开云体育

ctrl + shift + ? for shortcuts
© 2025 Groups.io
Date

Re: Apple's OSX computers now being hit with twice as much malware as PCs

 

Howdy.

This is just not the case and has been debunked many times.

There are hundreds of millions of Macs and over a billion iOS
devices. There are more devices running macOS X and iOS than there
are Windows devices.

Apple just does a better job at security.

Denver Dan



On Wed, 19 Feb 2020 09:11:28 -0500, hoplist wrote:
I’m not trying to scare anyone. I believe the risk is low and remains
low. Macs are safer because no one bothers to target them. It’s not
worth the effort. There are simply too few Macs compared to Windows.
And writing effective malware is, in fact, quite hard.
[|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|]

iSent from iDan's GyazMail on my MacPro


Re: Apple's OSX computers now being hit with twice as much malware as PCs

 

On Feb 18, 2020, at 10:43 AM, Randy B. Singer wrote:

There is NO ransomware in the wild for the Macintosh. NONE.

"Can Macs get ransomware and how to stop a ransomware attack"

I quote from the article you cite above. "Unfortunately even Macs have been affected by Ransomware attacks, although these are very rare, as you will see if you read on.”

Attacks don’t get named until after they happen. The most dangerous attack is a zero-day attack—the attack that has never happened before. The software and knowledge is out there. It’s not even particularly hard to find. Ask a hacker.

I’m not trying to scare anyone. I believe the risk is low and remains low. Macs are safer because no one bothers to target them. It’s not worth the effort. There are simply too few Macs compared to Windows. And writing effective malware is, in fact, quite hard.

What concerns me is the pervasive myth that Macs are somehow inherently “safe.” That is dangerous. Like keeping your door unlocked because you live in a “low-crime” area (which I must admit that I do). Macs are no harder to hack than any other system. The fact that they have been rarely targeted in the past is not protection against targeting in the future. Maryland rarely has earthquakes but the potential for a massive, city-shattering quake as big as anything California has ever seen sits below the state. Rare is not non-existent. Should I prepare? There is no easy answer to that question.

I also like keep in mind that OS of choice for the best and brightest computer minds is not Windows or Mac. It’s linux.

Cheers,
tod

P.S. If you want to be scared, read Edward Snowden’s book, "Permanent Record," or listen to the Audible series, "Dark Web” or frankly any good book about real-world hacking and global security.


Re: Flash Player Update

 

Tony M wrote:
Check Now: NPAPI Plug-In Version 32.0.0.330 is installed
Install Now: PPAPI Plug-In is not installed.

So if I click on Check Now it shows that Flash Player is up to date. What is?the PPAPI Plug-In?

If you do a web search for PPAPI or NPAPI, or just look them up in Wikipedia, you will quickly learn:
On 12 August 2009 a page on Google Code?introduced a new project called?Pepper, with the associated Pepper Plugin API (PPAPI);?PPAPI is a derivative of?NPAPI aimed to make plugins more portable and more secure.?This extension is?designed specifically to ease the implementation of out-of-process?plugin execution.

PPAPI was initially only supported by Google Chrome and?Chromium. Later, other?Chromium-based browsers such as?Opera?and?Vivaldi?added PPAPI plugin support.

In February 2012?Adobe Systems?announced that future Linux versions of Adobe?Flash Player would be provided only via PPAPI. The previous release, Flash Player?11.2, with NPAPI support, would receive security updates for five years.?In August?2016 Adobe announced that, contrary to their previous statement, it would again?support the NPAPI Flash Player on Linux and keep releasing new versions of it.

In January 2020, Google announced that support for PPAPI would be removed from?Google Chrome and Chromium in June 2021.

--?
Jim Saklad
jimdoc@...


