[Browse] [Tag cloud]

Log on:
Powered by Elgg

Ian Michael Bland :: Friends blog

September 06, 2011

Just a be aware entry really.  I have only posted it here as I thought that it was so appropriate for our students.


The following is from the Register.


"Low blow: Phishers target student loan applicants


Sadly victims may not notice grammatical error





Phishers are targeting UK student loan applicants in a new scam campaign.


Fraudulent emails, posing as messages from Directgov UK, attempt to trick recipients into handing over online account information and other personal data to fraudsters under the guise of a supposed account update. "We at HM Government noticed your Student loan online login details is [sic] incorrect and need to be updated," the scam email reads.



The email is circulating just weeks before British students are about to start another year at university. The incident illustrates that phishers are widening their nets and going after a greater range of potential victims outside their traditional targets of online banking accounts and PayPal logins. For example, recent attacks separately targeted frequent flyer schemes in Brazil and Google AdWords accounts.



More on the student-loan phishing scam emails – along with samples of the offending missives – can be found in a blog post by Sophos here. ®"



http://www.theregister.co.uk/2011/09/05/student_loan_phishing_scam/

Keywords: Phishing; Fishing; Low Blow; Student loan;

Posted by Nick Gurr | 0 comment(s) | Share

August 22, 2011

I have just changed the settings disabling anonymous comments. We have had a lot of spammers recently, and this is the only real option we have to limit this.

Posted by Karsten Oster Lundqvist | 0 comment(s) | Share

June 14, 2011


I have added an article below that was on Tech Republic written by Jason Hiner.  I would be fascinated to see everyone’s comments.   I will add my own thoughts later if a discussion results. I do not want to colour anyone’s thoughts before they read the article.  They do ocassionally throw up something thought provoking, if you want to see the original article and the comments that it provoked the link is on the botton of the article.


If you want to innovate like Da Vinci, education is overrated


Takeaway: Leonardo da Vinci is arguably the greatest innovator of all time. Da Vinci’s example helps justify Peter Thiel’s radical 20 Under 20 fellowship for college dropouts. See why, and the big caveat.


“I have been impressed with the urgency of doing. Knowing is not enough; we must apply. Being willing is not enough; we must do.” -Leonardo da Vinci


I have to admit that I scoffed last week when I read about Peter Thiel’s plan to give twenty $100,000 fellowships to budding entrepreneurs under 20 so that they can drop out of school and launch their own startups.


It’s not that teenagers don’t have great ideas and can’t be successful as entrepreneurs. Obviously, they can. My skepticism comes from the fact that Thiel is a venture capitalist and the game that VCs play is to invest in 10 different ideas with the hope that one of them hits it big, while the other nine are likely to fail, morph into something different, or simply fade away.


So, for the 20 kids that Thiel is funding with his flashy fellowship, only two of them are likely to succeed. Where will that leave the other 18 college-skippers? Possibly among the 20% of 20-24 year olds with only a high school diploma who are currently unemployed, according to the US Labor Department.


That was my original thinking.


However, I’m starting to change my tune after coming in contact with the Da Vinci: The Geniustraveling exhibit. Based on some lessons from Da Vinci, I think Thiel may be on to something, but there’s also one big caveat with this approach.


 


The Da Vinci example


Leonardo da Vinci (right) is arguably the greatest innovator of all time. He was an artist, a scientist, and an engineer. But, above all, he was an inventor, who laid out plans that were the predecessors of the airplane, the helicopter, the automobile, the tank, the steam engine, the parachute, the submarine, and the underwater diving suit.


He also developed lots of everyday mechanical innovations, including bridges, musical instruments, the hydraulic pump, cranes and construction devices, and a variety of gears and pulleys to streamline a lot of different laborious tasks.


The guy was a volcano of original ideas, but he also had a disciplined scientific mind that enabled him to refine those ideas into detailed plans — even though most of them were ahead of their time and were never built during his lifetime.


However, in the last couple decades, people have again become fascinated with trying to bring Da Vinci’s inventions to life based on his drawings and using 15th century materials. The Da Vinci: The Genius exhibit is centered around these historical replicas of Da Vinci’s ideas. This summer the exhibit is in Louisville (which is also the headquarters of the TechRepublic editorial department) and I’m volunteering as a guide in the exhibit. In observing Da Vinci’s ideas coming to life, it’s hard not to be awed by his creativity, imagination, and raw problem-solving skills. If he lived in the 21st century, he’d probably figure out the energy problem and the space travel propulsion problem, while also developing a true hologram that puts the current 3D scam to shame.


