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New Residents Info

PcByte of San Miguel de Salinas is the sponsor of our new technical services page. We will be bringing you the answers to a few frequently asked questions. As most new residents of the pueblo discover technology is here...but not so easy to get! Besides the valuable local support from PcByte, we add our website host - 1st Cornwall Web, a London based IT Director and of course us...to help you out

Technical Services - Help Guides


What is a firewall?

  • A firewall is a barrier between your computer and the rest of the internet, there to make sure you are as safe as you can be from hackers, worms, viruses and all the other nasty people and programs out there.
  • In real life, if you look at the roof line of a row of terraced houses you will often see them, sticking up a few bricks above the tiles between each house.
  • A firewall on a computer does the same job, and if you have a broadband connection to the internet then you need one for your own protection.

What a firewall does

  • At its simplest, a firewall stops anything you don't know about passing between your computer and the internet.

 

A firewall works as a barrier

  • So if you're using the world wide web only web-related data, like requests from your browser and pages from a server, should be moving back and forth.
  • And if you're e-mailing then only outgoing and incoming messages should be allowed.
  • That means that a hacker sitting in Chicago can't just link to your computer and look at your files or install a program they have written that will steal your credit card details.
  • And it means that a nasty little worm program on someone else's computer won't be able to connect to your PC and quietly copy itself.

Hardware firewalls

  • Hardware firewalls are separate boxes that you connect to your computer to monitor the data coming into your computer.
  • Hardware firewalls normally work faster than their software equivalents and often come together with other boxes you buy to connect when you want to connect more than one computer to the internet.
  • They are often more reliable as well but remember - hardware firewalls only look at data coming into your computer.


Software firewalls

  • Software firewalls are generally more tricky to setup but are more flexible and look for suspicious data going from your computer (as well as into it).
  • This could be useful if a virus has entered your computer via an e-mail or disk and is trying to use your internet connection to send out information you don't want it to.
  • If your computer is permanently connected to the internet via broadband you may want to consider using both.


How software firewalls work

  • When your computer is connected to the internet it can send data to and receive data from other internet-connected computers.
  • This data might be an e-mail message, a web page, a music file or any other sort of net content. A firewall program runs on your computer and monitors all of the data passing between you and the network.
  • It does this by sitting between the programs you use, like your web browser or e-mail client, and the network connection you set up when you connect to the net.
  • It keeps a list of 'rules' saying what can and cannot pass between you and the net. You decide what the rules are.
  • When you first install your firewall it will block everything. Each time you use a new program, like a web browser or chat client, the firewall will ask you if you want this program to be able to connect to the internet.
  • If you say 'yes' it will set up a rule to let this application go ahead, now and in future.

Getting a personal firewall

  • Some internet service providers, like BT and AOL, provide a free copy of a firewall program to their broadband customers.
  • If your ISP does this then it is sensible to use it, as you can then get technical support directly from them if anything doesn't work properly.
  • You can buy firewall programs from computer stores. Firewalls are sometime sold in a bundle along with anti-virus software and filtering programs to protect your children when they are online.
  • You can also get firewall software like ZoneAlarm by going to the supplier website and downloading it. Some of the programs are free, or you can pay for a more powerful version.
  • You can also buy firewall software from the internet or your local PC supplier.


Keep up-to-date

  • Even a firewall can have holes in it, and there are regular updates to all personal firewall programs.
  • These will fix bugs, correct problems and sometimes add extra protection.
  • Whatever firewall program you use, you should keep it up-to-date.
  • Since firewalls are used to protect your computer when it is on the internet, the best way to keep informed of new versions and patches is to subscribe to the automatic alert service.
  • You will be asked if you want to do this when you first install your firewall.


Not 100% safe

  • If your firewall is set to block all data coming in or going out then you won't be able to use any internet programs, so you always have to open it up a little bit.
  • And that little bit can be enough to let in a virus or a worm, or let a hacker attack you. A virus could come attached to an e-mail. A worm might pretend to be a friendly program that you trust, like a chat server.
  • And a hacker might have discovered a new security hole that your firewall doesn't block yet.
  • So you should not rely completely on your firewall. Keep your anti-virus software up-to-date, keep backups of your data in case the worst happens and you lose it, and keep an eye out for unusual programs or activity on your computer.
  • A properly installed firewall, like a good burglar alarm, doesn't keep you completely safe, but it can help you sleep more peacefully at night.

 


Factoid - there are over 200 million broadband subscriptions in the world, growing to over 400 million by 2010, according to market research firm In-Stat And Informa Telecoms & Media says there are over 2 billion mobile-phone subscribers, growing to 3 billion by 2008
What is MP3?

MP3 is a near-CD quality file format for sound files, and is very popular for music on the web. It's becoming more popular as people use it to swap music online because of its powerful compression. For example, you can get hundreds of songs on a single CD using the MP3 format.

