• RSS
  • subscribe
  • twitter

Author Archive

Opera 10.10 Dev Build With Opera Unite

By • Sep 5th, 2009 • Filed under: Opera-Browser, Ubuntu, Windows

Opera 10.10 development build now available for download comes with the much talked about Opera Unite -- a web server in the web browser. Opera 10.10 builds are a continuation of Opera 10 plus Unite with bug fixes. Better stay with Opera 10 if you prefer a stable well functioning browser to a complex, unstable […]

Get RSS and Twitter Updates on Your Monitor with FeedRoller

By • Sep 4th, 2009 • Filed under: Freeware, Windows

Windows only: FeedRoller does what it says, it places at the top of your monitor your RSS feeds and Twitter Updates. On my 24″ LCD Monitor it’s almost perfect, but my 17-inch laptop monitor is just too small, I can’t let FeedRoller’s black background banner eat up more space.

Opera 10 Final: Ubuntu 9.04 Overview Video

By • Sep 4th, 2009 • Filed under: Opera-Browser, Ubuntu, Windows

This is a short video by the Distro.TV that presents Opera 10 Final. This overview video, done on Ubuntu 9.04 seems to say “see for yourself that Opera 10 runs smoothly on Ubuntu”. Needless to say, it does and well too.

Ubuntu 9.10 ‘Karmic Koala’ Alpha 5 Released

By • Sep 3rd, 2009 • Filed under: Open-Source, Ubuntu

Ubuntu 9.10 “Karmic Koala” milestones says it takes another Alpha, alpha 6 to reach the first beta release. Ubuntu 9.10 “Karmic Koala” Alpha 5 is the last but one alpha release. Present in Alpha5 is the latest OpenOffice.org version 3.1. As Desktop Environment, you have GNOME 2.28 Beta 2 with Linux kernel 2.6.31 RC These […]

Proof-of-Concept Trojan Targets Skype Users

By • Sep 3rd, 2009 • Filed under: Multimedia, Open-Source, Security, Ubuntu, Voip, Windows

Researchers at TrendLabs have reported the presence of a newly released Proof-of-Concept (PoC) trojan that listens and records your Skype conversations. Confirmation of the release of this Trojan horse called Trojan.Peskyspy that records VoIP communications, specifically Skype calls comes from Symantec.com. They sympathetically call it the “wiretap Trojan”.