Saturday, May 23, 2009

PowerLESS Atom - real world power usage

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So I picked up a Kill-a-watt the other day (thanks Joe), which is a power meter that sits between the electrical outlet and any device.

I have been measuring everything on earth, a few specs from some devices I checked out:

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Atom Dual Core Desktop PC:

  • Intel embedded mb D945GCLF2
  • Atom 330 1.6ghz embedded CPU (8 watt)
  • 1 Stick Kingston DDR2-6400 2gb 9905316-132.A01LF
  • Hitachi HDP725032GLA360 320gb SATA2 low power harddrive
  • DVDRW LG GCC-H23N IDE DVD Burner
  • 5in1 USB Card reader
  • 150 Watt no-name PSU with 60mm fan

Average power usage measured over a 4 day period was 1.22 kw per day. It uses  a mere 48 watts during normal usage, and 63 watts when burning a DVD (most processors alone burn 65-95).

At $.13 per kilowatt, this PC is costing me $58 per year to run 24/7 - its GRRREAT!

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My Asus eee 901 Atom netbook is even less @ 11 watts with screen on medium brite, this little laptop would cost me $12 per year if I ran it 24/7 - luckily I only use it half that much ;)!

My Westinghouse 22" LCD is running a cool 33 watts compared to the 300 watts of my 61 inch rear projection (old skool) HDTV, fortunately I dont watch much TV.

Low power computing = big power applications


Today we are going to look at some ultra low power PCs - would you believe this is a PC:

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Of course, but what about this:

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Yes this little guy is a PC as well. Marvell makes this little wall outlet PC called the Sheevaplug, while its not truelly a desktop PC as it has no video, it does have a 1.2ghz cpu, gigabit LAN, 512 RAM, 512 flash, and a USB port - which makes it a great fit for Linux driven embedded applications, and Linux 2.6 kernels are already supported. Rumor has it these will sell for around $99.

Back to the first pic which is the Nvidia ION, a dual core 1.6ghz Atom that sports every connection you would ever need including HDMI, DVI, and esata paired with a powerful Nvidia 9400m graphics engine which is capable of full 1080p HD video playback, making it a perfect fit for home  theater PCs (HTPC). ION still hasnt hit the streets, but you can find more pics and info here. -------------------------------------------------------------

On to the next amazing computing device:

This is another board roughly larger than a card box called the Robin by Toradex, it sports Intels Z530 Atom which runs from 1.6ghz to 1.2 and as low as .65 watts power usage. These boards are fully loaded with an expansion board that has video out, Gig LAN, PCIe slot, onboard MicroSD slot, DVI, TV out, SATA port and much more, making it the perfect candidate for a small home NAS or low end HTPC or other appliance. They fully support Windows from XP to 7 as well as CE, and  many flavors of Linux.

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On to the final heavy hitter, the FIT (not the Honda):

This little demon sports an Intel Atom Z530 1.6ghz  and a hardware H.264 decoder which allows HD video playback while using just under 7 watts for the whole PC:

Support for all major operating systems could make this a low end desktop work horse, or even a HTPC. Below are the specs, or read more at their site:

  • 1.6GHz x86 CPU
  • 1GB RAM 
  • SATA hard disk 
  • DVI with graphics acceleration 
  • High definition audio 
  • LAN and WLAN 
  • 6 USB ports

Thursday, May 21, 2009

New low power NAS devices and new NAS softwares

VIA has just released a new low power motherboard called the NAS7800 with a C7 1.5ghz, 8 SATA ports, dual gig LAN, CF slot and more... 

This is the ideal platform for low power embedded storage, 8x 1.5 tb drives could yield a great high performace RAID6 system with 9 terrabytes of capacity. So unfortunate it sells for $550, and currently with a minimum order of 500 pieces with no distributors willing to pick it up. 

Next up, we have new appliances from QNAP that uses the ultra-efficient Intel Atom to perform RAID on up to 6 sata drives (+2 esata), with 2 Gig LAN, 5 USB ports all in a nice shiny case. While at nearly $2k it does not come with drives, the features  are extremely rich.

