Apple's New IMAC Is Thinnest Yet

Written by Craig Crossman


Losing weight has become a national obsession. Thin is in and it's not just withrepparttar human form. Some ofrepparttar 107657 most desirable technology products of today are thin andrepparttar 107658 thinnerrepparttar 107659 better. New digital cameras are thin enough to slip into a shirt pocket. Portable mp3 players and evenrepparttar 107660 latest stereo components are losing weight. And let's not forget those wonderful flat plasma TV sets that hang on a wall, and who doesn't want a flat panel computer screen on their computer these days? Unlessrepparttar 107661 computer ISrepparttar 107662 flat screen. Well that's exactly what Apple has done to its newest generation of iMac computer.

Looking atrepparttar 107663 new iMacs is like looking at a computer monitor withoutrepparttar 107664 computer. Apple has managed to cramrepparttar 107665 entire computer into a beautifully sculpted display that comes in a wide-screen format. In fact,repparttar 107666 new iMac's form looks pretty much like Apple's recently introduced line of 20, 23 and 30 inch screens. The brushed aluminum base allowsrepparttar 107667 screen to seemingly float aboverepparttar 107668 desk. A touch ofrepparttar 107669 finger lets you pivotrepparttar 107670 screen to an ideal viewing angle. The base is also part ofrepparttar 107671 iMac's cable management system that guides all ofrepparttar 107672 cables that plug into a vertical array of five USB ports (three USB 2.0), two FireWire 400 ports, a 10/100BASE-T Ethernet and a 56K V.92 modem port onrepparttar 107673 left side ofrepparttar 107674 reversed screen.

Is Your Computer Sick?

Written by Jim Edwards


Viruses and spyware usually show up on your computer one of two ways.

Either they invade your system with a frontal assault likerepparttar Huns attackingrepparttar 107656 Romans, or they sneak in a back door like a cat burglar.

Either way, once a virus or piece of spyware gets on your system, getting it off can rate harder than curing a severe case of trench foot!

Viruses, malicious programs designed to disrupt normal computing, and spyware, programs intended to literally "spy" on your activities, can enter your computer a number of ways.

Most commonly they enter your system through an email attachment, by sharing files with an infected computer by disk, as a "ride along" with a 3rd party program you install, or through a "back door" port in your computer.

Regardless of how they get on your system, once in place, they cause no end of headaches and frustration.

The following represent typical signs you may suffer from infection by a virus or piece of spyware.

Your computer starts acting oddly by doing things it never did previously.

Your modem starts trying to dial out torepparttar 107657 Internet without you initiating a surfing session.

You notice that files start disappearing,repparttar 107658 system stalls, runs slowly, or even crashes frequently.

Your computer takes progressively longer to boot up every time you start it or you notice that your available hard drive space has disappeared. Strange popup windows appear, even when you're not surfingrepparttar 107659 web, or you delete a program and it "magically" reappears next time you bootrepparttar 107660 system.

If you suspect you a virus or a piece of spyware has invaded your computer, follow these steps to first identify and then deleterepparttar 107661 offending code:

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