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UW-Stout E-Mail Going Cloud

24 Sep

liveateduUW-Stout has announced it has selected Microsoft’s Live@edu product to provide e-mail for students.  The choice will save hundreds of thousands of dollars for the University while providing the students a better e-mail system.  The aging campus-based e-mail server would have cost about $300,000 dollars to replace over a three year span.

The big draw for students will be increased storage capacity.  The top problem students encounter every single year is filling up their mailbox with messages.  So many of us today are use to unlimited storage of our data.  ‘Delete Message’, what’s that?  Services like G-mail offer the ability to keep a running archive of every electronic conversation you engage in.  The risk associated with that luxury is your e-mail is only stored in the cloud, not on your hard drive.  That is what makes so many nervous.  If the ‘cloud’ goes down, then what?  Oh my godddddd!!!!

Some administrators at other campuses cite the recent G-mail outage that occurred for one-half of a business day as a reason to stay away from cloud-based e-mail.  Really?  Do you think your universities IT department has the technology, hardware and abilities to that of Google?  Your out of your mind if you think your better off just because the server is on your campus.  Google maintains a 99.9% up-time, and that figured isn’t carefully crafted with formulas and exceptions to make it seem amazing.  It is real 99.9% up-time.  What service can even approach saying that truthfully?  Not many.

There is no question universities are afraid to ‘lose control’ over their e-mail system; a life blood of any university, especially UW-Stout.  Companies like Google and Microsoft can provide better solutions than any university IT department in the country.  Google has some of the best network infrastructure in the world.  Why not utilize the power of their technology for your students benefits?

These positives do come with risks like:

Microsoft Live@edu rolls out on-campus today.  I’m anxious to see the new product and all of its features.  I’ll post a follow up blog with how the transition is going here and my thoughts on using the Microsoft product first hand.

How To Secure Your Wireless Network

29 Aug

Securing wireless networks has been a headache for broadband users for years now.  I wanted to write a short blog on how the average home user or small business can secure their wireless network and keep moochers and even more malicious users at bay.

Your Not Secure Out Of The Gate

Most users think just having a router is an automatic shield after listening to various media stories praise routers for their firewall abilities.  This is not the case.  Most routers you purchase at your local electronics store (Best Buy, Wal-Mart etc.) is not secure when you first plug it in. Routers are normally pre-configured to be open wireless access points.  This means anyone within its range will be able to use your connection, no questions asked.  This is done to make setup easy and compatible with most operating systems.  The only problem is it leaves your network open to attack.

The very first thing you’ll want to is login to your router’s administration panel.  This is done by typing in a 192.168.x.x address into your browsers address bar.  The actual number varies by router manufacturer, look in your user guide or online to find the local IP address for your router.  Linksys for example is 192.168.1.1.  The manufacturer sets very easy non-secure passwords.  These are easily found online as well as in your user guide and if left unchanged will make your network exceptionally vulnerable.  You’ll want to change the password to your router right away.  Make sure it is a secure password of at least six characters and preferably with upper and lowercase letters and numbers.

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Bad Advice From GeekSquad

Local sales associates at places like Best Buy are often clueless on network security and sometimes offer up misleading advice.  Here are some steps that aren’t harmful, but mostly just a waste of time because they don’t secure your network.

  • Turning off your SSID broadcast. - The SSID (Service Set Identifier) is an identifier broadcast by a wireless router.  You might know this as your network name.  Most routers default SSID broadcast is the manufacturers name (linksys, netgear etc.)  Turning this off does nothing to protect your network.  With the proper software, a malicious user could easily spot your networks presence even with the SSID off.  It is a false sense of security.   Changing the network name won’t make you more secure either, though I would recommend doing it.  Just make sure you SSID isn’t identifiable making it easy for outside users to know where the network is located (i.e. last name, home address are all no no’s)
  • Turning DHCP Off - This in theory is a good idea but really doesn’t make you more secure.  It is easy to detect the method in which ip addresses are being assigned and make a request matching that method.
  • Filtering MAC Addresses – Filtering MAC addresses is a good practice to get into, but for most households and businesses it causes more headache than what it’s worth.  For homes with many devices on the network like game systems, multiple computers and cell phones, filtering MAC addresses simply isn’t practical.  That being said, a malicious user with easily attainable monitoring software can replicate a MAC address and still penetrate your network.  This method has some value for keeping the average user off the network but will crumble with ease against advanced computer users.

