December 2007                    

ACTIVE X

A Windows technology which allows programmers to do various things on your computer. Unfortunately it also allows hackers to do bad things to your computer, particularly via webpages in Internet Explorer, and is safest switched off. (In Internet Explorer go to Tools/Internet Options/Security and set the Security Zone slider for Internet to High. A few websites won't display quite as intended without it, but most bad ones won't be able to hijack you).




Latest Virus Threats
Click below for descriptions!

W32.Hitapop
Trojan.Horst
W32.Yalove
W32.Fujacks.B
For daily virus threats visit www.symantec.com




Experience Server Virtualization - FREE!!

Read the data sheet for more information or download the free VMware Server and try it for yourself.




HP products raise the bar!

Efficiency begins with HP products


HP has invested in energy research for ten years. Our power and cooling team alone has more than 1,000 patents. HP offers customers a holistic energy-efficiency solution, from PDAs to data centers. With HP products, customers not only save money and protect their capital investment, but also lower energy usage and protect the environment.


Innovation continues with energy-efficient processes

HP goes beyond product design in thinking about energy efficiency by helping customers manage processes to save energy and money. In addition, HP works internally and with suppliers to monitor and reduce energy use all along the supply chain.


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(Andrew Watson, President and
Mark Zienowicz, Vice-President)

The Management Team and Staff of VODA Computer Systems would like to express our deepest appreciation for your continuing support.

We would like to take this opportunity to wish all our clients and partners a great Christmas and a fantastic 2008. It's been another busy year for Voda Computer Systems with the launch of our new Managed Services offering Voda Care 2.0 in October, our move to a brand new head office and national recognition for our marketing efforts (we won gold for Best Marketing Initiative at the CDN awards...Yeah!). 

We hope that 2008 will continue the same trend and bring our clients and partners success and great achievements in business.  As always, we are excited about the opportunity of working with all of you in the new year and we look forward to another year of exciting projects and successful cooperation.

Best wishes from the entire Voda team.




Congratulations to VODA Computer Systems for winning GOLD in the 2007 Channel Elite Awards. The 5th Annual CDN Channel Elite Awards recognizes the achievement of partners in the IT channel. This award honored the partner that created and executed a dynamic advertising, marketing campaign or event showcase in 2006. VODA Computers entered it's 2006 Technology Showcase.

click here for more info!


Limited Quantities! 2 per customer!

Please call a VODA Sales Representative today! 1.877.374.8002


Here are some suggestions for gift ideas if you are having trouble coming up with ideas!

Please note that VODA can get some of these items, but not all. Please contact us if you have any questions.

 

 


XMAS RECIPE

Rudolph the Red-nosed Cupcake

RECIPE INGREDIENTS:

A cooled cupcake (baked from your favorite recipe) Chocolate frosting
Round, red lollipops (we used a Blow Pop)
M&M's candies
Black decorators' gel frosting
Pretzels
Red shoestring licorice

 

1. To make one, first frost a cooled cupcake (baked from your favorite recipe) with chocolate frosting.

2. Unwrap a round, red lollipop (we used a Blow Pop), trim the stem slightly, and stick it into the center of the cupcake for Rudolph's very shiny nose.

3. For eyes, set 2 M&M's candies in place, then dot them with black decorators' gel frosting. Carefully break large thin pretzels into antler shapes (this may take some practice!) and insert them into the top of the cupcake. Finally, add a short piece of red shoestring licorice for a mouth.



CHOCOLATE BANANA MARTINI

INGREDIENTS

  • 1 teaspoon chocolate syrup
  • 1 (1.5 fluid ounce) jigger banana liqueur
  • 1 (1.5 fluid ounce) jigger coffee flavored liqueur
  • 1/3 cup milk
  • 1 cup crushed ice
  • 1/2 banana, peeled and sliced lengthwise into quarters
DIRECTIONS
  1. Drizzle chocolate syrup round the inside of a martini glass.
Combine banana liqueur, coffee liqueur, milk, and ice in a shaker. Shake vigorously, and strain into martini glass. Garnish with banana spears.