Flash Player Update

 

开云体育

I am running macOS Catalina Version 10.15.3 and when I go to System Preferences and tap on Flash Player to see if it needs an update, I am confused (maybe too easily I add). Here is what is shown in the open Updates tab:

I have Allow Adobe to Install Updates checked. Under that are two options:

Check Now: NPAPI Plug-In Version 32.0.0.330 is installed
Install Now: PPAPI Plug-In is not installed.

So if I click on Check Now it shows that Flash Player is up to date. What is the PPAPI Plug-In?

Also, if I click on Notify me to install updates or Never check for updates, it brings up a pop up message:

legacyLoader is trying to install a new helper tool, and it asks for my Password. What is this?

Tony M


Re: Flash Player Installer problem

 

Patsy Price wrote:
Using High Sierra 10.13.6 on 2017 iMac as long as I can get by with it. I still?use Flash Player for some favourite sites and apps, and will continue to do so?till they all replace Flash.

Some sites will present you a Flash site if your browser tells the site that it has?Flash available, and will present a fully-functional non-Flash site to browsers that do NOT?have Flash.

If these are not sites requiring a registered-user login, and if you were willing to?tell us the sites, we could test them for functionality without FLash.

For example, I removed the last traces of Adobe from my computer 2-3 years?ago, and do not feel I am missing anything on any websites I have gone to in?the interval.

Eventually I succeeded in force quitting the installer in Activity Monitor, but?that didn't solve things. I couldn't eject the disk image.

Re-boot.
The mounted disk image should be gone, although the .dmg file it mounted?from will still be present.

I tried to restart the computer, but it wouldn't let me do so till I quit the?installer, which I didn't succeed in doing.

You can always just use the On/Off button…

Finally I managed to shut down the computer with the button on the back,?and then restart it.

See? <grin>

--?
Jim Saklad
jimdoc@...


Re: Flash Player Installer problem

 

After a frustrating experience trying to upgrade my Flash Player, I asked:
What's next with Flash Player upgrade installer? Suggestions? Explanations?
Randy replied:
Delete Flash with this uninstaller:
<>

Use EasyFind and do a search for anything with "Flash" in the name and uninstall it:

EasyFind (Free)


You may want to also do a search for "Adobe" and delete what you find if it does not relate to another Adobe product that you have.

Restart your Macintosh.

Download the full Flash installer from this Adobe site:
<>
Use it to install a fresh copy of Flash Player.
Thank you, Randy! Thank you for clear instructions, which I will follow tomorrow. I expect to sleep well tonight.

Patsy


Re: Flash Player Installer problem

 

On Feb 18, 2020, at 5:04 PM, Patsy Price wrote:

What's next with Flash Player upgrade installer? Suggestions? Explanations?
Delete Flash with this uninstaller:
<>

Use EasyFind and do a search for anything with "Flash" in the name and uninstall it:

EasyFind (Free)


You may want to also do a search for "Adobe" and delete what you find if it does not relate to another Adobe product that you have.

Restart your Macintosh.

Download the full Flash installer from this Adobe site:
<>
Use it to install a fresh copy of Flash Player.

___________________________________________
Randy B. Singer
Co-author of The Macintosh Bible (4th, 5th, and 6th editions)

Macintosh OS X Routine Maintenance

___________________________________________


Flash Player Installer problem

 

Using High Sierra 10.13.6 on 2017 iMac as long as I can get by with it. I still use Flash Player for some favourite sites and apps, and will continue to do so till they all replace Flash.

In System Prefs I had Flash Player set to notify me to install updates. A window told me an upgrade was available. Instead of going through that window, I went System Preferences and proceeded to download and install from there. The installer hung at 95% and I couldn't get out.

I tried so many things that I'm now quite confused.

Eventually I succeeded in force quitting the installer in Activity Monitor, but that didn't solve things. I couldn't eject the disk image.

When I thought I had gotten rid of the problem, I went to adobe.com and downloaded the upgrade from there and started over. The installer again hung at 95%.

