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Re: Computer Essential |
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09-03-2008, 01:49 PM
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#1
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No Pants
KillerGremlin is offline
Location: Friggin In The Riggin
Now Playing: my ding-a-ling
Posts: 4,566
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Re: Computer Essential
CCleaner
http://www.ccleaner.com/
great registry cleaner, uninstaller, and windows cleaner-upper program.
AVG
http://free.avg.com/
AVG is one of the better and free virus scanners. Provided you don't spend your day surfing German Warez sites, it should be more than adequate.
uTorrent
http://www.utorrent.com/
cause...it's fun to steal shit. still one of the better BT clients, imo
Daemon Tools
http://www.daemon-tools.cc/dtcc/announcements.php
daemon tools is a great all-around program, it allows you to create virtual DVD/CD drives so you can mount image files. again, great if you pirate or rip games to your computer
EAC
http://www.exactaudiocopy.de/
THE BEST audio ripping program...if you rip CDs use EAC
Lame Codec
http://lame.sourceforge.net/index.php
You'll need the lame codec to rock cocks with EAC
Trillian
http://www.ceruleanstudios.com/
Trillian was, at one point, the best IM program...it continues to suck with each new release, but it's still superior to AIM
Filezip
http://www.filzip.com/en/index.html
Filezip is like Winrar...only free. Of course, you have uTorrent...soooo
As far as media goes....that's up to you. VLC, Media Player Classic, and Winamp are all viable options that surpass the competition.
http://www.videolan.org/vlc/
http://www.winamp.com/
http://www.free-codecs.com/download/...er_Classic.htm
And, of course, for when your computer gets infected:
http://lavasoft.com/
(ad aware)
You may also want to check out Mozilla Thunderbird for email....the FLAC codec if you are into serious audio, Image Burn for burning and making images, and Audacity for all around audio goodness.
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Re: Computer Essential |
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09-04-2008, 02:08 PM
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#2
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Devourer of Worlds
Professor S is offline
Location: Mount Penn, PA
Now Playing: Team Fortress 2, all day everyday
Posts: 6,608
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Re: Computer Essential
Quote:
Originally Posted by KillerGremlin
CCleaner
http://www.ccleaner.com/
great registry cleaner, uninstaller, and windows cleaner-upper program.
AVG
http://free.avg.com/
AVG is one of the better and free virus scanners. Provided you don't spend your day surfing German Warez sites, it should be more than adequate.
uTorrent
http://www.utorrent.com/
cause...it's fun to steal shit. still one of the better BT clients, imo
Daemon Tools
http://www.daemon-tools.cc/dtcc/announcements.php
daemon tools is a great all-around program, it allows you to create virtual DVD/CD drives so you can mount image files. again, great if you pirate or rip games to your computer
EAC
http://www.exactaudiocopy.de/
THE BEST audio ripping program...if you rip CDs use EAC
Lame Codec
http://lame.sourceforge.net/index.php
You'll need the lame codec to rock cocks with EAC
Trillian
http://www.ceruleanstudios.com/
Trillian was, at one point, the best IM program...it continues to suck with each new release, but it's still superior to AIM
Filezip
http://www.filzip.com/en/index.html
Filezip is like Winrar...only free. Of course, you have uTorrent...soooo
As far as media goes....that's up to you. VLC, Media Player Classic, and Winamp are all viable options that surpass the competition.
http://www.videolan.org/vlc/
http://www.winamp.com/
http://www.free-codecs.com/download/...er_Classic.htm
And, of course, for when your computer gets infected:
http://lavasoft.com/
(ad aware)
You may also want to check out Mozilla Thunderbird for email....the FLAC codec if you are into serious audio, Image Burn for burning and making images, and Audacity for all around audio goodness.
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Friggin' brilliant! I'm downloading away! Thanks
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Re: Computer Essential |
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09-04-2008, 09:50 PM
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#3
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Or should I say.. smanger
Dyne is offline
Location: Vancouver
Now Playing: Infinity Blade II, Duke Nukem Forever, Skyrim, Vanquish
Posts: 9,435
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Re: Computer Essential
I love Google Chrome. I wish it was on Mac. SO many leagues better than Firefox.
