IT-Management – Celebrating Black History in Technology February 28, 2009
Posted by princekoj in Being Human.Tags: Black history, technology
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In celebration of Black History Month

Black History
Just a post in honour of Black History Month which may be at its close but – better late than never. Click here to see the slide-show. Very interesting. I thought I would just include this post as I was fascinated to see so many blacks making so many great contribution to industry. A needed image change for some black youths who have no role models in their lives. I will send this to my nephew who live in the UK. The black youths in the UK as well have lost their identity and it is cause for concern for me.
Kojo
Reflection on my facebook groups assignment February 24, 2009
Posted by princekoj in Being Digital.add a comment
Initial response
My initial response when given this task was – “What group should I join?” I searched for something rather generic and did not like the results I was receiving. Can’t remember the term I used right now. I started searching for topics I was interested in like Open Source and tonnes of groups turned up.
It was difficult at first to decide on one but I eventually did choose, a few, ”Gnu/Linux users” , “Open Source Community” and a few groups dedicated to the One Laptop Per Child Foundation[OLPC] (here is a link of Nicholas Negroponte talking about the OLPC in 2006, it is 18 minutes so view when you have time. click here).
Points of interest
My first observation when I went back to the groups subsequent to my creating them is that facebook (why do I write it in all common letters? This needs further analysis) has two columns with lists of groups, one is a list of the groups that my friends have joined and the second is the list of groups of which I am apart with or without my conscious knowledge. (You know sometimes someone suggests a group for you to join and because you trust your friend you just click the ever present “join this group”)
Well I did that once and ended up in a group that was dedicated to raising the self esteem of young women and while that is a good thing it just felt a little uncomfortable. Don’t get me wrong, I Love the idea but I felt like I was lost in a group of women talking about their own thing and I would be an outsider. Maybe I will grow up some day and see the light.
I digressed, back on topic. So facebook had the left column of the group tab displaying my friends’ groups and the right column. I view from left to right so I would naturally see my friends list before I see my list and although I think it is a great idea to have a list of the groups of which my friends are a part listed there, I would rather my groups to take center stage. It does follow well with the ideals of facebook, which is community – maybe they value the community more than the individual – but that is just my unsubstantiated view.
Inside the groups
Once inside a group I was struck by the fact that many discussions were taking place at once. So I just clicked on a topic of interest. For example I clicked on the Gnu/Linux user group and there is a list of discussions, I entered one entitled “False Linux User Claims” which was not so smart of that person who started that discussion as it was attacking Linux and making really unreasonable claims such as that it is a myth that “Linux is Virus free” and that “Linux is bug free”. Now this is all good and well as those are ridiculous claims and one should be wary of them anyway, but this writer had links of evidence to support his claim that people are saying these things and that it is misleading for new users. This showed me something interesting about research, particularly in this technological age, and it is that you can find evidence to prove almost any point of view you hold. (except for my dissertation on e-learning in marginalised communities, but that is for my tutor, oh, I guess he is reading this too, sorryLOL).
The response to this “brave” fellow was not very pleasant but in the end it was all engaging and I learnt about the myths and the way people can become territorial about their technology of choice.
Linux window managers
The other post I was following was on Linux window manager. This in very layman’s term is the visual display the graphical user interface that allows you to access the various applications on the operating system. I should have said this before but Linux is not windows. It is another operating system that also uses its own window system and it has a lot of them. This was garnered from the Gnu/Linux User group as well – someone asked what kind of window manager was persons using. Below is an example of what the window manager can do in Linux. Remember this is just one type of window manager and would require a good enough graphics card.
Linux window manager. I definitely will be trying out some of them as I have linux dual booting on my laptop. My only challenge is my graphics card is not as powerful to get all of that, pity.
Here are a set of videos the first one is funny: I got it from the same group as well.
Click [Funny linux/Windows videos] to get to the videos – You will be taken to a new window.
Enjoy.
