Mac hacked in 2 minutes


Recommended Posts

We a company called MSI in our hospital this week, doing security checks via DDOS attacks, etc on our network to see how secure we our, we run a strict MS network and so far they've managed to bring down 5 systems since Monday

Windows is scary.

If they didn't manage to bring down every system in the building, it wasn't a very good DDOS attack. I'll assume you actually meant they DDOS attacked your gateway(s), in which case you'll need to figure out what's wrong with your routers if a single machine went down.

If the "etc" includes internal security testing, and they managed to break into 5 windows systems, that's a failure by your IT department. As is evidenced by the fact that no one took home the 20,000 dollar prize on the first day, running a current and fully patched OS from Apple, MS or Ubuntu provides a very secure platform against network based attacks.

and your reply to the windows PC, is actually true, it was done in my Security Class before i graduated, just like i also used the MMC to remotely connect to a machine across the classroom and edited their registry(entrys in MMC go to registry) to lock their startmenu, edit permissions. and at a LAN party as a practical joke, inserted a couple porn vid's to a friends startup. if i have physical access to it but its locked, i can BART it, remove the PW, load the registry into BART Edit that, and do whatever else to the system

there is no Bull***, its fact as iv done it, my job requires me to break into a system @ customers request, or recover files/information if they can no longer access their computer

Not to be offensive, but you sound like you just discovered the ping of death download for win95. If hacking into a remote machine via a LAN was still possible without an admin password, we'd be reading about the guy that walked away with 20k, not 10 or 5.

Most of the posters here can break into a system and recover files given physical access, as usual there's of course free tools available for us all to download.

Vista Laptop was Won!: Congratulations to Shane Macaulay from Security Objectives - he has just won the Fujitsu U810 laptop running Vista Ultimate SP1 after it was installed with the latest version of Adobe Flash.

Ah, good ol' adobe flash, MS couldn't have asked for a better ad for silverlight.

'' So at the end of the last day of the contest, only the Sony VAIO laptop running Ubuntu was left standing. '' -- haha, OSX isnt that secure afterall, now is it? and its great sitting behind ubuntu right now, laughing at you dear Apple followers who are so arrogant and ''OSX is soo secure'' .

a healthy dose of reality never did anyone no harm

Here's a picture of Charlie (in the foreground) exploiting the MacBook Air from his own laptop, while Aaron from TippingPoint verifies the pwnage in real time.

charlie_miller.jpg

http://dvlabs.tippingpoint.com/blog/2008/0...er-with-picture

LOL he is using a macbook... now we know what hackers use and why osx has no viruses and windows so much hehe

/joke

Well that assumption isn?t correct,can you explain why OSX had a surge in vulnerabilities the last 2 years? (aprox)

Obviosuly the OS has evolved since,but evolved negatively or positively? i have no doubt that has evolved in a positive manner,however the switching to the x86 architecture,the introduction of new features not related to designers,and the increasing user base,this bring a whole new choices of configurations in every system.

This reason make me belive that OSX is entering a dangerous era,in few words OSX isnt a Multistellar OS,and this transision will cause a lot of damage,this menas that apple has no idea in wich terrain is entering,competing with an expierenced and dominant Windows,that has been testes and tested by hundreds of million people all over the world,with i may say infinite configurations,and this is the day that winows still has problems with drivers from many manufacturers.

Apple proposed this chanllenge

and Microsoft says ?bring it on?

Excellent argumen(Y)(Y)

id have to disagree and say Linux Zealots, lol, with Mac close behind, but Mac VS Windows, yea Mac

They are Zealots for a reaso;) ;)

Wrong. Currently they are a lot more secure because there just aren't nowhere near as much real security threats circulating for Mac. Infact the number of those is close to ZERO.

Have they ever spread very far or were able to do anything harmful?

So if Vista will reach the marketshare XP has (won't happe:woot:ot: ) it will be as unsecure as XP?

Your argument is flawed.

