Tag Archive for Windows 10

What You Need to Know About Blue Light on Your Screens

What You Need to Know About Blue Light on Your Screens CNN reports that Americans spent up to seven hours and 22 minutes on screens each day in 2019— not including screens used for school work.  That was before the pandemic, which pushed people’s social lives onto Zoom video chats.  There are risks in all that screen time.  One common concern is the blue light that emanates from digital devices.

PrismAll visible light falls on a color spectrum based on the wavelength frequency and energy levels each color produces.  Blue light is a short wavelength, high-energy, visible (HEV) light.  Darker colors, like blue, are the closest to more dangerous UV wavelengths and strength.  Lighter colors, like red, are on the opposite end of the spectrum, with longer wavelengths and lower energy levels.

Light spectrum

Blue light can be harmful.

Blue light can be harmful, like too much salt in our diet.  Our bodies are naturally adept at absorbing and dealing with blue light exposure, but too much can be harmful.

We are surrounded by blue light in our natural environment our whole life.  We tend to only worry about blue light coming from display screens.  It also comes from:

  • Naturally, from the sun,
  • Fluorescent lights, and
  • LED light bulbs.

LED RGB pixelsMost computer monitors, cell phone screens, and flat-screen TVs are additional sources of blue light.  HP explains this is because white light LEDs combine with blue LEDs to create a solid-state light that uses significantly less energy and power than alternative light sources, making it ideal for electronic devices.  It These digital devices cause excess blue light exposure, and there are concerns.

Our skin doesn’t have much of a problem dealing with blue light, but our eyes don’t have the same level of adaptation.  Because the wavelength of blue light is short and powerful, it can penetrate past the cornea to reach the retina, which is the most light-sensitive part of your eye.

Digital eye strain

Parts of the eyeOne of the most common side effects of blue light exposure is digital eye strain, also known as computer vision syndromeIt is caused by staring at a computer screen for too long and may lead to dry, sore, red eyes and blurred vision.  HP warns that with prolonged exposure, blue light can harm your eyes and lead to macular degeneration.

You can take some easy steps to avoid permanent damage to your eyesight.  Here are several suggestions to control your blue light exposure.  Our bodies are naturally conditioned and programmed to fall asleep when it gets dark and wake up when exposed to light.  Harvard Medical School found that it is essential to limit your screen time because blue light suppresses melatonin for about twice as long as green light and shifts circadian rhythms by twice as much.

The same Harvard study found that green light may be as hard on your eyes as blue light.  The researchers warn that the two lights are similar in strength, and there are few remedies for green light exposure.  Limiting screen time—even if you use a blue light filter is important. 

Get your eyes checkedIt’s not just blue light that can affect your vision.  As we age, the lens inside our eye can lose flexibility, resulting in the inability to change focus from far to near.  Regular comprehensive eye exams are important to maintaining eye health, no matter how much time you spend in front of screens.

If you already have prescription glasses, move to multi-focal lenses and have your optometrist add a blue light filter.  If not, “cheaters” from the drugstore may be enough—for a while. 

Blinking

Blinking is our body’s natural defense.  It lubricates and cleans our eyes.  Typically, we blink 10 to 20 times per minute.  However, studies have shown that our blink rate drops when we concentrate.  We only blink 3 to 8 times per minute when reading, watching TV, or looking at a computer screen.  Dry eyes are irritated eyes. 

Take time to rest your eyes every 20 minutes.  Look away from the computer and focus on something distant—like out a window.

  1. the average person blinks 10 to 20 times per minuteClose your eyes gently,
  2. Squeeze and hold them shut for a moment,
  3. Open and relax them.

Remember to blink more often in between, and when you are thinking, instead of squinting at the screen, turn away and blink a few times. 

A blue light filter can be a physical barrier or an application that blocks out blue light.  Physical blue light filters block short, high-frequency waves and allow long, low-frequency ones.  HP says physical blue light screen filters are the easiest and best way to reduce your blue light exposure.  Some are just a clear piece of plastic material that covers your monitor. 

Blue light filtering glasses

blue light filtering glassesWearing blue light-filtering glasses for 3 to 4 hours before bedtime is the easiest way to keep your melatonin levels in check and your retinas protected.  An inexpensive over-the-counter pair online can cost $10.00 and up to $80.00.  The original Blue Blockers cost $19.95 back in the day.

