Keeping Kids Safe Online



I know many of us are at an age where our kids are online. I’m a typical geeky parent; I have more computers than I have people in the house to use them. It’s been important to me that my kids stay safe online, and that takes some effort and watchfulness.

It also takes a good measure of educating my children against what can harm them online. As a homeschooling mom, I’m already their teacher, and I teach them about being safe online along with math, science, language arts, and social studies. And I also watch over their shoulders a lot, both virtually and in person.

Staysafeonline.org, an outreach of the National Cybersecurity Alliance, has stepped up their campaign to offer tools and resources not only to home users, but to schools, so that children can learn about the importance of cybersecurity from someone besides mom and dad, why may not be as tech savvy as they should be. Staysafeonline should be required reading for anyone getting a computer, or anyone who already has a computer, or who is thinking about getting a computer. The “home” section of the website covers things like assessing your security, what to look for, how to protect your kids, and who to report problems to. The K-12 section has plenty of activities for children, as well as having down-to-earth, non-techno-speak instructions for teachers on how to share cybersecurity issues with their students. There is also a section for higher education, and for small business.

I did some digging to be sure that the National Cybersecurity alliance is not being funded by a fringe organization. Turns out it is receiving money from the government and from some non-profit tech sectors, and their Board of Directors include representatives from Cisco, Symantec, and Microsoft. With this type of cooperation and corroboration, I am confident that their activities are above-board and intended to be useful. These days, you can never tell, with all of the hidden agendas we encounter throughout our cyber-travels.

I’m going to be making sure my parents read some of the home information at Staysafeonline.com, as well as passing it on to my brothers, who also have teens on the Internet.


GNC-2009-02-20 #453 Recorded on Rebuilt Machine



My loyal and dedicated podcast recording PC died on Tuesday and I had to revive it with some new guts. So while I get it dialed in let me know how the sound quality was tonight. I have a decent list of content for a Friday show. Thanks for staying subscribed.

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Show Notes:
Wordwide Linux User Count
Mark Cuban Startup Funding Round 2
Brain Scan Study I hope was Free
Have Hangover? Have Gatorade
Pirate Bay No One is in Charge
Mind Reader
32 Free PC Applications
Open Source at White House?
More proof of Water on Mars
30 Websites to visit if your Laid Off
Pirate Bay calls for ceasefire!
Android Paid Apps
Vista Server SP2
Brits to use WhiteKnightTwo for Sat Launch
Step into my Proton Cyclotron
More Bars on your Cell Phone
Comcast dazzles with more Speed
Facebook does about face on TOS
New Mac Mini?
iPhone App Shelf Life
Top 21 Twitter Clients
Dawn gets a boost around Mars
Legislation requires ISP keep Personal Data 2 Years
ICANN delays the TLD rollouts
Big Paycuts at HP
Facebook removed 5,500 sex offenders
T-Mobile $50.00 Unlimited Plan
No More Texting while Walking Legislation


Sunbelt Software – Show Stoppers 2009



2009-ces-sunbeltI was not aware of Sunbelt Software the creators of Vipre Anti-Virus. They have introduced a Anti-Virus solution that does not impact system resources. They have designed new technology that isolates malware by checking its signature in a virtual environment.

I think we have all seen computers that have come to a crawl when they are scanning for viruses and have been irritated as we have had to wait for the scanner to complete. The folks at Sunbelt Software assure me this is not the case with this AntiVirus/Malware/AntiSpyware application.

The price comes in at $29.95 per year.


Autonet Mobile – Show Stoppers 2009



autonet mobileAutonet is in a word Internet on wheels. How many times have you been in the car fired up a laptop to find something only to not have it on the machine. Imagine having a Wifi cloud in your car that is connected to the Internet.

2009-ces-autonet-receiverOne of the challenges that comes with Mobile Internet that traditionally coverage can be spotty dependent on where you are. The folks at Autonet appear while not confirming to have worked a deal with multiple carriers to guarantee that you will have the best coverage possible regardless of where you and your vehicle is located.

I think this is great technology and while not everyone wants Internet in the car the geek in me screams out to have this installed.


IOLO System Mechanic – Show Stoppers 2009



IOLOEveryone is trying to stretch there dollars farther these days. Most of us are not buying new computers and trying to make the ones we have last a lot longer. The folks at IOLO have a product called System Mechanic that is designed to speed up that older machine.

IOLO System MechanicI had a machine that was acting up the other day and decided to give this product a try and was very happy with the results. The machine booted quicker the applications seem to spring alive and more surprising the fan was not running as much as the machine was obviously optimized.

Sold me but you be the judge of there product and learn more about it from the IOLO rep at Show Stoppers 2009.


Tikitag – TouchTag – Show Stoppers 2009



2009-ces-touchtagThe folks from Tikitag pulled a fast one they have changed there name to TouchTag. The name change was a wise one considering what this product does. The best way to describe this is for you to watch the video.

The concept is a good one but it has to scale massively for it to make senses for consumers to pick up one of the TouchTag devices that will read a tag.