Seriously, if you want to really secure your system, this is how:

1) Turn it off

2) Remove the harddrive, RAM and processor

3) Put each component in an airtight and awesomely secure compartment

4) Put them in a Swiss Vault

5) Start praying so that no one carpet bombs that plac:laugh:gh:

there was more involved then going to a site

and your reply to the windows PC, is actually true, it was done in my Security Class before i graduated, just like i also used the MMC to remotely connect to a machine across the classroom and edited their registry(entrys in MMC go to registry) to lock their startmenu, edit permissions. and at a LAN party as a practical joke, inserted a couple porn vid's to a friends startup. if i have physical access to it but its locked, i can BART it, remove the PW, load the registry into BART Edit that, and do whatever else to the system

there is no Bull***, its fact as iv done it, my job requires me to break into a system @ customers request, or recover files/information if they can no longer access their computer

You're describing things that are documented as supported features / functionality on Microsoft.com, not hacks. If you're connecting via MMC / remote registry, you already have admin permissions on the box. Of course you can screw with it, you're an admin.

If you have physical access to the machine, you own it. You can install another OS and read any unencrypted data, mess with the OS, or even just install a new one. Any idiot script kiddie can do that. And not just to Windows, they can do it to Linux or Mac OS just as easily.

If you really want to talk smack, then do something interesting, like:

1) Compromise EFS encrypted data

2) Retrieve a user's password (not reset it). Of course, that's not really possible unless the user actually types it in for you

3) Compromise a domain-joined machine's network credentials

4) Compromise a BitLocker'd machine

Of course, what everyone is really worried about are things like remote code execution and elevation of privilege attacks. Somehow I'm not too worried about you or your security class finding any of those.

Right :rolleyes: and Vista and UAC is bulletproof too.

the issue with your comment, is that most people dont claim vista and UAC are bullletproof, yet a majority of mac users do make such claims about osx

not true.

and what system do you claim cannot be compromised with physical access??

clicked the damn wrong button.

as he said that is not a physical access hack. do you actually know what a physical access hack means?

Edited by whocares78
you missed where i said "connect to a machine across the classroom"

and all passwords can be bypassed, or gotten

noone missed the point, they just stated the obvious, i think you may have missed the point. across the classroom is on the same network and you still needed the admin password or an administrative account to use.. e.g. i am domain admin on my lan and as a result can do whatever i like to any machine on the network.

p.s. not all passwords can necesarily be bypassed or gotten.. you may have used an elevated privelegde expliot or somethign to get the admin password which is totally different from what you described, but anyway i think i wil pass on using your great expertise to test my security...

Wouldn't help. I know people that have Bachelors in Computer Science that can hardly even use a computer.

i know people with MCSE's that have no idea how to change an IP address, anyone that knows IT knows all certs mean is that you can read books :)

the issue with your comment, is that most people dont claim vista and UAC are bullletproof, yet a majority of mac users do make such claims about osx

"Majority of americans are stupid". - See what I did there?

Don't make assumptions based on vocal people on the net - they don't represent more than a fraction of any OS user base, maybe even less. Just because you read a few blogs or forums where people claim this or that doesn't suddenly make "majority" agree with them.

Edited by daPhoenix

Simple fact of the matter is, whatever OS your using, if you don't visit the website in the spam email, you don't get compromised. Perhaps more should be done by ISPs and free email hosts etc in terms of detecting and closing down the machines which spew the endless streams of spam emails rather than just focusing on operating system and browser a, b or c having flaws.

I think it's good to know that Microsoft's efforts towards security has paid off with a now secure OS. Obviously all users operating a computer of any OS still need to maintain it (i.e. download updates)

Im a Mac user and i hope that Apple are quick to patch this hole in safari, as long as the holes are not too stupid ive never had a problem with them being discovered as i know that something as complex as an OS is bound to have holes in it here and there, what really shows me strength is the speed in which these hole are fixed.

It's also good to see the Linux distribution with the most attention (ubuntu) come through with flying colors, as a large share of ubuntu users are switchers coming from another OS (such as windows and Mac OS X) it's good to know that while they are learning there way around the OS they are being protected.

(on a slightly different note i am still not convinced with Vista, i use a dual boot XP/Vista Ultimate x86 SP1 machine at work P4 3.4GHZ 2GB RAM SATA HDD's nVidia 7600GT. My machine has a couple of niggles with Vista, the hard disks are always thrashing away, there is not many docs on my computer as they reside on the server, after a week i would have thought it would have subsided after a couple of weeks. I also have a niggle where Vista will lose network connectivity, it shows as connected but it won't talk to the network, ive tried updated drivers. My XP OS is much faster without any of the above issues.

