Showing posts with label computers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label computers. Show all posts

Monday, August 28, 2017

"The Straightforward Internet" by Terry Lynne Hale

REVIEW and GUEST POST
The Straightforward Internet:
Your Simplified Guide to Exploring Everything from Basics to Social Media to the Deep Web
by Terry Lynne Hale

The Straightforward Internet: Your Simplified Guide to Exploring Everything from Basics to Social Media to the Deep Web by Terry Lynne Hale

Author Terry Lynne Hale stops by today to share a guest post and an excerpt from her latest book, The Straightforward Internet. You can also read my review. This blog post is brought to you by Kate Tilton's Author Services.

Kate Tilton's Author Services

Description
The Straightforward Internet cuts through the complex digital universe that is cyberspace and simplifies information that the reader can quickly absorb and apply, if they choose to. Geared for GenXers and anyone who has been reluctant to embrace all that the Internet offers, it also speaks to the technologically competent reader that understands how fluid the digital universe is and wants to stay on top of it. Plus, there’s information for everyone that falls between these categories. For background fun, occasional references to the original Back to the Future movie touches on the experiences of Marty and Doc.
Beginning with BASICS such as an explanation of the Internet's origin, to how it works, to downloading and uploading content, to how we travel via dial-up, DSL or satellite, this book's basic section also covers email, instant messaging, Netiquette, fact-checking, avoiding viruses, computers and peripherals, how to protect those investments and more.
INTERMEDIATE exploration covers understanding your computer's operating system, social engineering and phishing, differences between paid and organic search engine results, understanding Cloud storage, Social Media, blogging, online dating, fun and hidden Internet games like Easter Egg Hunts, naughty niche sites, Internet auctions, payment gateways, Catfishing and more.
Moving on to more ADVANCED data The Straightforward Internet explains ZIP utilities, PGP (Pretty Good Privacy) Virtual Private Networks (VPN) and when to use them, the Deep Web and its history, how to get there, what is there to do on the Deep Web, Darknet shopping, understanding the escrow system, legal risks, introduction and economics of Bitcoin, associated Deep Web lingo, and more.
The Straightforward Internet also provides a Glossary, website links of interest, end notes, and an index. Since the Internet's arrival in our collective consciousness, human attention spans are getting shorter and shorter. We must communicate swiftly and succinctly to hold one another's attention. This book packs a lot of critical information into a fairly small package, delivering something for (nearly) everyone. Expertise surely exists beyond mine, but it's often accompanied by an inability to express itself in everyday language so the majority can comprehend it.


Book Video


Excerpt
We’ve all seen posts on Facebook, or gotten emails forwarded to us that give people a warning horror story about something awful that happened, that the police want people to be aware of.
Take this story, as an example.
At a petrol pump, a man came over and offered his services as a painter to a lady filling petrol in her car and left his visiting card. She said nothing but accepted his card out of sheer kindness and got into the car. The man then got into a car driven by another person.
As the lady left the service station, she saw the men following her out of the station at the same time. Almost immediately, she started to feel dizzy and could not catch her breath. She tried to open the window and realized that the odor was on her hand; the same hand with which she had received the card from the person at the service station.
She then noticed the men were immediately behind her and she felt she needed to do something at that moment. She drove into the first driveway and began to honk her horn repeatedly to ask for help. The men drove away but the lady still felt pretty bad for several minutes after she could finally catch her breath. Apparently, there was a substance on the card that could have seriously injured her.
This drug is called 'BURUNDANGA'. (Not known To People So Far but sufficient Information Is available in the Net) and it is used by people who wish to incapacitate a victim in order to steal from or take advantage of them. This drug is four times more dangerous than the date rape drug and is transferable on a simple card or paper. So please take heed and make sure you don't accept cards when you are alone or from someone on the streets. This applies to those making house calls and slipping you a card when they offer their services.
That message was originally seen in an email in 2008. It sounds pretty terrifying and plays on our worst fears, that doing something as simple as taking a business card from someone could result in us becoming the victim of a crime. Of course if we receive this email, we want to forward it to everyone we know, so they know not to take business cards from strangers.
The problem is this email is fake. Nothing like the above story has ever happened. While the drug Burundanga does exist, it does not work in the way described in the above story and has never been reported as being used in any kind of attack like the one in the story.
How do I know this? A simple search of Snopes. Snopes is an Internet fact checking site that looks into many email hoaxes. They’re constantly updating their database with new stories they’ve debunked after doing thorough research.
To check out Snopes and stay up to date on the latest cyber hoaxes, go here: http://www.snopes.com/
Before you forward something like that, fact check. Check Snopes, or if the message is claiming that it’s a release from a police department, check the police department’s website. Above all, take any message you receive with a grain of salt. If it’s filled with spelling or grammatical errors, chances are it did not come from a government agency. Remember what was said in Chapter 1. The good and bad of the Internet; anyone can say anything.
[Want more? Click below to read another excerpt.]