Many prescription and over-the-counter cheaters have blue light filters in the lenses.  However, if you regularly wear prescription glasses, investing in a physical blue light filter may be a waste of money.

Windows 10

You can also reduce your blue light exposure by adding an app to many of your digital devices.  Microsoft (MSFT) Windows 10 has a built-in Night Light feature to control blue light.  To use Windows 10’s app:

  1. Microsoft logoClick the Start button,
  2. Go to Settings,
  3. System,
  4. Display,
  5. Toggle the Night light switch to turn the feature on.
  6. Click the link for Night light settings where you can:
    • Set a schedule that controls the lighting on your computer screen,
    • Setting the screen temperature allows you to adjust the levels of blue light reduction.  Warmer colors filter out more blue light—experiment with settings to see what works best for you.

Apple

If you are an Apple (AAPL) Mac user, Apple’s built-in blue light filter app Night Shift requires macOS Sierra 10.12.4 and specific systems.  If you can, follow these steps to enable Night Shift:

  1. Apple logoChoose the Apple menu,
  2. System Preferences,
  3. then click Displays,
  4. Click the Night Shift tab.

On your Apple iPhone or iPad, go to

  1. Settings,
  2. Display & Brightness,
  3. Tap the Night Shift setting. 

As with all things Google (GOOG) Android, the availability of a built-in blue light filter depends on your specific device and version of Android.  To see if this feature is on your Android device, go to:

  1. Goggle Android logoSettings,
  2. Display,
  3. Look for an option for a Night Light or Blue Light filter. 

If your Android does not have a blue light filter, consider using Grayscale mode, an accessibility setting for most smartphones.

F.lux is a popular third-party blue light filter application with apps for Windows, Apple, Linux, and Phillips Hue lighting system apps. 

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Please be aware that all these blue light blocker apps require you to turn on Location Services to get the automatic schedule.

Blue light-blocking apps can diminish the quality of your viewing experience.  HP says that compared to blue light filter applications and physical blue light blockers, physical devices diminish picture quality and color far less than apps.

Try one of these solutions to save yourself the discomfort and strain caused by blue light.

Stay safe out there!

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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.

Why CTRL + ALT + DELETE

Why CTRL + ALT + DELETEEvery PC user has given their computer the three-finger salute as it locked up – frequently at the most inopportune time. But why CTRL + ALT + DELETE? Turns out the three-finger salute was a 10-minute hack to make programmers life easier. The CTRL + ALT + DELETE was born at IBM (IBM) in the early 1980s.

IBM PCProject Acorn was the code name for the rush project to build IBM’s new personal computer – because Apple (AAPL) and RadioShack were already selling small stand-alone computers. David Bradley was part of the team working from the IBM offices in Boca Raton, FL on the IBM PC.

Mental Floss reports that the programmers’ working on the IBM PC had to manually restart the entire system whenever the computer encountered a coding glitch. This was a waste of time. Mr. Bradley told Mental Floss,  “Some days, you’d be rebooting every five minutes as you searched for the problem … The tedious tests made the coders want to pull their hair out.

IBM logoMr. Bradley worked on everything from writing input/output programs to troubleshooting wire-wrap boards on Project Acorn. In order to placate the programmers, Mr. Bradley created a hack. His hack was a keyboard shortcut that triggered a system reset without memory tests.

To Mr. Bradley CTRL + ALT + DELETE, was just another item to tick off his to-do list. He says. “It was five minutes, 10 minutes of activity, and then I moved on to the next of the 100 things that needed to get done.

The engineer chose the keys by location—with the DEL key across the keyboard from the other two, it seemed unlikely that all three would be accidentally pressed at the same time. Mr. Bradley never intended to make the shortcut available to customers, nor did he expect it to become a cultural icon. It was meant for his fellow coders, for whom every second counted.

Thank IBM for CTRL + ALT + DELETE

The IBM team managed to finish Acorn on schedule. In the fall of 1981, the IBM PC hit the market. It was a dull gray box beneath a green screen monitor. Marketers predicted that the company would sell less than 50,000 units a year. IBM execs thought that estimate was too optimistic. They were all wrong. Computing would never be the same.

Statista Percent of US households with a computer 1984 - 2016

As PC sales took off – few users were aware of Mr. Bradley’s shortcut hidden in their machines. That changed in the early 1990s when Microsoft’s (MSFT) Windows 3 took off. Now Microsoft’s Windows PCs were crashing and the infamous “blue screen of death” plagued Windows users. A quick fix to the BSOD spread by word of mouth (this was before the WWW) – CTRL + ALT + DELETE. Suddenly, Mr. Bradley’s quick hack was a big deal.

