Mark Soper "Mark Edward Soper"'s Amazon Blog

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Mozilla's Firefox web browser is the most popular alternative to Microsoft's Internet Explorer, and version 3, due out in mid-June, is sure to increase Firefox's market share. Release Candidate (RC) 2 was released today, but as of mid-afternoon East Coast time, the Mozilla Firefox RC page still listed RC1 as the latest release. However, it's easy to modify the shortcuts on the RC1 page to point to RC2. To learn how, see my Maximum PC blog entry, Get Your Hands on Firefox 3 RC2 - Now!

After a botched now-you-see-it, now-you-don't release at the end of April (caused by the discovery of a last-minute glitch in some Microsoft small-business management software), Redmond has released Windows XP Service Pack 3 to all users today, via Windows Update (recommended if you have only one PC to update) or via a downloadable CD image or self-installing .exe file.

Note that SP3 is only for users of 32-bit Windows XP (Windows XP Professional x64 users must wait for an update to Windows Server 2003).

Service Pack 3 doesn't include much that brand-new, but it does roll up hundreds of updates to Windows XP Service Pack 2 and earlier releases into a single package.

For the links you need to download SP3, and for workarounds and solutions to problems you might have (better read that stuff first!), see my article at Maximum PC's website: Better Late Than Never: Windows XP SP3 Finally Hits the Web.

Enjoy!

The final release of Windows XP SP3 won't be until later this year (informed sources suggest late April), but you can try a very-nearly-final version called RC2 Refresh right now.

You can only get XP RC2 Refresh via Windows Update, and you must download and run a script to install it. Find out what's new in SP3 RC2 Refresh and learn how to avoid getting the previous RC2 version here.

What's New in Windows Vista SP1? Plenty!

12:25 PM PDT, March 19, 2008
Although Windows Vista Service Pack 1 doesn't look all that much different than the original version of Windows Vista, it includes hundreds of improvements and updates. Some are of interest to every Vista user, while others are aimed primarily at corporate and government users. To learn more about what's new and improved in Windows Vista SP1 (and why it matters), see my new article Windows Vista SP1: What to Expect.
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And, an installation tip: if you use Windows Update to download Vista SP1, don't be surprised if the download gets interrupted before it's completed. In some cases, you might need to restart your PC. Don't panic: the Windows Update installer remembers where it left off and continues the download from that point.

Windows Vista SP1 is ready to roll - at last!

2:50 PM PDT, March 18, 2008
It's been about six weeks since Microsoft announced that Windows Vista SP1 had been released to manufacturing. Now, all original Vista users can download it and install it manually or install it through Windows Update.

For download links, see Windows Vista SP1 - Ready to Download (at Last!). To make sure you're ready to install Vista SP1, see page 1 of It's Coming! Our Checklists Help You Prepare for Vista SP1 (page 2 helps users of Windows XP to get ready to upgrade from Windows XP to Windows Vista SP1; upgrades will be available tomorrow).

Before You Buy That MacBook Air...

7:03 PM PDT, March 12, 2008
you'd better make sure you don't lose it! It's so light, so thin, so easy to misplace... If you don't believe it, ask Washington Post technology columnist Steven Levy. To find out what he thinks happened to his, and to learn how to avoid a similar fate, read "How to Lose Your MacBook Air!?"

One of the big complaints about Windows Vista is the amount of space it takes when installed - and the size of the installable image. You can shrink both of them by significant amounts - and customize driver support, hotfixes, features, and much more with the new vLite utility. Before you install Vista again, check out my test drive.

Two new e-banking threats are going way beyond the old trick of spamming every email address in sight with fake "log in a fix a problem with your account" messages:
  • Once installed on your system, Trojan.Silentbanker can intercept a valid e-banking session and steal your information; it's no longer necessary to fall for a hoax email message to wind up with an empty account (and a compromised identity to boot!)
  • A second threat, Trojan.Mebroot, uses recently-discovered methods to replace your computer's master boot record (MBR) with a replacement containing a rootkit (enabling it to hide from normal operating system commands) that installs keyloggers programmed to capture banking activity for over 900 banking institutions all over the world.
These threats are newly discovered, so if you've been lax about upgrading your antivirus software (or trying to slide by without it) and do e-banking, you could be in for a load of trouble. Get the rest of the story by reading my article Smart New Malware Targets E-Banking: Are You Ready?at Maximumpc.com

Vista SP1 RC Now Gets a Refresh (Literally)

9:27 PM PST, January 11, 2008
For about a month, I've been using the Release Candidate (RC for short) of Windows Vista Service Pack 1. It rolls up hundreds of updates and makes many other improvements. I like it - a lot.
Now, Microsoft has rolled out what it calls Windows Vista SP1 RC Refresh, a further improvement (and a step closer to the final version due early this year). It's available only via Windows Update, and the process is rather involved. Microsoft's official documentation explains the basic process, but in my Maximum PC blog post, Windows Vista SP1 RC Refresh - Now Available via Windows Update!, I provide some tips to make the process even easier.

