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Showing posts with label Edition. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Edition. Show all posts

Ground Labs Data Recon Standard Edition

Wednesday, July 30, 2014

Data Recon Login Screen For a 1-year subscription on a single PC. Pricing is on a per-machine basis. By Fahmida Y. Rashid

If thieves get their hands on your laptop, will they discover a gold mine of personal information or a barren workspace? Data Recon Standard Edition from GroundLabs ($179 per machine per year) is a lightweight scanning tool that looks for files containing credit card numbers and other potentially sensitive information stored on your computer. The software then helps you either move the data elsewhere or delete the files permanently. Considering that a significant percent of data breaches and exposures occur when an unauthorized user stumbles upon forgotten files on a laptop or file server, small businesses should definitely track down these potential landmines before an incident, and Data Recon is a good way to start.

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Data Recon goes a little further than PANscan, another lightweight scanning tool that looks for sensitive pieces of information. Data Recon can handle a broader variety of data types. It is not, however, as robust as Editors' Choice Identity Finder's Data Discover, but it does share many of the award-winner's scanning and remediation capabilities.

There are enough differences between Data Recon Standard Edition ($179) and Advanced Edition ($399) that they need to be considered separately. This review focuses on Data Recon Standard Edition for one Windows target (which I explain below). Standard Edition allows scanning on Windows workstations and servers, and Linux machines. I get that Macs are a whole different beast, but with more people carrying sensitive data on their pricey Macbooks than ever, I wish Data Recon (and the marketplace in general) would stop ignoring this user segment.

Data Recon Standard Edition can search through text files, multiple encoding types, office documents, compressed (zip) files, local database files, emails stored in client software such as Outlook, and a few other formats.  If you want to scan, say, webmail or email servers, you need the Advanced Edition. Once sensitive data is found, Standard Edition allows you to mask data elements such as credit card numbers, quarantine the file in a secure location, or permanently delete the file. I like the fact that all the remediation features are the same, no matter which edition you choose.

Getting Started With the Software
Pricing varies by the number of systems the software will scan, and this could get expensive very quickly, especially for smaller businesses. The base Data Recon Standard Edition price of $179 provides a 1-year license to scan one target system. The license is tied to that target's MAC address or hostname. If you buy a new computer midway through the year, you need a new license. If you want to scan a laptop and a Windows file share where employees keep their data, that counts as two targets. You can't fool the software by mapping the file share as a drive on the computer, either.

To scan multiple systems, Data Recon offers licenses for 3, 10, 25, 50, 100, 175, and 250 targets. Cost per target drops progressively, so a 3-target license comes out to $119 per target, or $357 for the year; a 10-target license becomes $109 per target, or $1,090 a year; and so on, up to a 250-target license for $59 a target, or $14,750 a year. This is an important service, but it's definitely not cheap. You need to think carefully about where you need to run this software and plan out how many targets you will need. If you aren't sure whether you need the Standard or Advanced version, you can request a free trial license from the website.

The GroundLabs customer support portal lists links for a 32-bit or 64-bit version of Data Recon, and you can decide whether you want to work in a command line or a graphical user interface. I stuck with the GUI and popped in the hostname to generate the correct license. The entire software is a single executable—nothing to unpack or install—and you can see all the licenses associated with your account listed in one place. I love how lightweight the whole thing is.

Scanning Rules, Options
When you run the Windows executable, it opens up a simple window with six icons for data types, and six search settings. Clicking on each icon or option opens a modal window with various options. You make your selections, hit the Search bar at the bottom, and just wait for the scan to finish. Depending on your settings and the number of files selected, your scan can take anywhere from 30 minutes to several hours.

Data Recon: User Interface

Under Card Holder Data, you can define credit card types (Mastercard, American Express, and so on) and issuing country. Under Bank Account Data, you customize the search with tax file numbers, bank account numbers, and the bank routing numbers. National ID contains options for searching for U.S. Social Security numbers, Canadian Social Insurance numbers, United Kingdom National Identity numbers, and other similar numbers from other countries.

Personal Detail is perhaps the most useful section. Here you select mailing address, telephone number, email address, driver's license number, date of birth, login credentials, and passport number. There is also a section to identify health plan information, such as the health insurance claim number and plan identifier.