At an event celebrating the 20th anniversary of the IBM PC industry big-wigs gathered for a panel discussion. Mental Floss says that the first question to the panel bypassed Microsoft chairman Bill Gates and was for David Bradley. Mr. Bradley, who has always been surprised by how popular his CTRL + ALT + DELETE hack made him, was quick to deflect the glory. The programmer joked;

I have to share the credit, I may have invented it, but I think Bill made it famous.

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Bill Gates has publicly admitted that CTRL + ALT + DELETE was a mistake – but the company he founded continues to use Mr. Bradley’s hack. In Windows 10  the keyboard combination starts Windows Security, which lets you lock the computer, switch to a different user, log off, start Task Manager, or shut down/reboot the computer.

Stay safe out there!

Related article

 

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.

Password Pain Continues

Password Pain ContinuesDespite claims to the contrary, the password isn’t dead yet. Help Net Security points out new research from SecureAuth that documents how dependent many firms are on passwords. In fact, the research found that 40% of IT decision-makers admit that passwords are their only IT security measure. The IT leaders also believe it will take 5 years to see a significant shift in organizations’ reliance on passwords. The author says this is a worrying revelation, considering how many security breaches are the result of compromised credentials.

The researchers found that the entertainment, hospitality, and leisure industry is taking the most risks with its data as 65% of respondents from this sector admit their organizations only use passwords as a security method. (rb- No wonder they keep getting hacked!)

The author claims that SeaureAuth found that 45% of public sector organizations only use passwords. (rb- Another reason to limit how much data they collect on citizens)

Despite companies relying on passwords alone, the survey revealed that 63% of respondents believe their current authentication methods are effectively protecting valuable assets. The survey also revealed that firms worry about protecting different resources:

  • 29% say protecting the company’s VPN is critical
  • 28% believe protecting on-premise applications is a top priority
  • 20% stated protecting Cloud and SaaS is the most important, and
  • 18% said mobile takes precedence.

Nick Mansour, Executive Vice President of Worldwide Sales at SecureAuth explained,

As the skills of hackers continue to evolve, organizations are going to have to wise up to new methods of information access security, such as adaptive authentication which can leverage real-time threat intelligence, biometrics and even behavioral analysis.

Windows 10 logoFrighteningly only 44% of SecureAuth respondents have plans to change or enhance their security model in the next two years. The forthcoming Microsoft Windows 10 can help firms evolve their authentication processes. Help Net Security reports that Windows 10, includes a new feature called Windows Hello. Windows Hello will allow users to authenticate themselves using biometrics. The SecureAuth study reports that only 28% of IT decision makers believe that businesses will biometrics in 5 years’ time.

The article reports that Microsoft (MSFT) considers Windows Hello authentication more secure than using passwords – so secure, in fact, that it can be used in government organizations, the defense, financial, and health care industry. Microsoft’s  Joe Belfiore wrote

Our system enables you to authenticate applications, enterprise content, and even certain online experiences without a password being stored on your device or in a network server at all

Facial recognitionMr. Belifore says Windows Hello will work with existing fingerprint readers. Windows Hello will also work with facial or iris detection by combining special hardware and software; “The cameras use infrared technology to identify your face or iris and can recognize you in a variety of lighting conditions.”

Mr. Belfiore also introduced Windows Passport, a programming system that can be used to provide a more secure way of letting you sign in to sites or apps. The article explains that unlike with passwords, with which you authenticate yourself to apps, sites, and networks, Passport allows Windows 10 to do that in your stead: again, without sending up a password to their servers. Mr. Belfiore says:

Windows 10 will ask you to verify that you have possession of your device before it authenticates on your behalf, with a PIN or Windows Hello on devices with biometric sensors. Once authenticated with ‘Passport’, you will be able to instantly access a growing set of websites and services across a range of industries

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Couldn’t Redmond pick a name other than Passport? Reminds me of the Hotmail days.

There is of course the age-old problem of what to do if your biometric signature is stolen. You can easily change your iris with a sharp stick, but that does not seem very efficient.

What do you think?

Will Windows 10 biometrics take off?

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Related articles
  • Second factor authentication can help prevent security breaches (cloudentr.com)

 

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.