Archive for the ‘Free Software’ Category

Sebrans ABC Free Software For Kids Tutorial – Video


Sebrans ABC Free Software For Kids Tutorial
Sebran #39;s ABC is a tool to help children study comfortably. http://betdownload.com/sebrans-abc-945-download.

By: More Download

View post:
Sebrans ABC Free Software For Kids Tutorial - Video

Hide and Change ip address – Video


Hide and Change ip address
hide and change ip address free software hide and change ip address hide change ip address free hide ip address and change ip address for anonymous surfing h...

By: Tech Behind

Originally posted here:
Hide and Change ip address - Video

Exclusive! Generate Targeted Leads For FREE(software) – Video


Exclusive! Generate Targeted Leads For FREE(software)
http://www.ProdigySMSBlaster.com Prodigy SMS Blaster is THE MOST Profitable SMS Program on the Planet! It can generate numbers on the spot, no need to buy ex...

By: henrythompson28

Original post:
Exclusive! Generate Targeted Leads For FREE(software) - Video

Trial Microsoft software and services for FREE!

Microsoft gives potential customers the chance to test drive some of its most popular software and services via free trials that ultimately make for better buying decisions.

+[Also on Network World: 10 (FREE!) Microsoft tools to make admins happier | 11 (FREE!) Microsoft tools to make life easier +

Here is a sampling of some of the trials available for businesses that can be fired up via Microsoft Web pages:

Office Professional Plus 2013: Microsoft says this package for businesses contains new features in its component applications that make for better productivity, give more communications options, help meet compliance regulations and offer better management using real time performance monitoring. Word, PowerPoint, Excel, Outlook, OneNote, Access, Lync, and InfoPath are all included in this 60-day trial.

Office 365 Small Business Premium and Midsize Business: See what aspects of this Office-as-a-service package might be practical for particular businesses. Many customers, for example, find that just using Exchange in Microsoft's cloud makes the investment worthwhile. Office 365 Small Business Premium and Midsize Business can be trialed for 30 days each. The small business option comes with 10 user licenses and the one for midsize businesses comes with 25 as well as Active Directory integration and self-service business intelligence.

Microsoft Dynamics CRM Online:Trialing this software can increase sales performance, build insights into customer activity and quickly solve customer problems all while the platform is managed via Microsoft Outlook, the company says. The 30-day trial comes with 25 user licenses plus 5GB of storage, and Microsoft provides wizards and videos for setting up the service quickly.

Windows Azure: During this 30-day trial of Microsoft's cloud services, customers can set up applications, virtual machines based Windows and Linux, and network infrastructure. They can also build Web sites and Web apps in the cloud. The trial includes a $200 credit to spend on the services.

Project Professional 2013: Customers can use this 60-day trial to try out this app for planning projects and collaborating remotely. The system is designed to work with other Microsoft applications and services. The platform provides a tool for making presentations about the progress of projects as well as a tool for gauging what resources will be needed as the project moves along. The system is designed to work with other Microsoft applications and cloud services such as SharePoint and Office 365.

Visio Professional 2013:Microsoft's diagramming and vector graphics program can be given a spin during a 60-day trial. The platform is designed to create diagrams intuitively with new shapes and stencils included among its resources. It also has updated effects and themes and supports co-authoring to make collaboration easier. Diagrams can be shared via Web browsers with no Visio client installed if users also have Microsoft's SharePoint.

Tim Greene covers Microsoft and unified communications for Network World and writes the Mostly Microsoft blog. Reach him at tgreene@nww.com and follow him on Twitter @Tim_Greene.

The rest is here:
Trial Microsoft software and services for FREE!

(Free!) Security Tools you should try

Who doesn't like free stuff? There's a long tradition of free or open-source security tools, and one of the best sites to learn more about them is Security Tools, a running list of what it claims are the 125 best free security tools around.

The Security Tools list, which is maintained by the Nmap Project, is a great spot to search for the best of the free network analysis tools that unfortunately, are used for evil as well as good. It includes the old reliables, such as the multi-platform network protocol analyzer Wireshark, the latest version of which is said to be v.1.10.5 released Dec. 19, 2013, and Aircrack, the 802.11 a/b/g WEP and WPA cracking tool and packet capture offering. But there are also several newer tools, such as Fiddler (the latest version being v.4.4.6.1, released Feb. 20, 2014), which is a web-debugging proxy that can log all HTTP(S) traffic.

+Also on Network World: 15 Free Network Security Tools Worth a Look | 7 games that will eat up your free time +

Sometimes vendors shepherd open source projects, such as the Snort intrusion detection and protection system, which Cisco gained in its acquisition of Sourcefire. Sourcefire founder Marty Roesch, now with Cisco, started Snort. In a much newer project, Cisco says it's open-sourcing next-generation firewalls through its OpenAppID project.

Another long-time favorite, the Metasploit Framework for developing and testing exploit code, remains open source. But it has also been commercialized by Rapid7, which now owns it.

In all, the sectools.org list contains 22 categories of free security tools, including rootkit detectors from Sysinternals as well as vulnerability scanners (though the better commercial versions come with a price tag). Web scanners can be had for free, too.

There are several free anti-virus desktop products, with the most well-known being from AVAST, AVIRA and AVG.

Then there's also Microsoft Security Essentials, anti-virus software available for Windows 7 in 33 languages, for small businesses up to 10 PCs. Several anti-malware vendors, such as Malwarebytes, also offer free but limited versions, mainly as an enticement to win new customers of its paid products.

So how well do the "free" versions typically do?

Dennis Technology Labs (DTL), based in Great Britain, over the years has regularly run a series of anti-virus software tests of both paid and free versions like AVAST and AVIRA. Its latest round of anti-virus tests published in December show that commercial products from Kaspersky, ESET and Symantec's Norton were somewhat more accurate than AVAST and AVIRA's free versions that were available last autumn.

See the rest here:
(Free!) Security Tools you should try