Praise for the Book
"Intended for those intimidated by the internet and hope it is a passing fad, Hale's book is mercifully free of intimidating techno-jargon, and achieves its goal of easing resistant Gen X'rs into eventual mastery of the internet." ~ IndieReader
"As someone who has been in business for years and thought I was fairly knowledgeable about the internet, I really enjoyed this book and learned so many new things. The simplicity of explanations, and humor made it even more interesting, and I have purchased several copies for friends as gifts. I look forward to your next book Terry!" ~ Horace James

My Review
I received this book in return for an honest review.


By Lynda Dickson
This is a simplified guide to cyberspace, aimed at GenXers or anyone who has been reluctant to embrace all that the Internet offers, from simple email all the way to the dark side of the deep web. It begins with an introduction to basic terms and concepts, including email, instant messaging, netiquette, viruses, scams, emojis, and texting language. It moves on to intermediate topics such as hardware, antivirus software, search engines, cloud storage, social media, virtual Easter eggs (loved this section!), naughty niche sites, catfishing, and Internet auctions. Then we learn about more advanced tools: zip utilities, encryption, Virtual Private Networks (VPN), and the deep web. It finishes with a glossary and a comprehensive list of sites of interest.
Throughout, the author uses analogies to the Back to the Future movie to explain concepts in simple terms. She also provides images, hyperlinks to useful sites and further reading, as well as footnotes hyperlinked to the reference section.
There are a few formatting and editing issues, but not enough to detract from the subject matter. The deep web section was all new to me, but I think the book could do without the "Naughty Niche Sites" section. I felt compelled to check some of them out and wish I hadn't. Seriously, do NOT google them. Okay, you did, didn't you? Don't say I didn't warn you.
The perfect gift for that someone you know who struggles with technology - we all have one!

Guest Post by the Author
Why Another Book About the Internet?
I’m one of those people who know how life was before the Internet. There’s an entire generation today who probably can’t imagine what that could have been like. It was OK. We didn’t know what was to come, so it’s not like we were missing it. But when the Internet came into the consciousness of the majority, there was no going back.
This woman wouldn’t have it any other way. I love the Internet. When PCs became widely available for home use – albeit outrageously expensive - I had to have one. My first computer cost $3500 in 1995. It was loaded with software from MS Office to Quicken to MS Money, to Encarta (encyclopedia) to MS Access (CRM), Adobe Reader (Acrobat), plus lots and lots of games. In addition to the processor/tower, it included the monitor, keyboard, mouse, and speakers. It was the whole shebang. It needed to be for that kind of money!
About 5 desktops, 4 laptops, 2 tablets & several smart phones later, I’m blown away when I think of all the money these toys, er - ah, tools, required.
I was super jazzed about being on the Net. Family and friends of all ages began asking me questions about it. They knew I was hooked and they also knew I dive in and absorb all that I can when I want to learn about a subject. So, in a pretty short time, I found myself an unofficial expert on all things Internet.
People mentioned they tried to learn from the Dummies books without success, and I paged through one of them at a (now defunct) Borders Bookstore. W-T-H? Talk about complicated! I understood the subject, but I found the book to be convoluted. How in the hell would your average Jill or Joe understand this stuff? So, that inspired me to write my first book, Ageless Internet: Internet Basics for Boomers and Seniors.
I spent three years writing the book (much too long), partly because I kept trying to keep up with the constantly changing Net! It can’t be done. It is so fluid, so ever-changing that, despite my best efforts, within a few months of publishing Ageless Internet, it was already out of date. (There is no mention of The Cloud because it wasn’t widely known at that time.) Still, there is a good deal of very basic information about email and effective searching that remains accurate and useful for the novice.
I was a little disillusioned. How does one create an evergreen product - one that stands the test of time – on a subject matter that defies it?
A number of younger friends and acquaintances – GenXers – would ask questions about getting around the Net, which really surprised me because they were so damn proficient in using social media! These people were amazing when it came to Facebook, Pinterest, Instagram, etc., but still had a lot of questions about getting around the Internet and all of the things they could accomplish with it.
Yet, that’s what is so rich about computing and the digital age. Expertise is as fluid as the digital landscape. One may be an expert in a tiny niche category of computing but clueless in the next.
So, I blew off my intention to write evergreen copy on the next book and sat down to write for that last group on the face of the earth who didn’t grow up with computers.
The Straightforward Internet is intended to be a quick read, not a comprehensive manual because, well, we’re all short on time. Our attention spans are shrinking, and we have to get the message out fast, furiously, and succinctly. That’s what I’ve done with The Straightforward Internet: Your Simplified Guide to Exploring Everything from Basics to Social Media to the Deep Web.