The reason why i mention this long winded side note is that Vista's excellent performance through the hacking contest gives me a lot of hope for the next release of Windows.)

No but vista is much more secure than OSX

statistical results prove it

shhhhhhhhh

I'd love to see your "statistical results".

Not said by the people who know,imagine all this vulnerabilities in Mac OSX with this tiny market share,then imagine if Mac OSX has 93% of market share (DANG!),now imagine that windows (Vista and XP) has lesser vulnerabilites with 750 million computers than OSX with 50 million pc at the most,and im being optimistic.

Can you see the breach?

Hope so,otherwise i'm so sorry :)

No one can see it unless you can tell us exactly how many vulnerablilities are in OS X and how many are in Windows.

on the MMC/Remote Registry NO Sh** when did i say i didnt have the PW, i wasnt an admin of that box though, slack*** part on the actual admin for having a week/widely known PW.

for your talk smack stuff

(1) Recovery ( not reset) of EFS passwords/hash's i personally dont use it as i dont need EFS recovery (found via link below) ( 2 for 1 special)

(2) see above, or This Thread i found this page trying to find the name of the program i actually use by the name of Petter N Hagen ( Linux based PW tool )

(3)as far as i know, the network credentials are authenticated against the server and not stored on the local machine, only the local PW is

(4)here is your bitlocker thing,, i knew about the Bitlocker/Filevault bypass, this is just a videoBitlocker Bypass Video

there is your requested info ( except 3 as i didnt really answer it )

You're describing things that are documented as supported features / functionality on Microsoft.com, not hacks. If you're connecting via MMC / remote registry, you already have admin permissions on the box. Of course you can screw with it, you're an admin.

If you have physical access to the machine, you own it. You can install another OS and read any unencrypted data, mess with the OS, or even just install a new one. Any idiot script kiddie can do that. And not just to Windows, they can do it to Linux or Mac OS just as easily.

If you really want to talk smack, then do something interesting, like:

1) Compromise EFS encrypted data

2) Retrieve a user's password (not reset it). Of course, that's not really possible unless the user actually types it in for you

3) Compromise a domain-joined machine's network credentials

4) Compromise a BitLocker'd machine

Of course, what everyone is really worried about are things like remote code execution and elevation of privilege attacks. Somehow I'm not too worried about you or your security class finding any of those.

FileVault Sucks

yet a majority of mac users do make such claims about osx

there are remote password retrieval tools, so yes they can, its just a matter of how long it will take a person to break it. so STFU and get off the bandwagon and go back to MickyD's your late for work

about my instructor/class he was CCNE as well MS, and it was not a hacking class moron

p.s. not all passwords can necesarily be bypassed or gotten.. you may have used an elevated privelegde expliot or somethign to get the admin password which is totally different from what you described, but anyway i think i wil pass on using your great expertise to test my security...
Edited by Hell-In-A-Handbasket

Ho boy...

on the MMC/Remote Registry NO Sh** when did i say i didnt have the PW, i wasnt an admin of that box though, slack*** part on the actual admin for having a week/widely known PW.

Guessing a weak password isn't really hacking of course.

(1) Recovery ( not reset) of EFS passwords/hash's i personally dont use it as i dont need EFS recovery (found via link below) ( 2 for 1 special)

Hopefully your instructor told you that uploading your sam to a questionable third party is about the worst thing you could do to a company.

(2) see above, or This Thread i found this page trying to find the name of the program i actually use by the name of Petter N Hagen ( Linux based PW tool )

These types of tools have been around more than 20 years now, it's nothing new to anybody.. We've all heard of or used L0pht, cain and able, pwreset.. the list goes on. None can help remotely crack a pc, they all need to get at the sam via an administrator password or boot disk. Not a remote hack.

(3)as far as i know, the network credentials are authenticated against the server and not stored on the local machine, only the local PW is

Research "cached credentials" Domain or AD or Active directory.