  • Online capacity expansion/migration
  • RAID 0,1,5,6, 5+spare
  • Dual OS on flash - if one fails, the other takes over
  • Rich addon apps like Joomla, MySQL, backup suites, IP Cam DVR
  • Click here for more

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I also came across this interesting item today - Port Mutlipliers for SATA - convert a single  SATA port into several - however the SATA interface must support FIS switching for port multipliers, for instance the Adaptec 1430SA (or also Marvell 88SX7042) is a 4 port SATA RAID card that can be expanded by these port multipliers to 20 port RAID card and still maintain wire speed on all channels. These are quite diverse devices with support for internal expansion or eSATA expansion - for instance the device pictured can be installed in an external enclosure and plugged into a single eSATA port on your PC to add 5 external drives. 

On to other items - NAS/RAID softwares:

FlexRAID is a new file system simulating RAID type features with many advantages and without the RAID card. It perform software parity on your data to prevent data loss in case of a drive failure much similar to RAID5, but unlike RAID5 where if a 2nd drive fails the whole array of data is lost, FlexRAID only looses the data on that lost drive, all other drives remain available for access. FlexRAID also offers automatic rebuilding to spares, use if non-similar disks and much more. Drivers are available for both Windows and *nix.

Another interesting NAS OS I have found is called UnRAID, which is mainly aimed at home based users looking to archive movies. Unraid uses many features of FlexRAID in that its all software based, and different drives can be used, and data loss is minimal in the event that more than 1 drive fails. It has free/paid licensing tiers which are quite reasonable, the free version handling 3 drives, and the 'PRO' version handling up to 21 drives. It has been stated this is not for everyone, the system is reasonably fast, but definitely lacks the speed available to true hardware based RAID/NAS systems.

If you missed this other article on Openfiler, you might also check that out for a NAS OS.

Excuse the poor formatting, blame it on Blogger.com

I just wanted to put this out there:

Blogger.com stinks!!!!!!!

I hope my readers will excuse the poor formatting of many of our articles, and the broken image links. The WYSIWYG editor of blogger is terrible, it gives you very little choice as to how images are placed, they simply bump text in random portions, and pictures which are supposed to open full size when clicked on are usually broken. I feel like I am limited to a 2 inch newspaper column. I have also tried imputting articles in raw html, but blogger does not seem to honor html formatting either.

Oh and the auto-save feature for editing, sometimes it decides to reload the whole page and loose all your editing since the last save.

Google - come on, get it fixed, with all those resources surely this is simple!!! I cant wait to get my new site up with integrated blog.

Wednesday, May 20, 2009

Corporate spam prevention on Exchange server and more

Another post about spam, today we will cover:
  • Nolisting (non-Exchange spam fighting method)
  • Exchange IMF
  • Exchange Sender/Recipient Filtering
  • Exchange Connection Filtering
  • Barracuda Networks DNSBL goes public
  • Tip on closing Exchange vulnerability
  • Vamsoft ORF (Open Relay Filter)

I will start off with something non-Exchange related - Nolisting!!! This looks like a wonderful spam prevention technique, that only requires that you have your own domain and control over the MX records.

Nolisting involves creating 2 fake mx records that point at nowhere. Spammers will usually attempt to only send to one server, if it fails they will abandon the attempt, normally they will send to the highest priority server, but some spammers seem to be taking a new approach of pin-pointing the lowest priority server with the assumption that only the primary server will have spam a filtering system - my method will nix both of those attackers.

For my domain I have created the following MX mail records:

  • Priority 1 dummyserver.smpltechno.com
  • Priority 20 mail.smpltechno.com
  • Priority 30 backupmail.smpltechno.com
  • Priority 40 dummyserver2.smpltechno.com

My true mail server being the 2nd one, the dummy servers being simply that, a record that points to a non-existent server name. Read more on Nolisting here.

On to Exchange Spam fighting with native tools:

Exchange 2003 SP2 comes with some new filtering tools to help you significantly fight spam. To configure these filters go to the Exchange System Manager and open the Message Delivery Properties under Global Settings.

First off I will start with the most basic spam prevention filter, Recipient Filtering. This will not do any real active spam blocking, but by checking the box there that says: "Filter recipients that are not in Active Directory", you can aide in preventing directory harvests which spammers use to list out all the addresses in use. You can also use it to prevent certain users from receiving outside email.

Next in line is the Sender Filter tab, you will want to check the box that says: "Filter messages with blank sender." -If you dont know them, block em. You can also use this tab to block individual spammers, but this would be a very tedious method of blocking spam.

