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MisterNoodle

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Everything posted by MisterNoodle

  1. I am asking about a way to manually tell the system to put them into a folder or tree that you could name or something. In the Process tab, there are *some* condensed processes, but I was wondering if there is a way to create larger trees to place similar (not necessarily the same) processes in. An example would be if I could take all the necessary windows processes like the search indexer and event log and place them into a "Windows Services" tree. All those different C++ Versions would be easier for me to manage if I could put them into a "C++ Versions" folder and not have to look at them every time. Thank you for your feedback. Based on your feedback, it sounds like this is likely not possible.
  2. Is there any way to condense processes in task manager? IE place similar processes into a tree or folder? Task Manager feels incredibly cluttered. I would love to bunch windows services, drivers, etc. into trees/folders so I don't accidentally end the wrong process and don't feel as overwhelmed by the clutter. Programs and Features in the Control Panel has the same issue. On my system there are 17 separate versions of C++. Is there a way to condense them into a "C++ Versions" tree that I can click into when needed to streamline the table? Every time I check that page, I don't need to see every version cluttering the screen as I scroll through. If anyone knows any solution(s) to either or both of these, please let me know.
  3. Oh I don't disagree at all, my sassy side just wanted to point out that I am doubtful most would care enough. Then again, a competitor (Tunnelbear) just gained some popularity by doing this, and they need to compete in order to stay afloat.
  4. What results? This is the first known VPN security audit. Many VPNs don't actually care that much about this sorta thing.
  5. In a blog post today, VPN Service Tunnelbear posted the results of a 2016 independent security audit of their VPN to find vulnerabilities. Cure53, the cybersecurity company that was paid to perform the audit, managed to find "vulnerabilities in the Chrome extension" that they were not happy about, but they hope to improve their VPN and remain transparent about their software. The blog post can be found here: https://www.tunnelbear.com/blog/tunnelbear_public_security_audit/ The results of the security audit can be found here: https://cure53.de/summary-report_tunnelbear.pdf While disappointed in part of the results, I am most pleased to see a company that is willing to be transparent about its security and practices. I am most curious what LTT thinks of Tunnelbear maintaining honesty with the public.
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