By volunteering in the Da Vinci exhibit I’ve also had to learn something about the basic Da Vinci bio. What I’ve learned — which brings this discussion back to the topic of education and teenage innovators — was that Da Vinci was an illegitimate child and so he didn’t get the classical education that other Renaissance brats got at the time. He wasn’t trained in Latin or Greek, which were the languages of all the intellectual texts for art, philosophy, engineering, and science.


Da Vinci didn’t learn any of the conventional wisdom of the time and wasn’t groomed to enter any of the most influential professions or centers of learning in Renaissance Italy. And yet, he became the greatest intellectual and innovator of his age — and maybe of any age. How is that possible? How did he do it?


He did it by observing harder than anyone else. He closely observed the laws of nature. He examined the mechanics of animals, especially birds. He looked at the ways people move, interact, and express themselves. He watched the ways people work and thought of mechanical devices that could improve and streamline important tasks.


Then, he took all of those observations and used his voracious imagination to improve on existing tools and to dream up new inventions that could give civilization another nudge forward.


On Sunday, one of the visitors to the Da Vinci exhibit asked me, “If Da Vinci had been tutored in Latin and Greek and gotten a classical education, would he have still come up with all of these inventions?” I threw the ball back into the court of this obviously very-well-educated lady and asked her what she thought. After debating the issue, we both decided, “No.” It was not very likely that Da Vinci’s imagination would have been as powerful or as prolific if he’d been indoctrinated with the standard ideas of the Greeks and Romans.


 


Throwing a bone to education


Before we completely throw institutionalized education under the bus, let’s not forget about two of the favorite modern examples of the drop-out-of-college-and-start-your-own-company approach — Bill Gates (Microsoft) and Mark Zuckerberg (Facebook). Yes, both dropped out of Harvard to start a company and eventually became billionaires, but before they went to college both of them got an outstanding education that was certainly a springboard to their later achievements.


Gates was one of the few students of his generation who got access to a full-fledged computer and logged as many, if not more, hours on a computer than any other high school student in America at that time. Zuckerberg cut his teeth as a high schooler at the prestigious Exeter Academy, one of the nation’s best private schools, and earned honors in science while learning four languages — French, ancient Greek, Latin, and Hebrew — a pretty social thing to do.


Even Da Vinci himself wasn’t completely devoid of education. When he decided to become an artist — one of the few avenues open to him socially — he showed enough promise that he was able to earn a 10-year apprenticeship with one of Italy’s top artisans, Verrocchio, under whom Da Vinci learned a wide variety of artistic, technical, and mechanical skills.


Final word


Clearly, big time innovators need some kind of decent education to light the fire and launch them on to their atmospheric trajectory. But, there’s also a point where they have to step outside of the conventional wisdom and the standard way of doing things in order to turn civilization in a different direction.


Education, by its very nature, is about institutionalizing and sharing the best ideas and best practices of the past — even if it’s the recent past. A college education trains and teaches students how to best plug themselves into the current civilization. Education helps you plug into the things society already needs, to plug into society as it is today. It’s not about tomorrow.


Innovation is about what’s next. To pull off a big innovation, you almost always have to take a big risk. You have to try something different.


That’s why Thiel’s program could work. He’s looking for up-and-comers with big ideas to solve big problems. The fact that some of these promising students are dropping out of college to pursue big ideas says something in and of itself. These are students willing to take big risks — the kinds of risks needed to make something big happen. Even if they fail, they’ll learn a lot in the process and then probably try another big idea.


This certainly doesn’t cancel out the need for education. Society will still need lots of educated people to refine, systematize, and carry forward the work of the next big ideas. But, to find the next Leonardos who can architect the next breakthroughs, we need things like the Thiel fellowship.


