Digital TV converters to sell for about $60

March 20, 2007 on 10:47 am | In Technology Education | No Comments

Digital TV converters to sell for about $60: LG

By Rachelle YounglaiMon Mar 19, 9:39 PM ET

LG Electronics (066570.KS) said on Monday it expects retailers to charge about $60 for equipment that will enable consumers to make the analog-to-digital switch on their televisions.

LG is one of three companies that have developed converter boxes to prevent analog television sets from going dark on February 17, 2009, when U.S. television stations are required to switch to digital.

“We plan to have the boxes available in early 2008,” John Taylor, LG’s vice president of U.S. government relations, said at a public meeting on the digital transition.

If U.S. owners of analog televisions do not get a converter box, subscribe to satellite or digital cable, or replace their TV with a digital television by February 17, 2009, they will not be able to watch television.

LG did not say how much it will cost the company to make the device.

However, it is unclear how the process of getting converter boxes to retail stores will work with the U.S. government’s plan to provide $40 discount coupons to consumers to help buy the converter boxes.

The National Telecommunications & Information Administration, the Commerce Department agency responsible for the converter coupon program, expects to have a system in place to accept requests for coupons by January 1, 2008.

Anita Wallgren, NTIA’s coupon program director, said the decision about when to start sending out coupons would be made after monitoring the readiness of the retailers to process the coupons and to have stock on the shelf.

Over the next few months, the NTIA expects to choose a contractor to run the coupon program. Coupons will be distributed through the mail, not in stores.

For manufacturers, the conundrum lies in when to roll out the converter boxes to retailers, given that the holiday retail season falls just before the coupon program begins.

“It’s hard to place new products during the holiday season,” said John Godfrey, Samsung Electronics Ltd.’s (005930.KS) vice president of government and public affairs.

“It either has to go on the shelves by September or after January first,” said Godfrey.

November through to January is usually the busiest time of the year for U.S. retailers.

Congress has set aside up to $1.5 billion to aid the digital TV transition.

All households will be eligible to request up to two $40 discount coupons to buy converter boxes until $990 million has been exhausted. Congress would then have to approve release of another $510 million for the program, but the coupons would then be limited to households that rely on over-the-air analog television.

Be careful opening MS Word documents received in emails.

December 12, 2006 on 5:39 pm | In Technology Education, Virus Worms and Vulnerabilities | No Comments

Microsoft Confirms New Word Vulnerability

Elizabeth Millard, newsfactor.com 52 minutes ago

Microsoft has confirmed that criminals are e-mailing Word attachments that contain malicious code, with two vulnerabilities in the ubiquitous word-processing software now being exploited.

The separate acknowledgements of the two flaws came about a week apart. Both flaws put users at risk. In the most recently reported vulnerability, a zero-day flaw, an attacker can run unauthorized software on a victim’s machine simply by having the message’s recipient open a Word document.

The vulnerability has been rated “extremely critical” by security firm Secunia because of its potential danger to users.

A similar bug was reported last week. According to Microsoft, neither bug will be patched in the latest round of software updates, known as Patch Tuesday. Microsoft has noted that both flaws are being exploited only on a very limited and targeted basis.

Office Mate

Over the past year, hackers have been increasingly interested in finding flaws in Microsoft’s Office suite. The popularity of applications like Excel and PowerPoint have led attackers to find flaws in those programs because they can reach such large numbers of users.

The recent Word flaws runs the gamut of major versions of the software — including Word 2000, Word 2002, Word 2003, and Word Viewer 2003 — but does not affect Word 2007.

In an advisory, Microsoft noted that the most recent vulnerability is different from the other Word flaw found last week, also a zero-day vulnerability for which there is no patch, but did not go into specifics.

“Do not open or save Word files that you receive from untrusted sources or that you receive unexpectedly from trusted sources,” Microsoft warned.

Patch Work

Although Microsoft has drawn criticism in the blogosphere for not being speedier with a patch for the problems, Secunia Chief Technology Officer Thomas Kristensen noted that fixing a flaw like this in a program as popular as Word might take some time.

“These patches are not always straightforward,” he said, adding that first Microsoft has to analyze and confirm the problem, then examine the code before creating a fix to change the code behavior.

After creating the patch, the company has to conduct several tests globally, given Word’s prevalence in the marketplace. “Unfortunately, all of this takes time, but it’s necessary,” Kristensen said. “In the meantime, customers are vulnerable.”

Secunia is recommending that users be particularly diligent about not opening attachments from people they do not know.

“The good news is that the distribution has been limited, so that makes widespread infection less likely,” said Kristensen. “Then again, we’re talking about criminals, and you don’t know where they’re going to surface next time.”

Do you have this new type of credit card?

