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September 11, 2005 |
WTVN Radio • Columbus, Ohio Sunday morning from 8 until 9 |
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Firewalls (yet again)This is a subject that will not go away. You need a firewall. If you have a dial-up connection, you need a software firewall. If you have a DSL or cable connection, you need a hardware firewall and a software firewall. Microsoft provides half a firewall for free with Windows XP and you can buy other firewalls from vendors such as Zone Labs and Kerio (as for Sygate, it's been acquired by Symantec). My choice is still Zone Alarm. Zone Alarm from Zone Labs has been around for a long time and it's the firewall I've always used, except for about the past 6 months. a certain Internet service provider that must not be named, my Internet service provider, began providing 4Mbps download speeds for those of us who were paying for 2Mbps. Trouble was, I didn't see any speed faster than 2Mbps. A WOW technician indicated that there was a "known problem" with Zone Alarm. The problem may be with Zone Alarm, but several acquaintances use Zone Alarm with Roadrunner and see the full 4Mbps download speed, both here and in California. I'm working with a certain Internet service provider that must not be named to figure out what the problem is. Regardless of whose problem it is, it is a problem, so I decided to try other firewalls. After less than a day, I dumped Sygate. That left Kerio. I ran the Kerio firewall for the better part of 6 months, becoming increasingly frustrated with it because it either provides far too much feedback (one program installation generated at least 30 messages from Kerio) or far too little (none). Perhaps I'd been spoiled by Zone Alarm, but I had become used to receiving just one or two messages when Zone Alarm noticed a new program. Finally I'd had enough in mid August. I dumped Kerio and downloaded the latest version (6.0) of Zone Alarm. I tested the download speed -- greater than 4Mbps before installing Zone Alarm, 2.4Mbps (still not bad) after installing Zone Alarm. It's annoying to be paying for 4Mbps and getting less than 3Mbps, but it's even more annoying when the software firewall you're using insists on being either incessantly chatty or silent. Zone Alarm Pro v.6Whenever any new version of an application comes out, some people have problems with it. Zone Alarm 6 was no exception. It's been working well for me and an update that was released earlier this week installed without incident. In the beginning, Zone Alarm was just a software firewall -- nothing else. Now it tries, and often succeeds, to be a total security suite.
A shared drive done the right wayI was just sitting there minding my own business when the UPS guy approached the house and tossed a package over the transom. It was from ADS, a company that sends things for me to take a look at. The box said it contained an NAS Drive Kit. NAS means "network attached storage" and it's a (pricey) way to make a disk drive available to all computers on a LAN. Was I ever in for a surprise! The first thing I noticed is that the ADS NAS Drive Kit doesn't include a disk drive. You provide that on your own. It's simply a box that holds the disk drive you choose -- a box that included an RJ45 Ethernet cable connection.
How does this compare to what else is on the market?I did some looking around and found ...
The ADS NAS Drive Kit has space for just a single drive, so there's no RAID redundancy built in, but the total cost (with a Seagate hard drive) is less than $250 for 200MB versus more than $600 for Snap's 250MB single-drive (no RAID) solution. The one thing that concerned me is that the CD provided with the device specified Windows only, so I wondered if the disk drive would be visible to a Mac. The answer is that it will, but that you must do the initial disk configuration with a Windows machine. The first time you use the NAS Drive Kit, you must configure it with the ADS application that runs only on Windows. Once you've configured the drive, it will be accessible to all PCs and Macs on the network. This means that you can set up the ADS NAS drive for the network and have Mac users copy files that need to be backed up to the NAS drive and then back up that drive. So how does it work in practice?I had a little trouble with the initial setup. The drive was not being detected. It was plugged into a hub and the hub's lights indicate that the hub could see it. The LAN light was on solid on the NAS drive, most of the time; it blinked occasionally -- once or twice every 30 seconds or so. I powered it down several times. I reset it. I tried to ping it. No response. The router/firewall (Netgear FR114P) that the hub connects to was set to provide DHCP. The NAS did not appear in the list of attached devices.