What You Should Do

The easiest thing you can do to secure your network is protect your wireless access point with encryption.  There are two different kinds of encryption you can use.  One is known as Wired Equivalent Privacy or WEP. This encryption is better than nothing but it does have a huge problem.

Beginning in 2001, several serious weaknesses were identified by cryptanalysts with the result that today a WEP connection can be cracked with readily available software found online within minutes. — Source:  Wikipedia

WEP can be easily cracked within minutes therefore it should not be your first choice, though it is better than having no encryption at all.  It will keep your pesky neighbors with no computer skills from using your bandwidth, but even the most novice 13 year-old could brute force their way into your network.  You want something with a little more ‘umph’.

You will want to use Wifi Protected Access, otherwise known as WPA,  for your wireless encryption.  WPA was designed after flaws were discovered in WEP that led to its demise.  Recently, researchers have found a way to crack WPA-TKIP connections, though it is still tougher than cracking WEP.  Since this has happened, you’ll want to make sure your using WPA-AES encryption to remain secure.  AES stands for Advanced Encryption Standard and the encryption contains three block ciphers.  It has been adopted by the U.S. government as their standard for encrypting sensitive networks and has yet to be cracked.

WPA2 is an even newer advance in WiFi network security.  If you have an older router or a computer older than 3 years old you may have compatibility issues.  For less headaches and still secure network, stick with WPA-AES unless you have all ‘newer’ hardware.

Conclusion

The simplest thing you can do to protect your wireless network is still encrypting it.  There is no need to cause yourself more trouble by turning off DHCP or hiding the SSID identifier. It will only give you headaches and nightmares down the road.  Most need for securing your WiFi comes from nosey neighbors or passer-by’s looking to score free Internet.  They don’t want to steal your credit card info or read your e-mails bur just score free interwebs. However, there are individuals who go around looking for easy targets to steal sensitive information from.

Device WEP WPA-PSK WPA2-PSK
PlayStation Portable Yes Yes No
Nintendo DS Yes No No
PlayStation 3 Yes Yes Yes
Wii Yes Yes Yes
Xbox 360 WiFi adapter Yes Yes No
iPhone Yes Yes Yes
Nokia N800/N810 Yes Yes Yes
Asus Eee PC Yes Yes Yes

Socialnomics

18 Aug

I found this from my girl Julia Roy.  I love these videos because they are so mind provoking and really make you think on a macro level.

I found these particuarly interesting:

By 2010 Gen Y will outnumber Baby Boomers.
This illustrates the shift occuring in our society right now in the U.S.  —  The older generations are falling out of power in business and society and Gen Y is taking over!

Social Media has overtaken porn as the #1 activity on the Web.
Didn’t think I’d ever see this happen!

1 in 6 higher education students are enrolled in online curriculum.
I am included in this 1 in 6 students.  UW-Stout is a leader in online curriculum.  In fact, most classes I take in a year are online.

CTA Radio System Hack Exposes Weakness

17 Aug

1320018A 20 year-old Chicago hacker by the name Marcel Carter was arrested for hacking into the Chicago Transit Authority’s radio system repeatedly for more than a year.  Don’t get overly scared by mainstream media’s portrayl of this kid as a dangerous genius who spent hours nightly hacking into CTA ‘super-servers’.

Carter either stole or found a CTA two-way radio that was already pre-programmed with the frequencies and codes that allowed him to harass transit employees for over a year.  This scenario however is much easier than you may want to imagine.

Many two-way radio systems in this country are built on old legacy technologies.  The security that is imposed on these radio systems is so easy to break a half skilled 14 year-old could execute the act of jamming the system.  Many of the systems in use today are still analog and use what’s known as CTCSS PL tones to keep unwanted jammers and others off the system.  The problem with this is PL (Private Line) tone systems is that they were not designed to keep systems secure.  PL tones rather lessen interference on large radio towers that are home to the high-powered radio systems.  With all that RF in such a small area, interference is commonplace.  PL Tones are a pre-defined set of tones that are encoded with a RF transmission to allow access to a repeater (radio system).  PL tone lists are by no means secret, there are only 42 CTCSS PL tones.  Today’s radio equipment can easily scan a transmission and find what PL tone is being used on that system in less than 60 seconds.  Once the PL tone is found on the system output frequency (the one you listen to). it’s just a matter finding the input frequency which again takes merely minutes to an hour at most.  Most of these radio system inputs & outputs are publicized on the Internet on scanner enthusiast websites.