 

 








If there is a topic that you would like to see covered in a Voda newsletter please email us at
newsletter@vodagroup.com




Are you ready for a new printer or multifunction product? HP provides you with three replacement models for each older product sku. Click here to learn more!





Voda Computer Systems Ltd. would like to welcome Lydell Hrabok as a Service Technician to the Kelowna team. Here’s a few words from Lydell himself.

First off, I would just like to send out an extended thanks to Wade, Kirby and Dave for their roles in hiring me and making me part of the Voda team.  I’m sure Wade was tired of me calling him already about the position to see if it’s been filled.  Sorry Wade!

My work history includes a brief stay in Medicine Hat, AB working for Auto-Star Compusystems.  I was a Technical Support Analyst.  Prior to that I did Contract Tech work for Jump.ca in Saskatoon, SK, which is where I was born and raised.

I met my girlfriend Tanya when I played for the Okanagan Sun back in 1995.  We started dating in 1996 and have been together ever since.  I think it's almost time to get married...at least that's what she's telling me!

Outside of business hours I am a huge Canadian and American Football fan and watch it every opportunity I get. Welcome aboard Lydell.


White Christmas
England has only known seven white Christmases in the entire twentieth century. According to the records of the Meteorological Office in London, snow fell on Christmas Day only in 1938 and 1976. (The definition of a white Christmas in England is when one snowflake falls on the roof of the London Weather Centre.)

Christmas Food
An old wives' tale says that bread baked on Christmas Eve will never go mouldy.
The Christmas turkey was imported to France by the Jesuits and it is still known in some French dialects as a 'Jesuite'.
Christmas pudding was first made as a kind of soup with raisins and wine in it.
Christmas Pudding originates from an old, Celtic dish known as 'frumenty'.

Christmas Day
December 25th was not celebrated as the birthday of Christ until the year AD 440.
The Queen's Christmas speech was televised for the first time in 1957.
Christmas crackers were invented by Thomas Smith. He had imported some French novelties to sell as Christmas gifts, but these were not popular until he wrapped them up and added a snapper.

Decorations
Each year between 34-36 million Christmas trees are produced to cope with the holiday demand.
Electric tree lights were first used just 3 years after Thomas Edison has his first mass public demonstration of electric lights back in 1879. Thomas Edison’s assistant, Edward Johnson, came up with the idea of electric lights for Christmas trees in 1882. His lights were a huge hit. It took quite a few years, however, before they would be made available to the general public.
In 1895 Ralph Morris, an American telephonist, invented the string of electric Christmas lights similar to the ones we use today. The actual strings of lights had already been manufactured for use in telephone switchboards. Morris looked at the tiny bulbs and had the idea of using them on his tree.

Christmas Banned
In 1647, the English parliament passed a law that made Christmas illegal. Christmas festivities were banned by Puritan leader Oliver Cromwell, who considered feasting and revelry on what was supposed to be a holy day to be immoral. Anybody caught celebrating Christmas was arrested. The ban was lifted only when the Puritans lost power in 1660.

Christmas Cards and Christmas Post
In 1843, the first Christmas card was created on the instructions of an Englishman, Sir Henry Cole. J.C. Horsley designed the card and sold 1000 copies in London.
Postmen in Victorian England were popularly called "robins". This was because their uniforms were red. Victorian Xmas cards often showed a robin delivering Xmas mail.
In the nineteenth century, the British Post Office used to deliver cards on Christmas morning.
The first Christmas stamp was released in Canada in 1898.

Father Christmas
Father Christmas has two addresses, Edinburgh and the North Pole. Letters addressed to 'TOYLAND' or 'SNOWLAND' go to Edinburgh, but letters addressed to 'THE NORTH POLE' have to be sent there because there really is such a place!
Father Christmas' reindeers are called Rudolph - the leader who lights the way with his bright red nose - Dasher, Dancer, Prancer, Vixen, Donder, Blitzen, Cupid and Comet. (Donder is also known as Donner.)

