Sunbelt Personal Firewall for Vista

This article was written on July 08, 2008 by CyberNet.

sunbelt personal firewall-1.png

It has been over a year and a half since the consumer release of Windows Vista, and the Sunbelt Personal Firewall is finally compatible with it. The new version has better network performance, enhanced packet filtering, improved stability, Vista (32-bit) compatibility, and more. Plus, like always, it comes in both free and paid flavors.

Do you need a third-party firewall when Windows comes with one? According to Sunbelt the “built-in firewall in Windows is worse than useless, since it is only one-way.” They aren’t completely telling the truth there. Windows XP’s firewall is indeed a one-way firewall that is only capable of blocking incoming connections, but that’s not the case with Vista. I’m sure that Sunbelt is a much better choice for protection, but I think they need to be more clear in the claims they are making.

Aside from the new Vista compatibility there isn’t much that I’m able to accurately test in the new Sunbelt Personal Firewall. Memory usage between the three processes (SbPFSvc.exe, SbPFCl.exe, and SbPFLnch.exe) totaled about 35MB for me, which is a bit more than I had anticipated. When compared to Comodo that is about ten times more memory being used.

If you do decide to give this a whirl it’s important to know that the free version and the paid version are both bundled in the same download. Once you download the “trial” you’ll have a full 30 days to play around with all of the features. After that it will fall back to the free version that doesn’t include things like ad blocking, identity theft protection, and remote administration.

Sunbelt Personal Firewall Homepage
Thanks Scott!

Copyright © 2013 CyberNetNews.com

5.5-inch LG phone leaks online, and it’s allegedly affordable

DNP LG G Pro Lite Dual leak

Somewhere out there, someone is probably waiting for a more affordable LG Optimus G Pro, and if the LG G Pro Lite Dual turns out to be real, then their wish might soon be granted. The phone will reportedly boast dual-SIM support and retain the size of its predecessor’s 5.5-inch display, but it’ll have a 960 x 540 pixel resolution instead of full HD. It’ll understandably be equipped with other lesser specs, including an unspecified 1GHz dual-core processor, 1GB of RAM, a 3,140mAh battery, an 8-megapixel rear camera and 8GB of internal storage that’s supplemented with a microSD card slot. According to the Russian website that first reported the leak, the Android 4.1.2 phone will be available in the Eurasian country in October for $400 unlocked, which just happens to be cheaper than the Galaxy Mega. Obviously, you’ll have to shell out for the more expensive Optimus G Pro if you want better specs, but at least this one comes with a stylus.

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Via: AndroidBeat, UnwiredView

Source: Hi-tech@mail

A Full View of the Gigantic Asteroid Vesta

A Full View of the Gigantic Asteroid Vesta

At 330 miles in diameter, Vesta is the second most massive object in the asteroid belt. NASA’s Dawn spacecraft has been orbiting it for some time now, but it’s finally generated an image which shows the asteroid in all its glory.

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AT&T brings 300Mbps fiber internet to Austin in December, gigabit by ‘mid-2014’

DNP AT&T brings gigabit fiber to Austin, Texas

Now that AT&T is actually laying down fiber-optic line in Austin, we have yet another reason to be jealous of Texas’ weird city. According to Ma Bell, “tens of thousands” will be getting 300Mbps downloads (and uploads), the “fastest internet speeds available” in town to the general public, come December. Those subscribers can snag a free upgrade to gigabit service — GigaPower, as the company calls it — when it’s available in the middle of next year. Oh, and if you want a say in where the ultra-fast service travels, make your neighborhood proud by voting at AT&T’s website. For some reason though, we don’t imagine Google will be casting any ballots.

[Original image credit: Adriano Aurielo Araujo / Flickr]

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Source: AT&T

GoPro upgrades sports camera line with Hero3+ models

The GoPro Hero3+ Black with and without its housing.

(Credit: GoPro)

With mobile phones gobbling up much of what used to be the camera market, it’s hard to imagine that a new company could find a niche. But that’s exactly what GoPro has done.

On Tuesday, it announced its Hero3+ upgrade to its line of compact, durable videocameras that customers attach to cars, surfboards, quadcopters, birds, and bike helmets.

