How To Clear Internet History
Do you know that everything you do on your computer can be seen? Do you know How To Clear Your Internet History to protect your privacy?
Chances are you don’t. Do you know that when you delete an email, it can still be retreaved and read. The same goes with the websites you view. Doesn’t give you much privacy does it?
Everything you do on your computer, including all your email and Internet activity is being recorded and is quite simple to see for anyone with access to your computer.
If you want to protect your privacy and delete your activity history, you need to use some software that completely removes all your activity and sensitive data so that no one else can see it. The type of things you may want to remove include:
- emails
- chat logs
- Internet histories
- audio and video files
- deleted files
- search histories
- clipboard data
- cookies
- password files
- image files
- and other information you probably never even realized was on your hard drive.
Evidence Eraser will allow you to completely remove all traces of questionable activity from your system. Formatting your hard drive or simply overwriting the files isn’t going to get rid of the data for good. You need a program that completely removes all traces of your computer activity. You need a program that meets the standards of the U.S. Department of Defense. You need Evidence Eraser. No computer user should be without it.
Evidence Eraser is easy to use, even for the most inexperienced computer user and works with all the popular PC web browsers.
Is Computer Infected
As an IT professional, that is the desperate question I am often asked. Excuse the poor English, but words frequently fail computers users when they are having major problems with their computers.
To answer this question quickly, if you are using Windows, and have Internet access, there is a very good chance your computer is infected with numerous nasties, even if you are using an antivirus program.
Aside from computer viruses, one of the biggest problems is spyware/adware. Chances are, your computer is already infected with spyware/adware, without you knowing about it.
What is Spyware and Adware?
Spyware and Adware is software made by publishers that allow them to snoop on your browsing activity, invade your privacy, and flood you with those horrible popups. If you are like most users on the internet, chances are you are probably infected with these applications. If you can relate to any of these below, you are probably infected:
- You have downloaded music online
- Your PC is running extremely slow
- You are pestered by those horrible popup ads
- Your homepage keeps changing
What can Spyware and Adware do?
Below is a list of some of the things spyware and adware can do to your computer.
- All information you enter via the web can be intercepted
- Passwords and credit card details can be intercepted
- Unauthorized sites can add themselves to your desktop (icons)
- Unauthorized sites can add themselves to your internet favorites
- Your browsing activity can be tracked and monitored
- Unwanted toolbars and searchbars can attach themselves to your browser without your knowledge or approval
- Your personal information can be sold to other parties without your knowledge or consent
- Your default homepage and settings can be hijacked so you can’t
change them - These malicious components not only invade your PC so they can not be removed, but take up your hard drive space and slow down your PC!
What can you do?
You need a Spyware Remover Program to prevent this happening to you. 
NoAdware is a Spyware Remover that can be downloaded for free. It will remove spyware, adware, and even popups from your computer. With nearly fifty million people using the program, NoAdware is one of the most popular Spyware Removers on the internet. Even better, you can give your PC a free scan to see if it is infected with any harmful files.
As well as removing syware NoAdware also protects your PC by providing immunization, browser shields and schedules, to help protect your computer.
Grab your compy of the best spyware adware remover on the planet and clean and protect your PC.
Twitscoop Open To Gaming

I saw a couple of links to Twitscoop on FriendFeed earlier today and decided to take a look.
Twitscoop provides a tag cloud meme tracker and search functionality of Twitter activity.
The search works quite well, providing a graphical depiction of the frequency the selected term has been mentioned as well as providing a list of who and what was tweeted. You can are also able to select from 6 hours to 3 days for your search criteria.

As noted, Twitscoop includes a tag cloud on the landing page, which does what a tag cloud is meant to do, providing easily identifiable representation of the most frequently mentioned terms in tweets.
This is where the problem comes in. If you look at the top image again, you will see that the dominant tag there was for ‘thesagecommander‘. I had no idea what this was referring to, or why it should gain such prominence in tweets, so I clicked on the tag to see what it brought up.
Take a look at the image below and you will see just how this is open to gaming.
Because this user included the URL with each tweet, the domain name now became the most prominent tag in the tag cloud.
This should be fairly easy to rectify to prevent, but it does illustrate, the potential for gaming of the service

MobileMe On Sale In Australia

You can now buy MobileMe service in Australia, so it is ready to roll (hopefully) when you get your brand new 3G iPhone on Friday.
MobileMe, the Internet service from Apple, automatically pushes new email, contacts, and calendar events to your Mac or PC and over the air to your iPhone and iPod touch. So no matter where you are, your devices are always up to date. You also get easy photo sharing, 20GB of online storage, and more.
Prices are $119 for a single user license and $179 for a family pack.
How Many Active Users Are On FriendFeed?
Yuval Atzmon has been conducting an interesting little bit of research on the number of active FriendFeed users. He began by writing his own FriendFeed crawler that starts with the public feed and extracts unique users.
The process is fairly straight forward, his crawler reads the feed, discovers the users, trawls through the subscribers and then repeats the entire process for the next user. From this, he extracts the number of active users.
Yuval provides disclaimers about his methodology, but his results are still interesting.He stopped his crawler at 60,000 users, finding that he was discovering less and less new new users at that stage. Allowing for the limitations of his methodology, and allowing 15% - 20% of undiscovered active users, he arrived at a figure of 75,000 active FriendFeed users.
I think it is fairly accurate to assume that the vast majority of these users would be early adopters, tech and new media oriented, make money online types with very few from the mainstream Web population.
Hopefully this will change in the future and provide a more diverse user base.
FriendFeed Gaming?
Interesting link on Twitter from Brian Clark, pointing to a post by Triston McIntyre about possible FriendFeed gaming.
Reading through the post, the title is a little misleading, as it mainly details how the top bloggers, Michael Arrington, Robert Scoble, Jason Calacanis, and Loic Lemeur, are included as part of a nine-person default list of friends created by FriendFeed, partially resulting in a massive amount of followers for these four.
There doesn’t actually appear to be any gaming going on to me, more like a wise move by FriendFeed to leverage the profile of these four for their own benefit. Of course, this also has the benefit of increasing the already massive profile of each of the ‘magic four’, and conversely, increasing their Web traffic.
Personally, I don’t see this as a problem at all, I see it more as an advantage for new users who may not be familiar with the service, or the people on it; what better way to introduce them to quality conversation then with these four. I would expect this default list to change as FriendFeed gains more widespread acceptance and use beyond the early adopter, geek crowd. Once that happens though, we will probably see some genuine gaming of the service.
TweetDeck New Adobe Air App For Twitter With Search

