Archive for the ‘(2) Tech Support’ Category

Facebook & Messenger Tips

     

MSN messenger & Facebook Tips

(1) Facebook & Your Digicel phone

A good idea is to add your mobile phone to your Facebook account & setup your alerts so only the notifications you allow are sent to  your phone via text message.

“Personally I allow only the message notification on my mobile phone because the rest of notifications were too much & unnecessary.”

Currently only Digicel phones are recognized, I dont know by now if  TSTT Bmobile has registered to Facebook for this service.

(2) MSN Messenger for Facebook chat

If you have an MSN, Live or Hotmail account you can have your Facebook account in sync with your hotmail, Live or MSN account.
First login & update your profile & account, see link below

http://login.live.com

After editing & updating your profile on your Live, hotmail or MSN account
look for Messenger social & click on the Facebook icon & setup your account.

Example Click here

After you connect your account to Facebook login to MSN messenger & you will see all your online contacts from Facebook & messenger.

Happy socializing & enjoy.

Share
September 12th, 2011 by admin

Get That Unknown Number That’s Been Calling you

Get That Unknown Number That’s Been Calling you

If your phone is Digicel you’re in luck because you can get the number from Digicel & possibly the person’s name & address.

It is a process but it just might be worth it.

Step 1: Download the form

Step 2: Fill out the form

Step 3: Make a police report                                                                                *It’s easy as these things are very common*

Step 4: Go into one of Digicel head office’s & submit the form               *There’s one in every mall*

Step 5: Wait a few days Digicel will call you in & you will receive that unknown number.

Step 6: Raise hell!!!

Download Form Here

Share
October 28th, 2010 by admin

Downloads

Setup FTP and download!

FTP Setup page

http://Leonpro.com/ftpsetup
Share
July 10th, 2010 by admin

How to Take Good Care of Your Laptop Computer

Following these 9 easy steps will help to ensure that your laptop lasts longer.


Click on image above

Share
February 20th, 2010 by Leon

Want a fast browser? uses least system resources than Internet Explorer 6x,7x,8 or Firefox ?

Try google chrone!

it really works great! works good for facebook useres also !

http://www.google.com/chrome/intl/en/landing.html?hl=en

Share
February 10th, 2010 by Rienzi

123456 The Key To Password Hacking

Security firm Imperva, by examining 32 million passwords that were posted to the Internet after a security breach at RockYou.com, has come up with a list of the most common passwords chosen by consumers. The results are not pretty, except for hackers, as the most popular password is 123456.
It was bad enough that RockYou saw fit to store the passwords in clear text, and that they were extracted through a SQL Injection vulnerability. But the choices that end users made for their passwords show that people still have a long way to go in terms of security.  The report (.PDF), states that the top 20 passwords were:
Password (followed by number of users with the password):

  1. 123456 (290,731)
  2. 12345 (79,078)
  3. 123456789 (76,790)
  4. Password (61,958)
  5. iloveyou (51,622)
  6. princess (35,231)
  7. rockyou (22,588)
  8. 1234567 (21,726)
  9. 12345678 (20,553)
  10. abc123 (17,542)
  11. Nicole (17,168)
  12. Daniel (16,409)
  13. babygirl (16,094)
  14. monkey (15,294)
  15. Jessica (15,162)
  16. Lovely (14,950)
  17. michael (14,898)
  18. Ashley (14,329)
  19. 654321 (13,984)
  20. Qwerty (13,856)

Amazing that 13,984 users thought that reversing 123456 to arrive at 654321 was sufficient protection as a password. Twenty per cent of the passwords were common names and slang or easily remembered number combinations.
Some of the key findings of the study:

  • About 30% of users chose passwords whose length is equal or below six characters.
  • Almost 60% of users chose their passwords from a limited set of alpha-numeric characters.
  • Nearly 50% of users used names, slang words, dictionary words or trivial passwords (consecutive digits, adjacent keyboard keys, and so on).

The reasons for this is obvious: people want something they can remember.
While not studied in this report, many also use the same password over and over and over.  Thus if a hacker gets one password, he can break into any of their accounts.
Imperva made the following recommendations:

  • The password should be at least eight characters in length.
  • It should contain a mix of four different types of characters: upper case letters, lower case letters, numbers, and special characters such as !@#$%^&*,;" If there is only one letter or special character, it should not be either the first or last character in the password.
  • It should not be a name, a slang word, or any word in the dictionary. It should not include any part of your name or your e-mail address.

