Web Site Spotlight
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With over 14 years of experience Infinity Technology has designed and developed hundreds of websites. View our Website portfolio
Infinity Technology recently launched the Woodrow Engineering Web site. Woodrow Engineering had us design and develop their web site. In addition, we setup a Facebook Fan Page, conducted and implemented Search Engine Optimization, and other Internet Marketing tactics. Experience, our talent at FootMeasure.com.
About Woodrow Engineering
Your
feet consist of 26 bones, 33 joints and more that 100 tendons, muscles and
ligaments. Your choice of shoes, and how they fit, are critical to your foot
health. Woodrow Engineering has spent the last 3 years developing an economical
foot measuring device that helps you take better care of your feet.
This
family foot measuring device, cleverly named the fOOter, can be used to measure
foot length and width for men, women and children. Utilizing the unique
properties of polypropylene and living hinges, you can take it anywhere.
Weighing only 2 ounces, it collapses to a mere 7 1/8" x 2 1/8" x
3/4".
Philanthropy has
always been a way of life for Mr. Michael Ball, inventor of the fOOter. VIEW
the Video to find out how Woodrow Engineering and the fOOter are helping around
the globe.
Watch the Video
Woodrow Engineering donates to Samaritan's Feet Nonprofit Ministry
Learn more about Woodrow Engineering at FootMeasure.com
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The Technology Buzz
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Crimeware gets worse - How to avoid being robbed by your PC
The malware threat to Windows computers continues to get worse so much so, there's a new term to describe malicious software that transfers money from online account at financial services companies - crimeware.Last week, an article at Technology Review told about a construction firm that had $447,000 taken out of their bank account by crimeware software on one of their computers. What makes this story particularly interesting is that the unnamed bank employed one time passwords. Perhaps you've seen the small key fobs that display a new password every minute. if you don't have the keyfob, you can't logon. But the computer was already infected and was being used by a legitimate user. Retina scanners would not have prevented the crime. While the well-verified user was logged on, making legitimate transfers, the crimeware software generated 27 transfers in the space of a few minutes. According to the firms president "They not only got into my system, they were able to ascertain how much they could draw, so they drew the limit". It can't get any worse. What to do?
By Michael Horowitz
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