Mark

thank you for your reply below.

First point re Router: I would prefer to steer clear of wireless routers as
I still don't trust them with regard to interception. I am a family
historian and have loads of certificate on my H/D which I need to keep safe,
so PC security is paramount. Bad enough with the government snooping on our
internet activity. I do know that Linux is safer than windows.
So I would prefer a corded router (ADSL for Tiscali)

Secondly re tranfering my MS docs into OpenOffice - Again it is my family
history stuff, which I tried once to do an automatic import into OpenOffice
and some of the documents, the content was not reconised and went missing.
As these are important documents to me, I just thought it best to be on the
safe side and manualy copy the one's from MS word, the PDF files will be
fine as they are. It will only need to done once.

Judy
----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Mark Rogers" <m...@quarella.co.uk>
To: "Peterborough LUG - No commercial posts" <peterboro@mailman.lug.org.uk>
Sent: Wednesday, February 04, 2009 9:41 AM
Subject: Re: [Peterboro] Hello from Judy a newbie + 2 questions


> Phil Thompson wrote:
>> the best way to connect any pc to broadband is via ethernet, using an
>> ethernet router.
>
> I'll second that. In particular, the best way to connect Windows PCs is
> via a router.
>
> Windows modem drivers invariably install all sorts of rubbish on the PC
> which is fine until you need to move to another modem because the one
> you have died, but then the drivers start to get messy. However the main
> reason is that it is very risky putting a Windows PC (or - to a lesser
> extent - a Linux PC) directly onto the Internet. A router becomes the
> first point of attack for anything trying to get in from the outside,
> and they're much better at coping with that than PCs are. Your PC on the
> other side of it simply isn't "routable" from the outside - that is you
> cannot even address it from the Internet side, never mind try to attack 
> it.
>
> And, of-course, once you have two PCs to connect a router becomes the
> only sensible option anyway.
>
> I would not be at all surprised if the issues with Tiscali's USB modem
> have been resolved by the community (regardless of whether Tiscali or
> their hardware manufacturer assisted with that), but I'd still suggest
> getting hold of a router. Assuming it's an ADSL connection (ie uses the
> BT phone line, which I assume is the only option Tiscali have) then any
> ADSL router will be fine but some might have extra features you can make
> use of (wireless, for example). (If it's a cable connection (eg
> Virgin/NTL) you need a cable router instead.)
>
> NB: Regarding office documents, I have a mixture of .doc, .docx and .odt
> files and don't really pay too much attention to which format they are
> unless I need to forward them to someone. I don't see much reason to
> convert between formats. (Everybody in the office now has OpenOffice
> installed to allow them to access .docx files - go Microsoft!)
>
> -- 
> Mark Rogers // More Solutions Ltd (Peterborough Office) // 0845 45 89 555
> Registered in England (0456 0902) at 13 Clarke Rd, Milton Keynes, MK1 1LG
>
>
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> Peterboro@mailman.lug.org.uk
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> 



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