Archive for the 'test' Category

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ASUS Eee PC

I have been thinking about buying ASUS Eee PC to help me access my main machine while I laze around in bed. The two laptops I have are a bit clunky and store crucial data that I cant afford to loose when I roll in bed. While most of my rss, email and music streaming needs are fulfilled by my pimped iphone, they keyboard and screen size often makes it uncomfortable to access my webserver over ssh and my machine over vnc.

While I still wait for some cash inflow for buying Eee PC, Jace has written a very insightful comparison of Eee PC and HCL MiLeap Y. For those who think HCL can produce a good laptop for Linux OS, this is an eye opener.

Johny Lang

I have read a lot of material on Johny Lang and stuff written by him, but I have never come across an article as lame as this. Someone please tell the author that penetration testing is different from data stealing!

Blackberry In India: Beware!

Indian government either needs a session on risk perception. It has this tremendous capacity to recognise a threat from a cow to a smartphone.

The way things are turning out in India, we will soon see DoT ordering NIC to maintain a national mail server where all our emails will be mirrored and scanned for keywords that reflect terrorism. Atleast people can look up to NIC to snoop around in other’s email and ask for backup just incase an email is deleted from their servers!

Apps on my iPhone

iPhoneThe native applications on the iPhone are somehow incomplete in exploiting its capabilities over IP. Probably one of the reasons for the lack of heavy data transfer oriented apps is Apple’s assumption that most iphone users will use EDGE and not WiFi for their communication needs. While I use EDGE for most parts of the day and check my emails extensively without a hitch, it feels good to be able to use iPhone as a portable machine doing practically everything from setting up alarms, managing my web server, taking backups of remote machines over ssh, etc. Now that iPhone is quite common in this part of the world, it’s time to discuss the app suite on my iphone:

  1. SSH: The famous Open SSH implementation for iPhone opens limitless tweaking possibilities on the iPhone. Connect the phone to home WiFi, switch on the SSH service and you’re ready to control your remote machine of choice, or upload custom themes from desktop to iphone.
  2. Summerboard: Native iPhone interface is not for me. Dave Shea’s Chalkwork theme does the trick for me.
  3. Boss Prefs: I personally feel Apple should have included a tool to switch off EDGE when not in use. Keeping EDGE on all the time drains out the battery within a day. Boss Pref, the swiss army knife for network services on iPhone lets you control WiFi, EDGE, SSH, Bluetooth services and save precious battery charge.
  4. Customize: Who said changing the order of icons and hiding icons was not possible in 1.1.2 ! Customize lets you change icons, indicators, and enables you to hide unused icons to keep the home screen clutter free.
  5. Lockbox: Keeping secret things secret. This surely won’t protect information if your phone is lost to a hacker with basic unix skills, but stands to people poking in your iPhone.
  6. iSMS: Sending SMS to multiple recipients and forwarding SMSs – this application fills in for 1.1.3 feature.
  7. iFlickr: Click photos and push it to your flickr account without clicking an extra button. Allows you to tag photos, and control private/public status of the photos.

All of these applications are available through Installer App if your iPhone is Jailbroken. Which apps do you use?

An Update

While the number of posts i was writing every month has decreased considerably, the zeal to dress up this site has not died in my mind. I still feel at times that there are hundreds of people reading my site everyday, and a boring stale design will only shoo them away. So I decided to pimp up my site yet again, and call it by a fancy name than just “sumeetsingh.net”. The past month has really been hectic. Foosball tournaments, patricks day celebration, b’day parties and what not. So now that I have some time to spare, the next few posts will be about punditz live, foosball tournament and b’day parties.

Around the Web

  • Apple launches 16 GB iPhone and makes me jealous. I can barely fit in my music collection on my 8 GB considering my new found love for psytrance.
  • StealthSim, the sim card that enables me to use iPhone in India, has confirmed that their sim unlock works on 1.1.3. Yay!!
  • iClarified jumped and released how to upgrade to 1.1.3 in Windows before anyone else could act.

Learnings from India: How not to secure personal data

The last few years have seen alarming rise in demand for security products and services within India especially related to data security. Be it firewalls, VPN boxes and encryption solutions, or ISO 27001 and SOX consulting, the demand has only increased. There is not one reason amounting to this growth. Contractual clauses for BPO segment have become harsher. Fear of data breach within companies has increased. Salesmen (or Pre-Sales consultant as they are known these days) have mastered the art of selling expensive yet ineffective solutions. And so on. But do the solutions protect private data of consumers better than before? Probably not to the extent it should be protected. And yet, there are not as many cases of privacy violation in cyberlaw courts in India as one thinks there would be. The problem with Indian way of securing information and assuring privacy is many folds. Continue reading ‘Learnings from India: How not to secure personal data’

iPhone: Why it makes sense!

Into the third week of using iPhone, I can justify carrying $400 toy strapped around my belt. Believe me, the phone lives upto every iota of hype it created before the launch. Be it user interface, glass screen compared to glossy plastic, integration with google apps or just the looks – each component makes it a proud member of my apple gadget army.

After 4 ipods, an ibook, host of accessories and dominating my rss reader list, a product from Apple can barely keep itself off my desk. And when it’s a super hyped phone, it stands no chance but to submit to my fingers. I got my iPhone 1.1.2 OTB up and running on Airtel network just over two weeks ago. So it was obvious for me to write a rant justifying the last minute Christmas gift to myself. This is why it makes sense to buy iPhone in India and use it before it is officially launched.

  1. Great Phone with Great Looks: One of the nicest looking gadgets around. If you care about classy, yet very usable stuff iPhone is for you. It sure will turn most heads if you plan to flaunt it.
  2. Workable Camera: If you happen to click photographs on the go for your moblog or just to keep your flickr stream running, this phone can help you survive. The 2 MP camera isn’t the best option when you compare to the 5 MP in Nokia N95, but 3.5 inch glossy screen makes clicking pictures a pleasure!
  3. Music on the go: For people who actually travel a lot using public transport or otherwise, iPhone is a perfect example of a convergent device – a basic phone + best portable mp3 player + great web browsing machine.
  4. Time – “Gadget of the Year” : How many times you get a chance to play around a proudly own a gadget rated so highly by Time Magazine?

So the next few posts will evolve as I explore this new gadget. In the meantime, run and grab one for yourself too!