Find Out Which USB Devices Have Been Used on Your PC

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Find Out Which USB Devices Have Been Used on Your PC


Updated Wed, 07/28/2010 - 09:41 by r.schifreen

It always amazes me to discover just how much information Windows stores, regarding previous activity on the PC. We all know about stuff like your web browsing history, for example, and all those thousands of cookies associated with web sites. Thankfully, there are programs which can delete this information in order to help maintain your privacy.

But did you know that, buried deep within the OS, is a list of all the USB devices currently connected, as well as all the devices you've connected in the past? No, me neither. Well, not until I discovered a handy little utility from the ever-wonderful Nirosft, which extracts the information and displays it in a handy table.

India's super-cheap computer @$35

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Union Human Resource Development Minister Kapil Sibal
unveils the low cost computing-cum-access device
in New Delhi on Thursday. Photo: V. Sudershan
Cheap, or frugal, and India are synonymous. Take a look at the Nano car and now the tablet PC


It looks like an iPad, only it's 1/14th the cost: India has unveiled the prototype of a $35 basic touchscreen tablet aimed at students, which it hopes to bring into production by 2011. 

If the government can find a manufacturer, the Linux operating system-based computer would be the latest in a string of "world's cheapest" innovations to hit the market out of India, which is home to the 100,000 rupee ($2,127) compact Nano car, the 749 rupees ($16) water purifier and the $2,000 open-heart surgery. 

The tablet can be used for functions like word processing, web browsing and video-conferencing. It has a solar power option too - important for India's energy-starved hinterlands - though that add-on costs extra. 

"This is our answer to MIT's $100 computer," human resource development minister Kapil Sibal said when he unveiled the device Thursday.

Computers Seized at Home of Gizmodo Reporter Who Wrote About iPhone, Gawker Media Says

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By BRIAN STELTER AND NICK BILTON

Gawker Media said on Monday that computers belonging to one of its editors, Jason Chen, were seized from his home on Friday as part of what appeared to be an investigation into the sale of a next-generation iPhone.

One of Gawker’s blogs, Gizmodo, published articles last week about the future phone after purchasing the device for $5,000 from a person who found it at a bar in California last month.
Gizmodo published articles about a next-generation iPhone that was found at a bar in California last month. Gizmodo.com Gizmodo published articles about a next-generation iPhone that was found at a bar in California last month.

Gawker’s chief operating officer, Gaby Darbyshire, said it expected the immediate return of the computers and servers.

“Under both state and federal law, a search warrant may not be validly issued to confiscate the property of a journalist,” she wrote in a letter to San Mateo County, Calif., authorities on Saturday. “Jason is a journalist who works full time for our company,” she continued, adding that he works from home, his “de facto newsroom.”

“It is abundantly clear under the law that a search warrant to remove these items was invalid. The appropriate method of obtaining such materials would be the issuance of a subpoena,” Ms. Darbyshire continued.

The letter was shared on Monday afternoon by Nick Denton, the founder and president of Gawker Media. “Are bloggers journalists? I guess we’ll find out,” Mr. Denton said in an instant message.

It became apparent last weekend that the authorities in San Mateo County were considering whether to file criminal charges in connection with the sale of the phone, which was returned to Apple by Gizmodo last week.

According to people familiar with the investigation, who would not speak on the record because of the potential legal case, charges would most likely be filed against the person or people who sold the prototype iPhone, and possibly the buyer.

The documents published by Gizmodo indicate that the Web site was clearly girding for a legal fight. Ms. Darbyshire had sent an e-mail message on Friday to Mr. Chen before the police action, outlining the state law regarding warrants for information gathered by journalists.

“In the circumstances, we expect the immediate return of the materials that you confiscated from Mr. Chen,” she wrote.

In his account of the events, published on Gizmodo, Mr. Chen said that when he arrived home around 9:45 p.m. on Friday, the authorities told him they had been there for a “few hours already,” searching the home and cataloging computers and servers.

The warrant published by Gizmodo said the officers had probable cause that Mr. Chen’s home “was used as the means of committing a felony.”

A spokesperson for the San Mateo police said the department was “not allowed to comment.”

Source: http://mediadecoder.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/04/26/computers-seized-at-home-of-gizmodo-reporter-who-wrote-about-iphone-gawker-media-says/

See this: IPhone 4G Leaked Images

The Knife With Self-Destructing Memory

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By STEPHEN WILLIAMS

Imagine how delighted the Swiss Army must be today: they’ve just been told that the makers of the venerable Swiss Army knife have released a new version, which contains a U.S.B. flash drive that will “self-destruct” if it falls into the wrong hands.
A screen shot of the Victorinox Swiss Army knife.Victorinox Swiss Army A screen shot of the Victorinox Swiss Army knife.

We ordinary folks can cheer up too, since the “un-hackable” gizmo will be available for sale, at prices starting at about $75, including screwdriver, mini LED light, retractable ballpoint pen, blade, scissors and nail file.

The Victorinox Secure, introduced this week in London, takes a page or two from the “Mission: Impossible” archives: the memory stick (available in sizes up to 32-gigabytes) is tamper-proof, the company claims. An attempt to forcibly open it triggers a self-destruct mechanism that burns the device’s CPU and memory chip.

The burn-up is the most drastic security measure on the device, but there are other security features as well, including a fingerprint identity function that’s aligned with a thermal sensor. In other words, the thing won’t work if the finger that holds the print is detached from the finger owner’s body.

These folks are serious.

The security threats posed by portable flash drives—devices that might be easily lost or stolen—are very real concerns to consumer and also to corporations. As the capacity for storage increases—allowing the drives to contain huge amounts of data and documents—the concerns only grow.

According to a post on the Tom’s Hardware site, the Secure Pro is to be available in three different sizes, from 8GB ($75) to 32GB ($270).


Source: http://gadgetwise.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/03/31/the-knife-with-self-destructing-memory/

Victorinox Swiss Army Tinker with Free Classic Knife
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Self-Standing Iron

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