Welcome to Lorewing Web Design Company
        --  How Wi-Fi Attackers Poison Browsers -- --  Microsoft Pulls Patch that Causes Blue Screen of Death -- --  The Buzz About Google Buzz -- --  Yahoo’s Sketch-a-Search: Quick on the Draw -- --  Test Drive: Facebook's Redesign Is a Step Forward -- --  Early Windows 7 Testers Must Soon Upgrade or Backtrack -- --  Google's Next Venture: Universal Translator -- --  Open Ebook Battle Ends, but the War Continues -- --  Google Eyes Social Net Role for Gmail -- --  Microsoft E-health Research Taps Xbox, Mobile Phones --
Golden
500 MB Disk Space
30 Email boxes
10 GB Transfer
Silver
1000 MB Disk Space
100 Email boxes
25 GB Transfer
Economic
2000 MB Disk Space
200 Email boxes
35 GB Transfer

Subscrib and get Our News

Your Name

Your Email

 

Netbook users worried about storing sensitive data on their portables are being offered the world's first whole-disk encryption that will run useably on Intel's Atom processor.

According to UK distributor, Security IP, C4KNetbook from Spanish company Secuware has been written from the ground up to enable transparent hard disk encryption on a class of processor not normally thought to be capable of handling its demands.

Despite its single core, low clock speeds, and more limited instruction pipelining, the Atom chip does have some hidden features that belie its image as a basic part. On more recent versions of the Atom this will include hyperthreading, a feature missing on many apparently more powerful Intel chips.

On C4KNetbook, a particular emphasis was given to processor I/O, which is where encryption places most of its demands on whole-disk systems. Security IP claims this optimisation means that the machine will perform as it would without encryption installed, keeping overhead to low levels.

The software is also FIPS 140-2 certified software, offers pre-boot authentication using digital certificates, smart cards or USB tokens, or simply using a conventional password.

If the product makes business use of netbooks viable from a security standpoint, is this a problem that businesses really care about in the first place?

According to Security IP, the case for netbook computers in business is really about replacing conventional laptops. In many cases, laptops are overkill to run email and perhaps a single business application, and the netbook is a cheaper alternative if the security can be put in place.

Public sector organisations, in particular, rate encryption with FIPS-140-2 compliance as being important before a netbook can even be contemplated, and this software could overcome that final obstacle.

The C4KNetbook software does have some limitations. It only runs on Atom-based systems (no other families such as Via's C7 are supported as being 'optimised') and also only works on the 32-bit versions of Windows so Linux-based netbooks are out.

Secuwave's C4K costs £45 (approx $70) per system on a one-off basis, or lower with volume pricing.

 
 

Other News

 

How Wi-Fi Attackers Poison Browsers

Public Wi-Fi networks such as those in coffee shops and airports present a bigger security threat than ever to computer users because attackers can...

Microsoft Pulls Patch that Causes Blue Screen of Death

Microsoft late Thursday said it had halted distribution of a security update linked to crippled Windows XP PCs that display the notorious Blue Screen...

The Buzz About Google Buzz

Google's latest social media experiment came to life on Tuesday in the form of Google Buzz: a social media sharing service built into your Gmail...

WinRAR Complete Guide

How to use ftp

How to use Cpanel

What are the types of hosting?

What is the DNS? And why we use

What is the domain name (domain)?

Why does the person or company nead hosting?

All Right Reserved @ Lorewing 1997 -2009
|
|
|
 
|
|