The rise in mobile ads indicates a growing comfort with using mobile devices to access the Internet. But there's bigger number mobile marketers should be concerned with.
<b>Linux.com:</b> "Internet Protocol version 4 (IPv4) has certainly served the world well over the past few decades, but that's no reason to cling to it until the bitter end. You can start using its replacement IPv6 on your Linux machines and home network today."
The rise in mobile ads indicates a growing comfort with using mobile devices to access the Internet. But there's bigger number mobile marketers should be concerned with.
The rise in mobile ads indicates a growing comfort with using mobile devices to access the Internet. But there's bigger number mobile marketers should be concerned with.
<b>ZDNet: </b>"Zach Whittaker projects Firefox overtaking Internet Explorer by the end of 2012, and while Google's fans cheer you may wonder if it matters."
For users of older versions of Windows pressing the F1 key could trigger a new zero-day vulnerability that taps into a flaw in the way VBScript processes help files in Internet Explorer.
Following revelations about a zero-day vulnerability in older versions of its Internet Explorer browser, Microsoft has broken with its custom and announced plans to ship an "out-of-band" patch.
<b>Begin Linux:</b> "Domain Name Service (DNS) was created in 1983 out of the necessity to convert IP Addresses like 192.168.9.2 to domain names like example.com. DNS is a distributed database, what this means is that no one computer is used to maintain a complete database of all of the domains on the Internet. Instead this information is distributed across many computers."
<b>Free Software Magazine: </b>" I'm working on not one, but two animated science-fiction films using free software tools, intended for a free-licensed release on the internet under new distribution models. And, being a writer, I'm going to write about it."
How long could your business last if you lost your email access and data? We look at a couple of Internet-based email backup and recovery options for different sized small businesses.
How long could your business last if you lost your email access and data? We look at a couple of Internet-based email backup and recovery options for different sized small businesses.
Speed, new features and browser market leadership against rivals including Google Chrome and Internet Explorer are at the top of open source vendors plans for its next generation technology.
What does it mean to trust an online service provider in an age when all your personal data is strewn across the Internet? Who do you trust with your most private data?
What does it mean to trust an online service provider in an age when all your personal data is strewn across the Internet? Who do you trust with your most private data?
.com, .net, .org and other website suffixes are known as “top-level domains” (TLDs). While we normally see only a few of these, there are hundreds of them – and there may be thousands more soon. Top-level domains are managed by the Internet Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA), which is run by the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN). HTG Explains: What is the Windows Page File and Should You Disable It? How To Get a Better Wireless Signal and Reduce Wireless Network Interference How To Troubleshoot Internet Connection Problems
I am running VirtualBox both on a Snow Leopard OSX host machine and on a Windows Vista host machine. Whenever my host machines lose internet connection the guest machines seem to lose internet connectivity permanently even after the host connection to the Internet is reestablished.
Resetting guest networking on the guest os, disconnecting cable via host virtualbox settings, and even restarting the guest OS do not help at all. The guest no longer can access the Internet. The only solution is restarting VirtualBox itself while the host is connected to the Internet. This really gets to be a pain when the host goes into sleep mode or I disconnect my laptop at work and then reconnect at home.
Guests are setup with NAT networking. It affects guest machines with both Ubuntu and Windows XP OS'es.
Is this expected behavior? Does anyone know of a fix? Or am I setup incorrectly?
Social networking websites have now became an important part of the internet platform all across the globe and almost every individual who is using the internet these days has an account or profile registered with at least 1 or 2 social networking websites. The spreading and rapidly growing trend of social sites should be an obvious sign to all online businesses and individual internet marketers that are competing in the search engines that this is a platform which they must consider using in order to give more exposure to their business as well as target to attract different people to their site.
I am planning to buy TP-LINK ADSL wifi router (model TD-W8151N) for my Internet connection which provides Internet through ADSL telephone line. I am also planning to take cable internet in a few months which provides internet through a LAN cable without the need of any modem.