The equipment needed to transmit on public safety frequencies or ones used by the CTA is relatively inexpensive and very easy to obtain.  Have $300-$400 burning  a hole in your pocket?  You could purchase perfectly legal amateur radio transceivers and do a simple modification or surf eBay for the proper equipment.  Either way you do it, it is very easy and quite cheap.

Once the radio system can be accessed, a person could begin to jam the frequencies hindering communications in an emergency and even impersonate public safety officers or dispatchers.

So why doesn’t jamming happen more often?  Well it does happen more than you think.  The city which I grew up in (Wausau, WI) is in the largest county in the state.  The radio systems here are large and span a very wide area.  Jamming is a nuisance that is a monthly problem for public safety dispatchers.  It is nearly 100% impossible to trace as long as the jammer/hacker isn’t stupid in his methods.  The main tool for tracing radio signals is often triangulation whether it’s from radio towers around the county to actually putting radio techs in the field moving around and honing in on the signal being transmitted from the jammer.

Police and fire systems are easy to break into and interfere with.  Most people don’t do it because it could endanger lives and would bring the attention of law enforcement quite quickly.  The story of Marcel Carter should be a wake-up call to our government.  It is time to drop old legacy analog systems and upgrade this countries network infrastructure.   The new digital systems aren’t 110% unbreakable but are incredibly tougher to get into.  A jammer/hacker would really really want to get in for a malicious reason to spend the time and money on equipment needed.  The Obama administration has dedicated billions of dollars to upgrading network infrastructure and I hope it is put to good use wiping out these old systems and old problems like Marcel can cause.

Open Textbook’s Beat Out Major Publishers

16 Aug

A huge hurdle has been jumped for e-textbooks and open source instructional resources.  California held an open ‘e-textbook compeition’ for any company to submit new instructional resources for the state.  The submissions were analyzed against California’s standards for their public education system and rated for their content.

A non-profit organization named CK-12 won the competition which is a recent upstart company with an incredibly small staff.  CK-12 wen’t up against major publishers looking to land a major contract with the state of California.  Of the 16 free digital textbooks for high school math and science reviewed, ten meet at least 90 percent of California’s standards. Four meet 100 percent of standards.’ Three of those recognized as 100% aligned to California standards were from CK-12 and one from H. Jerome Keisler.

What makes this hurdle so huge is that CK-12 is not a major publisher and focuses on open source information and sources.  Their texts are combined information for multiple sources and not a short list of authors.  Similar to ‘Wikipedia’ in a textbook format.  This showcases the power of open source information and California’s commitment to e-readers to deliver this content.

E-Textbooks Offer

  • Fast content turn-around.  No need for new print editions which when shipped can contain content that is up to 2 years old. Content can be edited literally overnight and kept up-to-date.
  • Content can be made more interactive and media rich via hyperlinks, high-resolution color graphics and other engaging content

This is a huge win for e-textbooks and open source content for instructional material.  It is my hope that universities will begin initialising similar programs for their students with the University of Wisconsin-Stout being a prime candidate test this new technology.

Ambient Awareness And Digital Intimacy

1 Aug

You see an old high school friend while shopping for your next pair of underwear.  You stop briefly to catch-up on ‘old times’ only to find it’s almost like you never were apart.  Sherri had a baby and John just had a killer bachelor party, yadda yadda yadda.  This phenomenon is known as ‘ambient awareness’.  Platforms like Facebook and Twitter have made following your friends, families and co-workers daily lives effortless.

Many non-early adopters ask, why do I care that Matt ate toast this morning or thinks that AT&T is an epic failure as a wireless provider?  With occasional browsing the updates seem really boring, perhaps even absurd to even waste time reading.  Keep following those status updates and tweets, soon a digital picture begins to emerge in your head.  You begin to tune into the flow of your friends daily lives and know their day-to-day triumphs and tribulations.  This is known as digital intimacy.

