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Geekboy’s mailbag: DNS woes, parenting advice and drunken llamas

Geekboy has returned from vacation and found a full e-mail bag. Let’s see if we can help some folks cure their computer ills.

DNS WOES

Q: Every once in a while when I am using using the Internet I get an error that says something like “Cannot open page.� I try later and it works. What’s going on? – A. Lau, Stone Mountain.

A: Sounds like a temporary Domain Name Server problem with your Internet Service Provider. I have had this problem with Comcast and here is how I solved the intermittent problem. If you don’t have this problem, don’t take these steps!

A Domain Name Server basically translates URLs (like www.ajc.com) into something computers understand – numbers — specifically IP addresses, which points your browser to the web server you want to connect to.

Geekboy usually employs the DNS of his ISP as the primary DNS server and a top level domain server as his secondary.

How do you change your secondary DNS to point to a top level domain server?

If you use Windows XP do the following:

1) Go to Control Panel-Network Connections and select your local network

2) Click Properties, then select Internet Protocol (TCP/IP)

3) Click Properties

4) Click the button that says “Use the following DNS server addresses� and enter the IP of your ISP’s DNS server as the primary and 4.2.2.2 as the secondary. You may have to call Comcast or whoever your ISP is to get the IP of their DNS server.

Other good-to-know top level DNS servers can be found at:

4.2.2.3

4.2.2.4

4.2.2.5

4.2.2.6

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Latest comments

Rick - Thanks for reporting that about Avast, I will correct my copy. I have it installed on so many computers it feels like I have to re-register every 60 days! IMMeen - OK, that makes more sense. I thought he meant something I suggested here would

... read the full comment by Geekboy | Comment on Rocking in the free software world Read Rocking in the free software world

He was referring to Free Software, as in The Free Software Organization, similar to Open Source. It’s a geeky concept, which is explained here: http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/philosophy.html

... read the full comment by IMMeen | Comment on Rocking in the free software world Read Rocking in the free software world

You made a mistake when you said “You have to re-register the Avast version every two months”. This is NOT the case. You have two months to register it. If you do NOT, then it will not update the definition files after 60 days. If you DO register

... read the full comment by Rick | Comment on Rocking in the free software world Read Rocking in the free software world

Alex - All of the downloads here are free. Some have non-free versions also, but all links here go to FREE stuff. That’s the point of the article. When you say “most are not free” you apparently have not gone to any of the links. Point

... read the full comment by Geekboy | Comment on Rocking in the free software world Read Rocking in the free software world

Rocking in the free software world

The best things in life aren’t free, but you can get some great software without spending a dime if you have an Internet connection and know where to look.

Here’s some stuff worth checking out if you use Windows. If you know of more freebies, let me know and we can list them here.

1) Bill Gates has enough of your money already, thus we start with OpenOffice, which can replace the $500 Microsoft Office, a bloated product re-released every few years just for suckers. OpenOffice includes a word processor, spreadsheet, a basic drawing program, and a lot more. You can even open and save Microsoft doc files.

2) Mozilla’s web browser, Firefox, is better than the also-free Microsoft Internet Explorer because it is less susceptible to viruses and other attacks. It seems to have some Java implementation probs, however, so keep IE handy for the sites that require it (like mlb.com’s live scoring scripts).

3) Thunderbird is a better e-mail client than the default Microsoft offering, Outlook Express, because it, too, seems to have fewer security issues. Also, the filtering options can consume more Spam than a Roseanne Barr wedding reception.

4) When the boss tells you you can’t play solitaire on the office computer, it’s time to fire up Tight VNC, which allows remote access of your home computer wherever you are on the planet. I was in Romania and was able to use my home computer to check e-mail, reset a game server, look up information stored on my hard drive, and even fire up a compiler to fix an out-of-control C script. You can also freak out wifey-poo by moving the mouse cursor while she’s trying to use it. Fun for all!

5) Those seeking to violate copyright law need Quick and Easy FTP server, which can be used to “serve� files to online users. Usually, FTP is used for files too large to send via e-mail, such as uncompressed sound or video. The “lite� version is free and can handle most anything you will throw at it. I use Filezilla as an FTP client.

6) Release your inner geek and kiss your social life goodbye with Microsoft’s free Visual C++ Express, a compiler for making your own programs. It’s a good introduction to the world of programming and abstinence.

7) Those desperately still clinging to a social life like Chief Wiggum does donuts may want to check out PHP Coder, a simple but effective Intergrated Development Environment (IDE) for making web pages with PHP, a powerful web scripting language. Slackers can forget they ever heard of PHP and just use it as an HTML editor.

8) An anti-virus program is the first thing you should install on any new computer. AVG gets good marks, but I have used Avast’s free version for years with no complaints. You have to register the Avast version within two months of installing it and renew it once per year, but that is a small price to pay for preserving nerd dignity.

9) I use Photoshop, which is crazy expensive, but those whose employers are more penurious should try XNView to resize photos or convert images from one format to another. Those needing more editing power should check out GIMPshop, based on the venerable GIMP familiar to Linux users.

10) If you are young and need music and mom has started noticing you are taking twenties out of her purse, look no further than Limewire, probably the best peer-2-peer file sharing software out there. At one point they included spyware in the download, but I think the backlash gave them a well-deserved lesson. The basic version is free, but I bought the “pro� version. Limewire is pretty easy to use, unlike …

11) Azureus is another take on file-sharing, but using the BiTorrent protocol. This is a little more complicated than Limewire. You have been warned. And quit stealing from your mother!