(4)here is your bitlocker thing,, i knew about the Bitlocker/Filevault bypass, this is just a videoBitlocker Bypass Video

We all knew about the new cold boot attack on encryption keys, now make it work... without downloading someone else's tool, otherwise you're the security equivalent of a script kiddie.

there are remote password retrieval tools, so yes they can, its just a matter of how long it will take a person to break it. so STFU and get off the bandwagon and go back to MickyD's your late for work.

Yup, there sure is... ALL require admin access to get the sam.

about my instructor/class he was CCNE as well MS, and it was not a hacking class moron

Hmmm, many of the posters (myself excluded) can be a source of incredible information, and many know far more about security than either myself, you or your instructor could hope to learn in a lifetime.

You'll gain no respect by calling knowledgeable people morons, you just make yourself look silly.

never said anywhere that i hacked anything, crack/hack are 2 different things

never said uploading sam anywhere, was talking about on the machine itself, or moving the sam to a different machine

i know those tools are old, never said they were new, and i don't remember saying anything about remotely attacking the sam ( if im wrong please quote that part )

im not a programmer, tried learning it but wasn't my thing, i don't do anything illegal, and everything is at request, and a script kiddie just uses the tools and doesnt know how it does it, that they just push a button and it does it, i actually know, so i doubt i qualify as a script kiddie, i don't do the bitlocker bypass and dont need to do it, it was listed because it was requested. and i didnt say any of those programs were for remote password retrieval, it wasn't asked for remote password retrieval, just for password retrieval, and i have said multiple times then i have access to the machine when asked to recover the password

found Cached AD/Domain, wasnt aware of the cache, and when required to change/get AD-Domain pass, we just changed it and had user change it to something else on next login, so thank you for pointing that out ( not said in anger ) as wasnt aware of it/forgot it if it was brought up in class as haven't messed with AD in over 3 years (Server 2003 was not even being deployed when i messed with AD, so it was all 2000 stuff)

about the gaining respect, i dont care, im not here in search of it, and in the thread i have given answers multiple times, so the person can alter what was asked, or totaly revoke the answer like it didnt exist because it wasnt good enough for them / didnt belive it. because they have it in their head that it doesnt exist, i know linux people that are the same way when their linux box crash's in front of their face, and they deny it crashed/locked, and when asked why it did it, they deny it doing it because " it cant", just like Windows/Mac users to the same extent.

this thread was made as nothing more then to flame mac like they were some sort of security wall of godness, thinking windows machines were somehow better because it wasnt attempted until after the Mac was won,, it was the Air,the flavor of the month, of course people are going to target that first, and of course the person that did the iPhone jailbreak could do it do fast, he probably used the same website. but somebody comes in to an anti-mac thread and not only Agreeing to the issues regarding Mac security and pointing out that its not only Mac but Windows,, people go apesh**. ok you win, Windows are impervious to all things, i dont know squat and my career in computers for 15 years is just a waste of my time i should go do trash collecting or something.

Peace Out

Ho boy...

Guessing a weak password isn't really hacking of course.

Hopefully your instructor told you that uploading your sam to a questionable third party is about the worst thing you could do to a company.

These types of tools have been around more than 20 years now, it's nothing new to anybody.. We've all heard of or used L0pht, cain and able, pwreset.. the list goes on. None can help remotely crack a pc, they all need to get at the sam via an administrator password or boot disk. Not a remote hack.

Research "cached credentials" Domain or AD or Active directory.

We all knew about the new cold boot attack on encryption keys, now make it work... without downloading someone else's tool, otherwise you're the security equivalent of a script kiddie.

Yup, there sure is... ALL require admin access to get the sam.

Hmmm, many of the posters (myself excluded) can be a source of incredible information, and many know far more about security than either myself, you or your instructor could hope to learn in a lifetime.

You'll gain no respect by calling knowledgeable people morons, you just make yourself look silly.

"Majority of americans are stupid". - See what I did there?

