| BENTSEN GROVE RESORT COMPUTER
CLUB
BULLETIN Week of February 20, 2006 |
|
MEETINGS
MONDAY
ROOM 3 & 3R GENERAL |
SPECIAL
INTEREST GROUPS:
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……424-0537Harold Buechly...581-3180 Corinne Higbee...585-5664 |
| UPCOMING
EVENTS: Please
wear your badge! Monday February 20th 2006, 9:30, Beginners Meeting By Corinne Higbee 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 Monday February 27th 2006 Monday March 6th 2006, 9:30, Special guest speaker, Mr. Matt Hester of Microsoft Printable poster |
| Beginners
Meeting By Corinne Higbee I mentioned a task analysis site I found and think you will enjoy checking your computer there. The site is www.pcpitstop.com. You can read and choose the information you want to use at this site. The Full Test on the left side of the page will do an analysis of your computer and give you the information you need to see if you can update it for better performance. Give it a try and let me know how you like the site. We will have our lesson six continued in class and answer any questions we can about the use of your computer. Plan on going to Mr. Gattis afterwards to lunch together. If you are new to the club just follow the crowd or ask for a ride and we will see that you get there. My suburban will hold an additional six people. See you Monday at 9:30. Corinne |
|
Anti-Spam Programs – Do They
Really Work? by Vinny La Bash, vlabash(at)home.com From that
moment on, any
incoming email that is not on the list is considered to be spam, and is
automatically exiled to a quarantine folder or wherever you decided it
should
go during installation. The programs
do
work as advertised, which is both their greatest strength and their
greatest
weakness. Here’s what you need to know
before installing one of these puppies. Scenario 1: A friend you have lost contact with over the
years sends you an email. That friend’s
email address is not on your white list. Unless
you have a quarantine folder where unapproved email
is sent without
automatically deleting it, you will never see this email.
You
have to check your quarantine folder, at least occasionally, to see if
there
are any false positives residing in there with all the junk. How much time will this take?
Who knows? None of the
programs mention this in their promotional
material or
specification lists. Scenario 2: You install a new program or device and run
into difficulties. The troubleshooting
guide sends you to an email address where you can get a solution to
your
problem. You remember to add the email
address to your white list. You wait for
a reply, and wait, and wait. What
happened? Your
problem was given to a
technical representative who has an email address different from the
general
support address. You don’t see the reply
unless you check the quarantine email folder, assuming that in your
efforts to
rid yourself of all spam you did not specify that anything not on your
white
list be automatically deleted. Scenario 3: You order something from an online merchant
and
before your order is shipped the merchant emails you to ask whether you
want
the white one or the black one. The
query has been rerouted to the quarantine folder because the person
trying to contact
you has an email address that is not on your white list. Scenario 4: Your spouse sets up a Yahoo! Email account
for the sole purpose of sending you a surprise Valentine’s Day email. For no
apparent reason you are getting the silent treatment.
You ask, “What’s wrong”? Your
spouse replies, “Nothing”. Scenario 5: Your granddaughter just got an email address
of her own. She sends you a message, and
can’t understand why you won’t answer. She
asks her parents “Why doesn’t grandpa love me anymore”? We could
go on, but you get
the general idea. 99.99% of all real
spam will be banished from your sight, but the very few legitimate
emails
identified as spam will very likely be the ones you most want or need
to
see. Some anti-spam programs have a
“sender confirmation feature” that automatically sends a personalized
notification to anyone whose message has been quarantined. Simply
replying to
the challenge causes the original message to be moved to your inbox,
and allows
their email address to be added to the white list. Legitimate senders
can
respond to these challenge messages, but suppose that for whatever
reason they
don’t. Does a seven year old grandchild
really understand why she needs a grandparent’s permission to send an
email? What you
end up with is a
time-consuming process of back and forth emails. Why
should every email first contact have to
be sent twice? What a waste of
time. This might be acceptable if your
email volume is very low, but who are we kidding. Simply
establishing an email account anywhere
will get you a boatload of spam. ISP
level filters are a joke. How many
essays do you want to compose explaining why someone needs “permission”
to send
you an email? I don’t respond to
challenge email. Why should anyone
respond to mine? You can
check your
quarantine folder regularly, but with the huge quantity of genuine spam
generated
and thrust upon us daily, it’s too easy to overlook a legitimate
message. When you finally delete the spam,
there is a good
chance that among the junk a valuable note is lost forever. After
using one of these
programs for several months, I decided that I would much rather delete
spam
manually, rather than run the risk of missing an important legitimate
email. No computer program, no matter
how expertly crafted or trained, can ultimately determine what emails I
do or
don’t want to read. Even after being
married for 38 years, my wife still can’t read my mind.
How do I expect a dumb computer to do it? 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. |
|
SPECIAL
INTEREST GROUP “SIG” By Corinne Higbee FOOD****FUN****GAMES****EDUCATION Immediately following our regular meeting on
Monday, the Computer Club members, spouses and guests are welcome to
caravan to Mr. Gatti’s Pizza, EVERYONE
WELCOME
|
|
I just finished updating my web site link on State of
Texas. You may enjoy checking it out at http://www.geocities.com/salmoczw/mypage.html
Cladue Westfall
|