Christmas Carols
St Francis of Assisi introduced Christmas Carols to formal church services.
The word comes from the ancient Greek choros, which means "dancing in a circle," and from the Old French word carole, meaning "a song to accompany dancing."
The first instrument on which the carol "Silent Night" was played was a guitar.
The popular Christmas song "Jingle Bells" was composed in 1857 by James Pierpont, and was originally called "One-Horse Open Sleigh." It was actually written for Thanksgiving, not Xmas.

Twelfth Night
It is not until Twelfth Night that the figures of the Three Kings are supposed to be added to the Christmas crib.
In Germany, Twelfth Night is known as 'Three Kings Day'.
The "Twelve Days of Christmas " gifts: A partridge in a pear tree, two turtledoves, three French hens, four calling birds, five gold rings, six geese laying, seven swans swimming, eight maids milking, nine ladies dancing, ten lords leaping, eleven pipers piping, and twelve drummers drumming. There are 364 gifts altogether, one for everyday of the year.
The poem commonly referred to as "The Night Before Christmas" was originally titled "A Visit From Saint Nicholas." This poem was written by Clement Moore for his children and some guests, one of whom anonymously sent the poem to a New York newspaper for publication.


The System Boot Process Explained

The typical computer system boots over and over again with no problems, starting the computer's operating system (OS) and identifying its hardware and software components that all work together to provide the user with the complete computing experience. But what happens between the time that the user powers up the computer and when the GUI icons appear on the desktop?
In order for a computer to successfully boot, its BIOS, operating system and hardware components must all be working properly; failure of any one of these three elements will likely result in a failed boot sequence.
When the computer's power is first turned on, the CPU initializes itself, which is triggered by a series of clock ticks generated by the system clock. Part of the CPU's initialization is to look to the system's ROM BIOS for its first instruction in the startup program. The ROM BIOS stores the first instruction, which is the instruction to run the power-on self test (POST), in a predetermined memory address. POST begins by checking the BIOS chip and then tests CMOS RAM. If the POST does not detect a battery failure, it then continues to initialize the CPU, checking the inventoried hardware devices (such as the video card), secondary storage devices, such as hard drives and floppy drives, ports and other hardware devices, such as the keyboard and mouse, to ensure they are functioning properly.
Once the POST has determined that all components are functioning properly and the CPU has successfully initialized, the BIOS looks for an OS to load.
The BIOS typically looks to the CMOS chip to tell it where to find the OS, and in most PCs, the OS loads from the C drive on the hard drive even though the BIOS has the capability to load the OS from a floppy disk, CD or ZIP drive. The order of drives that the CMOS looks to in order to locate the OS is called the boot sequence, which can be changed by altering the CMOS setup. Looking to the appropriate boot drive, the BIOS will first encounter the boot record, which tells it where to find the beginning of the OS and the subsequent program file that will initialize the OS.
Once the OS initializes, the BIOS copies its files into memory and the OS basically takes over control of the boot process. Now in control, the OS performs another inventory of the system's memory and memory availability (which the BIOS already checked) and loads the device drivers that it needs to control the peripheral devices, such as a printer, scanner, optical drive, mouse and keyboard. This is the final stage in the boot process, after which the user can access the system’s applications to perform tasks.

 




"Since it is the holiday season, I would like to send out a few holiday e-cards.  What is a good site that will allow me to do this for free?"

 


There are many sites out there that say they offer free holiday e-cards however many of them are not as free as they say.  Many of them offer a free trial, after which your credit card is billed a fee to continue using their services. Other sites allow you to send free e-cards, however these sites download spyware to your machine which can cause popups and can really slow down your pc.  Once clean site that we found was http://www.123christmas-greetings.com/ . This site has many cards that are fun, free and fully customizable.  You can even change the colour of the text and music that is played with the card.  This site also allows you to receive e-mail notifications when the other person views your card.  All in all, this is a very good site to go to for free, safe holiday e-cards.

 

If you have a technical question you would like answered please email newsletter@vodagroup.com and our VODA Experts will do their best to respond! You might just see it answered in an upcoming newsletter!


MISSION Statement: Voda is committed to achieving the highest levels of customer satisfaction. We ensure that we make available a highly trained and skilled team of professionals. Our people in combination with our commitment to excellence provide optimal Technology Solutions to our customers' organizations.


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