Monday, June 26, 2006

Backup4all 3.2 released


Backup4all 3.2 released
Backup4all 3.2 is now available for download. Changes in this version: option to choose "Windows Scheduler" or "standalone scheduler" for scheduled backup jobs before "Import", "Import inactive schedulers" option added, "Close after run" option added to "Create Shortcut" when using the main application, "Hide Window" option added to "Create Shortcut" when using command line application, "Backup List" window is now resizable, minor bug fixes. Visit http://www.backup4all.com/download.php and download the latest version!
Source: www.backup4all.com

Icon in system tray
What does it mean when the folder in the system tray is: [list] [*]a blank folder [*]a folder with the zip going up and down, or [*]a folder with a partial zipper at the bottom of the folder? [/list] Thanks! ;)http://free-backup.info
Source: free-backup.info

Japanese language pack now available for download
Backup4all Japanese Language Pack is available for download. Visit our Language Packs page (http://www.backup4all.com/languages.php) to download it. We are looking for people who can help us localize Backup4all. If you are interested, please read the Language Packs section for more information or contact us directly at support@backup4all.com
Source: www.backup4all.com

Spanish language pack now available for download
Backup4all Spanish Language Pack is available for download. Visit our Language Packs page (http://www.backup4all.com/languages.php) to download it. We are looking for people who can help us localize Backup4all. If you are interested, please read the Language Packs section for more information or contact us directly at support@backup4all.com
Source: www.backup4all.com

Net neutrality lobbying intensifies
(InfoWorld) - Advocates on both sides of a debate in the U.S. Congress over net neutrality pumped up their lobbying efforts late this week, even as a Senate committee delayed acting on the issue. The Senate Commerce, Science and Transportation Committee, scheduled Thursday to consider amendments to a 150-plus-page broadband bill, met for about two hours before adjourning to allow senators to vote on other legislation. The committee got through about 10 of the more than 210 amendments proposed for the broadband bill before committee Chairman Ted Stevens, an Alaska Republican, rescheduled the hearing for 10 a.m. Tuesday. [ See also: Net neutrality face-off on NPR ] The delay allows tech companies and consumer groups pushing for Congress to prohibit broadband providers from blocking or impairing competing Web content to continue their efforts to strengthen net neutrality provisions in the bill. The committee on Thursday did not address net neutrality and the bill's broadcast flag provision, which would require the U.S. Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to create a technology plan for protecting online video and audio files. Entertainment companies have pushed for broadcast flag rules, saying Congress should protect their copyrights. But some consumer and technology groups have protested the provision, saying it would restrict legal consumer uses of video and audio files. But most of the debate over the bill centers around net neutrality. The latest version of the bill, sponsored by Stevens, would allow broadband customers to run Internet applications of their choosing, but it doesn't prohibit broadband providers from giving their own services preference over competing services. An earlier version of the bill only instructed the FCC to make annual reports to Congress on the free flow of Internet information. A bill passed by the House this month would allow the FCC to investigate content-blocking complaints after the fact. Both the House and the Senate bills would streamline franchising requirements for telecom companies rolling out television-over-Internet Protocol services in competition with cable TV. Broadband providers such as AT&T Inc. say they have no plans to block competing Web content, but they want to be able to explore new business plans that allow them to charge new fees to give some Web content priority routing across the Internet. Net neutrality backers have protested that such a plan would create a two-tiered network, with content from broadband providers and their partners in a fast lane and everyone else in a slow lane. This week, Tim Berners-Lee, inventor of the World Wide Web, recorded a video in support of a net neutrality law. "When I invented the Web, I didn't have to ask anyone's permission," Berners-Lee wrote in his blog. "Now, hundreds of millions of people are using it freely. I am worried that that is going to end in the USA." Meanwhile, AT&T and other broadband providers continued to push for Congress to allow them to control their own broadband pipes without government regulation. AT&T rejected a proposal, made by civil liberties group the Center for Democracy and Technology (CDT), that would allow broadband providers to offer special services on private networks separate from the Internet, but require them to treat all Internet traffic the same. "When you put lipstick on a pig it's still a pig," said AT&T spokeswoman Claudia Jones. "CDT's proposal is a transparent effort to put some lipstick on the many proposals to regulate the Internet. This proposal will still result in consumers paying all the costs of building a better Internet while Internet Goliaths like Google receive government-sanctioned corporate welfare to avoid paying their fair share."SEE ALSO:Groups push alternate net neutrality proposals Senate chairman vows to fight net neutrality regulation
Source: www.infoworld.com

EMC opens software center in China
(InfoWorld) - EMC will open a software development center in Shanghai and invest $500 million in China over the next five years, the company announced Friday. The center is part of EMC's $1.2 billion investment in global research and development, although the company didn't specify the cost of the Shanghai facility. The software center will employ 100 people by the end of the year, and 500 people by 2008, EMC said. The storage vendor is hedging its offshoring bets in Asia. On Wednesday it announced a similar investment in India of $500 million by 2010, and said it would double its staff there, to 1,600, over the same period. While India has been the primary choice for software development offshoring in Asia, a talent shortage and rising costs have driven many companies to look elsewhere. Even Indian companies are now sending contract work to other Asian nations, including China and Vietnam.SEE ALSO:Microsoft steps in to VMware's virtualization arena Taiwan investment to China up 46% in 2006
Source: www.infoworld.com

Greek language pack now available for download
Backup4all Greek Language Pack is available for download. Visit our Language Packs page (http://www.backup4all.com/languages.php) to download it. We are looking for people who can help us localize Backup4all. If you are interested, please read the Language Packs section for more information or contact us directly at support@backup4all.com
Source: www.backup4all.com

Polish language pack now available for download
Backup4all Polish Language Pack is available for download (updated for the latest version). Visit our Language Packs page (http://www.backup4all.com/languages.php) to download it. We are looking for people who can help us localize Backup4all. If you are interested, please read the Language Packs section for more information or contact us directly at support@backup4all.com
Source: www.backup4all.com

Unable to copy files
After I run Back2Zip, I get in the log a message saying "unable to copy 46 files." How do I find out which 46 files have not been copied for backup and why they have not been copied.http://free-backup.info
Source: free-backup.info

Tags: Backup Restore File Recover File Recovery System Update Back Up
Tag: Backup Restore File Recover File Recovery System Update Back Up
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