Adobe Flash player install triggers virus alerts

I installed Adobe’s flash player 6 on my pc tonight and was surprised to see Comodo Antivirus kick in with a “Not-a-virus:RiskTool.Win32.PsKill.q” for the nsprocess.dll file included as part of the install – presumably to kill any previous installs currently running. I’ve seen things like this with Symantec Antivirus and pskill from sysinternals before but not with Flash Player!
I submitted the file to virustotal.com and got the following results.

Antivirus Version Update Result
AhnLab-V3 2007.5.10.0 05.09.2007 Win-Trojan/ProcKill.4096.B
AntiVir 7.4.0.15 05.09.2007 no virus found
Authentium 4.93.8 05.08.2007 no virus found
Avast 4.7.997.0 05.09.2007 no virus found
AVG 7.5.0.467 05.09.2007 no virus found
BitDefender 7.2 05.10.2007 no virus found
CAT-QuickHeal 9.00 05.09.2007 no virus found
ClamAV devel-20070416 05.09.2007 no virus found
DrWeb 4.33 05.09.2007 no virus found
eSafe 7.0.15.0 05.08.2007 no virus found
eTrust-Vet 30.7.3622 05.09.2007 no virus found
Ewido 4.0 05.09.2007 no virus found
FileAdvisor 1 05.10.2007 No threat detected
Fortinet 2.85.0.0 05.09.2007 no virus found
F-Prot 4.3.2.48 05.09.2007 W32/Trojan.RZG
F-Secure 6.70.13030.0 05.10.2007 no virus found
Ikarus T3.1.1.7 05.09.2007 no virus found
Kaspersky 4.0.2.24 05.10.2007 no virus found
McAfee 5027 05.09.2007 potentially unwanted program Generic PUP
Microsoft 1.2503 05.09.2007 no virus found
NOD32v2 2255 05.09.2007 no virus found
Norman 5.80.02 05.09.2007 no virus found
Panda 9.0.0.4 05.09.2007 no virus found
Prevx1 V2 05.10.2007 no virus found
Sophos 4.17.0 05.08.2007 no virus found
Sunbelt 2.2.907.0 05.05.2007 no virus found
Symantec 10 05.10.2007 no virus found
TheHacker 6.1.6.112 05.10.2007 Trojan/KillProc.p
VBA32 3.12.0 05.09.2007 no virus found
VirusBuster 4.3.7:9 05.09.2007 no virus found
Webwasher-Gateway 6.0.1 05.09.2007 no virus found

That is 5 antivirus products that presumably block or intefere with Flash from being installed.

Xp upgrade – cd issues

An upgrade to XP wasn’t working this morning with the pc giving various error messages – Setup was unable to verify drive C, Setup cannot copy the file: driver.cab. At this point it had damaged the w2k installation enough that the previous installation would not boot. A chkdsk from the recovery console would just reboot the pc. Booting to BartCD I was able to run defrag and a chkdsk with no problems found. I tried different installation media and still got the same problem. I searched for a BIOS upgrade but couldn’t find anything useful so I then swapped the cd drive itself and it is now working (or at least it is most of the way through the upgrade).

funky mail and hosting?

If you notice anything funky with emails or hosting, please let me know via a comment on this site (or at my flickr account as I am moving hosts this week. First up is the helsby.net domain. The website (what little there is) was moved yesterday and emails setup on the main server for the appropriate mail forwarding and I flicked the dns switch just now. This should really only affect emails to Kristen and I as the website is not really used (at the moment)
After that I will be moving this absoblogginlutely.net domain – that is going to be a lot more complicated due to sql servers, MovableType installations, redirection of subdomains, ftp accounts and what not. The good news is that I won’t need to pay more for hosting for the next two years and by this switch of hosts I’ll be consolidating the various payments made to various companies for hosting and domain registration.