I tried to restart the computer, but it wouldn't let me do so till I quit the installer, which I didn't succeed in doing. I managed to quit Brave browser, which I had used to download the installer the second time, but then couldn't relaunch Brave.

By then I had two disk images on desktop, one for Adobe Flash Player, one for Adobe Pepper Flash Player (which I had never heard of before this).

I couldn't restart the computer. It said I must first quit the Adobe installer. This time I couldn't force quit it in Activity Monitor.

Finally I managed to shut down the computer with the button on the back, and the restart it. No disk images on the desktop. I have relaunched Brave and Safari with no problem.

I still haven't upgraded Flash Player, and I'm afraid to try again. In System Prefs I have changed my pref to allow Adobe to install updates.

With my old Macs I felt fairly confident and generally understood what I really needed to. But with my current iMac and OS, I'm quite naive, and a slow learner thanks partly to my aging brain.

What's next with Flash Player upgrade installer? Suggestions? Explanations?

Thanks,

Patsy


Re: Apple's OSX computers now being hit with twice as much malware as PCs

 

On Feb 18, 2020, at 10:43 AM, Randy B. Singer wrote:

There is NO ransomware in the wild for the Macintosh. NONE.

"Can Macs get ransomware and how to stop a ransomware attack"



___________________________________________
Randy B. Singer
Co-author of The Macintosh Bible (4th, 5th, and 6th editions)

Macintosh OS X Routine Maintenance

___________________________________________


Re: Apple's OSX computers now being hit with twice as much malware as PCs

 

On Feb 18, 2020, at 8:47 AM, hoplist wrote:

We shouldn’t split hairs. A malicious attack is a malicious attack. Malicious attacks against Mac users are on the rise,
Please give us a link to a reputable Web site that lists these new attacks by name.


particularly ransom attacks.
There is NO ransomware in the wild for the Macintosh. NONE. Ransomware is a scourge for Windows users, but the Macintosh is not Windows.

One disreputable company that wants to sell folks anti-virus software wrote a fictitious "report" about a supposed rise in Mac malware, and now a lot of folks are panicking. But..it's not at ll true. The MalwareBytes "report" lists no new malware, gives no citations, and isn't backed up by anything. It's a lie.

Other people should not be going around yelling that "the sky is falling" without citations.

___________________________________________
Randy B. Singer
Co-author of The Macintosh Bible (4th, 5th, and 6th editions)

Macintosh OS X Routine Maintenance

___________________________________________


Re: Apple's OSX computers now being hit with twice as much malware as PCs

 

We shouldn’t split hairs. A malicious attack is a malicious attack. Malicious attacks against Mac users are on the rise, particularly ransom attacks. There are Trojans for Mac. There are browser hijacks which are OS agnostic. Malicious emails are a dime-a-dozen.

Most “security” software is multi-threat, and good software made for Macs can offer an additional layer of protection. Whether any given security software is useful or worthwhile must be considered on a case by case basic.

Both Mac and Windows OS currently have good protection built it. There is an argument to be made that security software suites are obsolete on both systems for reasons too complicated to get into here. However, Windows users have good options and because the software works and because Windows users are more likely to be attacked, the use of this software is routine. Similar options for Mac users are weaker and because Mac users are less likely to be targeted, such security software is not widely recommended. That does not mean it is not useful, just that people have judged it less necessary.

I personally don’t use Mac security suites, but I am vigilant against threats. I use mail services that aggressively scan incoming mail. I use secure browsers (Firefox, Opera) rather than the default, though this is arguably more about privacy than security. Also, don’t use Chrome. It’s essentially spyware. My systems sit behind effective firewalls. I keep security features enabled in the OS and run good backups.

Cheers,
tod


Re: export MS Word doc to PDF and retain TOC links

 

On Feb 17, 2020, at 7:04 PM, Jim McGarvie wrote:

Thanks for the tip, Randy. I’ve installed it and am evaluating. So far so good.
I played with it a bit last night...and I'm impressed.

Please let me know what you think of it.

