Windows XP and ZIP Files

The Windows operating system has made a lot of advances in the last ten years — that admission a shocker coming from me, eh?! However, Microsoft has not been the innovator; rather it is the third-party companies that develop enhancements that have been the driving force behind the improvements.

For example, Norton Utilities was (and probably still is) the best system-repairing software utility around. Microsoft, seeing that, incorporated into its chkdsk utility (you know, the disk checking utility that starts running after Windows crashes and then insults you by claiming that you failed to shut down Windows properly) either a licensed version or a pretty fair emulation of an early version of Norton Disk Doctor.

Microsoft XP does the same thing with ZIP files, incorporating directly into the operating system a method of accessing the popular compression system developed by PKWare. XP goes one step further and treats ZIP files like any other folder. Great for novice users.

The problem is that, once you have have begun to gain both experience and a large number of ZIP files, it becomes a nuisance for two reasons: (1) searching through files with XP’s built-in Search function takes much longer because now searches automatically include all the files compressed within your ZIP files; and (2) viewing a directory with a large number of ZIP files can take a VERY long time to display as XP runs through each of those ZIP files before displaying the top directory. It becomes even worse when you have anti-virus software running!

I decided that I didn’t want XP to treat ZIP files like folders anymore. Here’s the method I used to turn it off:

Click Start, then Run. Type regsvr32 /u %windir%system32zipfldr.dll at the prompt and click OK. Reboot.

Want it back? Do the same thing; just leave out the “/u” in the command above and XP’s handling of ZIP files will be restored.



The Anti-Atkins Diet

In the last week and a half, I’ve lost three pounds using what I call the anti-Atkins diet. As opposed to shunning carbohydrates, I go for carbs and leave out the fat and fewer sugars.

My typical eating pattern consists of cereal (80-90% carbs) and/or scantily buttered toast (50-60% carbs) in the morning, easily shooting for less than 25% of carbs due to sugars. Lunch is anything from sandwiches to TV dinners, skipping the fatty sauces and other high fat parts of the meal. Perhaps I even have pasta (70-85% carbs) with a light seasoning or sauce. For dinner I eat anything I want in moderation — even with a scoop of ice cream for dessert. A few hours after dinner, or during any dangerous snack-hungry time, I prepare non-buttered, seasoned popcorn or a small bowl of pretzels — 75-85% carbs, but none due to sugars and almost no fat.

Only 15 pounds to go ’til I reach my goal…

It’s 10:30 a.m. and I’m munchy, so it’s off to the kitchen to make some popcorn…


Don’t “Pass-This-On”

Some åsshølë took over my computer last night.

To be more specific, some åsshølë wrote some software and published it on the object.passthison.com subdomain — which then took over my computer. While Googling for some information for some fellow notaries public, I came across a notary website that displayed the ad that the åsshølë created. Despite the tight firewall, up-to-date antivirus definitions, anti-popup addons, and current anti-spyware software, my machine started freaking out.

The first sign was that everything on my computer screen went blank except for an instruction to “press the enter key.” Well, of course, that wasn’t going to be the first thing I tried — like I’m going to blindly follow some åsshølë’s instructions! Needless to say, after trying many other things, pressing enter was the only viable option. An ad then popped up, saying that I had spyware on my machine and that if I didn’t want it, then I had to buy a particular package of anti-spyware.

Blackmail! Extortion! Ãsshølës! Oh, my!

This morning I opened up Internet Explorer and my screen went black. Seconds later, my Empire Earth CD was ejected from my D: drive, accompanied by a message that said if my CD drives opened, then I had spyware on my machine. As before, if I didn’t want the spyware, then I had to buy a particular package of anti-spyware software.

Right. Like I’m going to send that guy ANY money!

Who is PassThisOn?

Passthison.com is registered to SmartBot.NET, Inc. at 3 Cobblestone Court, Richboro, PA 18954, phone: 215-953-7291, fax: 215-942-4338, with the name server as smartbotpro.net. Whois for smartbotpro.net also lists the phone number 603-817-0902. Through other sources, I get the name Stanford (although his real name is “Sanford”) Adam Wallace, phone: 215-628-9780. There’s also default-homepage-network.com, registered to a Mike Cayer at Seismic Entertainment Productions, Inc., a known spamming friend of Sanford’s. Their ISPs are ServInt Internet Services (passthison.com), Excalibur Internet (default-homepage-network.com) and Service Telematique Service Internet de Montreal (smartbotpro.net). More info on the åsshølë from AnnOnline and a cornucopia of knowledge about Sanford Wallace at Tired of Spam.

I found that most people (including an official representative from PassThisOn) blame the peer-to-peer file sharing system, Kazaa. PassThisOn also states in a quoted email that they “[use] banners on other participating networks in accordance to their own and PassThisOn.com’s terms of service.”

Yeah, that’s fair. If it’s OK with us, and OK with the websites on which we advertise, it’s OK for us to mess with your computer. Not! I somehow doubt that the notary whose website I visited would condone PassThisOn’s actions. (Of note, I don’t have Kazaa installed on my computer.)

According to the åsshølës themselves, “PassThisOn.com prompts and changes consumers’ browser behaviors to offer a better user experience and a more targeted advertiser-to-consumer communication system… PassThisOn.com utilizes several technical and business methods to change users’ default homepage to one that PassThisOn.com controls… Some users do not wish to see pop-ups on their web browsers. It is easy to install ‘pop blockers’ which will dissallow that feature. PassThisOn.com does not attempt to cause any damage or harm in any way. It will, however, use NON-DESTRUCTIVE ‘scare tactics’… to demonstrate the importance that users secure their computers from malicious hackers, and then PassThisOn.com attempts to sell products designed to secure users’ computers. PassThisOn.com enforces a zero-tolerance anti-spam policy.”

Sanford’s definition of a “better user experience” is far different than mine — thanks, but I think I am the most qualified person to decide how I want my own browser to behave.

Solution

Well, if you’ve read this far, it’s probably because you want to know how to get rid of this annoyance. So far, their latest version is really easy to disable since it doesn’t install anything in the StartUp directory like it used to. Previous versions installed files called reg.vbs, reg.hta, or reg2.hta in your StartUp folder, but PassItOn (same group as PassThisOn) claims to have stopped doing that.

Turn off JavaScript support (if you can), then reset your home page in Internet Explorer using Tools -> Internet Options. When everything seems OK, tentatively re-enable JavaScript.

I’m just glad the åsshølës at PassThisOn didn’t do anything worse this time.