On to the hardcore spam killers, Intelligent Message Filtering (IMF), uses heuristics to analyze each message and assigns each message a score (SCL). Filtering is then performed on 2 thresholds, if the score is equal or higher than a certain rating it will filter it at the gateway (1st setting), the next threshold sends the message to the Junk Mail box in Outlook. By lowering the  thresholds on these 2 you can fight more spam, but raising the chance of false positives. I have set mine to very minimum scores, 9 or higher will reject messages at the gateway, and 8 will send them to the Junk Mail folder in Outlook. It is recommended that you read the manual on IMF and filtering here. I should also mention this gets updated bi-monthly through Microsoft Update, an alternative update script can be found here.

Finally the most useful filter probably is the Connection Filter, which use Realtime Block Lists (RBL), aka DNS Blacklists, to look up a sending servers address to see if they are a known spammer.

There are several organizations that publish these DNS blacklists, but today we will be using the new Barracuda RBL, which they have just recently opened for public use. Barracuda Networks manufactures industrial spam filtering   gateways that sit in front of your mail server, if you dont have Exchange and cant use ORF, its a good alternative. To use this list you must register on their site and list the IP of any server that will be using the list. Go to the Connection Filter tab and click add to configure your blacklist provider like the image shown. This is most likely the most efficient method of preventing spam, as users will never have to review messages blocked by the Connection Filter, and many spammers are on these lists.

Now that all your filters are configured you need to enable them. In the Exchange System Manager expand Servers>Your Server> Protocols>SMTP> and open the Properties for the SMTP Virtual Server. On the General tab, click the Advanced button and click Edit button and check off the filters you wish to use. 

While in the SMTP Virtual Server properties it is well advised that you disable external relaying. Click the Access tab and click the Relay button, in here unless you know what you're doing only your subnet should be allowed to relay, and you should uncheck the box that says: "Allow any authenticated user to relay". This could allow a weak account to be hijacked by external spammers allowing them to use your server as a spam sending monster.

Once finished you must stop/restart the SMTP Virtual Server for the settings to take effect. Here is a block diagram that shows how messages flow through the different filtering points:

The above settings should aide in dramatically reducing spam, but if you find your users are still receiving significant amounts of unwanted email, you may need to move on to some 3rd party filtering. I have tried many different platforms for spam filtering, and there is ONLY ONE....

Vamsoft Open Relay Filter for Exchange

I have tried programs from GFI, Symantec, Trend Micro, Sonicwall, and many others, but only ORF provides all the features at a light price, in a light weight package that will nearly eliminate even the largest bulks of bulk mail with a very low false positive rate. A new release has just come out with some great new features.

  • DNS Blacklists
  • Automatic whitelists - if you send to them, they must be on the list
  • Sender/recipient/IP blacklists/whitelists
  • SPF lookups
  • Keyword filtering with regular expressions
  • Attachment filtering with regular expressions
  • URL blocklists - HTML emails are scanned for known URLs of spammers
  • Tarpit delays
  • Greylisting
  • New! Honeypot test - if a spammer sends to a dummy address you set they are banned
  • Integration with external apps like antivirus scanners
  • Quick import/export of settings to transfer golden settings to other servers
  • SQL integration for reports and list management if needed
  • Excellent reporting tools

Some of the other great features of ORF that I have yet to find in other programs:

  • One low price from SBS to Exchange Enterprise 
  • Low footprint 15-30 mb RAM and low CPU usage
  • No annual fee one time license

Finally here is a great article from Vamsoft (if you are using ORF) on preventing spam that shows your address for both the sender and recipient. You might look at some of the other spam related articles here if you are interested in other ways to prevent spam.

Tuesday, May 19, 2009

Once again Windows 7 might be a big UHOH! for consumers


This time around things might be different, but not in the way many we're hoping. In comparison to Vista, Windows 7 is much more user friendly and a bit more conservative resource wise, on average it should run smoother and faster - whats not to like?

However, it looks like Microsoft is in some trying times as is the rest of the world and they have decided they need to fill the gaps by raising the price of Windows 7 compared to Vista. So far this is scaring OEMs like Dell away as they are the first to market for the new software, and it is projected the same will happen for retail consumers. Vista was a bit more than XP, and now they are attempting to inch it up there once again - the cost of living? - well I have not received any cost of livign raises in the past couple of years, if anything my boss gave me a pay cut for the cost of living!

Monday, May 18, 2009

Less power for your CPU



   Would seem to be a common misconception that CPUs are only happy when they are sucking lots of power, well today we will cover the cost of this power, and discuss why this misconception is mostly false. 

