Practical Technology

for practical people.

July 8, 2011
by sjvn01
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The end of the future: The last Shuttle flight

When I was a kid, growing up on a dirt-road in the middle of Appalachia, not too different from how Max Jones’ childhood home in Robert A. Heinlein’s Starman Jones, I dreamed of starships.

When I was older I followed the Mercury, Gemini, and Apollo missions religiously, and when Neil Armstrong set foot on the moon I watched on a static filled color TV at a science camp. I dreamed of working at NASA, and, oddly enough, despite my liberal arts degrees I ended up working at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center (GSFC) in the 80s. During my time there I met astronauts, worked at GSFC’s Spacecraft Tracking and Data (Acquisition) Network (STDN) for eight Shuttle missions and I saw the Challenger disaster.

After that horrible day, I saw, and in a very, very small way, helped NASA return to flight. Then, I left NASA. I did it because I was starting my career as a technology journalist and because I had learned how NASA was slowly dying on the vine.

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July 7, 2011
by sjvn01
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Avoiding and Fixing Facebook Malware Faux Pas

My wife recently fell victim to a Facebook spam. She’s in good company. While many Facebook spam notes are as easy to spot as their e-mail counterparts—Click here to get CHEAP VIAGARA!!!—others are much more subtle. Recently, for example, one “offer” appeared to be a discount from a major airline. The one that caught her promised a sensational story about a local suicide.

So what can you do? Well, for starters, be as paranoid about unexpected messages from friends and colleagues as you would be when checking your e-mail. Would my friend Esther really send me a note with a link about Pittsburgh Steelers season tickets? I doubt it. Baseball maybe; football never! [Go DBacks! —Ed.]

Be especially wary of short messages that promises insight into some kind of dramatic news. Let’s say you click on one anyway; suddenly your Facebook wall has junk all over it and your account is sending messages to all and sundry. What do you do now?

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July 7, 2011
by sjvn01
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IPv6: What the CIO Needs To Know

The clock has stuck midnight. While your carriage may not have turned into a pumpkin, we really are out of IPv4 addresses on the Internet.

Oh sure, in North America, a few addresses left haven’t been spoken for yet, but they’ll be gone by the end of 2011. And you can buy IPv4 addresses for your growing enterprise for a little while. But the chimes of midnight are ringing in the air: You must start switching over to IPv6.

It’s not going to be easy, and you probably want to consider the transition in phases.

I recommend you start your IPv6 deployment by making your external Web, DNS, and e-mail services reachable from the IPv6 Internet.

The good news, though, is that you don’t need to switch over your intranet to IPv6 anytime soon. Within the confines of your company, you can still use IPv4. You need to move to IPv6 for your gateways, load-balancers, and outward facing Web and application systems, but at least for a while you can get by with IPv6/IPv4 gateways, dual-stack systems, and the like.

In short, you and your network staff need to learn some new technologies. It would be great if IPv6 was simply backwards compatible with IPv4 so we could easily switch over to tomorrow’s IPv6-dominated Internet – but it’s not.

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July 6, 2011
by sjvn01
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How to try to get a Google+ account

Sorry folks, I don’t have any Google+ account invites to give away. I wish I did. Google+ is great. But, there are some ways that appear to help you move up the Google+ queue.

Before talking about that though you should know that there’s already spam out there that masquerades as Google+ invites. Sophos, the anti-virus company, reports that “spammers are sending out bogus Google+ invitations that in reality point to online pharmacies.” I am so not surprised.

So, if you get an e-mail note telling you that you’ve got a brand, spanking new Google+ account, check the URL for that link before clicking on it. If it’s not going to “https://plus.google.com/,” or a similar address, don’t click on it. You can get your Viagra from a local drug store a whole lot more safely.

Here’s the real deal. Yes, Google is still letting people into Google+. But, it’s so doing very slowly .

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July 6, 2011
by sjvn01
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Could you do Linus “Linux” Torvalds job?

So you think you’re a Linux expert do you? You scored big-time on my two recent Linux quizzes: Are you a Linux guru? and Return of the Linux Quiz and you think you’re ready for the big time. Well, does The Linux Foundation have a quiz for you!

The Facebook quiz “Could you do Linus Toravlds’ job?” asks the hypothetical question that were Linus to take on another job—I understand Microsoft could use a new CEO no matter what Ballmer may say—could you fill Torvalds’ shoes?

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July 5, 2011
by sjvn01
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Is Facebook already running scared of Google+?

I’ve only been using Google’s new social network, Google+ for a few days, but I already like Google+ a lot. I’ve already said Facebook had reason to worry about its users leaving it for Google+. It looks like Facebook agrees. Facebook has blocked Facebook Friend Exporter.

Facebook Friend Exporter, like the name indicates is an open-source Chrome Web browser extension that lets you export your Facebook friend data. Or, rather it briefly did that anyway. Facebook has blocked it.

If wasn’t perfect. All it really did was export data–such as names, e-mail addresses, and birthday– that your friends had shared with you as a comma separated value (CSV) file. You could then import this into Google+. It wasn’t easy. Now it only sort of works.

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