I received an email from Google today on my other, older Google account asking me to move my old blogger blog onto the new system and link it to a Google account. Here is me thinking it's my old 'hobby log' (I had a page about my figure buyings and stuff, but I ran out of money at the time and never got back to it after that!)
To my surprise though, its an older blog from all the way back in 2003 with just two posts. I think quite possibly it was the first time I signed up and used a blog and obviously got bored of it rather quickly.
I've now added it to this account, I might just delete it; but for now as it stands http://ubertron.blogspot.co.uk/ here it is. What a tool the old me was LOL.
Friday, 27 April 2012
Tuesday, 17 April 2012
Popularity isn't always a good thing
You can always tell in the computer world what the most popular device
or what the most popular software is just by the amount of viruses/malicious files that crop up. For example, windows isn't any less secure than Linux
or mac; despite what nerds claim.
It's the fact that the more users there are, the more people to steal credit information, to spam and to generally piss off. And when there is a will, there is ALWAYS a way.
It probably doesn't need to be said, but Android clearly has more users than iPhone's IOS, quite a few malicious files are cropping up taking credit off of phones and stealing personal data. Not so musch on IOS.
You could say though that IOS is more secure, just by the fact that you are not allowed to do anything with it other than what apple tell you. With android though you can add any software you want as long as you select the option to do so.
Secured or not, people have to be care full of the things they install on computers or phones.
As for windows phone, never used one so I don't know much about them. But again: it won't be any less secure than Android or IOS. If it ever did become the dominant product in smart phones you would see allot of malicious start to appear.
It's the fact that the more users there are, the more people to steal credit information, to spam and to generally piss off. And when there is a will, there is ALWAYS a way.
It probably doesn't need to be said, but Android clearly has more users than iPhone's IOS, quite a few malicious files are cropping up taking credit off of phones and stealing personal data. Not so musch on IOS.
You could say though that IOS is more secure, just by the fact that you are not allowed to do anything with it other than what apple tell you. With android though you can add any software you want as long as you select the option to do so.
Secured or not, people have to be care full of the things they install on computers or phones.
As for windows phone, never used one so I don't know much about them. But again: it won't be any less secure than Android or IOS. If it ever did become the dominant product in smart phones you would see allot of malicious start to appear.
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