Tuesday Jul 07, 2009

 

This week I am on Holiday at the sea shore. A place called Long Beach Island, New Jersey. I would normally not be adding to my blog but my family suggested I do so. There was much discussion on this topic by family and friends this week.


It seems to be human nature to lose or misplace our personal items. Was talking to Vikie the manager of a L.A.'s Restaurant in Manahawkin, NJ.  She indicated that there is no shortage of items left behind at this establishment. Credit cards, drivers licenses, cell phones, coats, hats, cameras, and even a US Passport. LA's is a stopping point between Philadelphia and the New Jersey Shore on Route 72.


This is also the case at a place far from the New Jersey Sea Shore called the Half Mile Ranch  in Lake Luzerne, New York.  The owner Mark can point out the collection of no less then ten shirts and coats left behind at his establishment.  That's not all he has to show.  He has a rack set aside just for glasses and sun glasses.   It amazes him how many people will leave their cell phone and never call it or come back for it.   As far as the clothing he will collect it up for six months or more.   If it goes unclaimed he makes sure they are put to good use by sending them to an organization that distributes them to the less fortunate in the community.  As far as L.A's Restaurant in Manahawkin they tag the items and hold them for a year.   If unclaimed at that point they are given away.

So what's my tip today?  It happens to be two fold.

 

  • It you have an item of value make sure it's labeled with your name. your phone number or email address. Some people will use one of those return address labels they get in the US Mail.  This process is good for glasses, cameras, and cell phones as well.  It also works for cell phone chargers and laptop computer chargers left behind when traveling.  Many hotels and motels have an entire box devoted to chargers left by their guests.  Most hotels will attempt to return them if marked with contact information.

Mr. Thomas Jones, Jr.
226 Any Street
Home Town, Your State 12345
USA

 

  • The second suggestion is to make sure your smart phones, PDA's, Blackberrys, Treo's, etc are password protected if they contain sensitive corporate or personal information. Information such is username password combinations, credit card numbers, or corporate email.   Your employer has entrusted you with access to "organization only" information.  Please keep it that way.  Some organizations require your smart device to be password protected if setup to receive corporate email and calendar services.  So my advise to you today is lock them down.  Turn on the safeguards that come with the device and set a "strong" password.

 

Hope this was helpful and entertaining.    Enjoy your Summer!

-- Frank




Tuesday Jun 02, 2009

A Sunday wedding at a public pavilion in the town park. Another two restaurants closed and are up for sale.  In front of a church a sign that read "Free Lunch Saturday" was still displayed.  Many motor homes and boats for sale too along the way. Was upstate this past weekend. Took a ride.  Hesitant due to gas increasing in price again, but went anyway.  Great day for a ride. Motorcycles are starting to arrive for Americade.   Elvis Convention and the Tow Truck Show are just winding down.  

Elvis Photo

A quick stop at a motorcycle show.  A stop to take in the beauty of a lake.  A very nice couple offers me the 2 hour balance of their parking meter. Thanked them, but passed since I was only passing through. 


-- Frank



Friday May 01, 2009


Had an opportunity to participate in a conference on IT Greening sponsored by the NYS Forum and NYSERDA.   The primary focus was the sharing of energy saving best practices as they relate to IT.  I had the pleasure to attend a session delivered  by Brian Day, Senior Program Manager in Sun's Global Lab & Datacenter Design Services organization.  He has been working on the consolidation and energy saving projects in California and Colorado.  His presentation is pointer to his presentation.

FUTURE PROOFING THE DATACENTER - Eco DC Reality,  April 30, 2009

Brian is part of a team that is documenting their best practices via the Sun Blueprints.  Here are two of them:

Energy Efficient Datacenters - The Role of Modularity in Datacenter Design

Energy Efficient Datacenters - Electrical Design


I also enjoyed hearing Dr. Steven A. Leib's  Updating an Inconvenient Truth which was an updated version of the material originally made presented by former Vice President Al Gore.  Dr. Steven A. Leibo is the District Manager Upstate NY and VT, The Climate Project. 



-- Frank


Friday Apr 18, 2008

I have spent this past week at the California based headquarters of Sun Microsystems.  I have been collaborating with other Sun security experts on a variety of current events and new products.