And, for those companies, teams, and leaders looking for ways to innovate within their current work, I’ll share one last tip from Da Vinci. Remember when I said that Da Vinci basically out-observed everyone in his generation? That was critical. He spent a lot of time observing and figuring out where there were important problems and pain points that could be improved by either iterating or innovating. It’s a simple but powerful formula. Lots of organizations could do a better job of carefully observing the best opportunities to target, and then attacking the opportunity with their best ideas.


http://www.techrepublic.com/blog/hiner/if-you-want-to-innovate-like-da-vinci-education-is-overrated/8383?tag=mantle_skin;landing


Keywords: Da Vinci, education, Innovate, Tech Republic

Posted by Nick Gurr | 0 comment(s) | Share

June 13, 2011

I though t that I would re-post the links from the workshop last year.  I have not tested them so if there are any issues please post them in the comments section to help others out.  I hope that the resources are of some use.


*Eclipse Resources* 


http://ebookfreepdf.appspot.com/tag/eclipse - A number of text books on Eclipse several are specifically on using Eclipse to do a specific task.  One is a general cookbook type approach though.


*Android Programming*


http://www.ziddu.com/download/7229530/AndroidProgramming.pdf - A free text book on programing on Android.


http://oreilly.com/android/index.html - The publisher O' Reilly has opened up a number of Text books, here are some on the Android


http://www.linuxtopia.org/online_books/android/devguide/index.htm - Android Developer Guide


 

Keywords: Android; programming, Eclipse, mobile, mobile phone

Posted by Nick Gurr | 0 comment(s) | Share

This is available to both staff and students for use anywhere not just on campus as the universities version is.  So if you have run out on Elms, or are not suitable to receive it from there head on over to http://bit.ly/aQT9j and then hit the sign up button.  Once you are logged in go to the box with MSDN on it.  Click My products and continue from there.


Hope that this is of interest to someone.


Nick

Posted by Nick Gurr | 3 comment(s) | Share

June 08, 2011

We will be running a short workshop on programming Android native apps. It will happen from 2PM-5PM on the 15th and 16th of June (Wednesday and Thursday) in lab G21. 


The purpose of this workshop is to create a (very) simple Android game from which participants can create their own (not-so-simple) games, as well as having skills for other applications.


The code will be based on the code structure of my two games Rune Escape and BoB lite,and they are examples of two very different games that has been created on top of this code basis.


To get the full benefit of this you should come to both sessions, and you should have plenty of programming experience  (preferable with Java using Eclipse, but that is not a requirement.)


You register by making a comment on this blog post, and what degree you are doing (and the year if undergraduate).


 


YOU CAN FIND THE TUTORIAL AT: http://oster-lundqvist.com/karsten/?p=4886

Keywords: Android, Gamedev

Posted by Karsten Oster Lundqvist | 43 comment(s) | Share

May 29, 2011

I published another game of mine yesterday evening. It is called Rune Escape, it is a fast paced Mahjong style game.


The twist is, that the game is Adfreeable, which means that players can gain awards from in-game achievements and by fighting other players. If they win 70 Rune Awards the game will become adfree.

Keywords: android, gamedev

Posted by Karsten Oster Lundqvist | 0 comment(s) | Share

April 13, 2011

This is unfortunately not accessible for staff but is a really good way to differentiate between yourselves and other candidates for an initial position.


https://www.dreamspark.com/default.aspx


just follow the link on the frontpage of the website above.  This is a great offer and something really positive tp do.

Keywords: Free; Exam; Microsoft; Free Exam; Free Microsoft Exam.

Posted by Nick Gurr | 0 comment(s) | Share

I have just asked Wolfram Alpha how much wood would a wood chuck chuck if a wood chuck could chuck wood?  IT KNOWS!  Try it.


 


http://www.wolframalpha.com/input/?i=how%20much%20wood%20would%20a%

Keywords: Wood; chuck; wolfram alpha

Posted by Nick Gurr | 0 comment(s) | Share

April 04, 2011

I don't know how it could have skipped my mind, but it was pointed out to me today by the ITNG personel that I hadn't told RedGloo of my Android game I've just released. So if you want to see the fruits of my winter hobby code, then go to:


https://market.android.com/details?id=com.karlund.ballslite


or search for "bob lite" in the Android market.


It's a game that mixes the game dynamics of Labyrinth and Pool. You control the red ball using the accelerometers and the aim is to pot the red ball. THere are several game modes, Classic with no time constraints (except for scoring higher), Rush and Attack both have a time limit...


I'd really like feedback if you have any...

Keywords: android, development, game

Posted by Karsten Oster Lundqvist | 0 comment(s) | Share

<< Back
/