Riverside Hospital tech

The family waiting room at Riverside hospital has a neat web based (I assume) application that shows you the list of patients in the hospital and their progress. When you checkin at the hospital, the accompanying person is given a piece of paper with a number on that relates to that person. They can then look up the patients status on the various monitors around the waiting room to see if they have checked in, awaiting surgery, in surgery, recovery or what room they are in. This makes it easier to keep up to date on someone’s status. They also tannoy announcements whenever a doctor has new news for the family. It’s a cool system but would be really good if this was available outside the hospital on a website so that a patient could let people know their number (and I guess they’d also need a passcode to prevent unauthorised disclosure) so people would know how soon to leave their home to come visit and what room they would be in.
They also have free wireless for internet access and a couple of phone jacks for the poor souls who have to use dialup to access the internet. Each room also has incoming telephone access (in comparison to the hospital in the UK which had premium rate dialin access for each bed which is a despicable practise and I think there is actually talk of dropping this charge) and you can even Send an electronic greeting card to patients.

Kristen in surgery.

For those of you who don’t know, Kristen is undergoing surgery at the moment for the removal of her thyroid. Before she went down for surgery she seemed pretty relaxed and was joking around like crazy – I’m not sure if they put something in her drip or whether it was the fact that she’d only had 3 hours sleep in the past 49.5 hours. For more updates, keep an eye on Kristen’s blog where I’ll post updates.

Outlook/office dialog boxes look funny.

For some reason, one of my (terminal) servers has started to show funky dialog boxes in office applications. Everything looks plain, like in vb3 days and the options dialog box in outlook is unusable as the dialog is too small for the content. Any ideas on what has caused this?
Wrong dialog box

wrong

Correct Dialog box – everything fits in the screen (although I snipped the bottom off)

correct

Update – Mike – you are a genius. The funny thing is that I thought it was the fonts but at first glance it seemed ok. However, I compared the fonts in the appearance setting of the display applet in control panel and sure enough, the font settings were blank. A look at the Tahoma font in the font applet and it was 0 bytes – aha! Installed Tahoma again across the network and the fonts and dialog boxes are now back to normal. – Sir, I owe you a pint.

Zoomit updated

Zoomit has been updated, the tool that allows you to zoom into part of the screen, annotate the screen or have a break countdown timer displayed on the screen when doing presentations. I went to a presentation last week on Microsoft’s Forefront Technology software (which seems to have promise but doesn’t seem to be anywhere near capable as a replacement for Mcafee, Symantec etc due to the lack of functionality) which was in dire need of a zoom tool as the presenter even commented that he was having difficulty seeing the screenshots on his screen (so why on earth they were included in the powerpoint presentation I don’t know). At the end of the presentation I fired my laptop up, loaded zoomit and took it to the (Microsoft) presenter to show it to him and suggested he downloaded it and uses it in the future.
Update You can the presentation and virtual machines for Forefront by downloading the Microsoft Forefront and System Center Demonstration Toolkit. I intend to write up my thoughts from the meeting into a blog post later (as I have to provide feedback to the rest of the office anyway)

Sema4 drop down lists slow?

We had a customer who had a new installation of Sema4 (accounting and timesheets package) installed on a new pc and the performance of the software was abysmal in some cases. It was reported to me that if they opened the package and selected timesheets and then selected the employee drop down list, there would be a long wait for the dropdown box to appear and the program would appear to hang. I timed it and it took 7 minutes (for about 50 users) for the dropdown box to appear after it was clicked when the timesheet screen was first loaded.
The very strange solution is posted in the extended entry….

2 year anniversary

Yesterday was the second anniversary of moving to the States. The time has really flown by and so much has happened since our move. This now means that if we ever did go back to the UK then Kristen would have to go through the whole visa process again, which means the move is even more unlikely! I’ll write a longer post up later but right now we’re enjoying a secluded getaway in Hocking Hill’s. It’s unlikely we’ll go out from the cabin as the “road” up to the cabin has many potcaverns in them (too big to be called holes) and the car makes a funny noise every time we go over them. (I did manage to get 3 geocaches yesterday whilst Kristen was getting supplies though!)