About the Author
Terry Lynne Hale
Terry Lynne Hale is a Kansas City author and freelance writer. Her first book, Ageless Internet, was a Finalist in the Global Ebook Awards and Ageless Internet won the 2012 Indie Excellence Award in its category.
Her next book is The Straightforward Internet. It is geared toward Generation X, another group whose members may or may not have fully embraced all that is the Internet. It was published on Amazon as a Kindle ebook and a POD paperback in February.
Coming this Summer is Interview 2017. It’s a whole new world out there, and you won’t land that job you really want unless you treat the search like a job in itself. You need to make a mark, make it quick and make it memorable.
Terry is an animal lover and tries to be a responsible environmental steward. She is interested in nutrition and whole body health, combining alternative with mainstream medical modalities. She and her husband enjoy target shooting, whitewater rafting and in the Spring of 2016, enjoyed a hot air balloon ride in Park City, Utah. She loves the ocean, and they love the mountains.
Hale’s biggest issue is in finding the time to pursue all of the subjects she’s interested in. Learning takes time, and she is a life-long student.

Links

Saturday, November 28, 2015

"Mice and Spiders and Webs ... Oh My!" by Sherrill S. Cannon

GIVEAWAY
Mice & Spiders & Webs ... Oh My!
by Sherrill S. Cannon


Mice & Spiders & Webs ... Oh My! by Sherrill S. Cannon is a picture book suitable for children ages 3 to 8.
This book blast and giveaway is brought to you by Mother Daughter Book Promotion Services.


Description
Is your child a good listener?
Rosemary is a little girl who is worried about returning to school after her teacher warns the class that they would soon have some mice, spiders, and webs in the classroom. Could Rosemary have misunderstood something? How can mice and spiders and webs belong at school?
Full of "Computer Speak", this story introduces young readers to basic computer terms in a delightful way! See if your child can discover the mystery of the misunderstood words, and learn about the fun of computers with Rosemary.

Book Video


Praise for the Book
"Mice & Spiders & Webs … Oh My! features a wonderful rhyming tale with an important underlying message about 'being a good listener'. As an added bonus, the book also features bright and kid-friendly illustrations with cameo appearances of characters and covers from previous books. I highly recommend this (and other books by Sherrill S. Cannon) for children ages 4 to 8 years." ~ Renee @ Mother Daughter Book Reviews
"I adored this fun story and know it will become a fast favorite among readers." ~ Stacie @ BeachBoundBooks
"This book is educational, while entertaining too, and is a great teaching tool on being a good Listener." ~ LuAnn, Rockin’ Book Reviews
"This is a very fun book for both children and adults. It carries an important message, but at the same time introduces computer terminology that perhaps not every child will be familiar with." ~ Crsytal @Castle View Academy

About the Author
Sherrill S. Cannon is a former teacher and a grandmother of ten, who is also an Award-Winning Best-Selling Author! Her multi-cultural books have received thirty-six 2011-15 National and International awards. Most of her books try to teach something, like good manners and consideration for others. All of her books are part of two fundraisers, one to help find a cure for Juvenile Myositis, an incurable children’s disease at http://sbpra.com/curejm and another for the anti-bullying campaign imbullyfree.org at http://sbpra.com/imbullyfree. 50% of the cost of her books on these sites will go directly to each organization!
Sherrill is also the author of seven published and internationally performed plays for elementary school children, She is a resident of New Hope, PA and travels with her husband of 55 years throughout North America in their RV, sharing her books along the way!


Giveaway
Enter the blast-wide giveaway for a chance to win a $25 Amazon gift card or PayPal cash.