Don't make assumptions based on vocal people on the net - they don't represent more than a fraction of any OS user base, maybe even less. Just because you read a few blogs or forums where people claim this or that doesn't suddenly make "majority" agree with them.

i make assumptions on what i know and hear from working in IT and uninformed users telling me what they think and the most common thing i hear about macs is they are bulletproof my old boss used to even try to tell me macs were bulletproof of course he was a draftsman who just happened to know the most about computers quite a few years before i came along so got the job as it manager, and believe me i dont just go on what LTD says and i do realise not all mac users are stupid enough to make such claims. p.s. from expierience i have to also agree with you that a vast majority of americans are stupid although there are some inteligent ones over there, as with anything there are majoritys and minoritys

there are remote password retrieval tools, so yes they can, its just a matter of how long it will take a person to break it. so STFU and get off the bandwagon and go back to MickyD's your late for work

about my instructor/class he was CCNE as well MS, and it was not a hacking class moron

when it takes you more than a year to brute force a secure password then i aint worried and dont count that as cracking a password becasue i would have changed it by the time you can get it.. and there are also ways to avoid/ minimise the chance of someone even getting to your sams in the first place, but hey your security course should have covered that, hell pick up hacking for dummies and it will tell you (as well as all the stuff you have said in previous posts).

i am slightly worried your instructor of a security course (security/hacking/cracking its all basically the same thing really its all symantecs that i dont waste my time with that crap) had no security certifications e.g. Security+, CISSP, etc etc cisco and MS certs dont make you a security guru. and anyway i think i said earlier certs mean nothign when it comes to knowing what your talkign about and i have found the people that insist on getting more and more certs are the ones that have no clue. but thats just my opinion from my expierience dont take that as me bagging you in any way.

and honestly a job at maccyd's i am guessing that is mcdonalds, is honestly a tempting choice after 12 years working with computers, but i was leaning more towards a job as a lawnmower man, ahh not having to worry about servers going down and customers threatening to sue you cause your software doesnt work as they think it is supposed to.

when it takes you more than a year to brute force a secure password then i aint worried and dont count that as cracking a password becasue i would have changed it by the time you can get it.. and there are also ways to avoid/ minimise the chance of someone even getting to your sams in the first place, but hey your security course should have covered that, hell pick up hacking for dummies and it will tell you (as well as all the stuff you have said in previous posts).

how many people actually use a secure password, and by secure i mean the whole kitnkaboodle as far as caps/numbers/symbols/length. the strongest i have seen in use is on my laptop which is just numbers/letters, the rest ( including alot of my passwords because i have nothing that needs secured but all at least have multiple numbers and letters ) use their favorite baseball team, their dog, aka weak passwords, and im sure a secure one wont take a year with the speed of comps, yes they would have taken a year when 486 ruled the earth,but alot shorter on a 5 year old computer ( quickest i have done a PW retrieval is 2 days, but it was just numbers/letters with 1 cap )

i am slightly worried your instructor of a security course (security/hacking/cracking its all basically the same thing really its all symantecs that i dont waste my time with that crap) had no security certifications e.g. Security+, CISSP, etc etc cisco and MS certs dont make you a security guru. and anyway i think i said earlier certs mean nothign when it comes to knowing what your talkign about and i have found the people that insist on getting more and more certs are the ones that have no clue. but thats just my opinion from my expierience dont take that as me bagging you in any way.

he had a stack of certs and a degree, the Cisco/MS cert were an example as i feel the those garentee a well secured career, i seriously doubt an institution would not have somebody qualified to instruct, actually i think its will easily get the institutions accreditation pulled when reviewed and sued by the people attending.

i only have 1 other cert that i need to get ( its an OEM cert thats required by the OEM )

but i can understand where your coming from as far as getting more and more certs, imho a person without certs can know a ton more info than a person with certs, the only thing the certs do is give a piece of paper with a corporate/educational backing, when i was repairing Copiers with Pitney Bowes, i had to get Pitney Bowes Certified for the copiers i was working on, i have no idea why as i wouldn't be there if i didn't know how to fix it, but that piece of paper gave the customer ( who has no idea who i am ) reassurance that i could fix it, and im guessing the company a fallback as in " he's a certified copier technician ", but after 2 years i hated driving 100 miles to work, then an additional 50 to each office in a day( i covered multiple territories), although it was fun i hate long drives

and honestly a job at maccyd's i am guessing that is mcdonalds, is honestly a tempting choice after 12 years working with computers, but i was leaning more towards a job as a lawnmower man, ahh not having to worry about servers going down and customers threatening to sue you cause your software doesnt work as they think it is supposed to.