MP3 is a digital music format which allows CD tracks to be reduced to around a tenth of their normal size without a significant loss of quality. This means that for the first time it's become practical to make music available for download over the internet as download times have been drastically cut. MP3 strips out a lot of the information recorded in a song that our ears aren't able to hear and uses complicated maths to reduce the file size.

MP3s can be played on your computer using programs like, WinAmp or Windows Media Player. Lots of people download MP3s and then burn them onto CDs. They also sometimes load their CD collection onto their PC and convert the songs into MP3s before putting them back onto CD. That's because new walkmans are also becoming available that can play MP3s as well as normal CDs.

MP3 controversy comes from the fact that it is able to be downloaded over the net so easily. This means that it could be great for the music industry, as MP3 files could be used to distribute music cheaply. It also means that music piracy has become hugely popular - especially though file sharing programs. A number of sites that have offered MP3 music files for free download over the internet have been sued for breaking copyright as a result. As a result, some record companies are putting special software onto music CDs that you buy from stores to make it more difficult for people to copy them onto their PC.


In Spain's largest ever foreign acquisition Telefonica has just paid out cash and bought O² PLC, the leading telephone company in UK and Germany, for £17,700,000,000 or 26,940,000,000€ enabling it to get into the lucrative communication market big time! But for the consumer in Spain just calling his telephone service provider will take him to levels of frustration he never believed existed...that's of course if he is foreign. But the biggest communication customers are foreign. So tell us again...'hey this is Europe 2005'...and we will tell you...'yes but the UK, Germany, The Netherlands, France...well just about everywhere they are ten steps ahead when it comes to technology, communication, and consumerism.' You are in Spain now so put up and shut up because all that is coming poco a poco! Let's hope Telefonica can also learn to provide some better service levels with the acquisition. And they have made a start - check out TELEFONICA new website for goods and services - www.telefonicainenglish.com

We thought you might like a few statistics that may help to explain a few things about internet usage. This chart is fairly self-explanatory.

European Union

Population
( 2005 Est. )

Internet Users,
Latest Data

User Growth
(2000-2005)

Penetration
(% Population)

% Users
in EU

Spain

43,435,136 16,129,731 199.4 % 37.1 % 7.2 %

UK

59,889,407

36,059,100

134.2 %

60.2 %

16.0 %

France

60,619,718

25,614,899

201.4 %

42.3 %

11.4 %

Germany

82.726,188

47,127,725

96.4 %

57.0 %

20.9 %

Netherlands

16,322,583

10,806,328

177.1 %

66.2 %

4.8 %

European Union

460,270,935

225,006,820

141.5 %

48.9 %

100.0 %


Skype and eBay We hope you all know about Skype…if not and you’re reading this it’s time you did. Skype is a world leader in providing free high-quality voice communications to anyone with an Internet connection anywhere in the world. It was founded in 2002 by two men in Luxembourg and now has fifty-four million people in 225 different countries registered to use Skype’s free services, boasting an average of over 3 million simultaneous users on the network at any one time.

So it will come as no surprise to you that on 12 September 2005 another Internet giant agreed to pay $4.1 billion acquire it…eBAY and PayPal. These two leading ecommerce franchises, a global marketplace and a payments platform, will combine with leading edge voice communication to create unparalleled ecommerce in the new global online era.

So what does all this mean to the folk in San Miguel de Salinas. Well we started  e-com-smds a few weeks ago and you wouldn't be close on a guess of how many people hit the page because of the name...so it's time to download the free software…get your friends and acquaintances to do the same and then talk to each other 24/7 for absolutely nothing! Download  www.skype.com

Technical Services SMdS says... It is not a requirement to have a 1mb ADSL connection as VoIP (Voice over internet protocol) actually only uses about 34kbs to send and the same to receive a voice signal. So a full duplex (send and receive at the same time) connection would only equal 64kbs in theory. In this case you would only need a 512mb connection. As far as the headset/microphone & speakers are concerned spend the majority of your budget on a good quality microphone as you want the source of the signal to be high quality. You can buy some great value headsets that have built in microphones. Suppliers: Skype, MSN Messenger and now Google are jumping on the VoIP technology. But remember to get FREE calls, both parties must have the software installed at each end and PC have to be on (although some ADSL routers now provide ports for you to connect a VoIP phone handset without the need for the PC to be on) For a fee you can call from a VoIP connection to a any worldwide landline, current costs are cheap at around 1p per minute. VoIP is not a new technology and actually has been around for 10 years, I have just finished implementing a system for a London Publishing company which enables 7,500 staff worldwide to communicate internally for free! the voice quality is crystal clear. Any question I can answer please post on our forum or email


 

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On 7 November the Internet wagon came to town to bring access to the people. This is part of a programme in all towns to show people how easy this form of communication really is.

 

 
 
   


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