Tech Tuesday: Focus on Security


TECH-TUESDAY


Scan Your Computer for Trojans, Worms and Viruses, For Free
The Japanese antivirus company, Trend Micro, has come up with an effective online virus scan, called Housecall. Just click on the following link, and Housecall will scan your computer for intruders. Depending on the size of your hard drive(s), and the relative power of your computer’s CPU, the process should take anywhere from about half an hour to an hour. Trend Micro updates the virus definitions each time you activate the scan.
You can also run Trend Micro’s Hackercheck, simultaneously, to check for possible hacker intrusion points, or open (which oughta be closed) ports.
In addition, the company offers their Damage Cleanup Engine.
Here’s how to set it up: Create a folder called sysclean on your C:\ root directory. Click here to download the Sysclean package (bottom of the page), and save the sysclean.com file to the C:\sysclean folder. Next (and this is important), click on latest pattern file. You’ll be taken to a new page. Scroll down and click on HTTP, and save the file to your sysclean folder.
You’ll have to unzip this file, and extract it to your sysclean folder. Finally, click on the sysclean.com file; the engine will start. The Sysclean package:

  • terminates all malware instances in memory
  • removes malware registry entries
  • removes malware entries from system files
  • scans for and deletes all malware copies in all local hard drives

The Damage Cleanup Engine will take about an hour, or so, to run.
While you’re at it, you might as well download the latest version of Network Associates’ McAfee Stinger to scan your computer for the 45 newest Trojans and worms. McAfee Stinger 2.3.7 installation instructions are here.
Of course, scanning for viruses using Housecall and Hackercheck, and running the Damage Cleanup Engine does not obviate the need for an effective, always on, antivirus programme. Grisoft continues to offer AVG as an effective, free, antivirus programme for non-commercial users.

All the Right Moves: How Conservatism Won


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In a new book titled The Right Nation: How Conservatism Won, written by John Micklethwait and Adrian Wooldridge, Oxford-educated American correspondents for The Economist, the two Brits present a vividly detailed study of why conservatives rule American politics (and, by extension, set the agenda for Canadian politics).
The authors trace the history of the conservative movement from the McCarthy era, when ‘conservatism was a fringe idea,’ to the second Bush administration and the ‘victory of the right’. They dissect the new ‘conservative establishment’, which combines the intellectual force of think tanks, business interests and sympathetic media outlets, and argue that continuing Republican hegemony is likely.
Why? Three simple reasons explain why conservatives keep defeating the left, the authors suggest: The right wins the battle of ideas, has a more determined and focused army of activists, and is reaping the benefits of long-term changes in American society.
And, lest you think that Micklethwait and Wooldridge are themselves conservatives, they take pains in the introduction to disclaim any allegiance to either of America’s “two great political tribes.”
In his review of the book for Mother Jones magazine, Michael Kazin accepts the cogency of the arguments made by Micklethwait and Wooldridge, and writes that if the left is to succeed in reclaiming the hearts and minds of the American people …

“ … they (must) rid themselves of a nagging contempt for the unhip, the poorly educated, and the God-fearing. If the left is not a movement of and for working people — blemishes and all — then it has little chance to regain its previous influence.”


Micklethwait and Wooldridge limn a powerful dynamic that unites the Burkean philosophy of the right-leaning think tanks with the moral passion of religious activists and the entrepreneurial energy of small-business owners. Whether this fusion of interests will disintegrate amidst its own internal contradictions or whether the left will come to reclaim the activist and collectivist agenda of working people remains to be seen.

Under The Volcano Celebrates 15 Years of People’s Struggle


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Celebrating 15 years of cultural resistance, Canada’s largest political arts festival, the Under The Volcano festival of Art & Social Change, will be held again this year at Whey-Ah-Wichen (Cates Park), in North Vancouver, on the traditional territory of the Tsleil-Waututh Nation, Sunday, August 8th.
A child of Vancouver’s active indie music scene in the late 1980s, and largely youth-oriented in it’s early days, Under the Volcano has emerged as a successful and enduring cultural tool to educate and inspire alternatives to the overwhelmingly oppressive forces of patriarchy, racism, and capitalism.
For those living in, or near, Vancouver, see ya there next Sunday …

The Unbelievable Truth: Tonight Is Video Night

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A Lesson for Crispin Glover: When Not To Take LSD


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A few years back, actor Crispin Glover had, what appeared to be, a nervous breakdown while visiting David Letterman’s late night show on NBC. Subsequent to Glover’s onstage antics, Letterman swore that Marty McFly’s dad would never appear on his show again. Well, here it is a new millennium, and VanRamblings learns (c/o All Things Christie) that Mr. Glover wasn’t suffering from acute psychological distress, rather … he was making like Art Linkletter’s worst nightmare. Here is Crispin Glover ‘kicking it’ on the Letterman show.
Funnier Than Anchorman: Will Ferrell Makes Like Bush


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After spending over $75 million on fraudulent attacks, Bush White House apparatchik Karl Rove is back to selling the true Texas cowboy. Throughout August, Bush campaign commercials will feature President Bush at his ranch in Crawford, Texas. What will these commercials look like? Comedian Will Ferrell takes us for a behind-the-scenes look at ‘White House West’.
Summer at the Movies. A Video With More Heart Than I Robot


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Migawd, this has been one lousy summer at the movies. There are no sleepers. Not one film has broken out, unexpectedly, to emerge as a hit. Second week box office drop-offs remain in the 60% range, and from Van Helsing to The Village and The Manchurian Candidate, this has been a summer of disappointment for most dedicated movie-goers. Fortunately, VanRamblings comes to the rescue tonight, presenting this heartfelt glimpse into our future, a video
that is everything that I Robot could never hope to be, whatever the budget.