The final icon opens up a rules engine to define custom data types, which means you can specify a specific string or phrase that you want to search on (for example, "confidential" if you want to make sure you don't have files marked confidential on your laptop). If you want to search for a specific Social Security number (as opposed to any nine-digit number), or an actual address, you can specify that under the custom data type section.

Next: Data Recon Reporting and Remediation


View the original article here

Ground Labs Data Recon Standard Edition

Wednesday, July 23, 2014

Data Recon Login Screen For a 1-year subscription on a single PC. Pricing is on a per-machine basis. By Fahmida Y. Rashid

If thieves get their hands on your laptop, will they discover a gold mine of personal information or a barren workspace? Data Recon Standard Edition from GroundLabs ($179 per machine per year) is a lightweight scanning tool that looks for files containing credit card numbers and other potentially sensitive information stored on your computer. The software then helps you either move the data elsewhere or delete the files permanently. Considering that a significant percent of data breaches and exposures occur when an unauthorized user stumbles upon forgotten files on a laptop or file server, small businesses should definitely track down these potential landmines before an incident, and Data Recon is a good way to start.

Compare Selected

Data Recon goes a little further than PANscan, another lightweight scanning tool that looks for sensitive pieces of information. Data Recon can handle a broader variety of data types. It is not, however, as robust as Editors' Choice Identity Finder's Data Discover, but it does share many of the award-winner's scanning and remediation capabilities.

There are enough differences between Data Recon Standard Edition ($179) and Advanced Edition ($399) that they need to be considered separately. This review focuses on Data Recon Standard Edition for one Windows target (which I explain below). Standard Edition allows scanning on Windows workstations and servers, and Linux machines. I get that Macs are a whole different beast, but with more people carrying sensitive data on their pricey Macbooks than ever, I wish Data Recon (and the marketplace in general) would stop ignoring this user segment.

Data Recon Standard Edition can search through text files, multiple encoding types, office documents, compressed (zip) files, local database files, emails stored in client software such as Outlook, and a few other formats.  If you want to scan, say, webmail or email servers, you need the Advanced Edition. Once sensitive data is found, Standard Edition allows you to mask data elements such as credit card numbers, quarantine the file in a secure location, or permanently delete the file. I like the fact that all the remediation features are the same, no matter which edition you choose.

Getting Started With the Software
Pricing varies by the number of systems the software will scan, and this could get expensive very quickly, especially for smaller businesses. The base Data Recon Standard Edition price of $179 provides a 1-year license to scan one target system. The license is tied to that target's MAC address or hostname. If you buy a new computer midway through the year, you need a new license. If you want to scan a laptop and a Windows file share where employees keep their data, that counts as two targets. You can't fool the software by mapping the file share as a drive on the computer, either.

To scan multiple systems, Data Recon offers licenses for 3, 10, 25, 50, 100, 175, and 250 targets. Cost per target drops progressively, so a 3-target license comes out to $119 per target, or $357 for the year; a 10-target license becomes $109 per target, or $1,090 a year; and so on, up to a 250-target license for $59 a target, or $14,750 a year. This is an important service, but it's definitely not cheap. You need to think carefully about where you need to run this software and plan out how many targets you will need. If you aren't sure whether you need the Standard or Advanced version, you can request a free trial license from the website.

The GroundLabs customer support portal lists links for a 32-bit or 64-bit version of Data Recon, and you can decide whether you want to work in a command line or a graphical user interface. I stuck with the GUI and popped in the hostname to generate the correct license. The entire software is a single executable—nothing to unpack or install—and you can see all the licenses associated with your account listed in one place. I love how lightweight the whole thing is.

Scanning Rules, Options
When you run the Windows executable, it opens up a simple window with six icons for data types, and six search settings. Clicking on each icon or option opens a modal window with various options. You make your selections, hit the Search bar at the bottom, and just wait for the scan to finish. Depending on your settings and the number of files selected, your scan can take anywhere from 30 minutes to several hours.

Data Recon: User Interface

Under Card Holder Data, you can define credit card types (Mastercard, American Express, and so on) and issuing country. Under Bank Account Data, you customize the search with tax file numbers, bank account numbers, and the bank routing numbers. National ID contains options for searching for U.S. Social Security numbers, Canadian Social Insurance numbers, United Kingdom National Identity numbers, and other similar numbers from other countries.

