• Please use real names.

    Greetings to all who have registered to OPF and those guests taking a look around. Please use real names. Registrations with fictitious names will not be processed. REAL NAMES ONLY will be processed

    Firstname Lastname

    Register

    We are a courteous and supportive community. No need to hide behind an alia. If you have a genuine need for privacy/secrecy then let me know!
  • Welcome to the new site. Here's a thread about the update where you can post your feedback, ask questions or spot those nasty bugs!

Laptop security

Michael Seltzer

New member
Hi All,

Not sure this belongs here, exactly. Then again, it doesn't seem to belong anywhere, exactly.

For those who travel with a laptop, do you leave your laptop in motel/hotel rooms when you travel? What do you use to secure your laptop on trips?

I've been looking at security cables, and they don't inspire a lot of trust. Maybe that's because I've recently been looking at bicycle locks. You can find lots of information and reviews on trying to protect and secure your bike, but I haven't been able to find anything about securing your laptop. According to most sites talking about bicycle security, cable locks, for the most part, are about the least secure option. And the cables that come with computer locking systems are MUCH smaller than those used for bicycles. It looks as if any decent set of bolt-cutters (even ones small enough to fit easily in an inner coat pocket or a briefcase) could cut through them. As for materials, I think the bicycle lock manufacturers are using the best grade materials they can, at least for the top-end systems (many of them offer a guarantee when you buy the lock--if you lose your bike, they pay to replace it). It's odd, laptop security cable manufacturer sites talk a lot about how secure the locking mechanism itself is, but no one talks much about the cable, which looks like the weak link in the system to me.

I suppose with laptops, as with bicycles, deterrence is the name of the game: make it look harder than it's worth for the thief. But if all you're trying to do is deter the maid, probably the cheapest security cable out there would work. However the statistics on laptop theft make it seem as if it is more than simple casual, opportunistic, theft occurring. If there are those out there, maybe even some maids, who are more prepared, I can't help wondering if the security cables are any barrier at all.

Of course, there's LoJack. Maybe that's a good option, but I have to admit I'm uncomfortable with any system that puts software on my machine that checks in every hour (or day) with the mother ship in Vancouver. Especially when the mother ship can communicate back and do interesting things remotely, like completely erase my hard drive.

Anyway, I have a trip coming up, and was just wondering what others do.

Michael
 

Asher Kelman

OPF Owner/Editor-in-Chief
For those who travel with a laptop, do you leave your laptop in motel/hotel rooms when you travel? What do you use to secure your laptop on trips?
I rent rooms with a safe! It has to hold my laptop! Now I come to think of it, My 17" is likely to be a problem! Otherwise I have it kept in the hotel safe. If I have to leave it in my room, I have the files on a small mobile firtewire drive in my camera case.

I assume my laptop and anything else is not safe in the car either!

Of course, there's LoJack. Maybe that's a good option, but I have to admit I'm uncomfortable with any system that puts software on my machine that checks in every hour (or day) with the mother ship in Vancouver. Especially when the mother ship can communicate back and do interesting things remotely, like completely erase my hard drive.

Michael, that is probably what we have to do or backup online!

Now I'm thinking of getting a smaller laptop for travel!

Asher
 

nicolas claris

OPF Co-founder/Administrator
Bonjour Michael
I had one Powerbook stolen in a room of a LA Best Western.
It was in a small luggage and the safe was not big enough.
It has been sold while I was buying a 70-200 2.8 IS at Sammy's!
The door was not broken nor the locking system.
The card system proved that noboduy else than I and my wife and the Hotel staff as got into the room.
The manager of the hotel refused to accept that the maid working with him for 18 years could have been the thief…
The only compensation we got was that we didn't pay for 3 nights stay. Not worth the price of the new Powerbook…

Twice a year we do participate to boat show as exhibitors and I leave the laptop on the table with a slideshow running, it is "protected" by the cable system.
Of course the cable would be easy to break/cut but I think the cable prevent from easy "on the fly" thefts…

When I'm travelling (many times a year and in many different places) with all my photo gear, laptop, firewire external HD, I leave all the stuff to the manager office but I'm carefull it is not lying with luggages that travellers leaves there, after freeing the room, before leaving the hotel. A misfit would be so easy!
 
Anyway, I have a trip coming up, and was just wondering what others do.

I haven't tried it myself, I don't travel with a laptop, but maybe a deterrent like this could be of help. Assuming the cleaning people only clean during the morning, it would be possible to also switch on the audible alarm the rest of the day.

Frankly, I'd try and make it the hotel's issue to safeguard your property. Afterall, by paying for your stay you both enter into a legal contract, and theft prevention can be a (negotiated) part of it. The mere statement that you remain responsible for your personal belongings, could be a hard position to defend in court. Leaving the laptop with the (security)manager might be the best solution for all.

Of course the loss of (personal) data may be more important than the (insured) hardware itself, external/remote storage is the only solution.

Bart
 

nicolas claris

OPF Co-founder/Administrator
In a general way the companies of insurance pays off the stolen possessions if there was violence or burglary.
In some states of the USA, as California, hotels management are not considered responsible for what is not put in a safe…
 
Top