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    <channel>
        <title>FreePortScanner Reviews RSS Feed</title>
        <link>http://freeportscanner.nsasoft-llc.qarchive.org</link>
        <description>Free Port Scanner is a small, fast, easy-to-use and robust port scanner for the Win32 platform.You can scan ports on fast machines in a few seconds and can perform scan on predefined port ranges. This tool uses TCP packets to determine available hosts and open ports, service associated with port and other important characteristics.  The tool is designed with a user-friendly interface and is easy to use.</description>
        <generator>QArchive.org RSS Generator</generator>
	            <item>
            <title>Good in depth port scanner. by Sthoen with average rate 3.5</title>
            <link>http://freeportscanner.nsasoft-llc.qarchive.org/#4</link>
            <description>
                Scanner is useful for discovering systems and allow identification of multiple open ports.
            </description>
            <pubDate>31 Mon 2007</pubDate>
        </item>
        <item>
            <title>Does what it says! by Gogarth with average rate 3.0</title>
            <link>http://freeportscanner.nsasoft-llc.qarchive.org/#3</link>
            <description>
                I was looking for a simple of way of testing the security of a machine recently added to a WAN, and a port scan seemed a good place to start.  This no-frills program did just that.

Furthermore it not only showed what ports were open on a machine that I was testing remotely; it also proved that my Outpost firewall on the remote machine was working.  It detected the port scan and blocked me!
            </description>
            <pubDate>09 Sat 2007</pubDate>
        </item>
        <item>
            <title>FreeportScanner lies on WCF services by WCF issue with average rate 3.0</title>
            <link>http://freeportscanner.nsasoft-llc.qarchive.org/#2</link>
            <description>
                I wrote new WCF service and I used FreePortScanner for detecting free ports on my computer, Well, it was good enough for this task: free ports were reported as closed, but I was surprised launching my service from Visual Studio 2005 in debug mode.
VS 2005 launches the service on its own inner server and confuses your scanner: FreePortScanner reported me that port 4848 is closed while my service was listening this port.

Sorry for bad English - I am speeking on Lithuanian and Russian languages.

Gediminas Bukauskas
            </description>
            <pubDate>06 Wed 2007</pubDate>
        </item>
        <item>
            <title>Good Product by Tavis with average rate 3.5</title>
            <link>http://freeportscanner.nsasoft-llc.qarchive.org/#1</link>
            <description>
                Quite a neat little tool. Helped with some networking issues that we had on client machines
            </description>
            <pubDate>01 Thu 2007</pubDate>
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