Digital intimacy is increasing on a monthly basis with the evolution of ‘real-time’ platforms.  Thousands of users squawked when Facebook updated to their freshly designed home page with information popping up in their users feeds faster than ever before.  After a few months most adjusted to the new speed of information and the ground swell subsided.

So with this new ambient awareness of your network, you will find yourself feeling strangely close to your friends even though you rarely see them.  When you do stumble across them you pick up your conversation where it left off online.  This is not an unproven theory, I catch myself doing it all the time.  The more I scan my networks the closer I feel digitally to my friends.  But sometimes too much digital digestion can be a bit stressful.

This stress has led to many digital mavens to start adopting convergence tools like FriendFeed or simply skimming on the platforms they currently use when they have ample time.

Users who create more content are much more likely to have more digital visibility and are also more likely to have digital awareness of their network.  Content creates conversation and will foster more time spent digesting and engaging in the conversation.  This closeness drawn from conversation and interaction will foster more digital awareness of their network, especially those who engage with that users content.

That begs the question, are you in the conversation?

The Clueless Guide On How To Write Effective E-Mail

21 Jul

Email IconSo many of us do it daily, but hardly anyone does it efficiently.  E-mail has rapidly become as important as checking your physical snail mail box outside your home.  Nothing annoys me more than having to wait more than 24-48 hours for an e-mail response unless they have auto-reply turned on notifying you otherwise.  My gripe to people I know who do that is, “would you check your physical mailbox every three or four days?”  They always reply with the common answer, no.

Here are some guidelines for effective e-mail

  • Don’t Ramble! -  When people sit down to check their e-mail they often have lots of messages and little time.  Don’t tell your life story only to get to the point in the very last sentence.  KISS (Keep It Simple Stupid) often works well for e-mail.  No more than five sentences, that’s it!
  • Be Careful With E-Mail Directories and pre-defined mailing lists - I’ve seen people I know make this terrible mistake.  When loading up multiple recipients or using a pre-defined mailing list make sure you know who it’s going to!  Double check and re-check the recipients you’ve selected or know who the mailing list contains.  You could send information and have it seen by users who you definitely don’t want seeing it.
  • Don’t E-Mail Angry - Sometimes you will receive a message that angers you or maybe your upset for outside reasons.  Never, ever send an e-mail while angry.  Just leave it sit till the next day and approach your e-mail with a calm and collected mood.
  • Respect Privacy – I’m not terribly strong on this point, but some people are really hypersensitive about their e-mail address.  I am personally not one of these people.  When sending an e-mail to a group of people consider using the BCC (Blind Carbon Copy) option.  This will mask everyone who receives the message so none of your recipients know who else received the message.
  • Have A Good Signature - Signature are important and everyone should have one.  Often times they are over done and sometimes down right distracting.  Don’t use photos in your signature as it will increase the likelihood of being caught by a spam filter.  Don’t put any kind of quotes in your e-mail, they could end being offensive or confusing to your recipient.  Use eight lines to compose your signature, anything more is just too much.  Only include what you want recipients to know!  I know it is kind of obvious but if you don’t want business calls at home, don’t include your home phone number.  Lastly don’t get flashy and fancy, keep it simple.  Your not designing a poster, use easy to read fonts.
  • Check It Often - As I described above, nothing gets under my skin more when someone does not check their e-mail daily or respond in a timely matter.  Check your e-mail at the bare minimum once a day, I recommend checking it twice a day.  Don’t just read, respond!   Techno geeks like myself have e-mail on constantly with push notifications to our mobile devices.  When you send me an e-mail I get it within a minute or two.  If it is critical i’ll respond within minutes, not days.  You wouldn’t let your physical mailbox outside your home go unchecked for days, would you?
  • Don’t Use HTML - Don’t use HTML to link to your website or blog or anywhere else on the web.  (i.e. “My Website”)  Actually spell out the address. (i.e. http://www.techization.com)  You never know what kind of e-mail client the recipient is using and how it could display or not display your address.  This leads to a distraction within the message and could result in a lost opportunity if your link doesn’t work.

And for goodness sakes spell check before you send!

Did I forget one of your e-mail etiquette pet peeves?  Have another good point?  Leave a comment below!

Did You Know?

11 Jul

College Campus Tours Gone Digital!!