this is America, land of the lawyers, people have sued MickyD's cause they spilled coffee on themselves, lawn people can get sued because their grass wasn't cut right

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • Internet Download Manager (IDM) 6.43 Build 1 by Razvan Serea Internet Download Manager (IDM) is a tool to increase download speeds by up to 8 times due to its smart dynamic file segmentation technology. Unlike other download managers and accelerators, Internet Download Manager segments downloaded files dynamically during download process, and it reuses available connections without additional connect and login stages to achieve the best possible acceleration performance. Comprehensive error recovery and resume capability will restart broken or interrupted downloads due to lost connections, network problems, computer shutdowns, or unexpected power outages. All popular browsers are supported IDM integrates seamlessly into Google Chrome, FireFox, Microsoft Edge, Opera, Safari, Internet Explorer, Maxthon and all other popular browsers to automatically handle your downloads. You can also drag and drop files, or use Internet Download Manager from command line. The program supports proxy servers, ftp and http protocols, firewalls, redirects, cookies, authorization, MP3 audio and video content processing. IDM includes web site spider and grabber IDM downloads all required files that are specified with filters from web sites, for example all pictures from a web site, or subsets of web sites, or complete web sites for offline browsing. It's possible to schedule multiple grabber projects to run them once at a specified time, stop them at a specified time, or run periodically to synchronize changes. Easy downloading with one click When you click on a download link in a browser, IDM will take over the download and accelerate it. You don't need to do anything special, just browse the Internet as you usually do. IDM will catch your downloads and accelerate them. IDM supports HTTP, FTP, HTTPS and MMS protocols. Changes in Internet Download Manager 6.43 Build 1: Added the ability to download MP4 files from web sites where previously only TS videos were available. IDM displays both TS and MP4 file formats in its video download button. If you only need MP4 files, disable TS in IDM Options -> General tab -> Customize IDM Download panels in browsers -> Edit button. Remove TS extension on "Customize IDM Download panel in browsres" dialog Fixed video downloading problems on several popular web sites Fixed bugs Download: Internet Download Manager 6.43 Build 1 | 11.9 MB (Shareware) Links: Internet Download Manager Website | Screenshot Get alerted to all of our Software updates on Twitter at @NeowinSoftware
    • This is of course "clickbait" WTF? It is literally your example but tech based. A "clickbait" title is a sensationalized headline designed to manipulate readers into clicking a link using things like "fear" rather than delivering objective facts. A "clickbait" headline also usually provides little value compared to the hype generated. How does this headline not qualify? It's a generic often reused headline that is overly sensationalized. Oh no! "millions" can't use this app anymore. It has no basic facts like what f*cking app. You read the article and it's the Samsung VPN which no one cares about and there is a million free VPNs. How are you defending this ######? Headlines like this (and among other things) make me read Neowin much less than I used to in the past. It's trash...
    • UniGetUI 2026.2.1 by Razvan Serea UniGetUI is an application whose main goal is to create an intuitive GUI for the most common CLI package managers for Windows 10 and Windows 11, such as Winget, Scoop and Chocolatey. With UniGetUI, you'll be able to download, install, update and uninstall any software that's published on the supported package managers — and so much more. UniGetUI features Install, update and remove software from your system easily at one click: UniGetUI combines the packages from the most used package managers for windows: WinGet, Chocolatey, Scoop, Pip, Npm and .NET Tool. Discover new packages and filter them to easily find the package you want. View detailed metadata about any package before installing it. Get the direct download URL or the name of the publisher, as well as the size of the download. Easily bulk-install, update or uninstall multiple packages at once selecting multiple packages before performing an operation Automatically update packages, or be notified when updates become available. Skip versions or completely ignore updates in a per-package basis. Manage your available updates at the touch of a button from the Widgets pane or from Dev Home pane with UniGetUI Widgets. The system tray icon will also show the available updates and installed package, to efficiently update a program or remove a package from your system. Easily customize how and where packages are installed. Select different installation options and switches for each package. Install an older version or force to