RANDOM JOTTINGS                                                

Ken Meadows
SPAM
 
None of us likes spam but we all get it if we use the Internet and e-mail.  I have two e-mail clients, Forte Agent and Incredimail, both of which attract spam.  One of the magazines to which I subscribe included a program, Spamihilator, which purported to remove spam, so I tried it.  It removes what it thinks is spam, the removals are listed and you are able to view them if you wish and restore them if you believe the item not to be spam.
 Here are some of its spam items, probability as spam given as 100%:
There were two others of which I did not keep a record.
I was not impressed.  If this program is running, for safety you should view and decide on each item anyway, so it is just as easy for you to remove the spam from your e-mail yourself.
Spamihilator is now removed from my computer.
 
MS INTERNET EXPLORER
 
Most of you would use MS Internet Explorer.  Like most of you, I use the plain vanilla Microsoft version.  One day, though, in a moment of stupidity I installed the NineMSN version and did not like it.  My dislike was the way the page was split in two and what I considered a horrible address bar.  So I decided to reinstall the MS plain vanilla version.  Easier said than done.
Now I know MS IE can be removed if you know how – I think Microsoft was compelled by a Court decision to allow this but the method is not common knowledge.  If I tried to install the latest version downloaded from Microsoft’s web site I got the message that the version I had installed was a later version and it would not install.  It surprises me that the latest version from Bill could be older than Nine’s version.  So I emailed Microsoft in Sydney for advice on how to replace the NineMSN version.
After getting all my details the Techo detailed to help me told me – do a System Restore.  Why didn’t I think of that?  Probably because I thought I would have had to go so far back it would have got me into more trouble than I was now.  
I now have the plain vanilla Internet Explorer, the only down side being I was told to re-install one program.  Guess which one? – Spamihilator, which has even been expelled from the recycle bin.
 
INK TANKS
 
I don’t like replacing ink tanks in my printers.  Name brand cartridges are expensive so I have mine refilled by the Cartridge Factory of Dundas Court, Phillip.  They will only refill genuine name brand cartridges, in my case, Canon.  One reason I like Canon is because the colours are separate and each one can be replaced when empty. Not like some makes where the colours are all in one package and all have to be replaced even though only half or less used. 
In my printer the print heads are part of the printer, not part of the cartridge.  This is good, I think, because replacement cartridges are cheaper.  It did cause me a problem, though; a problem that I think was of my own making.
My printer was chugging along fine until I ran out of black ink.  Not to worry, I had a refilled replacement cartridge sitting on the shelf just for such an occasion.  So I replaced it.  Then my real problems started.  The black print head clogged.
Accessed from the Control Panel is printer maintenance, that includes Cleaning and Deep Cleaning of the print heads.  Each colour can be separately cleaned.  So all I had to do was to clean the black print head.  The trouble was, it would not clean properly.
Part of the process used black ink from the cartridge and while it seemed to clean, it would then clog again.  My guess is that the cause was the replacement cartridge that had sat on that shelf for goodness knows how long.  Can old ink cause problems?  Mr Canon, in the instructions on the packet of ink, which I have just bought, says ‘Use up all ink within six months after opening to ensure optimum print quality.’  
My printer, when ink is getting low, pops up a little diagram showing each cartridge with the amount of ink still left, thus giving you the chance to buy a replacement cartridge (or refill if that is your wish), ready for the day when it gives up the ghost.  
My printer is now printing, as it should.  From now on I shan't take a chance with old ink but shall only buy ink, straight from the package or refilled, when Mr Canon tells me the ink is getting low.
 
FROM LANGALIST 17/03/05
 
Washing--- Yes, *Washing*--- Your PC's Guts In "Rust Never Sleeps” (http://www.informationweek.com/story/showArticle.jhtml? articleID=159401313) we discuss "How to Deal With Moisture and Corrosion in Your PC;" a topic that especially pertains to PCs in non-air-conditioned spaces--- you'd be surprised how many times a mysterious gremlin in a PC turns out to be a connection erratically going bad due to an almost invisible layer of corrosion!
In that article we look at a number of anti-corrosion liquids, pastes, and sprays; and some cleaning measures which range from the basic to, well, check this out:
 
Hi, Fred: When I worked for Tektronix, we washed oscilloscopes when they came in for R&R (repair & recalibration). There were some parts we had to avoid getting direct spray on, such as [power supply] transformers with open windings and assemblies where water might get trapped....
 
I think that a really dirty computer could be cleaned the same way. The time it takes might be worth having a clean machine. The procedure would go like this:
1. Inspect the motherboard for water sensitive components. Decide if the procedure can be done without damage. For instance, the clock battery should be removed to avoid trapping [water] in its holder.
2. Remove all the cards and sub-assemblies....
3. Rinse well and let dry (you could even put it in an oven at 125 degrees to "bake out").
---Bill Roberts
 
Indeed, you can wash many electronic parts in pure water to remove surface contaminants (including salt, dust, dirt, dried liquids and the like). We've written about it several times before, including here http://langa.com/newsletters/2001/2001-11-01.htm#3. 
Byte's Jerry Pournelle also once memorably described taking his favorite keyboard into the shower to revive it after he spilled a sticky drink on the keys. And other readers in IT departments and computer repair shops report that they've loaded dishwashers with floppy drives, printer parts, and so on:
Basically, any solid or flat-surfaced part that water can get to, and dry from (e.g. a circuit board), is a theoretical candidate for washing. Enclosed devices (including enclosed sub-assemblies, like power supplies) are not.
Of course, a water wash is an extreme step, and should not be undertaken lightly; it's really sort of a last resort, and should only be attempted with parts that are facing some serious problem caused by surface contamination.
And that's where the rest of the article comes in; offering more detail on water-washing, and also talking about the less-drastic measures you can take to clean a PC that's having corrosion problems; or better still, to prevent such problems in the first place!  
My comment?  Don’t blame me if you have a shower with your laptop and it blows up in your face!
 
SHOULD BIG BLUE NOW BE BIG RED?

From PCPlus, Feb 2005, is a news article that IBM has sold its PC division to number one Chinese PC manufacturer, Lenovo (formerly known as Legend), for the sum of $1.75 billion US.  Combined with Lenovo’s existing business, the new operation will become the third largest PC Company in the world.
Remember Thomas J. Watson’s alleged famous statement that “there is a world market for about five computers.”  While Thomas J. Watson did not found IBM he made it the great company that it became.


Index       Next