicious code, or they try to trick low-quality advertising networks into running ads that actually contain malware. In any of these cases, they use zero-day attacks in browser plugins (or older versions of Internet Explorer) to get malware running on your computer.

Google Chrome runs Flash in a sandbox that protects against a lot of drive-by attacks, and when there is a security update, they can instantly push down a patch to everybody to make sure that people are protected. Microsoft Edge was designed from the start to forbid browser plugins, and of course Apple long ago banished Flash and all plugins from your iPhone or iPad (a good part of the reason why they are more secure).

Flash is slowly dying, and that’s a really good thing. The web doesn’t need plugins — I’ve disabled all plugins in my primary browser for the last year, and virtually everything on the web functions just as it should. And I use a separate browser for the few things that do require a plugin (like Netflix).

What You Can Do Right Now to Be More Secure

Stop what you’re doing, and go disable all browser plugins that you don’t need. It’s the most important thing you can do to keep yourself more secure. You probably won’t even notice a difference in your web experience (well, it might speed things up a bit).

And if you are really worried about security while browsing, you should check out our writeup of Malwarebytes Anti-Exploit, which adds protection against zero-day attacks by prohibiting them from accessing memory they shouldn’t or files that they shouldn’t have access to. The basic version is completely free.



Previous Thoughts You Might Have Missed:


Geek Comic
2015-10-09-(that-is-some-upgrade)
Today's Tech Term

Peopleware

Peopleware is the term used to refer to the role of people in the development and/or use of computer technology. Peopleware is one of the three core aspects of computer technology with hardware and software being the other two.

What We're Reading from Around the Web

How to Quickly Move or Copy Content in Word Using F2

Instead of using the cut and copy commands, "Ctrl + X" and "Ctrl + V", to move content, you can more quickly move text using fewer keystrokes. Any content, including text, graphics, and tables, can be moved using the "F2" key and the "Enter" key.

Read This Article →


How to Deposit Checks to Your Bank Account Using Your Phone

Much ado has been made in recent years about being able to deposit checks to your bank accounts using your phone’s camera. It works well and is super convenient, so if your bank’s app offers this feature you may want to try it out.

Read This Article →


How to Mount ISOs and Other Disc Images on Windows, Mac, and Linux

Disc images have become more useful than ever on modern PCs that often lack CD and DVD drives. Create ISO files and other types of disc images and you can “mount” them, accessing the virtual discs as if they were physical discs inserted into your computer.

Read This Article →


Why are PDF Files Generated by Microsoft Word so Large?

When your documents are mainly text only in nature, then it would seem like the file sizes for .docx and .pdf versions should be fairly similar when saved, but that is not always the case. Today’s SuperUser Q&A post has the answer to a curious reader’s questions about the large difference in file sizes.

Read This Article →


How to Create and Better Manage Amazon Wish Lists

If you use Amazon wish lists, then you might have noticed they can become a little long and unwieldy as you add more and more stuff you want. Here is how to better manage them.

Read This Article →


How to View and Delete Your Google Maps History on Android and iPhone

Google Maps saves the history from places you've reviewed, dismissed suggestions to review, saved, shared, or searched for recently. However, you can delete specific items in the Maps app on your Android device, iPhone, or iPad.

Read This Article →


How to Find Out Which Version of Android You Have

Android phones and tablets aren’t all kept up-to-date with the current version of Android. It’s often helpful to know which version of Android a specific phone or tablet is running so you can get help with something or determine whether a feature is present.

Read This Article →


Advertisement
Download Office 365: An Introductory Guide
Explore Microsoft Office 365 works, and then discover what steps your organization should choose to implement an infrastructure that is completely driven by it. Click here to download

Tidak ada komentar:

Posting Komentar