12) Are the black helicopters getting you down? Want to surf the net anonymously? Look no further than JAP. Those really trying to foil Big Brother should employ the pricier version and bone up on anonymous proxy servers.

13) Ad-Aware does a good job of removing spyware, if you are so afflicted.

14) Software firewalls blow, but the best of the bunch may be ZoneAlarm. You are better off buying a router with a hardware firewall.

15) Power users should check out the free file management utility xplorer. You’ll never use the Windows version again.

16) Have multiple e-mail accounts but want to check them all at once? MrPostman will download all of your web-based e-mail (Hotmail, Yahoo mail, etc.) into your regular e-mail client (Outlook Express, Thunderbird, etc.).

17) The Windows clipboard stinks, Clipboard Recorder does not. Now you can copy up to 99 different items before pasting!

18) Yahoo Desktop Search will find stuff on your computer way faster than that stupid dog Microsoft foisted upon us.

19) Win-Rar is a powerful archive manager that will make your forget Winzip, which only clowns use. For the clowns reading this, an archive manger compresses and decompresses a file to save space, usually before you e-mail it. Now get back to juggling.

20) Zork, the classic text adventure, is only as far away as the nearest web browser! Strangely addictive for those of us unwilling to actually work while at the office. Enjoy!

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Geekboy answers his fans!

I finally read my e-mail! I get a lot of good questions, this is not one of them.

AngryKeyboarder writes: Nothing irritates me more than misinformation from the media. Despite your statements to the contrary, Limewire, Gnutella, BitTorrent, Azureus, Kazaa, eMule and so on do not connect via the “World Wide Web”.

They connect via proprietary protocols on completely different ports than “The Web.”

“The Web” is a means to communicate and share files over the Internet. It is not the Internet itself. The media almost never points out popular, useful and perfectly legal use of file sharing on the Internet. Most notably, via Bittorrent.

I don’t suppose you’ll point this out in your blog anytime soon eh?

Geekboy writes: Did you even read the file sharing column? I pointed out BitTorrent.

Programs used to share files are not illegal. You can download any and all of them, and as long as you are not downloading something that is copyright protected your activities are legal.

But sharing copyright protected software, music or movies is illegal, no matter what program (or protocol) you use.

You seem to think “the Web” is nothing more than the Hyper Text Transfer Protocol (HTTP) protocol.

Any protocol, especially those employing a distributed load scheme like BitTorrent, is using “the Web” to enable communication between remote computers.

What port any particular software uses doesn’t matter! It is funny you would argue such a thing.

HTTP (the protocol used by servers to disseminate Web pages) uses port 80, generally, but many servers use another port. Are these servers no longer part of the Internet because they are not using a particular port?

Thanks for the jokes!

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Free and good

Anyone that thinks “nothing worth having is freeâ€? doesn’t know much about computers. A recent blog got me thinking that you don’t need to pay a penny for software to have a fully-functioning computer. You surely don’t have to fork over any cash to Microsoft or Apple for an operating system.

Some folks heckle Geekboy because he finds a lot of his hardware at apartment Dumpsters. They usually quit laughing once, with a modicum of effort, I get the HP laser printer or Dell laptop working.

My Linux webserver was found aside a Dumpster, and has operated flawlessly for several years. I use it as a test bed for PHP/MySQL sites before moving them to a real web host. The computer and software were all free.

“Vintage hardware� can be redeployed in a variety of ways. If you have kids, you can likely find a computer that will be good enough for junior or granny to surf the web with. A 500mhz computer with 128 megs of memory and an Ethernet card is all you really need to start surfing. Sure, some sites will creep, but Dumpster divers cannot be choosers. I have made several of these and given them to friends so they can use e-mail at least.

If you are a programmer, a Linux machine with an IDE (integrated development environment) like KDevelop or Anjuta is fun to tinker with. You don’t need much horsepower for that either.

A lot of the “free software� out there is for true geeks. Don’t be alarmed at the first few entries on the list, we will be getting around to the fun stuff later. The first few entries are dominated by workhorse software, the type of stuff high-paying jobs are built around.

So, let’s start off with a bang! What is the best free software you can get on the Internet?

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Apple surrenders?

As most people know, the Intel-based Macs will run Microsoft’s Windows XP, but now Apple has announced they’ve released beta software that makes the process a bit easier. I am not sure what the software is, but I assume it is something like the GRUB boot loader, which on Linux systems allows the user to select which OS they want to operate in during the boot process.

While reading the article the thought entered my head that this is basically Apple surrendering the software development prize to Microsoft.

The fatal flaw of Apple has always been that the software available for their machines is rather pathetic and expensive.

You can download better free PC software than you can buy on an Apple. For example, Filezilla, a free FTP client, blows Fetch, which works with Apples, out of the water. And don’t even get me started on IRC clients, that’s the Internet’s longest-running software joke.

In a nutshell, Apple is encouraging people to NOT USE their operating system because they realize no one except them is developing software for OSX — and that the software they develop can’t compete with that of third party developers guided by Adam Smith’s “invisible hand.”

Try visiting Best Buy and buying a game for OSX, you will see what I mean.

Your thoughts?

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