recovery – The Graphic Mac http://www.thegraphicmac.com Tue, 09 Aug 2016 15:00:02 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=4.5.3 Windows 10 does away with bloatware. Sort of. http://www.thegraphicmac.com/windows-10-does-away-with-bloatware-sort-of http://www.thegraphicmac.com/windows-10-does-away-with-bloatware-sort-of#comments Tue, 24 Mar 2015 15:30:06 +0000 http://www.thegraphicmac.com/?p=11136 Related posts:
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Windows 10

We are also redesigning Windows’ Refresh and Reset functionalities to no longer use a separate recovery image (often preinstalled by manufacturers today) in order to bring Windows devices back to a pristine state.

What Microsoft is trying to say here is that while they will still allow manufacturers like Dell and HP to pre-install a pile of crappy bloat/ad/malware, they will finally give you the ability to do a clean recovery of only Windows 10. As an added bonus, you can apparently create your own recovery partition with updates already applied. Nice!

I’ll not be switching to Windows any time soon, but this was one major reason I wouldn’t even consider it. Unfortunately, even when Microsoft does something really great, they manage to screw it up.

I realize that MS makes its money licensing copies of Windows to OEMs, and they are the ones that screw the users directly But it ultimately hurts MS more than anyone, because the remedy is not buy another PC manufacturer’s piece of hardware, but using another OS entirely. It screws the user because in order to have a great Windows experience, you first have to have a horrible one.

Microsoft has done a lot of things to copy Apple over the years, but putting the user first has never been one of those things.

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Recovering PDF passwords: what to expect http://www.thegraphicmac.com/recovering-pdf-passwords-what-to-expect http://www.thegraphicmac.com/recovering-pdf-passwords-what-to-expect#comments Mon, 18 Jul 2011 13:00:33 +0000 http://www.thegraphicmac.com/?p=5725 Recover PDF Password ($40 minus 15% off if you use the offer code GRAPH-MAC-15 at checkout time) app a try. It's the only Mac solution I came across that not only can bypass the no-print restrictions, but the more annoying "password just to open issue." Plus, I've reviewed a few of Eltima's apps before and found them to work pretty darn well. Below are my findings in my initial tests. ]]> Recover PDF PasswordIt’s not often that I get a password protected PDF file that I don’t get the password for. I’m not talking about a restricted PDF that doesn’t allow you to print or copy text out of, those are easy to work around. I’m referring to the obnoxious graphic artist at Client X who no longer works there who set the security settings on an important PDF to require a password just to open. That guy is a jerk, but that’s for another time. How to get into the PDF is the immediate dilemma we need to deal with.

Prior to Mac OS X Leopard, you could open the PDF in Apple’s ColorSync Utility – a simple workaround that obviously got missed by someone at Apple. Unfortunately, that doesn’t work anymore. So I decided to give Eltima’s Recover PDF Password ($40 minus 15% off if you use the offer code GRAPH-MAC-15 at checkout time) app a try. It’s the only Mac solution I came across that not only can bypass the no-print restrictions, but the more annoying “password just to open issue.” Plus, I’ve reviewed a few of Eltima’s apps before and found them to work pretty darn well. Below are my findings in my initial tests.

I’ll make this short and sweet, cause let’s be honest – there ain’t nothin’ sexy about password recovery! Heck, I’ll even use pictures to tell the story.

Test #1 PDF file: password = “apple” (without the quotes)

Recover PDF Password

“Apple” is obviously a short password, and to make things easier, it’s a word found in the dictionary. I knew any password decryption app would figure this one out if it worked at all. I wasn’t expecting to have it only take 3 seconds though! That was too easy.

Test #2 PDF file: password = “mac1234” (without the quotes)

This should take longer than 3 seconds…
Recover PDF Password test

Well, maybe the app automatically pauses if the Mac sleeps?
Recover PDF Password test

Ok, so it did say it would take more than a day…
Recover PDF Password test

Sheesh! They weren’t kidding about that “more than a day” part…
Recover PDF Password test

Nearly 47 hours… F#¢K IT! It’s faster to re-create the darn file!
Recover PDF Password test

I gave up after it hit 48 hours without cracking the rather simple “mac1234” password. If you have a password protected PDF file that you believe was created by a moron stupid enough to use a single word found in the dictionary, then Recover PDF Password is probably going to save your day for only $39.

If you think the person who created the password protected PDF had half a stinking brain, you’re probably better off just resigning yourself to the fact that you ain’t gonna see what’s in that file. After all, what is your time worth?

This isn’t a reflection on Eltima’s Recover PDF Password app, I suspect that password cracking is a mighty time-consuming and processor intensive task for any app. Recover PDF Password offers plenty of customization for your attempts at busting through the password security in a PDF file, and the app clearly does work. But short of accidentally forgetting the password to the great American novel you just finished writing and have no other copies of, I would use the $39 to put toward buying a new LCD screen to replace the one you just put your fist through!

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