NetApplications has released its latest browser market share figures, and these figures show that Chrome has overtaken Safari as the number three browser worldwide, behind Internet Explorer and Firefox. IE, by the way, continues to lose popularity rather fast.I use Chrome on Windows and cannot wait for it to be out of beta on OS/X so that I can dump Safari. Chrome is fast and stable and small touches like tabs that intelligently resize after closing a tab make it appealing.
Chrome was introduced almost 18 months ago, but yet it has already become the third most popular browser in the world. NetApplications' figures cover the entire month of December 2009, and they show that Google Chrome has gained 0.7 of a percentage point, putting it at 4.63%, ahead of Safari's 4.46%. Internet Explorer lost almost a full percentage point, dropping to 62.69%. Firefox remained more or less flat at 24.61%, while both Safari and Opera gained slightly.
Monday, January 4, 2010
Chrome Overtakes Safari, Becomes Number 3 Browser
From OSNews
Feds Warn Small Businesses to Use Dedicated PC for Online Banking
From Wired
In the wake of a rash of hacks on computers owned by small businesses, the FBI and the American Banking Association have issued an alert advising businesses to use only a dedicated PC for online banking, according to USA Today.This is a good idea, but I think the chance that a business or home user can accomplish this is too low. I suggest that they get a Live CD of Ubuntu and boot directly from the CD/DVD. As it runs from read only media you can be certain that it's always a clean system. You may need to download or buy updated CD/DVD's though, but one every 6 months to a year should be fine.
The alert was issued after numerous small businesses, universities and local governments have been targeted by hackers who installed keystroke loggers on their machines to steal banking credentials and siphon millions of dollars from their bank accounts.
The alert advises businesses to dedicate a single computer for online banking activity that is never used for reading e-mail or surfing anywhere else on the web. Using a dedicated computer would lessen the chance of the computer being infected with malware that can help crooks drain a bank account through wire transfers and automated clearinghouse transfers.
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