Vista Security Beats XP, Tests Find

May 10, 2008

Microsoft’s Windows Vista is 37 percent more secure than its Windows XP ancestor, a security vendor claimed Friday, a rate it hinted was disappointing.

Using different data collection techniques, Microsoft has recently asserted that Vista is 60 percent more secure than XP.

For every 1,000 machines running Vista, security company PC Tools counted 639 unique threats over a six-month period, said Michael Greene, the firm’s vice president of product strategy, on Friday. “A threat is actually when [malicious code] has penetrated the machine,” Greene said. “The malware has to be on the machine to be counted by our ThreatFire community.”

Vista’s number is lower than the one for Windows XP. Users of PC Tool’s ThreatFire behavioral-based anti-malware software who run the nearly-seven-year-old XP reported 1,021 unique threats per 1,000 machines in the same six-month period.

“We wanted to find out how bulletproof Vista was,” said Greene, noting that Microsoft has claimed Vista is significantly more secure than its predecessors. “The answer is that it is more secure than XP, but not so secure that you can give up on anti-virus and other security software.”

Ironically, the even older Windows 2000 is much more secure, by PC Tools’ statistics, than Windows XP or Vista; ThreatFire users reported just 586 unique incidents of penetrated PCs per 1,000 machines during the six-month span.

But Greene essentially dismissed that number, or at least direct comparisons with XP or Vista. “It’s a matter of what people are using as desktop machines,” he said, adding that since ThreatFire targets consumers and Windows 2000 is rarely run as a desktop client outside of businesses, the unique-threat-per-1,000 doesn’t necessarily mean that the old OS was more secure.

Overall, Greene was disappointed in the stats for Windows. “I didn’t think the situation would be this bad in general,” he said, adding that Microsoft’s claims that Vista is substantially more secure than XP doesn’t jibe with the ThreatFire numbers.

“I don’t think Vista is really any more secure than XP,” he said. “People still need to practice safe computing and need to have good security software, and keep their machines patched and up-to-date.”

Microsoft, however, has recently claimed that Vista is more secure than XP, and by a greater margin than what Greene and PC Tools allege. According to data collected during cleansing operations of the Malicious Software Removal Tool (MSRT), software that Microsoft updates monthly and feeds automatically to most Windows users, 60% fewer Vista machines were infected by a recognizable piece of malware than PCs running XP during the second half of 2007.

Microsoft summarized its MSRT data in a security report published about three weeks ago. The report’s key findings, as well as the full report, can be downloaded from Microsoft’s site.


Microsoft appeals record European Commission fine

May 10, 2008

Microsoft has decided to fight an uphill battle against the European Commission by appealing a $1.4 billion fine levied against it for not complying with a milestone European Commission anti-trust ruling. The software giant says it is making a “constructive effort to seek clarity from the court.”

The fine was imposed because of Microsoft’s non-compliance with earlier anti-trust rulings and for charging excessive royalty fees to rivals seeking inter-operability information for their server software. European Commission spokesperson Jonathan Todd said in a statement that the commission is “confident that the decision to impose the fine is legally sound.”

The decision to appeal is a bit surprising considering Microsoft had said earlier this year it wanted to make a fresh start in its often bitter relations with the commission. In any case, it seems there’ll be yet another chapter in Microsoft’s decade-long brawl with the EU over antitrust issues.


KMPlayer [The MPLayer of Windows]

May 10, 2008

KMPlayer is a korean movie and audio player that supports a wide range of codecs and file formats. It has full VCD/DVD playback functionality. KMPlayer is a versatile media player which utilizes all kinds of video information and subtitles to bring the best video experience through software/hardware options and recognition of various display devices. The player provides a strong hybrid structure efficient for interconnecting various directshow filters, winamp input&dsp plugin, and internal filters. The most outstanding feature is that the player has the full control of filter connections to prevent a media playback from being messed. KMP is a freeware.

KMPlayer handles a wide range of subtitles and allows you to capture audio, video, and screenshots in many ways. The player provides both internal and external filters with a fully controlled environment in terms of connections to other splitters, decoders, audio/video transform filters and renderers without grappling with the DirectShow merit system. Internal filters are not registered to user’s system to keep it from being messed up with system filters.

