Nvidia ForceWare 97.94 for GeForce 8800 (not for Vista) |
Nvidia has released a
new version of ForceWare drivers for the GeForce 8800-series GPUs.
Supported Operating Systems include Windows XP, Windows XP Media Center
Edition, Windows XP Professional x64 Edition and Windows Server 2003
x64 Edition. The ForceWare release 95 is labelled as version 97.94. As
usual, the driver is said to improve stability issues and have better
support for various games. The release is only available in the English
language.
Changelog:
- Adds support for GeForce 8800 GTX and GeForce 8800 GTS GPUs.
- New PureVideo technology features allows GeForce 8800 GTX/GTS to achieve a score of 128 in the HQV video quality benchmark:
- Improved inverse telecine algorithms (2:2 & 3:2 Pull-down Correction) for standard and high definition content.
- Improved spatial-temporal de-interlacing algorithm (for standard and high definition content).
- Includes the new NVIDIA Control Panel. Please visit the NVIDIA Control Panel website for more information.
- Microsoft® DirectX® 9.0c and OpenGL® 2.1 support.
Download: 32bit | 64bit (Freeware)
View: Release Notes
News source: Nvidia (32bit) | Nvidia (64bit)
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ExtractNow
is a simple utility that allows you to extract multiple archives
quickly and easily. ExtractNow is not a complete archival solution.
It's main purpose it to allow the user to extract multiple archives
easily.
Features List
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Microsoft Process Monitor 1.12 |
Process
Monitor is an advanced monitoring tool for Windows that shows real-time
file system, Registry and process/thread activity. It combines the
features of two legacy Sysinternals utilities, Filemon and Regmon,
and adds an extensive list of enhancements including rich and
non-destructive filtering, comprehensive event properties such session
IDs and user names, reliable process information, full thread stacks
with integrated symbol support for each operation, simultaneous logging
to a file, and much more. Its uniquely powerful features will make
Process Monitor a core utility in your system troubleshooting and
malware hunting toolkit.
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MSX Hackers attack EA's Battlefield 2 |
An
apparent hack attack has taken place on the EA servers. Players were
reporting the "top 6 players" by score were not the regular top
players. The hack is also visible in the bf2s.com website by viewing
the leaderboard. The hackers are sporting a clan tag of MSX, which is
known as MS Security or a variant there of. The move by the MSX members
looks like the clan is trying to prove the punk buster utility and the
anti-hacking software of the Battlefield2 game is still unable to catch
and prevent hackers. This comes as a negative blow to players of the
Battlefield2 community, because we continuously strive to play a fair
game.
Link: Global Score ranking
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Cursor hackers target WoW players |
World
of Warcraft players are being targeted by hackers exploiting flaws in
how Windows handles animated cursors, a flaw which has recently been
patched by Microsoft. Warcraft players seem to be one of the targets
because accounts for the game are potentially worth significant sums of
money. Security firms tracking how criminal hackers are exploiting the
cursor flaw suspect there are many websites hosting the code
(voluntarily or not) that can be used to take over vulnerable PCs. A
large number of criminally-minded hacking gangs are cashing in on the
flaw. Research by security firm Symantec suggests that the raw value of
a WoW account is now higher than a credit card and its associated
verification data. One card can be sold for up to $6 (£3) suggests
Symantec, but a WoW account will be worth at least $10. Microsoft said
there was a chance that attacks via the vulnerability would increase
but had seen little evidence of widespread use yet.
News source: BBC News
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Paul Thurrott: Windows XP Service Pack 3 Not Coming |
The
title for this newspost is easily the most significant of all 12 Short
Takes Paul Thurrott has put together for the week of April 9. "If
you were looking for any glimpse into the mind of Microsoft, this is
it: The company has completely abandoned Windows XP, and it has
absolutely no plans to ever ship an XP SP3." The majority of the
Short Takes have already been posted up on our front page, the rest are
simply speculation on Paul's part. Here are the individual headlines:
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ASUStek's Web site hacked, serves up Malware for .ANI flaw |
The
Web site for computer parts manufacturer ASUStek Computer has been
hacked and has been serving up attack code that exploits the recently
patched .ANI Windows vulnerability. The exploit is hidden in an HTML
element on the front page of ASUStek's Taiwanese Web site, which then
attempts to download the code from another server. As of Friday
afternoon, the server hosting the attack code was not operational,
mitigating the risk of this attack, although attackers can always
redirect their attacks to a live server. Based in Taipei, ASUStek makes
computer accessories like motherboards, video cards, and CD-ROMs.
Reliable exploit code that targets this flaw has been circulating for
more than a week now. Roger Thompson, CTO with Exploit Prevention Labs,
noted that the ASUStek hack shows how easy it is for even trusted Web
sites to be compromised: "If a major company like ASUStek can get hacked and be infective, anyone can."
News source: InfoWorld
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