BENTSEN GROVE RESORT COMPUTER CLUB BULLETIN
Week of February 13, 2006

MEETINGS
MONDAY

 ROOM 3 & 3R
BEGINNERS
PRESENTATION
9:30 AM

GENERAL
MEETING
10:30 AM

SPECIAL INTEREST GROUPS:
If you would like to meet in a small group to discuss one of the following subjects, contact the following people.

PHOTOGRAPHY
WEB PAGE

INVESTMENT CLUB
Bill Wiese
Harold Buechly

Corinne Higbee
580-3184
581-3180

585-5664

Our bulletin is also available on line by visiting http://www.bgrcc.com/ and clicking on bulletin. You may also select bulletins by its subject.
NEED SOME HELP
TRY http://www.bgrcc.com/
Click on HELP - - - - - - - -

EMERGENCY
RESPONSE
TEAM
John Abbott……424-0537
Harold Buechly...581-3180
Corinne Higbee...585-5664

UPCOMING EVENTS:      Please wear your badge!
Monday February 13th 2006,  9:30, Beginners Meeting By Corinne Higbee
        10:30, General Meeting By Harold Buechly
Monday February 20th, 10:30 Door prize Drawing
      10:35, General Meeting By Bill Wiese, will accept questions on photography and cameras.
      Noon, Pizza Sig at Mr. Gatti's

Beginners Meeting By Corinne Higbee
Please copy the beginners lesson number six and bring it to class with you on Monday. If you have a laptop and are on the wirelessweb you may bring your computer and follow along as we make a musical CD. You will need a blank CD-R to make the copy on. I believe all will find this a fun lesson and will be able to better use your computer for the pleasure
of listening to music while working.
I will have additional CD's with copies of the maintance files for those who had the red copies, and did not get spybot or ad aware  for the removal of spyware from your computer. See you on Monday. Corinne

Many Thanks to Jose Dominguez  (AKA Joe Sunday) for his presentation on 2/6/2006. It was most entertaining and informative. Visit his web site at http://www.svideo.com/ or contact him at sales@svideo.com .

BITS/BYTES, Kb/KB, SPEED TEST AND PING By John Abbott
There seems to be a wide disparity between speed figures being tossed about.  One of the distinctions is that part of you are quoting KBs and part Kbs.  KB is KiloBYTE and Kb is kiloBITS. There are 8 bits in a byte - so you can see where one signal may look 8 times better than another just by the way it reports.  

If you use the speed tests on http://performance.toast.net you will find a large disparity between testing sites.  If you pick a location in the UK the speed is going to suffer a lot more overhead and will look much slower.  If on the other hand (the one with the ring) if you select onlinesolutions.org you will get the best possible speed report.

So..  If everyone will use the same test port we will find that the speeds are much closer across the park.   I'd like to suggest that everyone use http://www.testmy.net   If you register (free) you can keep your averages for an extended period and see the speed curve smoothed out a bit.

Here is the report from my test tonight:

:::.. Download Stats ..:::
Connection is:: 756 Kbps about 0.8 Mbps (tested with 1013 kB) <--- the relevant figure of merit in bits
Download Speed is:: 92 kB/s <--- expressed in bytes
Tested From:: http://testmy.net (server1) <--- test point
Test Time:: Fri Feb 03 2006 01:13:33 GMT-0600 (CST) <-- time of the test (its faster after everyone goes to bed)
Bottom Line:: 13X faster than 56K 1MB download in 11.13 sec  <--- feel good numbers
Diagnosis: May need help : running at only 17.64 % of your hosts average (rr.com) <-- ignore this - the test sees us coming from the backbone RR.com
Validation Link:: http://testmy.net/stats/id-WXBO5MRNP  <--- because I registered you can validate this test, so you know the numbers weren't fakes

Keep in mind that distance from the antenna and the gain of the antenna being used will also have an effect on your overall speed.  This was captured with a 200mw Cisco PCMIA card 65 yards from the main antenna.

If you want the best figure of merit - upload and download - then use the command "ping" and pick a couple of known locations like www.google.com and www.cnn.com and a few others.  Keep track of the time it takes for a series of 20 pings ( ping www.google.com -c20 )  and you'll see the fastest, slowest and average time displayed.  Log those until you get used to them and you'll then know your health relative to the entire network.


