-
Shred’s attackers will be caught..
So they’re reporting that the guys who attacked Fred the Shred’s house have contacted news agencies to confirm who they are. Â The daily mail reports this here.Â
I don’t think these guys are going to last too long. Â They used a public mail provider called “mail.com”. Â Seems like a fairly trivial task to contact mail.com, get the IP access records for the account “bankbossesarecriminals@mail.com”. Â Next step, contact the ISP which holds the IP range and request customer details for the IP leased at that time. Â
If it’s a home address then you’re screwed. Â If you’ve gone to an internet cafe then you’re probably on camera or some sort of CCTV but less screwed. Â Mobile phone connection won’t be any better, in fact, they’re probably more easily traced and if you’re doing it on an iPhone expect to get a visit thanks to your GPS device.
If you’re hijacking on an unsecured wireless connection then you stand a better chance but again that means you’ve probably used a laptop and in which case a lot of routers record host names of connections and almost certainly MAC addresses.
Everything on the t’internet is logged. end.
-
Slow streaming from wireless to Media Center (Vista / Windows 7)
So you’ve arrived here because your current Media Center is taking EONS to load/stream a video file over wireless from a laptop or other wireless device to your media center.
I had this too and it’s a pain up the arse to fix, but for me I managed to get it working so much so it was delivering files over wireless at almost full wireless speed, in my case, 48Mbps.
First, Windows Vista (and maybe Windows 7) uses a few things to try and improve network speed and file access which ironically is the cause of the problem. I’m not sure the developers really ever tried this in real life but it sucks and causes more problems than I can think of.
So, to the solution. I did the following steps and some may not be required at all but in doing all of these it worked and I’m not going to change them back to see what happens
Remember to do this to BOTH/ALL machines. I did it to Windows 7 to be sure. None of the features below were required by me so it’s no loss to see them go.
1. Remove IPv6
This is the IP address version 6 which changes the usual 192.168.129.111 to a long and complex HEX based address. On your standard internal network (which you are more than likely running) you simply don’t need the address space it offers.
Launch control panel, find the current network controller and click properties and disable IPv6 (Control Panel\Network and Internet\Network and Sharing Center –> Click Local Area Network –> Properties –> Uncheck IPv6 and confirm.)
2. Duplex and TX settings
If the options are there, keep the above properties open and Click “Configure –> Advancedâ€. Select “Flow Control†and select to “TX Enabledâ€. In the same window look for “Link Speed and Duplex†and set to “100Mbps Full Duplexâ€.
3. Removal of “Remote Differential Compressionâ€
Go to “Control Panel\Programs\Programs and Features†and select the option on the left “Turn Windows Features on or offâ€. Uncheck “Remote Differential Compressionâ€. Press OK – this may take AGES.
4. Turn off “offline filesâ€
Go to the start button and in search type “Offline filesâ€. Click the first item and select “Disable Offline filesâ€.
5. Reboot the machine
Reboot is vital here. Once your rebooted give it a try and you should be surprised with the speed now coming down.



Recent Comments