Showing posts with label computer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label computer. Show all posts

Thursday, June 30, 2011

Meet The World's Biggest Computer Security Risk


time youtube cover

The world's biggest security concern... is you.

Forbes quotes security expert Mark Rasch as saying "There's no device known to mankind that will prevent people from being idiots."

Most successful hacking attacks are due to so-called social engineering, meaning exploiting human, not computer error. At the end of the day, many times, it's our own stupidity or carelessness that leaves us vulnerable.

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Meet The World's Biggest Computer Security Risk


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Thursday, January 20, 2011

Google Funding CS4HS to Support Computer Science Education

CS4HS is a workshop for high school and middle school computer science teachers that introduces new and emerging concepts in computing and provides tips, tools and guidance on how to teach them. The ultimate goals are to "train the trainer," develop a thriving community of high school CS teachers and spread the word about the awe and beauty of computing.

Google Funding CS4HS to Support Computer Science Education


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Monday, December 13, 2010

Google Offers To Help Your Parents Use Their Computer

Google Teach Parents Tech

Google has a condescending new Web site that lets users create a canned e-mail message for their parents with links to 30 instructional videos on how to perform simple computing tasks like copying and pasting, sharing photos, and changing the clock.

The videos are not bad: they're all under one minute long, and they're not too shameless about plugging Google products--the video on how to create a blog mentions Wordpress alongside Blogger, and the video on browser updates includes a demonstration of Firefox as well as Chrome. Other videos, like changing the wallpaper on the PC, don't have any Google links at all.

Unfortunately, the site asks you to send the links within a email that explains how "shocked" or "impressed" you are that your parents are using their computer. A word to the wise: even if your parents seem like total idiots when it comes to the computer, nobody wants to be treated like an idiot--it's probably better to create a personal email message and embed the links yourself.

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Google Offers To Help Your Parents Use Their Computer


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Tuesday, December 7, 2010

Comment on The Network Computer Arrives…Finally! by A S

Om wrote: Of course, as time passed the networks got faster, the components got cheaper, but more importantly, the rise of AJAX and the evolution of the open source LAMP stack allowed the idea of web-based applications to blossom BECAUSE?. Was that sentence supposed to end like that?

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Saturday, November 13, 2010

WorldWinds Selects Slidell as Home to One of Most Powerful Computer Systems in the New Orleans Area

WorldWinds, Inc. Selects Slidell Center as New Home to One of the Most Powerful Computer Systems in the New Orleans Area - SYSTEM IS DESIGNED TO RUN STORM SIMULATIONS FOR HURRICANES


Slidell, LA--- WorldWinds, Inc., has installed one of the most powerful computer clusters in the New Orleans area at Slidell’s Gause Boulevard Complex.  WorldWinds purchased the system to run storm surge simulations for historical and hypothetical hurricanes that will be used by the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) to develop new flood zone maps.  WorldWinds' executives think it is an ideal location for the new computer cluster because of its high level of security and multiple sources of backup power, allowing for work without interruption.  The Slidell Gause Boulevard Complex also houses Textron Marine and Land Systems and the St. Tammany Parish Coroner's Office.

The site once served as home to the former NASA Slidell Computer Complex where NASA first placed computers in 1962 to support Saturn space vehicle construction at the Michoud Assembly Facility in eastern New Orleans.  The NASA Slidell Computer Complex was one of the most powerful in the country.

Those early computer systems were strikingly different from today’s sleek and modern machines.  The old systems would often fill an entire room with thousands of circuit boards, card readers, printers, and racks of tape drives.  Additionally, an army of technicians were needed to toggle switches, mount tapes, and repair equipment, which failed every few days.

Dan Yeates, Superintendent of Public Operations for the City of Slidell reminisces, “Contractor’s cars filled the entire parking lot at Gause Boulevard and Robert Road.  A large room housed key punch operators who typed instructions and data onto punch cards that filled many boxes.”  John Autry, Slidell's Information Systems Manager, added, “The systems were so fragile that if the lights blinked, the maintenance engineers would start running towards the computers like they were firemen to protect the equipment.”

In stark contrast, the new computer cluster purchased by WorldWinds, Inc. fits in two racks only six feet tall by four feet wide.  It is housed in the computer room in the basement of the building, and only requires two WorldWinds' staff members to operate it.  Hurricane storm surge simulations will run around the clock on the new computer, with much of the operation unattended.

“Storm surge simulations that previously took days to run on our old computer system now take only a few minutes”, explains Elizabeth Valenti, WorldWinds CEO.  “The new hurricane storm surge simulations will be used by FEMA to determine the likelihood of flooding in coastal areas as a result of hurricane water and winds.  A high performance computer is needed for the model runs in order to correctly position levees, roads, and channels.”

The model estimates the water level at each 30-foot grid point every 15 minutes, given the characteristics of a simulated hurricane (size, forward speed, maximum winds).  Model runs will initially be made for Georgia and northeast Florida while new flood maps for the Louisiana and Mississippi coasts were produced shortly after Hurricane Katrina.

WorldWinds, Inc. continuously gathers weather and ocean information from many sources and packages it into usable products for the public.  This wealth of information is evaluated, assembled, and disseminated through a network of computers located across the southeastern US.  In addition to running storm surge models, WorldWinds, Inc. provides customized weather information for mariners and emergency responders.  In cooperation with Baron Services, detailed satellite images, sea surface temperature maps, buoy observations, and wind forecasts are transmitted via the XM WX Satellite Service, http://xmwxweather.com.  To help fishermen in their quest, WorldWinds developed a product called FishBytes that identifies preferred fishing locations.  It is available on the same XM WX Satellite Service.

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WorldWinds, Inc. develops cutting edge technology from NASA, the US Navy, NOAA, and other government partners into state-of-the-art products and services that benefit the public.  WorldWinds is an active member of the EIGS geospatial technology cluster of the Magnolia Business Alliance (MBA). MBA’s goal is to impact economic development by serving as an advocate for small and medium sized businesses.  For more information about WorldWinds, Inc., visit www.worldwindsinc.com.