PING www.l.google.com (216.239.37.104) 56(84) bytes of data.
64 bytes from 216.239.37.104: icmp_seq=1 ttl=235 time=79.4 ms

[redundant sequences removed for space consideration]

64 bytes from 216.239.37.104: icmp_seq=20 ttl=235 time=79.3 ms

--- www.l.google.com ping statistics ---
20 packets transmitted, 20 received, 0% packet loss, time 19081ms
rtt min/avg/max/mdev = 72.885/80.685/100.714/6.713 ms
john@linux:~>

MICROSOFT POWER TOYS FOR XP By Harold Buechly
Maybe TOYS is in the name but they certinly are not toys as toys go. Power Toys is a group of programs offered by Microsoft to add fun and functionality to your XP system.
One of the oldest is Tweak UI, now updated, allowing yout to safely make changes to your system without you having to directly edit the registry.
Other programs may allow functions to your computer that you may not have known could be done with your computer.
http://www.microsoft.com/windowsxp/downloads/powertoys/xppowertoys.mspx

What Your Computer Really Does When It's Idle by Vinny La Bash, vlabash@home.com
Member of the Sarasota Personal Computer Users Group, Inc.

You're sitting at your machine, thinking about what to do next, when your disk drive starts whirring and the light flashes, indicating that something is going on. What is your machine doing? Your hands are nowhere near the keyboard or the mouse, and you can be relatively certain that neither telepathy nor telekinesis is at work.

 One possibility is that your system is loading automatic updates from Microsoft.com because you set your system to download updates automatically. The same could be true for anti-virus programs, firewalls or any application software that offers this type of automated service.

 The Task Scheduler may be running a background utility. Your automatic backup may be kicking in, or an online subscription service is delivering requested information as part of a service it provides. Any number of similar operations could be going on. There is a dark side to this. You may be infected by a spyware program reporting back to its master over the internet. Most spyware blabs about your web surfing habits to a commercial entity so that it can tailor ads to your individual tastes. Many people consider this annoying or intrusive. Nevertheless, the designers of these programs have no desire to hurt you. They want only to sell you something.

 However, something far less benign could be going on. A program could be attempting to steal your banking information, PIN numbers, credit card records, social security information, and other financial data with the intention of draining your bank account.

 A Trojan horse program may be downloading spam to retransmit from your machine, making it look to recipients that you are the spammer. Other programs make your machine a "zombie" or a node in an array of machines designed to launch a Denial of Service (DOS) attack on a web site.

 Worst of all, there have been instances reported of stealth programs downloading child pornography and retransmitting it to another machine. These programs make it look like you are the culprit, making you subject to arrest and incarceration. This kind of frighteningly malicious activity has been rare, but the danger is real.

 If you are concerned about this, and you should be, Windows XP offers a solution:

Click Start.

Click Run.

In the text portion of the Run dialog box, type cmd and click OK.

This brings you to the Command Interpreter, which starts out by displaying the Version of XP that's running on your machine and some copyright information. Now enter the command netstat -o, which displays network statistics about your current active connections.

There are five columns of information displayed. The Proto column tells you what communication protocol is being used for a particular process. In most instances this will be TCP (Tele-Communications Protocol). This is irrelevant for our purposes. Local Address is your machine.

Foreign Address is the IP address and port number of the machine the process is communicating with.

State informs you if the communication session is sending or receiving, waiting, acknowledging or finished.

PID (Process Identifier) is the piece we need, because it identifies the process (program) that is controlling the communications session from your computer.

4. Perform the Ctrl+Alt+Del keystroke sequence to bring up the Windows Security window.

5. Click Task Manager.

6. Click the Processes tab.

7. Click the PID column. This sorts the information, making it easier to find the program you're looking for.

Note: If the PID column is not displayed, you can activate it from the View menu.

Examine the PID list until you find the PID number(s) you found with the netstat command. If it's msnmgr.exe or iexplorer.exe, there is nothing to worry about. These are normal Windows XP processes and no cause for concern. There are many other legitimate Windows XP processes that are likely to be listed in the Task Manager.

How do you tell the good from the bad? Unfortunately, Windows itself isn't much help in showing what any given process is doing and you can't shoot them all and "let God sort them out". A search of Microsoft's web site won't yield useful information.

A great place to find valuable information about common Windows processes is:

http://www.liutilities.com/products/wintaskspro/processlibrary/

This site contains information about all common Windows processes, and the site administrators do an excellent job of keeping posted information current.

Knowing what's going on in your system is good, but the best protection against intruders is to keep your anti-virus, firewall, and other specialized protection programs up-to-date. :

There is no restriction against any non-profit group using this article as long as it is kept in context with proper credit given the author.  The Editorial Committee of the Association of Personal Computer User Groups (APCUG), an international organization of which this group is a member, brings this article to you.


For Sale.  Epson 1280 Printer. Cost $400., asking $300.  Used 1 month. R & V. Lehnhardt,  519-7588,   W-37