My family and friends are of the impression that California is always warm and sunny.  Some places are but not always the San Francisco Bay Region. So to the title of this entry, Sunny California.  It has been very sunny but not as warm as you might have expected.  They set temperature records for being the warmest day of the year so far and this past Saturday a 60 year record was broken with it hitting near 80 degrees.  Well since last Sunday that it has been on the cool side.  In fact cooler than my home in New York.  Can't wait for Spring to come to New York./font>


-- Frank




Tuesday Mar 04, 2008

 

I am just back from three days of deep technical training at the Q Center in St. Charles, Ill.    The Q Center is a first class business conference facility located just outside Chicago, Ill.   It was Sun Microsystems sponsored with classroom and hands on sessions.  The event included an evening dedicated to our partners to showcase their new products and solutions.   Some of the partners showing their newest technology included VMware, LSI Logic, IBM, HP, Brocade, and many others.

 

I attended sessions from both AMD and Intel which detailed their current processor offerings with a peek at their future road maps.   Other very good sessions included identity management deployment best practices and a virtualization hands on lab.

 

Much of the excitement at this event had to do with several recent announcements made by Sun Microsystems:

    Sun Microsystems and VMware Announce OEM Agreement

    Sun Microsystems Announces Completion of MySQL Acquisition

    Sun Announces Availability of Sun xVM Ops Center

    Sun Microsystems Announces Agreement to Acquire innotek (VirtualBox)

If you get a chance check out the VirtualBox with DSL.   It works!


-- Frank

 



 

Wednesday Dec 27, 2006

I have been asked this question several times this past week so I will formalize my response as a Christmas Gift to you all.

Well you are now on your second or third generation digital camera. You have 3000 to 5000 photos on the hard disk of you home computer or laptop. If you are like myself you have been taking digital photos since the late 1990's. You now have a digital camera built into you phone. Sure hope all of these priceless photos are backed up someplace!

 

Verizon Wireless CDM 8945

My recommendation to you all is to go out and get some high quality write once CD-ROM media that can be found at places like CompUSA or Wal-Mart. Divide your photos into some logical grouping. I like filing by year and then by activity or event. If I don't have a specific activity or event but have several disparate photos, I just file them in a directory/folder named month_year, like Feb_06 (usually a slow month). This way I can archive an entire year at a time. So far I have not hit the maxium size of a CD-ROM in a given year.

Memorex 100 Pack Standard 120mm CD-R Discs 52X

I burn two copies. One I keep in my computer CD-ROM collection at home. The other I put in a safe place such as a bank safety deposit box or fire proof safe. Preferably someplace other than where you are keeping your first copy. I archive my photos yearly. I backup my photos on hard disk every few weeks.

Now for a great Christmas gift for that owner of that digital camera. Get them a USB thumb drive or memory card/stick to keep their most recent photos on. This will allow them to bring their most recent photos with them to show off at family gatherings and other various social events that typically take place here in the United States at this time of the year.



Happy Holidays! --Frank

Wednesday Nov 01, 2006

I can't make this stuff up. This is real world conversations.

Was in the office several days ago and one employee hands another some pages which had been on the printer since the weekend. The recipient states it must have been when he was connected to the VPN from home and tried to print this document. Nothing came out at home so he reprinted, this time selecting his local printer.

An employee travels to his corporate offices in New York City and is conducting business on one of the computers in this office. Since their IT staff is forward thinking the employee can login to the computers in the NYC office and use his profile as if he is back in his local office. He sets his default printer to the NYC office printer. This individual returns home. Several days later he prints some sensitive corporate information but the output did not come out of his printer. It went to the printer in NYC. You guessed it, the chase is on to find someone he trusts that can grab the output before he gets in hot water.

Also this past week I hear a story about how someone attempted to print some off color output from an adult web site on their printer from their company owned laptop. Nothing printed on his/her home HP Inkjet, but must have forgot they printed it. Several weeks later at the office, after plugging in his/her laptop, a coworker on a witch hunt is running around trying to track down who just printed some very offensive material at work.

So be careful when printing something that is not for public consumption.


-- Frank




This blog copyright 2009 by FrankWickham