The KMPlayer includes almost all the essential decoders required for media playback. Furthermore, to get beyond the limitation of internal decoders, the external ones such as commercial h.264 decoders or cyberlink/intervideo audio decoders can be specified, so that KMP works optimally by the users’ own customization. Even though the KMP is based upon directshow structure, it supports Winamp, Realmedia and Quicktime by the internal logic. Thus, it is possible to specify where to try to connect firstly the media in preferences.

The player can set multifarious audio and video effects, slow down or increase playback speed with regular tone, select parts of a video as favorites, do an exceptionally powerful A-B repeat, remap the keys of remote interface for HTPC including overlay screen controls, change a skin dynamically depending on a media type playing, and many more. It is completely customizable thanks to a wide selection of skins and color schemes, and the configuration options are extremely extensive.

KMPlayer developed by a South Korean engineer and is well known for stable engine and various features and used by millions of users every day. In order to develop the KMPlayer to the next level to accommodate growing needs from all over the world, Pandora TV, the largest video streaming company in Korea has acquired the technology including the source code and core engine for the KMPlayer from the original developer, Kang Yong-Huee on August, 2007.

Features:
KMP has required codecs built-in.
- Enjoy medias without installing codecs separately.
- KMP supports both built-in and 3rd party codecs.
- KMP’s built-in codec is faster and reliable because it process internally.
- The current built-in codec supports all ffdshow codecs and also codecs that ffdshow doesn’t support such as MPEG1, 2.
- Features audio codecs (AC3, MPEG1, 2, AAC, WMA 7, 8 etc.).
- Matrix/normalizer options through built-in voice codec.
- Through KMP’s built-in codecs, you can enjoy all major media formats.
- KMP additionally supports 3rd party codecs for users that doesn’t use the built-in codec and also doesn’t install the codecs on the computer like other codecs do. Most public codec packs+players forces to install the codec on your computer, while KMP does not. This means that installing KMP will not affect your computer at all.

Correction of corrupted files
- AVI format originally have problems when trying to view corrupted files.
- KMP therefore supports various methods to play AVI files. First, KMP utilizes the ‘AVI Splitter’. Minor corrupted AVI files can be viewed through previous versions of AVI Splitter.
- If it still doesn’t play, KMP will utilize the ‘AVI Source Filter’ for playback. The built-in ‘AVI Source Filter’ analyses AVI files and plays by skipping bad frames.
- If it still doesn’t play through the above methods, it will utilize the RealMedia engine to play the corrupted AVI files.

Various File Format Support & Hardware Support
- KMP is based on DirectShow so it supports almost all Windows Media formats.
- KMP also supports Winamp, RealMedia, QuickTime, Flash(SWF) through KMP’s ground-up technology.
- KMP supports the most media formats compared to all worldwide media players.
- KMP supports DirectShow’s extension WDM(TVs/cameras) and DVDs..

Various Options
- Various ratios supported (4:3, 16:9. 2.35:1, 1.85:1 etc.)
- Playback speed options.
- Various subtitle options.
- Standard Video Setup: Soften/Sharpen/Blend Color/Reverse Input/Reverse
- Advanced Video Setup: Remove Afterimage/Remove 3D Noise/Remove Noise in Phases/Add Noise/Fast Forward Mode etc.
- Manage still images, video captures, filters etc.
- Flash format supported (FLV, SWF).
- Watch Live URL broadcasts (VOD, MMS).

Language: 25 languages supported (Albanian, Arabic, Belarusian, Bosanski, Brazilian, Chinese, Czech, Dutch, English, French, German, Hebrew, Hungarian, Italian, Japanese, Polish, Portuguese, Romanian, Russian, Spanish, Swedish, Thai, Turkish, Ukrainian, Vietnam)

Homepage – http://www.kmplayer.com/forums/

Download Links:

Download The KMPlayer Full Install version

Download The KMPlayer Full 7zip version

Download The KMPlayer Full zip version

Download The KMPlayer Mini zip version

Download Beta