11 Jul

Podcast LogoTouring college campuses can be painstaking and even sometimes boring.  I’ve been through my share of campus tours around the upper-midwest and have found some very interesting and others are down right boring.  I’ve often found that tour guides ‘go through the motions’ and say things like, ‘This is our commons area, we serve pizza and pasta and it is open till midnight.’  On the tour I’m likely to deduce that we’re in a commons type setting and the hours are likely posted on the door we came in and I’d assume they would be serving carb food like pizza and pasta!  There is no substance to tour guides that give you the very basics and sometimes bluntly obvious.  Now you can supplement your universities tour program with digital podcast tours while adding some consistency, engaging content and even a helpful training aid for campus tour-guides!

Getting the family together can be tough for some which can make scheduling a personal campus tour a real hassle.  By offering an audio podcast you can allow potential students and their families to tour the campus on their own time, even on weekends!  Not only do you give the freedom back to touring families, you also can control the presentation of the content within the tour and make it very consistent and engaging.  Ideally you would offer these mp3′s both on your university domain and on iTunes.  Why iTunes you ask?  Arguably iTunes is the most used platform to transfer digital media onto portable platforms, especially now with the iPhone.  Sorry Zune fans!  You can either create one large podcast and have listeners pause the mp3 while they walk to a new location, or splice up the tour into multiple audio files.  With the podcast tour you would offer a downloadable PDF with a map of your tour route.  A map and the directions you give in the podcast will be crucial to making it successful and easy to follow along. Many families will appreciate this offering from your university and it will increase your digital footprint, a key as we move further into this transforming digital world.

Podcast tours can also serve as a training mechanisms for your ‘in-person’ student tour-guides.  I have found great variability in campus tour-guides, not saying it’s a completely bad thing but using podcast’s to train will educate existing and new tour guides with little known information often found by researching your universities archives.  Fun facts that make you go, hummmmm, neat!  Information that is more engaging than, “Here is Johnson hall built in 1899, it has lots of math classes.”  That is the beauty of the podcast, you can re-do and re-do and tweak and perfect the tour until your completely satisfied with its presentation of your campus.

I have pitched this idea to administrators and media professors at the University of Wisconsin – Stout.  I hope there will be a ground swell acceptance for this new media idea.  One of the best parts about it is the investment cost is very low; quite important in this tough economic times.

Is your university doing something with digital media for campus tours?  I want to hear about it!  Comment below and tell me your thoughts and experiences.

ASCAP Digs For More Money On Ringtones

8 Jul

ASCAP Logo

When I first heard about this, I almost thought it was a joke.  ASCAP, a music performing rights organization now wants to tap more money out of your pocket for ringtones.  Songwriters and artists already receive a royalty when you purchase a musical ringtone, now that want ANOTHER tax on top of that. ASCAP claims that even if you legally purchased a ringtone for your cell phone you could still be infringing copyright’s because you didn’t pay what’s known as a ‘performance tax’.

ASCAP is claiming that every time your ringtone goes off, that song being played in public is considered a ‘public performance’ and therefore they should get a kickback for it.  Yes, you heard that right.  I guess I better keep my windows rolled up when I’m blaring AC/DC in my car and I better not play music off my laptop in the lounge at school because i’d be putting on a ‘public performance’.

ASCAP’s arguments are down right outlandish and I highly doubt they’ll win this fight in court with wireless giant AT&T.  ASCAP is also claiming that not only is the mobile customer with the ringtone liable, but so is the wireless provider who’s network makes the mobile phone ring.

Ringtones funnel hundreds of millions of fresh profit into the music industry each year, hip-hop artists’ like Soulja Boy focus their entire songwriting and career around selling ringtones because they have a high return.  Album sales don’t make the same amount of cash for the artist as a ringtone. For the last five years ringtones have been the crutch to the industry as they work on new business models to survive.  ASCAP has even gone as far as saying that “AT&T has gone much further in copyright infringement than Napster ever did.”  No, you are not in the twilight zone, this really is happening.

Leave it to the recording industry to poke a hole in their temporary life raft and tick everyone off in the process calling major corporations and millions of wireless customers criminals.  Instead of trying to suck money off their customers with additional taxes and suing their own consumers, maybe they should spend their time figuring out new business models for their industry to stay alive in the digital age.

Do you think a ringtone is a ‘public performance’ and should artists receive a royalty for it?  Let me know what you think by commenting below!

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