The Adobe Premiere 6.02 update provides fixes to known issues in Premiere. Please note that this update is still in beta. You should not install this update unless you are experiencing any of the specific problems listed below:
Corrects stuttering playback problem. Fixes problems with stuttering playback on systems that meet the minimum system requirements.
Corrects fast DV playback problem. Some customers are experiencing problems with the video output from Premiere speeding up on playback.
This update includes all the fixes from the 6.01 update.
The update is already available in various languages (french & german). Click the link below to download the english updater:
The update is already available in various languages (french & german). Click the link below to download the english updater
News source: Activewin
Download: Adobe Premiere 6.02 Beta Updater (2.74 mb)
Corrects stuttering playback problem. Fixes problems with stuttering playback on systems that meet the minimum system requirements.
Corrects fast DV playback problem. Some customers are experiencing problems with the video output from Premiere speeding up on playback.
This update includes all the fixes from the 6.01 update.
The update is already available in various languages (french & german). Click the link below to download the english updater:
The update is already available in various languages (french & german). Click the link below to download the english updater
Files Vulnerable
When Klez infects a PC, it installs itself into the registry, infects executable files, and kills the tasks launched by security programs running on the PC. Programs targeted include those offered by Symantec, Network Associates, F-Secure, Sophos, and Trend Micro--all of which market antivirus products. The worm also removes the autostart components of these programs, disabling them, F-Secure said.
Microsoft addressed the Klez worm in a recent update of Internet Explorer. IE versions 5.01 and 5.5 are vulnerable to the worm.
The worm has an even more damaging payload, however, that is activated when a certain combination of dates occurs, according to F-Secure. On the sixth day of odd-numbered months (January, March, May, July, September, November) the worm attempts to overwrite all files on the infected PC that have specific extensions. Among those targeted are such common file types as .txt, .htm, .html, .wab, .doc, .xls, .jpg, .cpp, .c, .pas, .mpg, .mpeg, .bak, and .mp3, according to F-Secure. Wednesday, the sixth day of March, an odd-numbered month, is such a file-deletion day.
Klez has been around since late 2001, though it has gone through a number of variations.

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