I don’t work on Chromebooks very often. There isn’t much that can go wrong with them. Recently, I was given a Chromebook to work on that had been hacked. It wasn’t really hacked, and from what I’ve read, in terms of security, a Chromebook is about as secure as you can get. I don’t know how true that is, but it seems likely.
In this case, the person had a pop-up in the Chrome browser saying he had been hacked, by Russians no less. Very specific. Hackers don’t usually tell you anything about themselves. I recognized the pop-up, as I’ve seen that sort of thing on Windows machines before. The computer isn’t compromised, it’s just being annoying. In this case, I moved the cursor to one of the 3 pop-up windows and an X and a tool icon appeared I clicked on the tool icon and selected Block this sender. All three pop-up windows immediately disappeared and did not return. Some Internet suggestions were to reset the browser, or even reset the Chromebook. Both seemed a tad extreme. This isn’t a ‘cure’, since another annoying site can do the same thing. With malware and hijacks, it’s a constant battle. They will always be out there phishing, and you will always try to not get hooked. The thing to remember is to NOT CALL THE NUMBER and give them your time and money. Breathe, and remember that the Russians didn’t hack you. Next thing. Chromebooks are kind of cool. While I am used to Windows, and Macs are also great, Chromebooks are likely all that many of us need. The Chromebook simplifies what most of us are doing, which is going on the internet. Google also supplies many free apps, like word processing and spreadsheets, and it’s FREE. If you have an old laptop you haven’t given me yet, you might want to turn it into a Chromebook and try it out. You can download the software to a USB drive and run it on anything, or even install it to the old laptop, which I recommend. Again, it’s free. I’ve written about it before, but this time, I’ll let Linus guide you through the process, from why it’s worth doing to the actual doing of it. Watch the Youtube video HERE. I keep writing about phishing scams because people keep falling for them. They are so common, and some can be quite persuasive. It’s understandable to click on a link in an email purporting to be from UPS saying there is a delay in your delivery, especially if you are actually expecting a UPS package.
Phishing scams are ‘Fishing' for information, using bait such as delivery has been delayed, a bank account has been compromised, or your email has been accessed on a new device, in China, was it you? Those are just a few, and generally, all fake. One scam recently has been the ‘unusual sign on activity’ mail. It suggests your email was accessed somewhere or sometime which could not have been you. A link is provided if it wasn’t you. DON’T CLICK THE LINK. It leads to trouble. There are common variations on the theme, and I get legitimate ones from Gmail, but there are no links. That’s a clue. The Gmail emails tell me to go to my Gmail account and do something, rather than provide a link. That’s what to look out for, as the link is the hook, and you are the ‘fish’. You can read about this sort of thing HERE. I get phishing on my cell phone too. I just delete the text messages and have no idea what the goal is. Often, it’s seemingly innocuous asking me why I haven’t called lately, or they left their coat in my car, short messages, nothing identifiable. Weird. When I delete them the option to also report as spam comes up, which I do. With emails, I do the same, send to junk folder and report. I don’t know that it does any good, but I feel better doing it.
I was recently contacted to work on a computer where she said her Gmail was no longer working. She was using Outlook 2013 and had no longer been receiving any Gmail messages. In the past, I would have gone into her Gmail account and turned on the toggle to Allow Less Secure Apps. That isn’t there anymore.
While the easiest way to resolve the issue is to use Gmail in a browser instead of Outlook, I was intrigued. It turns out, for an older mail client, you need to do something different. After poking around, I found out you need to generate a special password in your Gmail account and use that as the password in Outlook. It’s not that simple of course, because first you need to turn on 2 factor authentication in Gmail. It sounds more complicated than it is, and it’s no doubt more complicated than it needs to be, but if you are using an older email client and want to use your Gmail account, that’s what you have to do. For a written explanation of how to do all that, go HERE. If you prefer a YouTube video showing what to do, then try THIS.
Now, just in case you thought Gmail was being persnickety, Carol told me her iCloud account wasn’t working anymore in her Outlook. She’s using a current Office 365, so that seemed strange to me, because it was the same problem. It turns out the issue is with using 2 factor authentication on Apple, which is the correct thing to do. She sent me an article on it, and it turns out to be the same thing as the Gmail problem. There’s a way to generate an app specific password in iCloud that has to be used with Outlook. The article from Microsoft is HERE.
It’s not as bad as it sounds, just something ‘new’ that needs to be done. To the point
A short tech tip. One I particularly like though. I love my iPhone. I loved my Android. The one thing that smartphones don’t do all that well though, IMHO, is be a phone. My iPhone has been doing some weird things since I got it from Carol. When I mentioned it to Carol, she said it did that for her as well. Maybe it’s the iPhone 11, I don’t know. Anyway, in particular, it loses it’s cell connection. No bars, no cell service, even when I’m in a location with cell service. So I press the 2 buttons, slide the bar to power off, wait a minute, press the power button and wait for the Apple logo. As of late, Apple has added a Siri command to restart the phone for you. This feature only works on iOS 16. Restart your iPhone using this simple voice command. As long as you have the "Hey Siri" feature enabled, which constantly listens for the two-word command, you can say the following to restart your iPhone:
Much better. Read the full article on CNET. Pictures take up a lot of space on your phone. On a computer in general, pics are where the space goes. The cameras in smart phones these days take great pictures. Every year the manufacturers make sure to advertise how much better their cameras are than everyone else’s. Great for us, in a way. It means we need more storage to keep those photos. Bigger storage drives in a computer or phone, more cloud storage, more costly as well.
And when sending the picture to someone, they don’t really need to see your garlic shrimp dinner at 6Mb, no matter how delicious. And 6 months later, you won’t need to refer to it on your phone, a 3” square, at that size either. David, Carol’s brother, referenced a great article on this very thing. Read it yourself Here. Note from Carol: Images for the web do not have to be large. Print requires a much higher resolution than websites. Both my Inbox and I would appreciate smaller images. 😉 |
Tech TipsThere's a lot of fake information out there. Please be scrupulous about what you share on Facebook and other platforms. Here are some trusted sources. Please don't rely on social media for your information.
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