Your average conventional desktop CPU uses 95-130 watts (a measurement of joules per second), however both Intel and AMD are making conventional CPUs as well as "low power CPUs" that somehow run in the same gigaherts, and on average produce nearly the same calculations per second as their conventional counterparts. 

Some of the new Core2Duo and Phenom CPUs even suck 145 watts.

We have covered the heavy weight contenders, no on to the slim distance runners. Intel makes several low power processors in starting at 65 watts, and going down to around 40 watts, and they have a special platform called the Atom that makes as low as 0.65 watts. Personally, in my home and everyday business use, we only use Atom based platforms.

My atom desktop is a dual core 1.6 ghz, does everything I need for severe web browsing, document editing, some pretty regular photoshopping and even DVD ripping, this little power house uses 8 watts of power.

My atom laptop is a single core 1.6 ghz, still just as potent, I have 25 browser tabs open this very moment, along with a pdf and excel sheet. This unit uses a whopppping 2.5 watts.

Now thats all great, I have reduced my power usage by over 90%, I am reducing my carbon footprint dramatically, but the real joy is when I leave my charger at home in the morning, work throughout the day on my 2 pound laptop, then come home, have dinner, sit on the couch with my wife, and work some more, and finally go to bed and plug my laptop in to charge, all without burning my legs (i like to call those 17 inch Dells leg warmers;).

Moving on to servers, these things need some real computing power, conventional servers use one or 2, or even more 140-160 watt CPUs, some of my clients have a few of these. Now these things run day and night 24/7/366 - that could be some considerable consumption. But even here there is room to spare, Intel has low power Xeon server processors starting at 80 watts, and going all the way down to 38 watts, and they are real computers, a single one of these does what 2 CPUs did 5 years ago and at a great power savings.

Moving on to the numbers that actually matter:

Your power company bills you by the kilowatt hour (1000's of watts per hour). The average power company charges $0.11 per kwh, but here in Southern California, since power is greener than the rest of the nation we pay $0.13, so being greener pays all the more.

So the conventional CPU (just the processor) if run 8 hours per day, would cost as follows:

95 watts= .095 kwh x .13 x 8 hours x 365 days = $36 per year

If it was an 8 watt 1.6 ghz dual core Atom CPU:

8 watts= .008 kwh x .13 x 8 hours x 365 days = $3 per year

Or if you desire more processing power, there are several options in 45 watt area: = $17/year

Or if you for instance use my Atom based eee netbook @ 2.4 watts: $0.95/year

Now a Xeon server cpu running 24/7 @ 160 watts would use:  $182/year

Ok, some may say thats barely negligible, but many companies have many workstations, and sometimes even many servers. Most workstations are not on 24/7, but looking at making your next server purchase as an experiment in efficiency may put you on the road to savings soon.

The average 'green' cpu will cost 15-20% more than its conventional counterpart, and sometimes 15% less even. Lets say a 3 ghz 160 watt xeon is $330, and its 65 watt counterpart is $380, the $50 difference would be recovered in less than 6 months: $182 vs $74/year. You may only have 1 server now, but who knows next year you may need 2, 3-4 servers saving you $100 each could be quite helpful.

Other things to think about:

There are several other areas in the computer that can be optimized, such as:

  • high efficiency hard drives
  • low power memory
  • low power fans

Not too mention, less power will mean less heat generation, which converts to less cooling costs, overall power savings could be considerable, just as Google did with their servers.

Not saying some people dont need true high power computing, for instance one of my customers runs a photolab and where they run Photoshop on 10-15 layers, with 25 megapixel cameras out now, you can burn some gigahertz really fast, they truelly needed a Quad Core i7 with 6gb ram. 

For more information on processor power usage Intel list all of their CPUs here.

32 nanometer CPUs on the table @ Intel

I am planning on deploying a number of high power servers in the coming weeks, and have been doing some research on CPU efficiency (as in how much money the electric company charges you to run that quad core i7). More on that in another article, in the mean time, I found some interesting info on future 32nm chips from Intel here. Current quad core 45nm processors (Core2Duo quad) have around 800 million transistors inside, 32nm chips are already on the test bed with 1.9 billion transistors, which will mean a significant increase in computing power, and more importantly to me, lower power consumption. I couldn't care any less about how much your gigahertz, todays computers are blazingly fast, even if its the slowest model, but being able to run the same applications at an energy savings is quite enticing when you are a company with several dozen computers.

