How to prepare your PC or laptop for theft [closed]
Here are a few detailed tips & tricks (mostly from Lifehacker)
10 Tips to Keep Your Notebook Safe when Traveling
How to Set Up a Laptop Security System
You could
1 put some baby photos as wallpaper or in the laptop bag
2 Never use a Laptop bag (thats a neon sign)
3 Uglify your laptop if you are visiting a crime prone area
Use Software
Top 10 Ways to Lock Down Your Data
Prey Phones Home to Help You Recover Your Stolen Laptop
Goto: Lifehacker for many other articles on theft.
One thing you can do that will make theft less lightly is to uglify your laptop.
- Put some duck tape around the hinges and/or battery hatch.
- Put on a godawful sticker on the back.
- Remove an unused key or two from the keyboard if you can, they are easy to snap back into place.
All these are reversible, if you don't care about resell value give the cover a good scratch with a key.
I purchased 4 year protection from Lojack for Laptops. They have you install something that gets embedded in the BIOS. It allows tracking of the laptop to still be possible, even after a reformat. They also maintain a relationship with law enforcement to quickly determine the location of any activations after theft.
I can't testify to their recovery efficiency, b/c the laptop was never stolen. But at least one time, I got a email warning "LoJack for Laptops has not received contact from your computer - Action Required". I had to call the owner and they confirmed, "Yeah, I haven't turned on my computer in over a month, how'd you know?"
They have other testimonials here: http://www.absolute.com/resource_center/search?market=home. I was satisfied with the piece of mind it bought.
Prey. An free, open-source anti-theft solution for PCs, Macs, and some smartphones...
Prey lets you keep track of your phone or laptop at all times, and will help you find it if it ever gets lost or stolen. It's lightweight, open source software, and free for anyone to use. And it just works.
The thing I like about Prey, is that you can lock the computer, change the password, take screenshots, grab images from the webcam, and see a list of all modified documents within a certain time frame...works well and free, have experimented with it, and love it!
One thing I recommend for all anti-theft softwares: get to know the software beforehand, and learn how to use it before you lose it!
- Encrypt your drive with an insanely strong password. If it's hard to remember, and you need to keep a copy of it, store it apart from your laptop.
- Turn off your browsing history, saved forms, and make sure to destroy any private data after browsing. Firefox has a number of ways to do this.