Archive for RB

Floppy Disks Fades

Floppy Disks FadesTechCrunch is reporting that Sony will stop making floppy disks in March 2011. According to the article,  Sony (6758) is actually still making and selling those discs. But soon it’s time to say goodbye. The company said [JP] it will stop production in March 2012. Sony rolled out the world’s first 3.5-inch floppy disc back in 1981. Even in 2008, the company could still sell 8.5 million units in Japan alone.

Floppy Disks FadesTechChrunch says “Not too surprisingly, Sony cites rapidly plunging demand as the reason” Floppy disk (demand peaked in 1995 and has shrunk more than 90% since. Hitachi Maxell and Mitsubishi Kagaku Media, two other major makers, withdrew from floppy disc sales in the spring of 2009.

Quietly, Sony wrapped up international sales of floppy discs last month. The exception was India and a few other parts of the world. The company already stopped producing floppy disc drives last September.

For the youngsters – here is what a floppy drive is

Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

9 Year Old Hacks School System

9 Year Old Hacks School SystemComputerWorld reports that officials at Fairfax County Public Schools thought they had a hacker on their hands. It was reported that someone was changing teacher passwords on the Falls Church, Virginia, school district’s Blackboard system. Blackboard (BBBB) gives teachers, students, and parents a way to communicate and stay on top of homework assignments and class announcements over the Web. Blackboard’s website says more than 5,000 K-12 and higher-education institutions nationwide use its software.

Blackboard logoThe District contacted local authorities when teachers and staff members reported their passwords were changed preventing access to their accounts because according to ComputerWorld. Changes to content and enrollment information for some courses was also discovered. The local police investigated and pulled a search warrant for Cox Communications, the Washington Post reports. They traced the  IP address which accessed the Blackboard system to the McLean, Virginia physical address of the home of a 9-year-old student in Fairfax County Public Schools. The police initially suspected the student’s mother, but after interrogating both of them it became clear that the child was to blame.

Turns out that the Blackboard system was not hacked. The student had simply taken a teacher’s password from a desk and used it to change enrollment lists and other teachers’ passwords. “This was a case where an individual … got hold of a teacher’s password, and the passwords had administrative rights,” said Paul Regnier, a school board representative. “It was actually not a hack, unless you consider the 9-year-old took the teacher’s username and password from the desk a hack,” said Michael Stanton, Blackboard’s senior vice president of corporate affairs. Although there will be no criminal charges filed against the perpetrator, citing school policy, Regnier wouldn’t confirm that it is a student, the Fairfax school board is taking the incident seriously, Regnier said. “Nothing bad happened this time, but we have to make sure that … it doesn’t happen again,” he said.

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TPassword on post ithis event correlated with the recent (04/14/2010) Tufin Technologies survey results of the hacking habits of 1,000 New York City teenagers. The survey found that 39% of the teens surveyed think hacking is “cool” and 16%, or roughly one in six, admitted to trying their hand at it. Only 15% of the entire sample has either been caught or knows someone who has – particularly disturbing considering 7% of young hackers reported they did so for money and 6% view it as a viable career path.

The big lesson here is, of course, SECURE YOUR PASSWORDS

 

Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

Earth Day 2010

Every day is Earth Day …

Earth Day

…When your world is disappearing

 

Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him at LinkedInFacebook and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

Google Aims For Driverless Printing

Google Aims For Driverless PrintingGoogle (GOOG) is looking to leverage its infrastructure to move printing to the cloud. Development is underway for a new feature in Chromium where Google will communicate directly with printers to generate the output. The Google Cloud Print project is a service that enables any application (web, desktop, or mobile) on any device to print to any printer.

HP 9000 printerGoogle says that it will work with direct (USB or parallel) and network-attached printers using a Google ‘print proxy’. The app would send the document and details of the printer into the Google Cloud Print (or another cloud) service which will then send back a correctly formatted print request to the printer using the PC operating system’s native print stack and sends job status back to the printer.

Google Cloud Print project infographic

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As with most things Google, there is good and bad. The good is that printer management can now be off-loaded. The proposal can decrease the headache of print drivers for grandparents and network admins. Now even hand-held devices can print (think Android, Chrome, tablet, Chrome on a tablet) a document without having to worry about printer drivers or third-party applications.

 

Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

First Broadband Over Powerline Net Dead

First Broadband Over Powerline Net DeadThe Manassas, VA broadband over powerline (BPL) network is dead. DSLReports cites the chief protagonist of the BPL drama the American Radio Relay League (ARRL) which won when on April 05, 2010, the Manassas City Council unanimously voted to pull the plug as of July 01, 2010.

Broadband over powerline was once praised as the third alternative to the telco’s and cableco’s stranglehold on the broadband market. Former FCC chief Michael Powell called the Manassas installation, “the pinnacle of broadband achievement” just five years ago. In the meantime increased broadband speeds and the unwillingness of utilities to become broadband providers doomed BPL.

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International Broadband Electric Communications (IBEC) to play on. They won’t have to deal with that pesky FCC or end-users since they can sell their broadband over powerline products to utilities as part of the U.S Department of Energy’s $3.3 billion smart grid technology development cash give-away grants.

Related articles

 

Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.