GoPro introduced the Hero3 in 2012, bringing Wi-Fi support that made it easier to use cameras that don’t necessarily have an LCD. The Hero3+ adds improvements to performance image quality, GoPro said.

According to the company, the top-end $400 Hero3+ Black model has:

• A camera body that’s lighter and 20 percent smaller. That should make it easier to mount and carry, and for seagulls to steal your camera.

• Battery life that’s 30 percent longer. That should help with people out in the wilderness or shooting a lot of video.

• Wi-Fi that’s four times faster for when playing videos on a mobile phone or transferring them to a computer.

• An automatic low-light mode to change the frame rate when capturing video in … [Read more]

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Google Drive has just received a nice little graphical update, with document editors now neatly comp

Google Drive has just received a nice little graphical update, with document editors now neatly compressed to maximize space on the content itself. Go check it out.

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BitTorrent Thinks It Can Make Your Online Chat Secure

BitTorrent Thinks It Can Make Your Online Chat Secure

The fallout from the NSA spying scandal has left many people unsure about what they should and shouldn’t share across the tubes. But now BitTorrent has an answer: an instant-message chat client that uses decentralized data transfer to keep your communications safe.

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Canadian carriers launch centralized database of stolen phones

In the latest installment of Grand Theft Mobile (TM): Canadian phone thieves face a major hurdle now that several carriers in the country have launched a centralized blacklist of stolen devices. Canada’s Protect Your Data initiative combines collections of pilfered gadgets’ IMEIs — a unique identifier that most phones have — not only from each participating carrier in the country, but also from the US carriers’ unified database. The joint effort will allow the companies to cross-check against everyone’s rosters and refuse to activate any GSM, HSPA, HSPA+ or LTE device that appears in them. While only phones reported stolen or lost starting September 30th will automatically be listed, carriers have the option to add devices lost before that. While only phones reported stolen starting September 30th will automatically be listed, carriers have the option to add anything lost before that. It might not bring people’s phones home, but at least those no-good snatchers will wish they’d stolen something simpler instead, like wallets, or cars.

[Thanks, Mackenzie]

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Source: CBCNews, Protect Your Data

Amiigo Fitness Bracelet Demoed

Amiigo Fitness Bracelet Demoed[CEATEC 2013] Here is one Indiegogo project that has definitely passed the mark of success. In fact, it managed to raise $580,000 plus instead of the $90,000 goal, which means more than 6 times of what it needed. Having said that, the Amiigo fitness bracelet was demonstrated today on the showfloor, with a model punching the air as well as performing high kicks to show off just how technology can end up as a viable exercising companion, where all of the vital details and information will be stored and displayed on your smartphone. There are iOS and Android versions of the app, so BlackBerry and Windows Phone users will just have to sit this one out.

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  • Amiigo Fitness Bracelet Demoed original content from Ubergizmo.

        



    Toshiba’s TransferJet adapter does high-speed video transfer from micro-USB, smartphone chip coming next year

    Toshiba's TransferJet adapter offers highspeed video transfer from microUSB ports, builtin chip for smartphones coming next year

    Toshiba’s TransferJet has kept relatively quiet since we got the full explanation (spoilers: high-speed data transfer over very short distances) on stage at CES 2013. Finally, several Toshiba products are now ready for launch. Alongside a compatible SDHC card, there’s also has a new micro-USB adapter that plugs into your (Android-only, although Toshiba are in discussions with Apple) smartphone, enabling those much-faster-than-Bluetooth data speeds over a distance of a few centimeters. It worked without a hitch on the show floor here at CEATEC, and the TransferJet duo is set to go on sale this December.

    Toshiba’s spokesperson added that pricing for the pair of adapters will come in at around 10,000 yen (around $100), although it was the tiny chip sat next to it that really piqued our interest. Toshiba is planning to get its TransferJet tech embedded within smartphones and other products in the future, which could make a far more convincing argument for the file transfer technique. One module chip has been given a December production date, although the company wouldn’t spill the beans on exactly which devices we’ll see it in.

    Darren Murph contributed to this report. %Gallery-slideshow99600%

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