Personal Detail is perhaps the most useful section. Here you select mailing address, telephone number, email address, driver's license number, date of birth, login credentials, and passport number. There is also a section to identify health plan information, such as the health insurance claim number and plan identifier.

The final icon opens up a rules engine to define custom data types, which means you can specify a specific string or phrase that you want to search on (for example, "confidential" if you want to make sure you don't have files marked confidential on your laptop). If you want to search for a specific Social Security number (as opposed to any nine-digit number), or an actual address, you can specify that under the custom data type section.

Next: Data Recon Reporting and Remediation


View the original article here

Samsung Ativ Book 9 2014 Edition

Sunday, July 13, 2014

Pros Slimmer, lighter design and larger display than previous iteration. Premium materials. Fourth-generation Intel Core i5 processor and 128GB solid-state drive keep things speedy. All-day battery life. Full-size HDMI port. Sound technology geared toward audiophiles.

Cons Full HD rather than Quad HD+ display on previous model. Dongles required for VGA and Ethernet. Slightly higher price than previous iteration. Bottom Line The Samsung Ativ Book 9 2014 Edition should be on your short list if you want a premium, long-lasting ultrabook, but don't need a higher-than-HD display.

By Brian Westover

Samsung knows a thing or two about making top-notch ultraportables and ultrabooks, and the new Ativ Book 9 2014 Edition ($1,499.99 as tested) shows that it's still one of the best in the category. The follow-up to the top-rated Samsung Ativ Book 9 Plus, the new Book 9 2014 Edition has most of the traits that wowed us in the past, like a slim design, premium lightweight construction, and a battery that lasts all day. This new model, however, loses the impressive display seen on the Book 9 Plus, and while the improved battery life and larger display size do help make up for it, it's not quite enough to take top honors.

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The Samsung Ativ Book 9 2014 Edition marks a slight change in naming convention since the previous iteration. Last year, the Book 9 was available in two configurations, the premium Book 9 Plus and the lower-powered (but less expensive) Samsung Ativ Book 9 Lite. With this new model, the "Plus" and "Lite" names are discarded, with just a single Book 9 configuration that keeps most (but not all) of the high-end offerings of the Plus and is a significant step up from the Lite, making it simply the Book 9 2014 Edition.

Design
Measuring 0.5 by 12.6 by 8.80 inches (HWD) and weighing just 3.92 pounds, the new Book 9 is slim and light, but it's also very sturdy and substantial thanks to an aluminum chassis and improved keyboard, which provide a very solid feel to the highly portable ultrabook. It has the same sleek curves as the previous Samsung Ativ Book 9 Plus, but with a slimmer overall profile and narrower bezels around the display. The result is a lighter laptop that packs a larger 15.6-inch capacitive touch display into a similar overall size. That larger display also accounts for the slightly higher list price, which makes the Book 9 2014 Edition $100 more expensive than the previous Book 9 Plus.

Though larger, the new Book 9'sSamsung ATIV Book 9 2014 Edition
display takes a step backward from the impressive 3,200-by-1,800 resolution of the Samsung Ativ Book 9 Plus's screen, or even the 2,560-by-1,440 resolution of the Editors' Choice Toshiba Kirabook 13 i7s Touch. Instead, there's a 1,920-by-1,080 screen, which is more common to midrange ultrabooks. This display is brighter, with 300-nits backlighting, but the Full HD display isn't particularly compelling. The one benefit of the lower-resolution display, however, is the improved energy efficiency, extending the battery life by hours.

The keyboard has subtly sculpted keycaps, a surprisingly deep 1.3mm of key travel, and a soft-touch matte finish on the individual keys. It also offers backlighting, for easy typing in low-light conditions. The touchpad is quite large, measuring 4.25 by 3.2 inches, with a silky smooth surface and full support for Windows 8 gestures.

Samsung uses a Wolfson digital-to-analog chip for better audio and recording, and partnered with Dolby to develop custom compression algorithms that reduce the flattening experienced when listening to compressed audio. To my ear, that sound is good when heard through the laptop's built-in stereo speakers, but the real magic happens when listening with high-end headphones; that's when FLAC files play back with better than CD quality audio.

