Search TekSocial
Stay Connected

Enter your email address:

(We respect your privacy!)

Or subscribe with your favorite RSS Reader

  

Entries by Sam Galley (2)

11:53AM

Java's Security Still Flawed

As you may know, Oracle recently updated their Java software. This update was set out to fixed a large hole in the security, which it did. However this update opened another hole and is still a vulnerabililty to users. Java can easily be disabled with a few simple steps and once it's gone you probably will never notice it.

Google Chrome

Disable Java in Chrome is very easy, simply type "chrome://plugins" into your address bar, locate Java and disable it. Then just restart your browser.

Safari

To disable Jave in Safari press control and comma simultaneously, or click "Safari" then "Preferences". Then click "Security" and simply uncheck the "Enable Java" box. Then simply restart your browser.

Internet Explorer

Go to Tools, Manage Add-Ons and you will be greeted with a window. On the left will be a lift labelled "Show" click this and select "All add-ons" and locate Java. Click the disable button and restart your browser.

Firefox

Enter the "Tools" menu and click "Add-ons". Select "Plug-ins" on the left of the new tab that has opened. Browsing through this list you will find Java. Click the "Disable" button on the right and restart your browser.

10:30AM

Sick of Hard Drives failing? This sapphire disk has you covered!

As they are known, hard disk aren't the most reliable things in the world, sometimes failing just weeks after you've bought them, however the technology that is being incorporated in recent years has propelled the storage market, but this new edition will revolutionize the way we see storage.

The project originated in nuclear waste repositories and realised they needed a reliable way of storing the records of where they had buried the waste, and with nuclear half lives being hundreds of thousand of years a tradition Hard Disk Drive was out of the question.

Scientist set out to find a material that would allow data to be stored for a significant amount of time. Sapphire was the material of choice with the data being etched in platinum. The two disks will then come together to form an information sandwich, which are then molecularly fused together. To ensure the disks would be suitable for sustained used the disks were immersed in acid to simulate aging and is said to last 1 million years.

This may sound like an amazing idea but there are two drawbacks. First off, a prototype costs a staggering $30,000 and second, if you need to preserve data for use in tens of thousands of years, what language do you use? How about pictures instead?

Twitter