Then I realized there was an OBVIOUS problem that I'd overlooked: The NAS was at 192.168.1.200 and all the other devices (and the router) are at 192.168.0.x. Dumb. You can't do that with a netmask of 255.255.255.0. "Easy fix!" I thought. So I changed the router to 192.168.1.1. I changed the desktop to 192.168.1.101. I changed the Mac to 192.168.1.102. I changed the printer to 192.168.1.125. I changed the DHCP to 192.168.1.2 through 192.168.1.50. When I fired up the NAS Drive, the setup application still couldn't find it. The power light was on solid. The LAN light was on solid, with occasional blinks. The hub indicated the presence of a device. I tried connecting the NAS device to the router, too. No difference. Even ping failed: At this point I concluded that I must be doing something incredibly stupid or that the device I'd received was a dud. That's when Daniel Chan came to my assistance. "Connect the NAS device directly to the computer and see if it's recognized," he suggested. Then I'll call you. I tried that and the setup software still couldn't see the NAS device. Playing the part of the typical consumer, I didn't write down the full error message and when Daniel asked me what the message had been, I said, "Wait a moment. I'll run the application again and tell you." Of course, that's when the setup software saw the device. I plugged it in to the router and the setup software saw it there, too. I asked Daniel if he would mind staying on the phone 24 hours per day, 7 days per week. Daniel went back to work and I finished running the setup software. When the NAS rebooted, it was no longer accessible. When Daniel called again, we talked about routers and workgroup names. The NAS defaults to "workgroup" and my home workgroup is "blinnhouse". Changing that seemed to make all the difference. Just to be certain, I used the setup application to set the drive to a static IP address (192.168.1.200). This may not have been necessary, but I've had no trouble since then. Daniel says there is a known compatibility issue between the ADS NAS Drive Kit and the Netgear FR114 router. My router is a Netgear FR114P. But once the user works around the initial setup, everything works reliably. But now it's working
Later, I added a 16MB hard drive for about $1200. If you examine the Windows Explorer listing at the left, you'll see that there are two 120GB Seagate SATA drives (C and D) and that I've added 2 additional Seagate USB drives (M and N) that are nominally 200GB and 160GB. Add the NAS Drive Kit with a 200GB drive and Kaydee's Mac with a 200BG shared drive and an 80GB drive that could be shared, you'll realize that I have slightly more than 1 TERABYTE of available online storage on a HOME network. Amazing! This is 67,500 times the space available on my first hard drive and I don't even want to think about how much more space this is that what was available on a computer with 2 floppy disk drives.
The setup program (if you don't have a Netgear router) will probably find the drive and set things up properly. You might run into a problem if you've set up your home network on a subnetwork other than 192.168.1.x, as I had. For most users, there won't be much of a problem.
There's not need to visit the Share tab unless you want to create users who have read or write permissions for specific areas of the drive. This could be important if you have financial data that you want to protect and you also have small children who might accidentally delete important files. Otherwise, making the entire drive accessible to everyone is the easiest solution.
How to capture streaming audioI'm not sure whether this is dedication or an indication of serious trouble on the horizon, but I heard from a listener who wants to record Technology Corner using WTVN's streaming audio (www.WTVN.com). He wasn't able to get the free audio program Audacity to record the show and wrote to see if I could suggest another application. What I suggested, instead, was digging several layers deep to the control panel Windows provides for playing back and recording sounds. Why Windows makes this so hard, I'm not sure, but I know that Apple makes it even harder to snag streaming audio.
Programs • Accessories • Entertainment
Audacity doesn't have the ability to start recording at a specific time, but there may be a way to lash something together with macros or a Windows version of cron to start the application at a specific time. As far as I know, none of the other recording applications have a way to start or stop recording at a specific time. This turned out not to be the solution that worked for the listener with the question, but it's a way to grab streaming audio if you have the need. Nerdly NewsSmaller and smallerThis week Apple introduced the iPod Nano. The latest Ipod holds 1000 songs of average length, is (as Steve Jobs likes to point out) "thinner than a standard pencil", and is about half the length and width of other players. The Nano has a color screen and can also hold photos (meaning you get fewer songs). Because it uses the same 30-pin dock connector as the Ipod and Ipod Mini, it can use hundreds of accessories developed for the Ipod. The Nano 4GB model is priced at $249 and a 2GB model is priced at $199. They're available in black or white. Do a Google search on "Vinton Cerf"One of the primary inventors of the Internet (and NO, Al Gore never claimed to be an inventor, only a proponent) Vinton Cerf has accepted a job at Google. He's been MCI's senior vice president for technology strategy. Cerf worked on developing the Internet with it was Arpanet. In the early 1970s, Cerf and Robert Kahn developed procedures that would allow isolated computer networks to talk to each other. We still use it today -- Transmission Control Protocol/Internet Protocol (TCP/IP). Saying that he's excited to be working directly with computer technology again, Cerf says he's not yet sure exactly what he'll be working on at Google. He is 62 years old and his first day at Google is October 3. Let us know what you think. Write to:
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