install a 32bit architecture. [But don't worry, those options will be saved for future updates for this package] Share packages with your friends to show them off that program you found. Here is an example: Hey @friend, Check out this program! Export custom lists of packages to then import them to another machine and install those packages with previously-specified, custom installation parameters. Setting up machines or configuring a specific software setup has never been easier. Backup your packages to a local file to easily recover your setup in a matter of seconds when migrating to a new machine Devolutions UniGetUI 2026.2.1 changelog: This release brings several quality-of-life improvements, new troubleshooting features, privacy enhancements, and a collection of fixes and stability improvements across UniGetUI. New Features Added an operation counter to provide better visibility into ongoing package operations. Added a setting to automatically redact usernames from exported logs, making it easier to share diagnostic information while protecting personal data. UniGetUI now opens the release notes page after updating by default, helping users discover new features, improvements, and fixes. This behavior can be disabled from Settings. Expanded diagnostics and troubleshooting capabilities to simplify issue reporting and support. Improvements Improved update reliability and handling of update-related edge cases. Enhanced installer behavior when updating running UniGetUI instances. Improved package manager integrations and package metadata processing. Refined various user interface elements for a more consistent experience. Updated package screenshots, icons, and bundled resources. Improved logging and error reporting throughout the application. Bug Fixes Fixed multiple issues affecting application updates and self-update workflows. Resolved several package installation and upgrade edge cases. Fixed UI inconsistencies and unexpected behaviors across different pages. Improved handling of package manager responses and failure scenarios. Addressed issues affecting package discovery and metadata retrieval. Fixed a number of stability issues reported by the community. Performance & Stability Improved overall application stability during package operations. Reduced the likelihood of update interruptions and inconsistent update states. Various reliability and performance optimizations across the codebase. Download: UniGetUI 64-bit | Portable | ~200.0 MB (Open Source) Download: UniGetUI ARM64 | Portable Links: UniGetUI Home Page | GitHub | Screenshot Get alerted to all of our Software updates on Twitter at @NeowinSoftware
    • PDF4QT 1.6.0.0 by Razvan Serea PDF4QT is a free and open-source application created to provide a complete solution for working with PDF documents in a simple, flexible, and effective way. It offers all the essential tools you need to handle your files: you can view PDFs with smooth navigation, edit content, annotate pages, and highlight key sections for better collaboration. It also allows you to compare two versions of a document, making it easy to spot changes. Built-in security features give you control over protecting sensitive information and managing access. Applications PDF4QT Viewer Profi: Advanced PDF browsing with encryption, digital signature verification, annotation editing, regex text search, page-to-image conversion, and plugin support. PDF4QT Viewer Lite: Lightweight viewer with essential, user-friendly PDF viewing functions. PDF4QT DocPage Organizer: Merge, split, move, clone, or add pages easily with an intuitive interface. PDF4QT DocDiff: Compare two PDFs, highlight differences page-to-page, and export results to XML. Key Features Multithreading Support for faster PDF processing Hardware Accelerated Rendering for smooth, high-quality display Encryption to secure documents Color Management to preserve accurate color profiles Optional Content Handling to control visibility of content Text Layout Analysis for better text extraction and editing Signature Validation for verifying digital signatures Annotations and Form Filling for interactivity Text-to-Speech Conversion to listen to PDFs Advanced Annotation Tools (images, text, etc.) File Attachments Management to view and save attachments Optimization to reduce file size without losing quality Command Line Tool for automation Audio Book Conversion from PDFs Internal Structure Inspector to explore PDF structure Compare Documents to detect differences Redaction to remove sensitive information Document Signing for digital authentication PDF4QT 1.6.0.0 release notes: PDF4QT 1.6.0.0 brings a major image compression and optimization update, especially for PageMaster and assembled output documents. Image compression is now integrated into the assembly/export workflow, backed by new optimizer infrastructure, UI controls, feedback fixes, and tests. This should make PageMaster much more useful for producing smaller output PDFs directly from assembled or reorganized documents. The release also contains a large PageMaster refresh