shauny.me

“The future of the web is HTML5.”

Dean Hachamovitch
General Manager, Internet Explorer 

IEBlog : HTML5 Video

Make sure your website is hosted properly

Our website service is usually completely bespoke, and completely controlled by ourselves.

We design the website, work out the site structure and the look and feel of it, sometimes we even create corporate identities. We then build the website, coding the theme by hand, and using tried and tested software packages for the CMS. We also set up Google Apps for email, and host the websites ourselves. Every part of the website process is controlled by us, and so everything is done properly and efficiently.

But I said “usually”.

Sometimes we have a client who just needs a redesign of their website, but they have hosting and emails. We try to encourage them to switch it all over to us, but sometimes they are happy with their current setup.

Then things like this happen.

Last night a virus — Troj/JSRedir-AK — infected all the websites under a company’s server (who we are in no way affiliated with, but happen to have worked on several of the sites before). The hosting was done by someone else (in someone’s bedroom, I fear). Needless to say, when the sh*t hit the fan we were the ones getting asked to fix it.

But the fault (out of date software, crappy Windows server, I don’t even think they have backups[!!]) is not down to us. We are going to help in every way we can, but we have even been locked out of FTP access because those passwords were changed.

I guess what I am trying to say is - be careful where you host your website. Our host has a stunning report, constant backups, 99.9% uptime. As far as we are concerned, viruses are things that happen to other people.

xkdc - Retro Virus

xkdc - Retro Virus

“Any IT professional who is still allowing IE6 to be used in a corporate setting is guilty of malpractice. Think that judgment is too harsh? Ask the security experts at Google, Adobe, and dozens of other large corporations that are cleaning up the mess from a wave of targeted attacks that allowed source code and confidential data to fall into the hands of well-organized intruders. The entry point? According to Microsoft, it’s IE6.”
Ed Bott: It’s time to stop using IE6 (via Daring Fireball).
“The best thing a user can do to advance the Web is to help move people off IE 6”
— Ryan Servatius, senior product manager for Internet Explorer.
I am seeing this far too often today. Ugh, Microsoft!

I am seeing this far too often today. Ugh, Microsoft!

“Microsoft has no choice but to make a leap of development faith, by abandoning the IE rendering engine and releasing new WebKit-based desktop and mobile browsers. IE is a dead platform.”
— Joe Wilcox, Microsoft should dig into the WebKit to stop Google from framing IE
“For all of the fanfare surrounding the new OS, Windows 7 is really just a Vista martini. The operating system may have two olives instead of one this time out, but it’s still made with the same cheap Microsoft vodka.”
— Dvorak
“Consumers now buy more PCs than businesses do, and their wants and desires for better-looking devices have invaded the cubicle. The current breed of consumer has shown an ability to turn something like the Apple iPhone into an overnight sensation, then demand that companies embrace it.”
— New York Times, Forecast for Microsoft: Partly Cloudy
“The idea that Windows 7’s quality will spur upgrades from XP is predicated on the fact that the people holding out on XP make their computing choices based on quality. But if that’s the case, why exactly are they still running Windows XP? Why are they still using Internet Explorer? I think it’s hard to overstate the fact that, with the explosion of the Internet as a universal communication medium, hundreds of millions of PCs have been purchased around the world by people who don’t care about computers or software at all.”
Microsoft’s Competition for Windows 7 Daring Fireball
Oh, Windows. Even when I’m running you on my Mac you give me hassles.

Oh, Windows. Even when I’m running you on my Mac you give me hassles.

An investigative series I’ve been writing about organized cyber crime gangs stealing millions of dollars from small to mid-sized businesses has generated more than a few responses from business owners who were concerned about how best to protect themselves from this type of fraud.

The simplest, most cost-effective answer I know of? Don’t use Microsoft Windows when accessing your bank account online.

Brian Krebs
Microsoft.com is still using this meta tag, which forces Internet Explorer 8 to ‘emulate IE7’.
What this means is they do not have either the time or the ability to fix their website so that it displays correctly in their newest browser.
What a poor effort.

Microsoft.com is still using this meta tag, which forces Internet Explorer 8 to ‘emulate IE7’.

What this means is they do not have either the time or the ability to fix their website so that it displays correctly in their newest browser.

What a poor effort.

“A Game Informer survey of 5,000 readers found that the Xbox 360 has an astounding 54.2 percent failure rate. That means 54.2 percent of Xbox 360 consoles fail in one way or another. That’s well above the reported failure rates of Sony’s PlayStation 3 (10.6 percent) and Nintendo’s Wii (6.8 percent).”
Survey: Xbox 360 failure rate is 54.2%