Links

Thursday, January 16, 2014

"Saving Juno (The Juno Trilogy)" by Larry Kilham

NEW RELEASE
Saving Juno
(The Juno Trilogy)
by Larry Kilham


Saving Juno, the third volume in The Juno Trilogy, has just been released. Also available: Love Byte (read my blog post) and A Viral Affair: Surviving the Pandemic (read my blog post).

  
Description
Super AI computer Juno has been taken over by an international computer genius. NSA’s major computer center is also being taken over. Dr. Tom Renwick, Juno’s developer, is kidnapped. Civilization as we know it is threatened. What to do?
In this fast-paced thriller, Tom’s super brain computer scientist son, Primo, is thrown into the fray. With mysterious agent, Wildflower, and trustworthy officials in Washington, Primo strikes back. Their trail to Tom is through a hall of mirrors and continuous plot twists. It ends in an orbiting computer satellite.
Written in the genre of the late Michael Crichton and the late Tom Clancy, Saving Juno presents and action-packed adventure and new ways to look at national security.

Excerpt
Chapter 4

The next morning, right after my Cheerios and coffee, I checked my laptop for new developments. Sure enough. Wildflower had left me a message. “Login, Primisimo.” I did. There she was in a new Snapchat photo. It was vertical, showing her breast and hip under a diaphanous shirt. Sort of like I was peeping through her window. “Oh.” I wrote.
“No other comment?”
“Actually, I meant to write oooooooooooh.”
“That’s nice! Now your friend Moe will be by in a few minutes. You’ll be learning some interesting stuff today. We’ll talk more tonight.”
This was bizarre. I tried to refocus on getting ready to be picked up.
Moe showed up with a McDonald’s coffee for me. “Cream, no sugar, right? You’ll need this.”
“Thanks, Moe,” I said, trying to shake my fantasies of Wildflower. I didn’t dare to ask him about her, because I still didn’t know who knew whom in this weird bunch.
We drove directly to the NSA complex. A man appeared out of a side door with his hand extended.
“Dr. Dimitri Kamenov. So pleased to meet you, Dr. Renwick. Come on in. The Red Queen is waiting.”
A breakfast of orange juice, hot cinnamon rolls and coffee was set out for me.
“Did you sleep well?” Red Queen asked.
“Like a log.”
“Did you meet Wildflower?”
“We talked by texting,” I said, not wanting to mention our texting and Snapchat connections.
The Red Queen frowned. I suspected that they were monitoring my texting and found nothing. She relaxed again, and said, “Pardon me for not introducing Dr. Kamenov, our director of operations. He is trained in evolutionary biology and for some years was the deputy director of the Institute of Molecular Genetics in Moscow. He came over to our side when the politics in Russia and at the Institute became overbearing. Continue, Dimitri.”
“Welcome again, Dr. Renwick. Let’s drop the formalities. We’re all comrades…friends…let me call you Primo. She is always Red Queen, however.
“We in Russia have been pioneers in behavioral studies, beginning with Pavlov. We know now that the science must include genetic structure and DNA coding. There is an evolutionary theory called the ‘Red Queen hypothesis’ after the Red Queen in Lewis Carroll’s Through the Looking-Glass. Was that on your reading list? Probably not. Well, anyway, she said that her country is a place where ‘it takes all the running you can do, to keep in the same place.’ In the kingdom of plants and animals, this means they face constant change. They must continually adapt and evolve new species merely to survive. Now I would add that the same applies to the human species and their inventions of all kinds.”
I think I must have looked puzzled.
He picked up on that and continued, “As to the species of things, for example, your smartphone design is effectively a genome, and other models of smartphones have similar genomes but with variations in their design DNA. The mechanical genome carrier we all are learning to live with is the robot.”
“What does all this have to do with me? Why am I here?”
“Because,” Dimitri answered, “you are endowed, shall we say, with an extraordinary brain—an IQ over 200—and you’re trained in computer science. We want you to direct the writing of computer programs so that we can efficiently and most usefully put the genomic information of every single person and every human creation in our database.”
“But isn’t that information already stored elsewhere? The human genomic information is stored in FBI criminal records and related medical information in health records.”
“True, true,” Dimitri answered, but we want it all here.
“Under whose control?” I knew no fear.
“Here, here, young man, let’s not go there now. Let’s meet your programming associates.”
“But I haven’t agreed to anything yet.”
“You will,” Dimitri said.
The Red Queen spoke up. “And don’t forget that we’re always tracking your whereabouts. You are one of us now.”
Dimitri and I went into a large, darkened room where 10-20 people could work comfortably. I don’t know about creatively. There were eight or so programmers working during our visit. Most of them were standing up stabbing with light pens at glowing images floating in the darkness. They were developing computer code based on the manipulation of three dimensional objects. Such objects could be spatial representations of a person’s DNA and other personal data.
I asked Dimitri if it was okay to talk to one of them. He agreed and pointed to a senior-looking person who stepped into an outer office with us. Dimitri introduced us, without giving my proposed position, and asked me to give my impressions.
“It looks like you have the very latest programming technology here,” I said. “Apparently no paper or screens. You just interact with your program in space.”
“Not all of the time,” the programmer said, “but the spatial mode of programming gives us a much better way of visualizing the manipulation of complex 3D objects. We are developing a large cache of information about every person in the country—their history from the day they were born, their medical record, their complete genome, school and professional records, criminal history, family and so on.”
I pressed on. “Why would you want to do that?”
“We use those data as criteria for sorting people into various risk categories. The DNA…”
“Thank you, Sam,” Dimitri interjected. Clearly, Sam had ventured too far. And then turning to me, he said, “That’s enough for today, Primo. I hope and trust that you will find this an exciting place to use your matchless talents.”
We returned to what I began to think of as the Red Queen’s salon. She smiled at me benignly and tried to be as non-threatening as possible. “I think you are now seeing the great mission we are on, Primo. There are millions of bright minds who would kill for this opportunity, and you are the one chosen.”
“Thank you very much,” I said bowing my head a little. I wasn’t ready to be anointed, but I thought it best to play the game.
“Get plenty of sleep tonight.” Red Queen said. “Tomorrow we will have a nice surprise for you.”
“Will I see Tom?”
“If I told you, it wouldn’t be a surprise, would it?”
That sounded to me very much like I would see Tom tomorrow. I had no idea why they waited so long. Dimitri showed me out to the car where Moe was quietly waiting.

