Wrong Text

This morning I got a series of strange text messages on my cell phone. They started out being short ones, saying, “I love you” and “I can’t wait to see you again.” And I was freaked out because I didn’t recognize the phone number and I was not expecting anyone to say that to me. Maybe my mother! But not any guy or co-worker, for sure!

After about a dozen of the texts that I did not answer, I was getting annoyed that they kept coming every few minutes. For one thing, each text message received costs me 20 cents. And for another thing, the texts were never signed with a name nor addressed to a name, and they clearly were not meant for me.

It occurred to me that the person was texting them to the wrong number and might not stop until someone replied. I was sorely tempted to reply “F*** You!” and see what happened, but it might have been a guy stalking his girlfriend and if she was to actually say that then the stalker might escalate the interaction with something violent and the poor girl would not have any warning or any defense.

So I called the number and said this is Vicki and I have no idea who you are sending all these texts to, but I know you aren’t intending to send them to me, so check the damn number and quit sending me all these texts or I will report you to the police.” And I hung up – I didn’t even want to hear the other person’s voice. And they stopped.

Playing Solitaire for Stress Relief

Do you remember when computers first came out and all the Windows-based computers had preloaded games n them, like Canfield and Minesweep?

I used to play the Canfield game for about 5 minutes every afternoon when I needed a mental health break. My boss would go ballistic if she came into my office and saw me playing solitaire. She would scream about cheating the company by wasting time playing games.

I would put up with her rants for a while, but honestly she wasted 10 times more time than I ever did. That bitch would take smoke breaks every hour or two, write poems to her boyfriend, and make long personal calls – all on company time.

I think that people are entitled to a short break during the day, whether you are stupid enough to stand outside in the cold and puff on a cigarette or choose to stay at your desk – still available to take phone calls and answer questions – and play a 5 minute solitaire game on the computer to help clear your mind and take away some of the stress from your day.

A Peek into Our Police State

Have you seen the show, Person of Interest”? I think the story premise is frightening. When I watched the previews it was creepy, but I forced myself to watch it. And it was pretty much exactly what I thought it was, which is disturbing. It is pure, subtle propaganda for a police state. The idea is that two guys who care about the world are going after people before they commit a crime because they have special access to data. They are making it look ok and cool because they put their Hollywood spin on it. But imagine being intercepted by law enforcement because they think or assume that you are going to be involved in a crime – no evidence, no proof – just their personal assumption and some computer data from a questionable source. That is frightening to me.

Computer Guts

My computer quit working. I have not idea what’s wrong with it. I try to push the power button and nothing happens. Of course I checked to see if it was plugged in.

It was just a cheap $300 computer so I took a screwdriver to it. I opened it up and looked inside. Nothing looks blackened or weird. It was pretty interesting looking at the computer guts.

It might be something as simple as a fan that quit working. So off to the PC repair shop we go next week when I get paid.

What is the Texas Virtual Border Watch?

One of the most innovative programs in preventing illegal immigration and protecting the borders of the US is the Texas Virtual Border Watch program. Texas Governor Rick Perry enacted the program in conjunction with the Texas Border Sheriff’s Coalition and Blue Servo ?, a privately held company. The program is designed to allow the public to participate in monitoring crime along the Texas-Mexico border.

Under the program, anyone with Internet access can become a “virtual deputy” by creating an account and logging on to the Blue Servo network. Once you have created an account, you can monitor the Texas-Mexico border 24 hours a day, seven days a week.

The virtual deputies are able to see what’s going on at the border thanks to cameras that stream live from the border continuously.

When virtual deputies spot suspicious activity, they are able to report their findings to local country sheriffs via email. Emails coming in to the county sheriff’s are anonymous. Local authorities have responsibility for checking out all emails sent in, conducting investigations and taking appropriate actions.

The Texas Virtual Border Watch is like a community watch program on steroids. Since it’s inception in 2008, the program has had mixed reviews. As of April, 2010, just 26 arrests had been made as a result of information obtained through the program. At this point in time, just 29 of the projected 200 cameras had been installed. In order to defray costs, the plan for funding the program called for installing the cameras over a period of time.

Mixed Reviews

Those who criticize the program say that it is too expensive, considering a cost of $2 million just to get the program up and running. Proponents of the program say that the real benefit is in its ability for the cameras to deter criminal activity, which is difficult to measure.

In the first year, one major drug bust was completed because of the program, netting 540 pounds of marijuana and the arrest of a suspected drug smuggler. However, this appears to be the only significant arrest to come from the program.

Of course, any program like the Virtual Border Watch faces the inherent problem of timeliness. By the time law enforcement officers can retrieve emails sent by the public, and act on them, the suspicious activity is likely long over.

The program has also suffered from a waning interest by the public. When the site was initially launched, the website got millions of hits. It appeared that people from all over the US, and even abroad, were calling themselves virtual deputies. But, over time, interest in monitoring the site has fallen off.

There has not, however, been serious talk of discontinuing the program. When Blue Servo began working with the Texas government, they had plans to offset costs by selling advertising on the website. The site has continued to have benefits beyond those of the virtual border program, since it allows other groups, such as neighborhoods, to create their own virtual watch programs at no cost.

Phyllis T. Zerkle particularly likes to write about issues surrounding homeland security and the various courses studied when earning a homeland security degree online.

Reposting Scams

An uncomfortably large number of my Facebook friends seem to be extremely gullible and naive. I am going to have to give this some serious thought. They are way too willing to repost false statements on their walls without checking them out first. The one that really ticks me off are all the self righteous faux christians reposting the lie that Pepsi or dr. Pepper have cans with the Pledge of Allegiance on them and theat they deliberately left off the words “under God.” This is not true and yet I see this reposting almost ever day for weeks now.

If people judge you by the friends that you keep, I do not want other people to think that I am this stupid, too. I am seriously thinking about unfriending anyone who reposts these and just thinning out my list.

Thumbs or Clouds?

I have to rethink my data backup process. For the past couple of years I have been using thumb drives or what they also call jump drives. This is easier and faster than the old way of using CDs or DVDs. But now I am hearing the IT guys talking about the Cloud and using the internet to back up their files.

I’m not sure sending everything important to me to a web server someplace is a good idea. What if they get hacked or go out of business? Then what do I do about retrieving my data? I think I will stick with the thumb drive for a while longer.

Fun in the Kitchen

I just discovered the Paula Dean web site and I am fired up about trying some of her recipes at home. She has the most wonderful personality and I know that everyone raves about how delicious her food is. Real Southern home cooking food. I’m going to start with a dessert and then work my way up to the main course. There are hundreds of recipes and videos on her site – I can’t wait to try a bunch of them.

Big Monitors

I remember when computers first came out and the monitors were nothing more than a stripped down TV set. Most of them were monotone – either gray text on a black screen or white/yellow text on a dark green screen.

When they actually went to color, and the world of graphics opened up for computer users. I remember seeing the high price tags for the color monitors and they were huge, heavy boxes of plastic with a screen full of glare.

Now, we have the color flat screen and high definition screens. They have gotten much cheaper and are the standard for today’s computer users.

Bookworm

Sometimes I want to play a quick game to take a mental break from my real world. I used to play solitaire for 10 minutes or so, and then I tried my hand at Mahjong. Now I found a cool word game called Bookworm. It is like Scrabble in that you use tiles with letters to make words. But it is a single player game and it really does exercise the brain. I used to be happy to get a high score of 100,000 before losing a round, but now I regularly top 1,000,000 and the same game can go one for weeks at a time – I just play for 10 or 12 minutes and save the current game. Then, when I have another quick break, I pick up from where I left off and play for a while, save it, and so on.