So I would like to have my modem work for both connections which I am using. When using cable internet I want this TP-Link modem to work just as a wireless router (so that I can have the freedom to use my laptop in different rooms instead of sitting at a place by plugging in that cable). Is it possible to use this modem in that way?
I don't have much knowledge about these things except that I can configure things as instructed. Please suggest me whether I should go ahead and buy this one or if there is any other modem in your view which can serve both my purposes, let me know.
Operating System I am using: Windows 7
Hi, I've upgraded from Vista to Windows 7. On Vista I used to run one network card (Intel 82566DC -2 Gigabit) for my internet which was connected to a Dovado USB mobile broadband router connected to a 3G modem. The IP setup on the card is set on DHCP. The second card (3com Ethernet link) was used to connect to our town's local WUG (wireless user group) and all worked fine.
Now the problem I have with Windows 7 is that when I connect to the internet with the (Intel) first card, the internet work fine but as soon as I connect the second card to the wug my internet drops. If I then disconnect the first card (internet one) and try to connect to the wug it works.
It seems that the two cards are fighting each other. Is there maybe something I can do to fix the problem? As you probably can gather from this post is that I am not an expert on PC's so please if you do answer do I in simple terms. :)
Thanks,
Martin
I have two computers.
C1: Windows with Internet connection.
C2: Ubuntu connected with C1 but not connected with Internet.
I'd like to access apt repositories to update or install some packages on Ubuntu.
I heard, apt-cacher is one of solutions, but I couldn't find apt-cacher for Windows (It is only one, I have, with Internet connection).
Please let me know how to do.
Thanks in advance
Ted Kim
I have installed Android as per this guide as a guess os via VirtualBox:
http://www.android-x86.org/documents/virtualboxhowto
Using the following ISO:
android-x86-4.0-RC1-eeepc.iso
But I am unable to connect to the internet from within the android virtual machine.
The host OS is Ubuntu 12.04 where the internet works fine. I have internet access via a usb wireless connection to the home router. All this is fine. If I install Ubuntu 12.04 as a guest, where the host is also Ubuntu 12.04. The guest os'es internet works fine out of the box. But for some reason, I can't get the above androids internet to work out of the box as the guest os.
Anyone know what I am doing wrong?
I have pppoe internet connection. My ISP provides connections like this:
ISP->media converter(fiber)->8 port switch(TP Link TL-SF1008D)->to individual internet connection account holders (like me)
Now the connection between the media converter and the switch is done using 4 pair cross over cat5 cable and I would like to connect the cable running from the switch to the router and through router to my PC. So what type of cable should I use to make the connection between the switch and the router (straight thru cable or cross over cable)?
The point I am trying to make is I am able to connect to the internet using straight through cable between the switch and my PC but when I connect the same cable between the switch and the router and from router to my PC I am not able to connect to the internet.
Also, if I am using the 2 pair cable (instead of 4) between the switch and the router I am able to connect to the internet but same is not true in case of 4 pair cat5 cable.
I have the USB modem internet connection.
I am using ICS sharing in XP to share my internet connection.
ON window XP LAN i have set up the LAN IP as
192.168.137.1
255.255.255.0
Now i have joined the cable from that XP LAN to another LAPTOP running vista
Now if set the LAN on VISTA to get ip automatically them internet don't work
but if manually set the ip to
192.168.137.3
255.255.255.0
gateway 192.168.137.1
Then my internet works
But i want to join that LAN cable from XP to rouer so that i can use router to divide internet.
But i don't know how i can give static ipto router because i think somehow
that LAN on XP is not giving the IP address
I'm having a problem on deleting a user-defined chain.
these the are rules I entered.
sudo iptables -t mangle -N internet
sudo iptables -t mangle -A PREROUTING -i eth1 -p tcp -m tcp --dport 80 -j internet
sudo iptables -t mangle -A internet -j MARK --set-mark 99
sudo iptables -t nat -A PREROUTING -i eth1 -p tcp -m mark --mark 99 -m tcp --dport 80 -j DNAT --to-destination 192.168.3.1
When i'm using -X or -D, it gives me this error
iptables: No chain/target/match by that name.