Thursday, May 14, 2009

New old NAS

ok a quick one here - I have been in the dark ages it seems using freenas, all this time there has been Openfiler which while its not as slim as freenas, its got some nice features:
  • Point-in-time snapshot support with scheduling
  • Online volume size expansion
  • Volume usage reporting
  • Volume migration & replication

    It looks well established, developed back in 2001, and feature rich, and it runs on the other nix which seems to adapt faster than BSD. www.openfiler.com/
  • Tuesday, May 12, 2009

    Labs: Server 2008, Exchange 2007, MS Forefront and Enterprise Spam Filtering

    Well this was a long day in the lab. We have tested Server 2008 a bit here and there over the last year and recently a client requested a full update to the all the "latest and greatest" server software, so today we decided to put together a full blown lab with a server and fresh client workstations even, using all the latest applications available today (not including betas such as Exchange 2010), the end goal being to test the full capabilities of Forefront security.





    So a preview: we have tested the above software and finally end up taking a non-MS route and using alternative softwares. Read on to find out....

    Microsoft Forefront is not a single program, its their new flagship platform for security and network stability. It is everything from an antivirus/anti-spyware/antispam suite to a full blown 3 server networked security and connectivity suite that securely connects every aspect of your Microsoft life, from more secure VPN to internet web caching (results in faster internet, formerly ISA server), to less workstation viruses with better AV, and WSUS (Windows Software Update Server) - the Forefront platform ties all this together with its myriad of Forefront applications.

    We went with the standard installs of Server 2008 and Exchange since the desired Forefront suite does not support Small Business Server - this took approximately 10 man hours to prep the platform from installing windows, to installing Exchange, SQL Server (required by Forefront), and finally Forefront for Exchange and Forefront Client Security for the server (note we are pretty proficient at slapping a server into shape). - What a PAIN!!!

    Forefront Security for Exchange was surprisingly easy to installed (compared to all the rest), it took only about 3-4 minutes to install, and another 15 to configure - WOW!!! Forefront plugs right into Exchange and will scan all mail for viruses and spam before users ever see it. It looks like Forefront is VERY good at stopping viruses, it comes out of the box integrated with 8 different Antivirus scanners, and actually recommends you enable at least 4 of them (hmmm, I wonder how efficient that is in production), oddly 5 of these AV scanners were very obscure to the extent that I have never seen them before, the other 3 were somewhat obscure (no Symantec here). The spam area is pretty typical, it has keyword filtering, spam blacklist lookups, whitelists, and blacklists.


    Now on to Forefront Client Security, this has several aspects, there is a ginormous server aspect. It uses the following items on the server to secure clients

  • WSUS to deploy approved critical Windows updates silently to workstations
  • A SQL database to store a client and software info
  • A SQL database for reporting
  • Management Console for pushing the installation to client computers and monitoring

    Then the workstations get a very slim Forefront client (called MS Security Essentials) which uses around 10 megabytes of RAM - very impressive. This client scans for viruses and spyware very efficiently and is actually a 'spiffed up' version of Windows Defender (finally MS gets something right).

    Unfortunately this solution would fit only a couple of my clients, as it requires a massive IT output to implement it, and licensing models are very prohibitive to sub 150 node networks, and doesnt really start to 'come in handy' until the 300-500 node network.

    Forefront for Exchange requires Exchange Enterprise licenses (more $$ than Exchange Standard)
    If you have lesss than 50 PCs you should definitely be using Small Business Server (75 max), which Forefront does not support due to its resource needs at the server (its a hog).

    ******* Key reading: *****************************
    A BETTER SOLUTION for the SMB and possibly Enterprise:

    If you are a candidate for Small Business Server (75 users max), a far more efficient and cost effective solution is:

  • Vamsoft ORF for Exchange to handle virus and spam filtering in emails

  • Comodo Antivirus business edition or NOD32 bus. ed. for workstation security

    Vamsoft ORF actually works better than Forefront on all fronts, and even for the Enterprise deployment. Vamsoft supports regular expressions (Forefront lacks), which allows it to scan emails and get those odd variations of words like v1agr@ or m0rtg@ge that we so often see now - a keyword filter just isnt enough, it must grab the variations, and ORF does. ORF also supports a number of virus engines, as well as blacklists and whitelists, and even automatic whitelisting of people you email, another thing I didnt notice in Forefront was greylists, and tarpit delay. The best of all ORF is layed out with far more options {than 4front}, and yet I can configure it in the same amount of time, and ORFs memory and CPU footprint is very small at around 10mb ram. Settings are saved in a text file, so I can quickly pass my golden installation on to other clients Exchange servers, making configuration even quicker - like 3 minutes.