December 5, 2006 on 12:07 pm | In Technology | No Comments

Schumer warns on no-swipe credit cards

By KAREN MATTHEWS, Associated Press WriterSun Dec 3, 10:37 PM ET

No-swipe credit cards that use radio waves to relay their data put consumers at increased risk of identity theft, Sen. Charles Schumer (news, bio, voting record) said Sunday.

“These cards may be convenient, but they’re a double-edged sword,” said Schumer, D-N.Y.

Tens of millions of no-swipe credit cards have been issued in the past year. When a customer uses the credit card to make a purchase, the card is processed by a radio frequency identification reader operated by the retailer.

Schumer said thieves can equip themselves with the radio frequency readers to steal information from the credit cards, which are being marketed heavily as time savers.

“All you need to be is within a couple of feet of the customer,” Schumer said. “You may as well put your credit card information on a big sign on your back.”

But JPMorgan Chase & Co., the nation’s second-largest financial services provider and its premier credit card issuer, has maintained the no-swipe method provides the same level of security as the traditional swiping method, which involves reading a magnetic strip on the back of the card. The cards use encrypted data, it said.

“The card and the reader in the terminal are safe and secure, and the transaction is handled the same way that credit cards are managed today,” Thomas O’Donnell, senior vice president of Chase cards services, said when the company announced the launch of its blink cards last year.

Schumer, who held a news conference on a busy Manhattan street corner Sunday amid holiday shoppers, called for regulations to require higher encryption standards that would make the cards more secure.

In addition, Schumer said contracts for the no-swipe credit cards should have warning boxes disclosing “the known weaknesses of the technology.”

“Holiday shoppers need to be extremely careful with their credit cards,” he said, “and these companies need to step up their efforts to protect people from identity theft.”

A telephone call to Visa International Inc., the nation’s largest credit card brand, wasn’t immediately returned

Trends in On-Line Education

November 9, 2006 on 1:21 pm | In Technology Education | 1 Comment

Here is an interesting article about trends in on-line education….  What do you think?

More college students taking Web courses

By JUSTIN POPE, AP Education Writer

Roughly one in six students enrolled in higher education — about 3.2 million people — took at least one online course last fall, a sharp increase defying predictions that online learning growth is leveling off.

A new report scheduled for released Thursday by The Sloan Consortium, a group of colleges pursuing online programs, estimates that 850,000 more students took online courses in the fall of 2005 than the year before, an increase of nearly 40 percent. Last year, the group had reported slowing growth, prompting speculation the trend had hit a ceiling.

“The growth was phenomenal,” said Jeff Seaman, Sloan’s CIO and survey director, who also serves as co-director of the Babson College survey research group. “It’s higher in absolute numbers and higher in percentages than anything we’ve measured before. And it’s across the board,” at schools ranging from doctoral institutions to those offering associate’s degrees to for-profit colleges.

Some online programs have flopped, and several for-profit universities have seen their share prices slump in the last two years amid concern over online’s growth prospects. Shares of Apollo Group, which owns the giant for-profit University of Phoenix and is now embroiled in a stock-option scandal, are more than half off their 52-week high.

Still, many universities are investing heavily in online learning, hoping the model will prove more economical than traditional classes, thus expanding their reach. A recent survey by Eduventures, a consulting and research firm, found 50 percent of consumers who expected to enroll in a higher education program said they would prefer to get at least some of their instruction online.

About 80 percent of online students are undergraduates, and they are generally older and more likely to be working and have families. But only about half are pursuing online degrees, according to Eduventures.

The rest are taking individual online courses or — increasingly — mixing online courses with more traditional campus-based classes. One reason online enrollment may be growing is that the difference between traditional and online classes is blurring. It’s not unusual now for traditional classes to post syllibi and homework assignments online or to have class discussions in group forums. Some classes take place more than 80 percent online, which makes them count as online courses for the Sloan survey.

“That’s bumping up enrollment,” said Eduventures senior analyst Richard Garrett.

The Sloan survey results also suggest academic officials are becoming more comfortable with online learning. About 62 percent of chief academic officers said they felt students learned as well or better from online courses as they did in face-to-face ones.

However, that left about 38 percent who found online courses degraded the educational experience. And almost all said they aren’t certain online learning will be more widely adopted. Among the obstacles: online courses take more time and effort to prepare, students need more self-discipline, and faculty often aren’t convinced online learning is worthwhile.

Officials at the schools surveyed “all acknowledge that there are significant barriers,” Seaman said. “The question is going to be when do those barriers kick in and how do they cope with them.”

Greetings Church Members and Neighbors

November 8, 2006 on 4:38 am | In Technology Education | No Comments

Welcome to the EWHBC-CLLC Blog. We will use this forum to discuss various information technology topics and how you can use them at home or at work. We invite you to actively participate in our discussions…

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