I told Moe to skip shopping for today—I had enough food and beer in the house. I grilled a nice steak and wolfed it down with beer and potato chips. What more could I want? I dozed off, wondering where my dad was. I had a dream about rescuing him from some dismal place guarded by foreign agents. We’d be reunited with Mom and forget about this horrible adventure. Democracy would be saved, and I could start an exciting career.
I woke up and starting thinking concretely. How can I find my dad? Laser must know. I will have to contact him and go from there. But how do I get out of this place? I guess the best thing to do is to let a day or two pass and see if any information presents itself here. Maybe Wildflower has heard something about dad. What is she doing here anyway?

The next step was to check for Wildflower text messages. There was one to visit her Snapchat. A new photo greeted me. A beautiful leg stepping out from under a shimmery skirt. “Ooooooooh!” I typed again.
“Did you miss me? Tell me about your day.” Wildflower almost purred out of the screen.
“I saw some way-out, almost sci-fi computer technology where they program.” I think I was excited as I wrote, and I had to temper my excitement with consideration of what Wildflower might not know about this project. I realized I was falling down the rabbit hole and should say no more.
“It’s your turn, send me a photo,” Wildflower wrote, seeming to sense my predicament.
Using the camera in the laptop and the timer, I took a picture of me from waist up, shirtless, and flexing my muscles. I sent it to Wildflower with the note, “Check out this dude!”
“Ooooooooh!” she wrote. “I must go now. Login tomorrow at six. Moe will be by for you at ten.”

Review
There are no reviews as yet for this NEW RELEASE. Why not be the first to write a review after reading your copy?

About the Author
Larry Kilham is an inventor, entrepreneur, author and consultant. He has received numerous patents and awards and has published two books about inventing and high tech business development (Great Idea to a Great Company: Making Inventions Pay and MegaMinds: How to Create and Invent in the Age of Google) .
Larry has returned to his native Santa Fe, New Mexico and is now focused on writing about future society, ecology and artificial intelligence. He has just completed The Juno Trilogy involving AI and robots 40 years hence (Love Byte and A Viral Affair: Surviving the Pandemic, and Saving Juno). Saving Juno is about a plot to take over the NSA computers as a way to dominate the world.
Larry is trained in engineering and management with a BS from the University of Colorado and a MS from MIT. He belongs to several professional societies and has published widely in the technical and business media.

Links