Microsoft Football Scoreboard 1.0, as apparently published Tuesday. It's nice to know Microsoft has time to build things like this. 3.5MB for something that could be a web app in a little browser window though? From the description it's basically an RSS reader and world clock.
Apparently there's a an event to show Serenity on Joss Whedon's birthday this year to raise money for Equality Now. Info on the Minneapolis group.
A blog from the production of The Tribe. There's a lot of photos of the set and stuff around it. Probably the most info about the movie I've seen so far - it still doesn't appear to be in IMDB.
I saw this on the way to lunch, and just figured it was funny and someone had way too much time on their hands. Then I realized this leaves an interesting question. Did someone have way too much time on their hands, or should the date be taken into account when considering this?
Jesper Johansson has written an article called Help Wanted — Need "People" People for July's TechNet. It's an interesting writeup about how technological solutions to computer security problems will never work, and it needs to be addressed through changing opinion. Even brings out the classic quote "If a bad guy can persuade you to run his program on your computer, it's not your computer anymore." The dancing pigs example is back too.
He does bring out the point that we need "people" people to do that, which I think is important. The problem from my point of view seems to be convincing the more technical people people that it's in the user's best interest to be told no for certain things and explain why, rather than saying the users aren't technical and they'll never understand it. Just saying no isn't enough, as if someone is told know but just thinks it's arbitrary or because IT doesn't have time or doesn't want to support it, they'll try to do it on their own and make it worse than if they were assisted.
His perspective is actually that the technical people have to figure out how to deal with people to get around that. I can see that in a way. There are several non-technical people at work who I've built up relationships where I give complete answers of why we want to do something in a completely different way. They've learned in the long run that it's easier for both of us, and now are pretty much willing to take my responses without explanation. I think the key is after reaching that point to still keep explaining things, so things don't revert back to an "us vs them" mentality. It makes things easier to explain in small pieces gradually and let it sink in rather than hitting a point where it no longer makes sense and the whole background has to be rebuilt.
Unfortunately there are a couple issues with this. The first being it ends up not falling under and interfering with trying to keep a single-point-of-contact Help Desk. Part of the problem here I think stems from the fact that often the front line doesn't have enough technical knowledge to see the reasoning (or doesn't care about telling the user about it), and doesn't have an interest in learning it, so passes information through that sounds like an arbitrary mandate. The problem isn't needing to change the Help Desk model, that's needed for a lot of the front line stuff. Sysadmins need uninterrupted time to concentrate and work on projects. The people I work with for example understand that they can't always come to me with stuff. Most stuff goes to the Help Desk, especially if they need response right away. If it's an explanation that will end up with jumping through hoops at the Help Desk and they're willing to wait for action, it may not go through there. They understand I can't respond to stuff instantly (although for simple stuff I know the history and can do it in 10 seconds rather than them spending 30 minutes explaining what it is to someone asking completely unrelated things because they don't know it), and in some cases may take weeks to finish a request. And and understanding or dealing with the occasional "that needs to go through the Help Desk". I think there's probably a good medium between the techs dealing with people and the Help Desk workers understanding and communicating reasonings. There's also the need to get the information out to work the way down the chain through smaller jumps in technical knowledge, somehow minimizing the telephone effect.
Of course there are always the people who won't care, and will refuse all attempts to explain anything. Those are the ones who will probably need a few rounds of getting their identity stolen or financial accounts compromised, and losing their data due to lack of any sort of data management habits before thinking there may be a reason behind why they can't do whatever they want. What are your opinions on this issue?
Aaron Margosis posted an interesting thought on Anti-Virus vs Non-Admin (LUA). Basically with what's out there and the assumptions it makes, it's currently better to just run LUA (not as an Administrator) without any anti-virus or anti-malware than to run as admin because the protection software breaks otherwise.
I didn't realize there was such broken "security" software for Windows. They didn't name names in the articles though. Does anyone know which they are so I can avoid them when others ask me?
As you can't otherwise read it in the picture since the camera on my phone sucks, the nameplate on the door is copied in the upper right of the photo. Yes that's the data closet in the mens room. I have no clue who put this latest one up (or if he's seen this yet), but this showed up in the last day or so. In the last week since the holder was put on the door it's gone from "Data Closet", to "This door must remain locked at all times", to this.
I've added a new system for nested comments. I've been meaning to do it for a while, but just finally got around to it. So poke at it a bit, and let me know if you find something that breaks.
So today I was driving past Jake's in Mounds View, which I hadn't been by since lunch earlier this month, and noticed that the sign is down and it said something about opening mid-June. Looks like it's changing names/owners (7C). It'll be interesting to see if the new place is similar. It was a nice place to get a good burger over lunch without coming back to work spelling of smoke, as they had isolated the bar from the restaurant area.
I took some pictures this weekend up on the north shore between Duluth and Tettegouche State Park. Nothing too spectacular, but I figured I'd post them.
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