SkyDrive den Cloud Dienst von Microsoft im Tutorial erklärt

12 Comments

  1. Alles schön und gut, nur wie sicher ist das ganze?

  2. Toll, dafür war das Video auch gedacht, dass man mal die einzelnen Cloud Anbieter kennenlernt.

  3. hat mir einen Ueberblick gegeben -

  4. Habe ich versucht, jedoch wird die Datei also als .sav geändert, nicht als Spielstand gelesen

  5. Rechtsklick umbenennen?

  6. Ich habe da ein Problem. Ich wollte ein Save von der App Purple Cherry einem Emulator für Windows Phone 7 aus der Cloud raus holen und es auf dem PC spielen. Jedoch bekomme ich da nur Office Dateien und ich weiß nicht wie man sie in .Save Dateien umwandelt. Weiß das einer? Danke in Vorraus

  7. Kleine Frage am Rande, ist es auch möglich die Daten im TrueCrypt Container hochzuladen / zu synchronisieren?

  8. Merkwürdig, in der Überschrift steht ja nichts von Windows 8. Geh doch einfach in den Windows 8 Store und such da nach SkyDrive bzw. SkyDrive sollte da schon vorinstalliert sein.

  9. ich hatte eig nach der app von Windows 8 gesucht
    aber dein Video hat mir auch etwas weitergeholfen
    Danke

  10. PAY NOTHING>THIS IS A SMITFRAUD.
    I wrote this to another poster but it all still applies to you.

    She has what is known as a smitfraud(a rogue security program).She’ll need to go to CNET at http://www.download.com and install the free version of Malwarebytes’Anti-Malware and then update the signatures.After that ,go to http://www.bleepingcomputer.com and look in the Uninstall List for this program (she’ll need to know exactly what the name of the program is;obviously she doesn’t or is not paying attention)and get the instruction for removal. sometimes they might ask you to install ComboFix or SmitFraudFix but Malwarebytes’ should do it. DO NOT restore the PC to an earlier time;that only makes it worse.

    I’m not sure how she’s attempting to get into safe mode,but the PC must be completely off.Then you hold down (don’t tap)key F8 (not F and 8 but F8) and restart the PC and work your way into safe mode from there.

    After the PC is in safe mode,open Malwarebytes’ and do a complete scan.If it finds anything,more these to quarantine and then delete them.If you don’t move them into quarantine and you just delete them,they will reinstall themselves.

    If she has CCleaner,run that to clean out any junk left behind.Then restart the PC normally.

    ALSO:
    Protection follows five main security software programs:
    1 a firewall (install only one)
    2 an anti-virus (install only one)
    3 an anti-spyware/malware (install two or three)
    4 a secure browser
    5 a disk cleaner (temporary files,etc.)

    Free firewalls:
    Comodo Internet Security (just the firewall and not the anti-virus)
    ZoneAlarm
    PC Tools Firewall Plus
    Outpost
    Online Armor

    Free anti-virus:
    avast! Home Edition 4.8
    Avira AntiVir Personal 9
    AVG 9 (use Threatfire with this program)
    Panda Cloud Anti-Virus
    Microsoft Security Essentials

    Free anti-spyware/malware:
    Ad-Aware
    Malwarebytes Anti-Malware
    Windows Defender
    SUPERAnti-Spyware
    Spybot Search and Destroy
    Spyware Terminator

    Browser:
    Firefox and load it up with McAfee Site Advisor,AVG Link Scanner,BetteryPrivacy,WOT (Web of Trust),Ghostery, TACO (Targeted Advertising Cookie Opt-Out),KeyScrammbler

    These are free for personal use and you can download them at CNET http://www.download.com
    Some add-ons for the Firefox browser are available at http://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/

    Disk cleaner and defrag utilities:
    CCleaner ,Glary Utilities,and Advanced SystemCare ; all free
    Get it at CNET http://www.download.com
    Also get Smart Defrag and run that in Deep Optimize mode

    clean and defrag for a fast unclogged OS

  11. I think NO6664ME is probably right. Never ever pay money or give out important information if you see a “pop-up” message like that.

    What is the name of the program telling you there is an infection? Look it up on the internet and you will very likely discover it is a malware program (like a virus) that is trying to trick you into buying something you don’t need; even if you pay the money it will actually make the problem worse because it will cause more attacks.

    Nasty. You may need to get some help removing the malware and making sure your computer is free from viruses and trojans.

  12. “No666…” gives solid advice.
    Add to that:
    “Fake Infection Warnings Can Be Real Trouble:
    Often, the inducement comes from a malicious Web site that uses JavaScript tricks to toss up a bunch of pop-ups… to create something that looks like a real antivirus scan…”
    PC World » Blogs » Security Alert: http://www.pcworld.com/article/159316/fa…
    (some call these “ransomeware” tactics: http://blogs.pcmag.com/securitywatch/2009/10/new_scareware_turns_into_ranso.php)

    Post-cleaning prevention:
    Because of inherent architecture of Internet browsers (especially IE) vulnerabilities (notably ‘javascript’) are readily exploited, and it is even more important that you use Firefox with ‘NoScript’ add-on, which will prevent “Click-jacking’, hidden “iFrame” exploits, and “Drive-by” installs.
    “NoScript”: https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox…

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