___________________________________________
Randy B. Singer
Co-author of The Macintosh Bible (4th, 5th, and 6th editions)

Macintosh OS X Routine Maintenance

___________________________________________


Re: export MS Word doc to PDF and retain TOC links

 

Thanks for the tip, Randy. I’ve installed it and am evaluating. So far so good.

Jim

On Feb 16, 2020, at 18:39, Randy B. Singer <randy@...> wrote:


On Feb 16, 2020, at 7:47 AM, jimrobertson via Groups.Io wrote:

I use PDF PenPro; I think of it as a pretty capable tool wrapped in a simply horrendous user interface :-(
Which is exactly how most of the users in my user group regard it. PDFpen isn't as capable as Adobe Acrobat Pro, but it's hundreds of dollars less, and close enough in compatibility, with a pretty bad user interface.

A new option, (actually an old option now owned by a new company which has updated it) is:

Kofax Power PDF for Mac


(Previously Power PDF for Mac from Nuance.) This product has always been awesome, for instance it includes all of the amazing OmniPage Pro OCR engine. But Nuance was a developer from Hell to deal with. Now that Nuance is out of the picture, Power PDF may well now be the best choice as an Acrobat Pro alternative. There is a free demo available for download.

___________________________________________
Randy B. Singer
Co-author of The Macintosh Bible (4th, 5th, and 6th editions)

Macintosh OS X Routine Maintenance

___________________________________________


Re: Brother ink cartridge problem

 

On Feb 17, 2020, at 12:40 PM, McAllister wrote:

My wife's printer is a Brother MFC-J485DW.

The printer doesn’t recognize a brand new Yellow cartridge. It continues to complain that the Yellow cartridge is out of ink. We also tried a second new cartridge. Same effect.

What might be the problem? Is there anything else we should try?
Is the yellow cartridge a genuine Brother cartridge or a third party cartridge?

If a Brother cartridge, I'd consult Brother. If they can't make it work, I'd ask for a refund or replacement of your entire printer, since that means that it is defective.

If it is a third party compatible cartridge, I'd consult with the company that makes that cartridge, and at minimum request a refund for that cartridge.

___________________________________________
Randy B. Singer
Co-author of The Macintosh Bible (4th, 5th, and 6th editions)

Macintosh OS X Routine Maintenance

___________________________________________


Brother ink cartridge problem

McAllister
 

My wife's printer is a Brother MFC-J485DW.

The printer doesn’t recognize a brand new Yellow cartridge. It continues to complain that the Yellow cartridge is out of ink. ?We also tried a second new cartridge. ?Same effect.

What might be the problem? ?Is there?anything else we should try?

Stratton McAllister
73357.3046@...?


Time zones in Apple mail

 

开云体育

A former medical practice`` partner of mine in California is now in retirement, living in Mendoza, Argentina, where he’s now making award-winning Malbec wines.

Yesterday we drove (all within one state and one time zone) the 250 miles due east from near Montana’s western border to Bozeman (still quite far west in this enormous state).

Ted Turner (he of CNN, the Atlanta Braves, etc) owns a restaurant here at which Bison holds primacy on the menu (Mr. Turner’s 3 herds in MT actually help in preserving the endangered species.

We had dinner there last night, and I was surprised at the number of Argentinian Malbec’s on the menu, so before choosing my wine, I sent my friend a quick email asking which I should choose. The waiter was a bit impatient, checked his mobile, and told me it was already after 11 pm in Mendoza (it was ?just after 7 pm in Bozeman).

Here’s the puzzle: my iPhone says my email was sent at 19:04; my computer agrees.

My friend responded fairly quickly. I missed his incoming message.

This morning, I apologized on chance I’d awakened him, and when he responded, what I receive on my iPhone says that I sent my apology at (9:39 (GMT -0:500), but that’s not correct, since Bozeman is GMT -0:700). Turns out my friend is currently in Florida, which is GMT-0:05, but it’s confusing that the message reports while quoting from my message as follows

From: James Robertson
Date 2/17/20 09:39
(GMT-05:390

(followed by the text my friend has quoted from my message).

