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PC Magazine May 4, 2005 Sebastian Rupley |
Digital Archive to Go Orb Networks is now making its streaming software free. |
PC Magazine May 4, 2005 Bill Machrone |
Hey, It's Your Music Some people love iTunes; others hate it. They may prefer to manage their music library with Musicmatch or Winamp. |
PC Magazine May 4, 2005 Ryan Naraine |
The Lookout: Symantec Fixes Flaw In late March, Symantec issued patches for a DNS cache-poisoning and redirection vulnerability that affects multiple gateway-security products. |
PC Magazine May 4, 2005 Neil J. Rubenking |
Transfer Outlook Signatures I recently had to reformat my hard drive and reinstall Microsoft Windows XP Professional. So far, I've managed to restore everything, including Outlook 2003. However, the signatures I created in Outlook 2003 are no longer there. Is there a way to recover them? |
PC Magazine May 4, 2005 Neil J. Rubenking |
A Better Way to List a Folder's Contents in Word This technique for putting the list of a folder's contents into Word is indeed quite a bit easier than switching to the command prompt, especially if you skip the step of saving the document as a text file. How? |
PC Magazine May 4, 2005 Neil J. Rubenking |
An Outlook Express Oddity in Windows XP Here is a peculiar behavior in Outlook Express 6 that seems to be present only under Windows XP. |
PC Magazine May 4, 2005 Neil J. Rubenking |
Control Rounding in Excel I have an Excel spreadsheet for my small business that I use to figure employee payroll. What formula can I use so that Excel will always round across the columns so they add correctly? |
PC Magazine May 4, 2005 Bill Howard |
GalleryPlayer View high-quality, high-res paintings and photos--never available digitally before--on your Media Center PC, as a Spotlight application. |
PC World June 2005 Michael Desmond |
The Trouble-Free PC With the right utilities, you can heal your ailing machine--or even keep it from getting sick in the first place. All-in-one suites and specialized tools are tested to find the best. |
PC World June 2005 Scott Spanbauer |
Rootkits: Invisible Assault on Windows These clever attacks are not new, but they pose a growing threat to Windows PCs. Since rootkits can work with spyware, viruses, and other malware in blended threats, security vendors are sharpening the tools they'll need for detecting them. |
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