I saw this link to a new Adobe Air Twitter app via Duncan Riley on FriendFeed.
TweetDeck is not just another Adobe Air app for Twitter; it actually adds some great features that can make your Twitter experience so much more enjoyable, especially if you are getting sick of the Fail Whale and receiving ‘limit exceeded’ messages in Twhirl.
Developed by Iain Dodsworth, TweetDeck provides a move away from the chat style interfaces of typical Twitter Air apps, instead going for a larger screen footprint that allows you to see all tweets and replies at a glance, as well as the results of searches.
TweetDeck allows you to view four columns at once. These columns are:
- All Tweets - all your friends tweets.
- Replies - relies you have received.
- Search - fully integrates with Summize for all your searches.
- Group - the ability to group tweeters based on your own selections.
TweetDeck automatically updates as tweets and search results come in, but there doesn’t appear to be any way of forcing an update.
You can send your tweets from inside TweetDeck, as well as direct tweets and replies from the images of other tweeters. There also appears to be a button to favorite a tweet, but this was greyed out, so would seem to be non-functional at this stage.
I did notice an annoying little quirk, where clicking on some of the options for the first time, caused the window to jump to the left or right. This appears to only be an issue the first time the some buttons or options are clicked, subsequent clicks did not cause the same issue, except on the tweet text area, where clicking to close it caused the window to jump to the right, without the tweet areas closing until a second click on the cross.
Other then this little quirk, I am quite impressed with TweetDeck. If it had FriendFeed integration as well, it would be even better and maybe even become my app of choice.
TweetDeck is still beta software and I look forward to seeing what updates are included as development continues.
SMSGupShup Gets $10 Million Funding

I recently reported on Indian startup SMSGupShup and how Twitter could learn a lot from the way they have built their architecture.
It seems that people were listening, with TechCrunch reporting that Webaroo Technology, the company behind SMSGupShup has raised $10 million in a third round of funding.
As previously mentioned, SMSGupShup shares many similarities in functionality with Twitter, but does not suffer the same outages, despite having 7 times the number of users and 3 times the number of daily messages.
As well as the different architecture, another reason for the increased reliability of SMSGupShup over Twitter could be the fact that most of the users are using only a mobile phone to interact with the service, whereas Twitter, due to it’s API, has numerous mobile and Web based sites and services linking to updates.
Win Great Prizes With Microsoft Secret Search

Aussie Web searchers can now win some great prizes, just for using Microsoft Live Search.
So it might scream of desperation on the part of Microsoft, but it could be an easy way for you to pick up some freebies, just for doing what you already do, except you give Live Search a go instead of Google for a change.
Microsoft for it’s part, in conjunction with it’s Aussie portal partner, the Nine Network has revamped ninemsn and Live Search, with improved results and the integration of video, images, news and maps into search queries.
Microsoft is calling it’s promotion Secret Search and is giving away prizes every 15 minutes until July 29.
So get on it while you can.
MioNews - What FriendFeed Has Been Waiting For

I found this great new FriendFeed service from Duncan Riley’s The Inquisitr.
If you are reading this, there is a fair chance that you are using FriendFeed, or at the least have heard of it, but if you haven’t, below is a quick explanation.
FriendFeed is a service that allows the user to aggregate information from various websites they belong in a central location, while making it possible to keep up-to-date on the web pages, photos, videos and music that your friends and family are sharing. FriendFeed integrates with sites such as Digg, Twitter, YouTube, Flickr, etc.
You can see an example of the standard FriendFeed screen below.

As you can see, for many people, the standard FriendFeed interface may appear a little sparse and uninteresting; enter mioNews.
Patrick Lightbody, made use of the FriendFeed API to create a new way to deliver your FriendFeed service in an RSS style reader interface. It makes heavy use of Ajax for the interface, which provides a much more intuitive experience for people unfamiliar with FriendFeed.
A really great feature is the ability to add a topic and automatically, mioNews will display all the feeds relating to that topic.
It also boasts Twitter and blog integration, although I was unable to get Twitter to work, which is fairly standard for services trying to work with Twitter. You can send friends requests from inside mioNews and import friends from various mail services and email clients.
I agree with Duncan, mioNews may provide an easier way for the general population to embrace FriendFeed, which would go some way to increasing the depth of topics.