    Whats more the, the reports in ORF are very clear and concise and actually solved a problem for me in 3 minutes, at which 4 hours of trying to use microsoft resources failed.

    Coming in at just under $300 one time license, ORF is worlds below the microsoft platform, and at that same cost it will work on any version of Exchange from SBS to Enterprise, and includes SQL integration for settings and reports at no additional cost.

    On to viruses and spyware:
    Comodos antivirus engine is great at around 15 mb ram, and NOD32 uses a bit more at about 30 mb- still worlds below Symantec at 200 mb.

    The Forefront platform looks great, seems well thought out, seems to work well, looks thorough, but I am reluctant to recommend it at all because it still lacks a couple of minor items that competing solutions have, and the implementation cost would be staggering compared to other solutions, even if your IT is on salary, they might have something better to do, finally not to mention the actual cost of the licenses. I dont know what Forefront costs (we used a 120 day trial), but I know its pre-requisites are very costly, like SQL server and Exchange Enterprise, and multiple servers for its recommended deployment like Windows Essential Business Server (actually 3-4 server solution for network security and management). As said, it would most likely fit very well on a 500 node network that has unlimited IT staff on salary, and would most likely in the long run save time and run very efficient, but it does not even belong on a medium sized network of 100 users.
    ****************************************

    The same goes for Server 2008 Standard and Exchange 2007, there are some advantages over previous versions, but unless your infrastructure *requires* them, its not worth it - a client with less then 50 users recently requested an upgrade from their Small Business Server 2003 platform to full blown Server 2008 Standard - nix!!

  • Friday, May 8, 2009

    Anonymous-e-Mail AntiSpam



    A common misconception in spam prevention seems to be "I just need to filter it", well I spit in the face of that concept, here is a new one - the less people with your address, the better - plain and simple. The more spam you filter, the more chances you will get legit mail confused with spam, an important client email in your spam box, or junk in your inbox.

    The first rule for spam prevention - dont give your address out if you dont know what you will receive - you may say "i really need to join this mailing list" or "I *need* to register for this online sweepstake" - well in comes anonymous mail accounts, and the number one being spamgourmet.com

    www.spamgourmet.com will not only hide your true email from receiving junk, but will also allow you to send/reply to mail without revealing your true address as well. The best part - its all done using your regular email program, no need to check some other site, no need to install any software. Just hand out your spamgourmet address to any site, or anyone, and spamgourmet will auto-forward any mail to your real email, if you reply, it actually replys back to the spamgourmet server, strips your real address out, and forwards it on to the recipient showing your fake email. 
     
    You set a number for how many emails you wish to receive at this address and once that amount has been exceeded any further spam gets "eaten". There is a max of 20 emails (there is even a way around this...keep reading).
     
    Read their FAQ - it is amazing, try the advanced mode out for some added features, for instance if you want to exceed the maximum 20 spam emails, its right there in advanced. They also have several dozen other email domains that you can use so it doesnt say @spamgourmet.com, just enable advanced mode, and click "send a message".  

     This is an open source system that was started in 2000, so I think it really is the best around, and its free.

    www.gishpuppy.com also lets you send/receive, but they dont seem to be as reliable as the gourmet site.

    And finally here are some more temporary junk mail sites:

    http://www.sizlopedia.com/2007/05/27/top-20-temporary-and-disposable-email-services/

    Ok - I wish I had some really cool spam filters to post here, but I think I will leave that to another article.

    Monday, May 4, 2009

    Apple + Google = uhoh??

    Was reading some of my junk feeds just now and saw this, looks like someone doesnt like the close board of directors that google and apple share (2 members reside on both boards at the moment), i guess this violates one of the old anti-trust acts so there may be some trouble to be had. I - well I am suspicious of both of them at all times;)... just thought it interesting.

    Green Machines....

    Verdiem has  released a new program called Edison that can actually tell you how much power your PC is using, and aide you in better managing your PC's power usage. - I am going to install it on my Atom asap - with that much power savings on an Atom I should be able to displace a new V8:)~~~