with improved drag and drop, recent files, crop pages, save/restore functionality, rotation and size indicators, a reworked icon set, and faster output preview rendering. Viewer and Editor workflows were improved with wildcard Advanced Find, Enter-to-search behavior, better outline keyboard selection, startup settings, fullscreen support, side-to-side scrolling, smoother scrolling, text selection, snapping, and expanded annotation controls. Compatibility and platform behavior were improved as well, including fixes for embedded files, fonts, checkboxes, invisible text, menu colors, highlights, XMP metadata, Windows color management, AppImage packaging, MSIX generation, installer behavior, translations, and newer compiler/Qt warnings. The commit history also includes a new scan-and-edit plugin foundation and color management performance work. Changelog: Highlights Image compression for PageMaster / DocPage Organizer and assembled output documents (#92) Major PageMaster UX refresh, including drag and drop, recent files, crop pages, save/restore, icons, and output preview performance (#383, #18) Improved image optimization feedback, including final resolution and DPI updates (#384) Better Viewer and Editor navigation: fullscreen, side-to-side scrolling, smoother scrolling, text selection, snapping, and outline keyboard selection (#242, #368, #136, #321, #250, #373) Advanced Find wildcard mode and Enter-to-search behavior (#379, #378) PDF compatibility fixes for embedded files, fonts, checkboxes, invisible text, form content suppression, and Windows color management (#225, #356, #256, #230, #326, #224, #385, #388) Startup settings, custom settings directory support, Linux double-click viewer separation, and packaging/build fixes (#382, #380, #381) Scan-and-edit plugin foundation and broader translation updates from the 1.6.0.0 development cycle Resolved Issues Issue #389: Adding hyperlink to internal object in PDF Issue #388: Update Windows color management system Issue #385: PDFTextLayoutGenerator::isContentKindSuppressed(ContentKind kind) is missing ContentKind::Form Issue #384: In the "Optimize Images" dialog, the info on the final image resolution and final DPI does not update Issue #383: UX improvements for PDF4QT PageMaster tool (v1.5.3.1) (ex. DocPage Organizer) Issue #382: Startup Settings Issue #381: Separated apps for double-click viewer in Linux Issue #380: Ability to run app with custom settings directory - executable parameter with path Issue #379: Advanced Find - Wildcard Mode Issue #378: Advanced Find - Should start searching if Enter key is pressed Issue #376: Deleting a note jumps to Outline Issue #375: Not enough maximum compiled page cache Issue #373: Ctrl/Shift keyboard selection for Outline Issue #372: Option to not color images Issue #370: Extracting pages within a range Issue #369: Keeping redact box on Issue #368: Side-to-side scrolling Issue #357: Bulk delete/add/edit of page labels Issue #356: Compatibility issues - font problems Issue #354: Color blend mode for highlights Issue #352: Icon size of the sidebar Issue #349: Add inherit zoom to bookmark zoom options Issue #338: Editor toolbox higher than editor window Issue #334: Impossible to set French language Issue #326: Checkboxes don't render in PDF4QT Issue #324: Menu text not rendered with correct color Issue #321: Select text in Viewer Issue #291: Support for editing XMP metadata or exporting to PDF/UA format Issue #282: Editor outline view: always zooms to around 50% Issue #256: PDF4QT cannot show some specific fonts correctly Issue #253: Undo/redo doesn't work in "edit page content" mode Issue #250: Snapping Issue #242: Full screen Issue #234: Setting font, font size and area of text annotations Issue #230: Garbled characters when opening PDF files with PDF4QT Issue #225: PDF4QT cannot open PDF files with embedded files Issue #224: Option to remove invisible text Issue #194: Change page size Issue #160: Color | Custom (green/black) does not work Issue #136: Smooth scrolling of document with mouse middle wheel - flywheel Issue #92: Add image compression to PDF DocPage Organizer Issue #18: Performance optimization - OutputPreview Renderer Download: PDF4QT 1.6.0.0 | Portable | ~30.0 MB (Open Source) Download: PDF4QT MSIX | 29.4 MB Links: PDF4QT Home Page | PDF4QT @GitHub | Screenshot Get alerted to all of our Software updates on Twitter at @NeowinSoftware
  • Recent Achievements

    • Veteran
      branfont went up a rank
      Veteran
    • Reacting Well
      Almohandis earned a badge
      Reacting Well
    • First Post
      Cosminus earned a badge
      First Post
    • One Year In
      ThatGuyOnline earned a badge
      One Year In
    • Week One Done
      Jeroen Wilms earned a badge
      Week One Done
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      472
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      181
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      120
    4. 4
      Steven P.
      85
    5. 5
      neufuse
      73
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!