HI!
What is the best reel to reel tapes to buy (second hand, NOS and brand
new....)
Is there some brands and types to watch out for?
I plan to record music from LP's and CD's and my recorder is a Tandberg TD
20A....
All the best
jan
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Fra: Association for Recorded Sound Discussion List
[mailto:[log in to unmask]] På vegne av Frank Strauss
Sendt: 17. juni 2013 11:14
Til: [log in to unmask]
Emne: Re: [ARSCLIST] FW: Cindy Stockard
I guess you have to decide whether you need malware removal or malware
protection. For the limited purpose of looking to see if opening the
Stockard em allowed malware to be installed, free MWBytes is pretty easy to
use. Many anti virus programs claim to have real time MW protection.
Another clunkier MW protector that also has monitoring is Spybot Search and
Destroy. It is also free but is a little harder to use. Anything that gets
installed and runs in the background has potential for conflict and possible
slowing down a computer. Sometimes the cure is as bad as the disease.
On Monday, June 17, 2013, [log in to unmask] wrote:
> I just checked my copy, the FREE version of Malwarebytes does not run
> in real time protection mode. Manual scan only, which is good but not
> as good as it could be. It is not "on" and protecting you all the time.
>
> joe salerno
>
> On 6/16/2013 8:20 PM, Frank Strauss wrote:
>
>> I assumed it was bogus, but did open it using my iPhone, which is
>> probably immune to malware as we know it. I have used Malwarebytes,
>> (Google it) a free malware detector, for many years and have found it
>> to be quite effective. Downloading it through CNET is probably the
>> best way to get it; always have the latest version and ask for an
>> updated malware list before you scan. The free version is the one
>> you want.
>>
>>
>> On Sun, Jun 16, 2013 at 8:27 PM, Donald Clarke <[log in to unmask]>
>> wrote:
>>
>> Paul is absolutely right. There was no reason for me to click on
>> that,
>>> except that it came from ARSC, and I shouldn't have done it!!
>>> But the object must be to spread the malware? It can't
>>> possibly be worth the trouble to advertise berry juice or whatever it
was?
>>>
>>> Donald Clarke
>>>
>>> On Jun 16, 2013, at 7:09 PM, Paul Stamler wrote:
>>>
>>> Hi folks:
>>>
>>> It's worth pointing our that this epidemic of contagious nastiness
>>> doesn't result from hacking as we usually understand the term --
>>> someone from outside breaking into your computer and making it do
>>> things you never intended.
>>>
>>> Instead, what happens is semi-self-inflicted. When you get one of
>>> these e-mails and click the link out of curiosity or habit (after
>>> all, you know the person the e-mail came from), it downloads malware
>>> to your computer, which then sends the infected e-mail with the
>>> contagious link to everyone in your address book. Changing your e-mail
password WON'T PREVENT THIS.
>>> Only getting the malware out of your computer will; better still,
>>> never letting the malware in. When you get an e-mail that includes a
>>> link and not much else (maybe a "This really works" line) DON'T
>>> CLICK ON THE LINK.
>>> Delete the e-mail immediately.
>>>
>>> Peace,
>>> Paul
>>>
>>>
>>
>>
>>
> --
> Joe Salerno
>
--
Frank B Strauss, DMD
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