Archive for December, 2009

Save The Earth With Paint-less Coke Cans

Thursday, December 24th, 2009

CokeGiven the unbelievably large number of Coca-Cola cans sold every day, one artist has a simple proposal to save significant amounts of energy and materials: don’t paint the cans.

Link: http://gizmodo.com/…
(via digg)

Google’s New DNS Resolver

Wednesday, December 23rd, 2009

GoogleNearly all web surfing makes use of a DNS resolver, a computer program that takes your human-readable domain name (e.g., www.chadsnews.com) and turns it into a numeric IP address that’s understood by the routers and switches on the Internet. DNS resolvers are typically supplied by your ISP, but astute Chad’s News readers will already be aware of OpenDNS, a free DNS resolver that has advantages over the ones provided by ISPs.

Now Google is getting into the business by offering a free DNS resolver service. They say it speeds up the browsing experience, increases security, and does away with those pesky redirects to advertising pages (which my ISP, Qwest, does when it can’t find the domain name).

The downside is privacy. Here at the Chad’s News network command center, for instance, Google already knows a lot of information about us because we use gmail and the Google reader. Using the resolver would give them even more data about our web browsing habits.

If you want to do a trial of the Google resolver, there’s a Windows program called Google DNS Helper that does the switch for you and, if you don’t like it, will switch you back.

Link #1 (Google Site): http://code.google.com/…

Link #2 (More Details): http://blogs.techrepublic.com.com/…

Link #3 (Negative Analysis): http://arstechnica.com/…

Link #4 (Speed Tests): http://www.pcmag.com/…
(via digg)

NORAD’s Santa Tracker

Tuesday, December 22nd, 2009

ChristmasNORAD’s Christmas Eve Santa tracking has embraced Web 2.0. The linked article explains its history, starting in 1955 with a typo that accidentally directed callers to a top-secret phone, to the present day where the Santa tracker is on gmail, YouTube, Twitter, Facebook, and others. The big event, however, is the real-time NORAD radar/satellite tracking on Christmas Eve. Military fighter jets meet up with Santa when he enters North American airspace and escort him as he goes about his duties. It turns out that Rudolph’s nose is bright enough to give off a heat signature detectable by NORAD’s satellites.

Link: http://news.cnet.com/…
(via Neatorama)

Coca-Cola Facts

Tuesday, December 8th, 2009

CokeAccording to the linked article, it’s estimated that 1.5 billion Coca-Colas are served daily. When you figure in the other brands owned by the company, the number of daily servings rises to 50 billion. I find that to be mind-boggling.

Link: http://www.busmanagement.com/…
(via digg)

Let Me Google That For You

Friday, December 4th, 2009

Google LogoAre you tired of people asking questions online that can easily be answered by a simple Google search? If so, then the linked website is for you. Perform the search like you normally would on Google, and you’ll get a link. Copy that link and give it to the person instead of an answer. The results are funny.

Thanks to Tom for this topic.

Link: http://lmgtfy.com/

Avast! Anti-virus False Positives

Thursday, December 3rd, 2009

Computer SecurityHere at the Chad’s News network command center, we use Avast! as our anti-virus program, because it’s free and is more or less mandated by our corporate masters for VPN access. The folks at Avast rolled out an update yesterday, at about 5:15pm Mountain Time, and it had severe problems. The update caused many false positives and crippled the programs that it incorrectly flagged as having the “Win32:Delf-MZG” virus. At 10:50pm Mountain Time, they released an update that fixed the problem.

If you are experiencing this issue, first update Avast! If you saved the corrupted files to “the chest,” you can safely restore them, and that will be that. Here at Chad’s News, however, we were caught by surprise and spent about 8-9 hours “fixing” the problem before finding out that it was all a mistake. Sigh… The linked article contains the official explanation and solution.

Link: http://support.avast.com/…