Sunday, December 11, 2011

Need to Replace a Laptop Battery or Power Adapter? Think Again!

The "smart technology" of a laptop lithium-ion battery will fool users when they unexpectedly and silently receive malware (malicious software) which will drill computer hardware central processing unit (Cpu) 'system education codes' which is buried in Cmos and Bios date and time function article keeping. The computer command instructions will get into a date trigger activation performance to stop a laptop battery to accept the electricity from a power adapter.

All laptop users see is their computer operating law schedule react to 'date and time deactivation'. The computer malfunction will display its pop-up warning sign that users read "battery not charging." This will falsely mislead both consumers and most technicians to mistakenly replace the laptop battery.

Ac Adapter

To prevent or accurate this from happening the only alternative is to download, install, and run a quick scan on the whole computer. Use only a trustworthy and highly sophisticated type of anti-malware software. This should prevent the computer hardware question from stopping the battery and stopping the power adapter from sending electrical power (Ac or Dc to the lithium-ion battery in the laptop).

If this question is not solved soon, it will continue to bring on a process for both consumers and businesses to suffer higher cost than what most laptop users, technicians, distributors, and manufactures realize. When the lithium-ion battery charging process is stopped and false indicator displays lead to replacing laptop lithium-ion batteries, think again folks.

When malware occurs after suitable 1-year warranty expiration (on relatively new laptop computers) as well as with extended warranty plans wherein lithium-ion batteries are continually being supplanted because of resultant lack of malware capability knowledge driving connected costs higher. The following should occur:

1. Warranty goods adjustments creating both unnecessary labor and shipping costs (expended by seller and manufacturer); and...

2. As was written above consumer goods exchange retrievals costs (expending consumer transportation costs to seller or shipping facility); and, businesses and home-office businesses) will be affected.

Studying the aforementioned 'full picture' demonstrates how single types of incredibly sophisticated malware alone increases unnecessary costs connected with lithium-ion battery disruptions when only an expensively stupid exchange choice is made.

Actual Malware Event (Brief) -

EmiSoft anti-malware program, known as "a2 Personal" (circa: 14Jan11), detected' and allowed discharge of a highly exact form of malware. This ensue caused a relatively new Hewlett-Packard Compaq Presario Cq60 laptop computer from working. The law is (equipped with current updates for its Microsoft Windows 7 prime operating law schedule as well as its Microsoft security Essentials anti-malware and anti-virus application program). The ensue will render its lithium-ion battery and charging display to indicate the lithium battery was low (12%) -requiring charging. This simultaneously causing the laptop to silently reject alternating current (A-C) electrical power (110-Volt) having always been used to recharge the laptop battery within the laptop computer.

EmiSoft a2 Personal anti-malware and anti-virus application schedule located the malware as residing within the Hewlett-Packard factory created portfolio entitled "C:\Hp\Bin" where specifically that malware file was identified using the file name "EndProcess.exe" containing malware identified by EmiSoft a2 Personal as "Riskware.Win32.KillApp! A2" whereupon after the malware infected file was removed the Compaq Presario Cq60 laptop lithium battery resumed normal charging from the electrical power source as well as properly displaying the battery mode as "charging" rather than "not charging." The EmiSoft "a2 Personal" anti-malware and anti-virus article records the aforementioned encountered question (below).

Actual Malware Event ( article ) -

Computer: Compaq Presario Cq60

Emsisoft Anti-Malware - Version 5.1
Last update: 14-Jan-11 12:18:13 Pm

Scan settings:

Scan type: N/A
Objects: Memory, Traces, Cookies, C:\, D:\
Scan archives: Off
Heuristics: Off
Ads Scan: On

Scan start: 14-Jan-11 12:18:44 Pm

C:\Hp\Bin\EndProcess.exe detected: Riskware.Win32.KillApp!A2

Scanned

Files: 421742
Traces: 586552
Cookies: 0
Processes: 58

Found

Files: 1
Traces: 0
Cookies: 0
Processes: 0
Registry keys: 0

Scan end: 14-Jan-11 4:00:17 Pm
Scan time: 3:41:33

C:\Hp\Bin\EndProcess.exe Quarantined: Riskware.Win32.KillApp!A2

Quarantined

Files: 1
Traces: 0
Cookies: 0

Need to Replace a Laptop Battery or Power Adapter? Think Again!

No comments:

Post a Comment