Posted on Sep 30, 2007 - 9:21pm by Terry Green in Art
Posted on Sep 29, 2007 - 12:38pm by Terry Green in Computers, Security
For the grizzled internet veterans out there, details on the seedy underworld of cyber-crime is nothing new. For the rest of us, let me present some of the sordid details. Have you wondered why you get so much spam and who is responsible for it? Surely it is just the equivalent of junk mail in our home mail box right?
Sadly enough, in many cases no. Spam, phishing emails, and spyware are just the tip of the iceberg for the many tools that cyber-criminals use these days to steal millions of dollars every year from every day people like us. How real is this threat? Consider this account and the level of detail that the criminal had to have to pull this off
It was July 2004 and Brian Campbell had been on Isla Mujeres off the coast of Cancun for three days for a relative’s wedding when he discovered he’d been scammed.
An American MBA student studying in Australia at the time, Campbell (not his real name) was accustomed to checking his investment portfolio daily over the internet. But the wedding distracted him a couple of days, and when he finally got online, he found he was locked out of his Schwab trading account.
He called Schwab and discovered that his user name and password had been changed. What’s more, $106,000 had recently been wired from his account to a Fortis bank account in Belgium. Campbell hadn’t requested the transfer.
Unknown to Campbell, a cyber thief who went by the nick “desertmack” had gained access to his e-mail account and had been watching him for weeks. The Mexico wedding was the break desertmack needed. He’d been hoping a little tequila and sunshine would distract Campbell from obsessively checking his brokerage account long enough to steal the money and send it to Brussels, where an accomplice would withdraw it.
Posted on Sep 14, 2007 - 2:11pm by Terry Green in Art, Human Interest
Imagine that you were in an accident and left paralyzed. Your first thought is likely similar to mine, that is, the impact of not being able to walk on your life style and being able to get around and interact as easily with friends and family. I would have to relearn how to interact with major portions of my life. People that can overcome tragedies like these have my respect for having the persistence to move past these
However, what if you were left a quadriplegic? How would you life change then? I would have to relearn how to interact with even the most basic of elements in my life. Eating, working on the computer, calling people are all things I would have to relearn how to do. I would could it a success if I could get my life as close to its previous state as possible. Taking up new endeavors would seem forever out of reach.
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Posted on Sep 13, 2007 - 5:30pm by Terry Green in Money
So how often do you buy a new car? Every 3 years? 4 years? 5 years? So how much does it cost you to buy that car new car in the long run and are you really saving money by having a car in warranty and not having to worry about repairs? A recent Consumer Reports Article tackles this question and provides some great insight into the costs paid for people that keep their car for 200K+ miles (15 years) vs. those that buy a new car in 5 years.
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Posted on Sep 07, 2007 - 8:42pm by Terry Green in Humor
I have been in more than a few meetings where I seriously questioned the wisdom of the decisions being made. However, nothing compares to this humorous list of pictures found from the outer recesses of the internet by OneMansBlog.

Posted on Sep 06, 2007 - 1:51pm by Terry Green in History
What if I told you there was a town that caught fire in 1962 and has been burning ever since. The town of Centralia, Pennsylvania in 1962 was a small but growing coal mining town. At its height it had over 2500 people in the town and surrounding area. In 1962 the town was burning its landfill to reduce the volume and in doing so an exposed vein of coal caught fire.
The fire spread underground and continued to burn for 2 decades before the full scale of the problem was understood. In 1981 a 12 year old boy was outside when a sink hole opened up underneath him. If it weren’t for his cousin’s help he would have fallen 150′ to an underground inferno. By this time the fire had spread to affect 200 acres of land recent studies show that it could burn as long as 250 years.
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Posted on Sep 04, 2007 - 10:49am by Terry Green in Robotics
I saw this and thought the idea was really cool. The concept behind “Steam Punk” or Steam Works is what if technology had developed differently. For example, what would machines have been like if computers and the industrial revolution occurred at roughly the same time. Leave aside the obvious problems with that concept and enjoy the designs for their ingenuity. They strike me as something for a H. G Wells or Jules Verne novel. They are fascinating to watch and intriguing to consider the possibilities.