In addition to all these tips, Microsoft has a password strength tester. Type your password in here and it will tell you how strong or weak your password is.
For those who may have trouble remembering passwords, there are programs to help with that problem, many of them, in fact.  Browsers themselves will store passwords, but there are plenty of standalone programs. One favorite of ours is LastPass. It’s free, and stores your passwords online (and locally), so that you can have them synced to different PCs you use. There are many others, and a simple search on "password" will bring up many of them (Roboform, KeePass, etc., etc.).

Source: http://hothardware.com/News/123456-The-Key-To-Password-Hacking/

Share
January 29th, 2010 by larnelle

New Apple I-Pad

wow, almost unreal..

LeonG

Share
January 28th, 2010 by Leon

Researchers Crack 3G GSM 128-bit Encryption in Under 2 Hours

The security woes of the cell phone sector continue

For those in the know about the current state of cell phone security, it’s a mess. With current 64-bit encryptions on GSM (used by about 3.5 billion people worldwide), publicly cracked after 21 years of secrecy, wire-tapping is now no longer the realm of the government alone.  Security researchers have demonstrated that malicious users and corporate spies alike can tap 64-bit GSM and decrypt it using equipment that can cost under $1,000 (most of the software involved is open source).  That’s scary news for anyone who wants to avoid letting their company’s financial results slip in a seemingly private, behind-closed-doors conversation with your financial staff.

Equally scary is the cell phone companies’ response.  They only acknowledged the insecurity when the algorithm was publicly cracked by Karsten Nohl, PhD, a 28-year-old German computer security researcher and member of Berlin’s Chaos Computer Club.  Even now they’re dragging their feet on adopting more secure algorithms across their networks.

And now the next best encryption, the KASUMI system — a 128-bit A5/3 algorithm implemented across 3G networks — has been cracked as well.  Where as A5/1 was brought down by 2 terabyte time-memory tradeoff attack tables generated over a couple months on an NVIDIA GPU cluster (via CUDA code) early last year, the effort used the sophisticated, “related-key sandwich attack” to crack the more advanced algorithm in only 2 hours.  A paper on the work is published here (PDF).

The research was led by faculty members of the Mathematics and Computer Science departments at the Weizmann Institute of Science in Israel.  The participating researchers included Orr Dunkelman, Nathan Keller, and Adi Shamir, the last of which is famous for having his last name being part of the acronym RSA — which stands for a popular public-key encryption algorithm.

They used an approach that involved first using one key for encryption of a message, and then changing it to a different key.  Writes the researchers, “By using this distinguisher and analyzing the single remaining round, we can derive the complete 128 bit key of the full Kasumi by using only 4 related keys, 226 data, 230 bytes of memory, and 232 time. These complexities are so small that we have actually simulated the attack in less than two hours on a single PC, and experimentally verified its correctness and complexity.”

The attack is less effective than the recent A5/1 crack, though, according to Karsten Nohl.  Professor Nohl says that the new method requires the collection of “several million known plaintexts” to get a single key.  A plaintext is transmitted approximately every second, so cracking a particular carrier’s encryption could require a long period of data collection.  It also would take two hours to crack the particular call on a single PC, though researchers said using a cluster could reduce this time to a manageable amount.

The current KASUMI (A5/3) algorithm was the result of a tweaked MISTY algorithm.  The original MISTY algorithm was developed by researchers at Mitsubishi.  The MISTY algorithm was more secure, but more computationally intensive, than the modified KASUMI variant.

Mr. Nohl says despite the new research shows that the GSM industry should perhaps reconsider KASUMI as they move away from A5/1 he states, “The attack should stand as a reminder that A5/3 and any other cipher will need to be replaced eventually.  Hopefully this fact is considered when upgrading GSM.”

Currently most of the telecommunications industry has no definite timetable for even rolling out KASUMI, so it seems doubtful that it will act very fast, though.  That means that for now, you probably shouldn’t say anything on GSM networks that you don’t want repeated.

Source:http://www.dailytech.com/article.aspx?newsid=17417

Share
January 15th, 2010 by larnelle

Starcraft 2


Starcraft 2

Sequel to the most popular and successful strategy game ever made, Starcraft II is sure to make waves in the U.S. — but it’ll make bigger ones in South Korea, where the decade-old game is still a national obsession. There’s no official release date for Starcraft II yet, but we’d expect to see it drop around the fall.

Share
January 3rd, 2010 by Leon

Get *Christmas Wallpapers* here

Christmas Wallpapers 2009

Click On Image Above To Go To Gallery

www.Leonpro.com/pictures

Share
December 22nd, 2009 by Leon