If you haven't tried Windows Vista SP1 RC yet, you can learn more from these postings:
If you're already using Windows Vista SP1 RC,  you will need to uninstall it before you try the Refresh version. And, remember, as good as it is, RC and RC Refresh are still prerelease packages. Don't run SP1 RC/Refresh on your "bet the company" mission-critical PC.

Windows Vista SP1 Release Candidate Is Here!

11:46 AM PST, December 12, 2007
It's been a bit over a year since the first corporate versions of Windows Vista rolled out, and almost 11 months since Vista was first available to the general public. A lot has happened to Windows Vista since then, and Microsoft has rolled hundreds of updates and fixes into Windows Vista Service Pack 1 (aka SP1). SP1 has also been optimized to provide faster file-copy and network operations.
Although the final release of SP1 won't be available until early 2008, you can try a near-final release candidate (RC) now. It's available via Windows Update or by direct download.
I'm downloading it now and will post my impressions soon.

 
 
December 12, 2007-June 04, 2008
 
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Bio

I’ve always been interested in things that go fast, like airplanes and trains. However, it took me until my late 20’s to discover that the world’s fastest – and most versatile – devices didn’t have wheels.
My background in English, history, and French makes me somewhat unusual in the technology writing field, but it gives me a big advantage when it comes to helping ordinary people understand how the Internet, PCs, servers, and digital cameras work. I stay up to date by reading technology blogs, newsletters and websites, and experimenting on “FrankenPC” and my office network.
Although I’ve been contributing to books since 1999, I cut my technology writing teeth in the mid-1980’s. Do you remember the Commodore 64 and its inscrutable 1541 floppy disk drive manual? My first piece of tech writing crunched down the essentials an ordinary user needed to know to get programs running to a single page. A few years later, exasperated with salespeople who kept selling PC clone configurations the techs in the back room could never get to work right, I wrote a compatibility handbook for my employer, a computer store. In the meantime, I spent a lot of time talking users through configuring startup files with DOS’s ghastly Edlin line editor and discovering the brave new world of desktop publishing and scalable fonts.
I turned that expertise into a new part-time career as a magazine writer, first for WordPerfect Magazine (1989-1995), and later for Sandhills Publishing (1991-2001). Check out the article database available at http://www.smartcomputing.com/editorial/asearch.asp (use Soper as the search term and specify the date range).
In the meantime, I provided consulting and training services to area businesses, and, starting in 1992, spent most of the rest of the decade traveling the US and teaching classes on computer troubleshooting, workgroup networking, and other subjects. I also wrote three book-length training manuals in 1992-1993. Before email was common, I often submitted magazine stories by bringing my laptop computer and portable printer to the nearest UPS or FedEx drop box, hand-feeding the printer and hoping that the pick-up time shown on the box was accurate!
Beginning in early 1999, I made the decision to become a full-time writer, cheering my wife and children (who area also big technology users) by getting off the road. I teamed up with Scott Mueller, dean of computer hardware books, to help get Upgrading and Repairing PCs, 11th Edition, wrapped up on schedule. I’ve contributed to every edition since, and have also co-authored six books with Scott. I also assist Scott with
www.UpgradingandrepairingPCs.com.
I’ve also teamed up with TechTV to write two books on computer upgrades, paired up with radio and TV tech guru Leo Laporte for two books on computer troubleshooting, and written several other books on the Internet, home networking, troubleshooting, and digital photography. Currently, I’m hard at work on a Microsoft Windows Vista book.
Somehow, I still have time to prepare IT screening questions for ReviewNet (www.reviewnet.net/authgallery/authgall-soper.html), write online tutorials for Skywire Software (www.skywiresoftware.com), and attend Grace Church of the Nazarene (www.nazarene.org).
I’m also a freelance author for MaximumPC magazine (since 2004), with some of my articles finding a second life in the books The Maximum PC Guide to Building a Dream PC and The MaximumPC Ultimate PC Performance Guide. To keep my finger on the pulse of PC users, I also teach classes on A+ Certification, digital imaging, and other subjects for the Evansville campus of IvyTech Community College of Indiana (www.ivytech.edu/evansville/). If you have questions about my books or other projects, please drop me a line.
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