Features
On the sides of the slim ultrabook, you'll find a surprising number of ports and connectors, given the lack of space. On the left, there's a full-size HDMI output, one USB 3.0 port, a stereo headset jack, and a tiny port for Samsung's small Ethernet adapter dongle (included). On the right, you'll find two more USB ports (one USB 3.0, one USB 2.0), a Kensington case-lock slot, and another small adapter port, this time for VGA ($39.99, sold separately). Also on the right side of the system is an SD Card slot, with a spring-loaded cover that keeps out dirt and grime whenever the slot isn't in use.

Samsung ATIV Book 9 2014 Edition

To maintain the slim dimensions and speedy performance of the ultrabook, the Book 9 is outfitted with a 128GB solid-state drive, which offers fast boot and wake times, and snappy performance. What it doesn't offer much of is storage space—the Gigabyte U2442T-CF1 combines a 128GB SSD and a 750GB hard drive for more capacity.

Samsung includes a few preinstalled programs on the system, though not many that would be classified as bloatware. Samsung Link lets you share content with other Samsung devices, or stream media to a Samsung Smart TV. Samsung's S Player+ provides more file format support than Windows 8 does, and offers better support for lossless file formats. For photos, Samsung offers both S PhotoStudio and a complimentary copy of Adobe Photoshop Elements 11. Samsung includes a one-year subscription of Norton Internet Security Suite and covers the Book 9 with a one-year warranty on parts and labor.

Performance
Samsung ATIV Book 9 2014 Edition The Ativ Book 9 2014 Edition comes with a 1.6GHz Intel Core i5-4200U processor and 8GB of RAM—the same CPU as the previous Samsung Ativ Book 9 Plus, but with twice the memory installed, resulting in noticeably improved performance. For example, in Photoshop CS6, the new Book 9 finished in 4 minutes 49 seconds, more than a full minute ahead of the previous Samsung Book 9 Plus (5:51). But while the increase in memory did eke better performance out of the same CPU, it's not enough to compete head to head with a faster processor. The Toshiba Kirabook 13 i7s Touch, for example, boasts a faster Core i7 chip, and plowed through Photoshop in 4:37. It also offers significantly better performance in PCMark 8 with 2,344 points, where the Book 9 scored a still respectable 913 points. That said, the Book 9 is made for general users who demand fast performance, while the Kirabook is aimed at creative professionals who need more power to prevent being bogged down while they work.

Equipped with Intel's integrated graphics solution—Intel HD Graphics 4400—the Book 9 may not be ready to take on 3D gaming, but it should meet all of your other needs, from streaming movies and rendering web pages to editing photos and video clips. In 3DMark, the system scored 4,274 points under CloudGate (the medium settings test) and 267 points under FireStrike Extreme (the high detail settings test). Gaming, as mentioned earlier, is mostly out of the question, as the Book 9 2014 Edition failed to produce playable scores in any of our gaming tests, under any settings.

The best aspect of the new Book 9, however, is its battery life, lasting 11 hours 26 minutes in our rundown test. This is a dramatic improvement over the previous iteration (8:15), and leaves all other competitors behind by a similar margin. This improvement is largely due to the change in display resolution, making it a trade-off that many will find worthwhile.

Conclusion
While I was sad to see that the Samsung Ativ Book 9 2014 Edition didn't offer the same higher-than-HD screen seen on the previous Book 9 Plus, it was one of the only disappointments in an otherwise premium ultraportable. The slim design and sturdy aluminum build is just as impressive as ever, and the larger 15.6-inch display offers more screen real estate in roughly the same package, not to mention the all-day battery life, a healthy port selection, and improvements to the keyboard and sound quality. The Toshiba Kirabook 13 i7s Touch is our Editors' Choice for high-end ultrabooks, largely due to its own 2,560-by-1,440 resolution screen and lightweight magnesium construction. It takes the top spot due to its premium features, but the new Samsung Ativ Book 9 2014 Edition comes in as a close second, and is recommended for anyone who wants a premium ultrabook, but doesn't see the need for a higher-than-HD display.


View the original article here

 

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