I did indeed send it at 9:39 Florida time, but in quoting my message shouldn’t the header quote “from” information (who sent it and when it was sent) using the same time reference appropriate to the quotation’s origin?. After all, when I send a message I know where I am, but may have no idea where my respondent is. Admittedly what I’m reading here is what my friend is quoting about that message, and maybe the the time stamping of messages in headers doesn’t get transferred from the header of a quoted message. It certainly is confusing!

By the way, even without my friend’s guidance, I managed to choose the “right” Malbec!

Jim Robertson


Re: export MS Word doc to PDF and retain TOC links

 

On Feb 16, 2020, at 7:47 AM, jimrobertson via Groups.Io wrote:

I use PDF PenPro; I think of it as a pretty capable tool wrapped in a simply horrendous user interface :-(
Which is exactly how most of the users in my user group regard it. PDFpen isn't as capable as Adobe Acrobat Pro, but it's hundreds of dollars less, and close enough in compatibility, with a pretty bad user interface.

A new option, (actually an old option now owned by a new company which has updated it) is:

Kofax Power PDF for Mac


(Previously Power PDF for Mac from Nuance.) This product has always been awesome, for instance it includes all of the amazing OmniPage Pro OCR engine. But Nuance was a developer from Hell to deal with. Now that Nuance is out of the picture, Power PDF may well now be the best choice as an Acrobat Pro alternative. There is a free demo available for download.

___________________________________________
Randy B. Singer
Co-author of The Macintosh Bible (4th, 5th, and 6th editions)

Macintosh OS X Routine Maintenance

___________________________________________


Re: Apple Music Family Plan

 

开云体育



On Feb 16, 2020, at 9:18 AM, Pat Taylor via Groups.Io <pat412@...> wrote:

I just use the share feature to send tracks, albums and playlists to friends and family who are also Apple Music subscribers. ?Each recipient can then add the music to their library if they want.

That’s certainly simple enough!

Thanks so much.

--?
Jim Robertson


Re: Apple Music Family Plan

 

开云体育

I just use the share feature to send tracks, albums and playlists to friends and family who are also Apple Music subscribers. ?Each recipient can then add the music to their library if they want.


Pat

Pro

On Feb 16, 2020, at 8:53 AM, jimrobertson via Groups.Io <jimrobertson@...> wrote:

?My wife and I have similar tastes in music; enough so that we’d like not only to share the expense of listening to Apple’s enormous library, but access to our own downloaded libraries as well. So, I’ve just put us on a family plan, but now I’ve not been able to figure out how to SEE what she’s already put on her iOS devices nor she to see what I have. Does Apple have this as part of the Family Plan in a way that I’ve not sorted out yet (the web pages advertising the family plan emphasize the opposite—many people (well, six) able to create their own individual taste local archives, but not what we’re seeking; e.g., “Honey, remember that great David Bromberg album we shared in the late 70s; I just downloaded it, so listen to it yourself when you’re driving into town tomorrow."
--?
Jim Robertson


Apple Music Family Plan

 

开云体育

My wife and I have similar tastes in music; enough so that we’d like not only to share the expense of listening to Apple’s enormous library, but access to our own downloaded libraries as well. So, I’ve just put us on a family plan, but now I’ve not been able to figure out how to SEE what she’s already put on her iOS devices nor she to see what I have. Does Apple have this as part of the Family Plan in a way that I’ve not sorted out yet (the web pages advertising the family plan emphasize the opposite—many people (well, six) able to create their own individual taste local archives, but not what we’re seeking; e.g., “Honey, remember that great David Bromberg album we shared in the late 70s; I just downloaded it, so listen to it yourself when you’re driving into town tomorrow."
--?
Jim Robertson