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Re: Computer Essential |
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09-05-2008, 09:33 AM
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#4
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Devourer of Worlds
Professor S is offline
Location: Mount Penn, PA
Now Playing: Team Fortress 2, all day everyday
Posts: 6,608
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Re: Computer Essential
In CC Cleaner, it gives you options for deleting files, from simple overwrite to Gutmann. What is the difference?
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Re: Computer Essential |
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09-05-2008, 11:12 AM
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#5
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President of the Galaxy
Bube is offline
Location: Turkey
Now Playing: Alice: Madness Returns, WoW
Posts: 2,595
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Re: Computer Essential
Quote:
Originally Posted by Professor S
In CC Cleaner, it gives you options for deleting files, from simple overwrite to Gutmann. What is the difference?
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When you delete a file, it's almost always recoverable. When you use something other than simple, I'm guessing it deletes the file, overwrites the sector of the deleted file with a dummy, and deletes that again. So when tried to recover, you'll get the dummy file the program made, not the originally deleted file.
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Re: Computer Essential |
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09-05-2008, 11:22 AM
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#6
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aka George Washington
manasecret is offline
Location: New Orleans, LA/Houston, TX
Now Playing: CSS
Posts: 2,670
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Re: Computer Essential
Quote:
Originally Posted by Professor S
In CC Cleaner, it gives you options for deleting files, from simple overwrite to Gutmann. What is the difference?
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The difference is a non-secure deletion (the type that frees the space for future files, but doesn't actually remove any information of the file from your hard drive) and a secure method that makes sure to overwrite the contents of the data.
The Gutmann method, by Gutmann's own criticism of its usage now, is used "more as a kind of voodoo incantation to banish evil spirits" than it is to actually secure deleted files. My limited understanding of the method is that some types of storage media (mostly the old floppy types) can theoretically hold the data from past files even after you rewrite data over them. The Gutmann method is an algorithm that writes a series of 35 patterns that take into account the memory encoding methods to make sure that all traces of your data can not be recovered.
Nowadays, it's more voodoo than anything else. Simply making sure to rewrite over the actual data of your files is sufficient, which is probably one of the options below Gutmann.
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d^_^b
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Re: Computer Essential |
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09-05-2008, 02:11 PM
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#7
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Devourer of Worlds
Professor S is offline
Location: Mount Penn, PA
Now Playing: Team Fortress 2, all day everyday
Posts: 6,608
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Re: Computer Essential
So i guess its only useful if you wanted to eliminate digital evidence then.
BTW, I downloaded cc cleaner, AVG anti-virus and ad-aware and my computer has never run better. My inernet connection used to crash constantly, and now its fine. Thanks so much!
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Re: Computer Essential |
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09-06-2008, 02:01 PM
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#8
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No Pants
KillerGremlin is offline
Location: Friggin In The Riggin
Now Playing: my ding-a-ling
Posts: 4,566
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Re: Computer Essential
Quote:
Originally Posted by manasecret
Simply making sure to rewrite over the actual data of your files is sufficient, which is probably one of the options below Gutmann.
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You'd be amazed at what you can recover from a "secure deletion." You can download government-level programs (like KillDisc) that will run a 'thorough' deletion process. But it takes a long time as the program literary writes and re-writes over every byte of space on the hard disk. The guys at MIT have recovered 'securely deleted data.' And, if optical scientists can recover data from charred hard drives in the 9/11 rubble.....
It's all kind of pointless for the casual user though.
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Re: Computer Essential |
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09-06-2008, 04:40 PM
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#9
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aka George Washington
manasecret is offline
Location: New Orleans, LA/Houston, TX
Now Playing: CSS
Posts: 2,670
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Re: Computer Essential
Quote:
Originally Posted by KillerGremlin
You'd be amazed at what you can recover from a "secure deletion." You can download government-level programs (like KillDisc) that will run a 'thorough' deletion process. But it takes a long time as the program literary writes and re-writes over every byte of space on the hard disk. The guys at MIT have recovered 'securely deleted data.' And, if optical scientists can recover data from charred hard drives in the 9/11 rubble.....
It's all kind of pointless for the casual user though.
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Yes, but the Gutmann method is an overkill method that isn't meant for the hard disks of today. So one of the options below Gutmann will be just as sufficient, and probably faster. Assuming you want to be secure about your deletions, that is. If not, then just do a simple delete and that will be the quickest.
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