As a final bit of statistics: The Gnu/ Linux user groups had 28, 559 members as at 3:41pm today, Feb. 24, 2009, and also 307 discussions.
This was my reflection on using groups in facebook. (still writing it with common letters, can anyone explain that?)
Kojo
Cost effective deployment of Linux based virtualised PCs for Schools in Brazil February 20, 2009
Posted by princekoj in Being Digital.Tags: Brazil, FOSS, linux, School, thinclient
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PRESS RELEASE: Userful and ThinNetworks Announce the World’s Largest Desktop Virtualization Deployment – 356,800 Green Workstations Calgary, Canada, and Brasilia, Brazil – February 17, 2009 — Userful and ThinNetworks today announce that they have been selected to supply 356,800 virtualized desktops to schools in all of Brazil’s 5,560 municipalities. [Read here for more]
Of course access is not enough but that large scale with open source is impressive. Lots of issues to discuss here though. We would want to hear about how it will be used in schools to provide blended learning and a strategy for that needs to be well planned. In fairness I am not sure if the Brazilian Government has such a plan in place or policy to meet the demand for proper integration into the schools’ curricula.
Interesting numbers though.
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Malicious URL arrive on Digg February 18, 2009
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Source can be found here at this link
12 February 2009
Malicious URLs arrive on Digg Web portal
Steve Gold
The ingenuity of malware distributors has reached new levels – of depths – depending on your point of view.
According to PandaLabs threat researcher Sean-Paul Correll, malware distributors are now using rogue URLs on the Digg news aggregation portal to persuade Internet users to click through and become infected.
By placing URLs on the Digg pages that ostensibly link to interesting stories, Correll says that internet users are getting infected with malware.
The process is apparently known in hacking circles as RickRolling, and is named after the 1997 Rick Astley song “Never gonna give you up.”
The real term in fraud circles, Infosecurity notes, is `bait and switch,’ a process in which shoppers are lured into a transaction for a given product or service and which is then switched at the last minute.
PandaLabs’ Correll says he has discovered several dozen `celebrities’ posting stories or comments with malicious URLs on Digg that route to video files which turn out to be routes for adware or fake anti-virus applications.
Digg has been notified about the problem and is reported to be taking action, terminating as many as 300 accounts on its service.
The problem, Infosecurity notes, is not confined to Digg, but to any Web site – especially web 2.0 portals – that allow postings from internet users.
Which probably includes a sizeable minority of the hundreds of millions Web sites on the internet – including, ironically enough, www.rickastley.co.uk which has a forum that allows postings…
Digitally Yours (a digital poem) February 9, 2009
Posted by princekoj in Being Digital, Being Human.2 comments
Digitally Yours
I’ll blog about you always
and send you hearts on chat
put your photo in my album
If you are ok with that
I’ll send you e-cards for no reason
and e-love-letters as e-mails
writing with words and symbols
So my lyrics may never grow stale
The traditional end is outdated
“Yours Truly” will not work for sure
I’ve coined a new way of closing
I’ll sign it – “Digitally Yours”
Botsio
February 8, 2009
Posted by princekoj in Being Human.3 comments
I wrote this quote that could be applied to true friendship in 2001:
I don’t need to know you for a long time, to Love you for a lifetime…
Botsio (2001)
That is the way I feel about all of you on this course, even if I have never met you. In a way we are all connected.
To Be human! February 4, 2009
Posted by princekoj in Being Human.Tags: human, life
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The About this Blog link has an extensive write up about what this blog is all about with a brief about me in Personal Profile, and they are both worth a look. However, part of what makes us human is that shared experience of living our lives day by day and doing things that are similar, such as eat and drink and worry, and Love and hate and all that is in between. Most of us have concerns in life and some are more capable of surviving than others.
I will write somethings here that I say to myself to encourage me and if you want you can come along for the ride. It should prove interesting and very “human”. Now when you find time and to be truly inspired, take a look at this story called That Something (link opens in new window) and be prepared to be transformed. I will also place it in a page in the column at the right of this Blog.