NEKLS Technology Weblog

50 Feet From the Cutting Edge in the Northeast Kansas Library System

Social Media Introduction

Posted on December 9th, 2009 by Heather Braum

I will be giving a “Social Media Introduction” presentation at the Lawrence Public Library later today for the Lawrence Arts Rountable meeting. It’s very similar to the presentation I gave a few months ago at the SWKLS Tech Day. Resources for the presentation will be posted here.

Or, view the presentation:

“Online at the Library” article

Posted on October 20th, 2009 by Heather Braum

Governing magazine has posted a great article, “Online at the Library” about how libraries are helping patrons without computer or Internet access still connect to online-only government services. Check it out!

(Thanks to Bob Walter at Pittsburg State University for posting this to KAN-LIB.)

Massive Phishing Campaign Hits Multiple Email Services

Posted on October 7th, 2009 by Heather Braum

Here’s even more information on the phishing scam previously posted on this blog. Brig McCoy posted the following on the KANLIB listserv, from Slashdot, but as some of this blog’s readers are not in Kansas, I thought it was still a good idea to repost his email here. Please read this to the end.

“It seems as if the massive phishing campaign reported yesterday was not specific to Hotmail, as was initially believed. According to a report by the BBC, many Gmail and Yahoo Mail accounts have also been compromised. Earthlink, Comcast, and AOL were also affected. While the source of the latest attacks has not been determined, many are pointing to the same bug that claimed at least 10,000 passwords from Microsoft Windows Live Hotmail. Microsoft has done their part in blocking all known hijacked Hotmail accounts and created tools to help users who had lost control of their email. An analysis of the data from Hotmail showed the most common password among the compromised accounts to be ’12345.’ On their end, Google responded to the attacks by forcing password resets on the affected accounts.”

http://tinyurl.com/ycvuu7y

Re-read that next-to-last sentence… a password of ’12345′? Please use better passwords… take the first letters of a sentence, for instance.
Sigh. “

Remember the blog post several few months ago on the 500 worst passwords of all time and also mentioned at this year’s Tech Day during the Cloud Computing presentation? Now would be a very good time to check that list and if one or more of your passwords are found on that list, please change it/them now!

Password leaking more widespread than thought

Posted on October 6th, 2009 by Heather Braum

According BBC News, Lifehacker, and other sites, the password leakage may be more widespread than previously reported. Gmail, Yahoo, AOL, Comcast, and Earthlink email accounts may have had usernames and passwords posted online, also. I would highly recommend you change your passwords on all your sites and consider using a different password for each site.

Most of us use the same password over and over again (I’m right there with you), and if one account is ever compromised, you risk all your accounts being compromised.

How can your account become compromised? The most common way is through a phishing scam (pronounced fishing). Common Craft has created a “Phishing Scam in Plain English” video, so you can see how phishing works. Also, see if you can detect different phishing scams through this online phishing quiz. As always contact your friendly NEKLS Tech Staff if you have any questions.

Thousands of Microsoft Windows Live Email passwords leaked online

Posted on October 6th, 2009 by Heather Braum

Sometime over this past weekend, several thousand Hotmail/MSN/Windows Live passwords were leaked online through a third-party. If you have an email account at one of these places, I’d highly recommend you go ahead and change your password. It appears most of the usernames whose passwords were posted online were in the A and B range, but it’s good practice to change your passwords frequently, anyway.

National Gaming Day is November 14

Posted on October 5th, 2009 by Heather Braum

Does your library game? Have you signed up for the National Gaming Day?

According to Jenny Levine, there are “about 300 free games left for National Gaming Day 2009. has your library registered? http://bit.ly/ngd2009 #ngd2009″

The above link takes you to a survey about National Gaming Day, Saturday, November 14, 2009, sponsored by ALA: “ALA is coordinating its second annual National Gaming Day @ your library on November 14, 2009. There will lots of fun activities again, including a national video game tournament in which your players can compete against those in other libraries across the country. We’d love to have your library participate in whatever way works best for you. Please fill out this survey to add your library to the national list and map of participating libraries and request free donations.”

Check out the National Gaming Day website for more information.

KLA-PLA Live Blog

Posted on October 1st, 2009 by Heather Braum

SWKLS Tech Day 2009 Presentation On Social Media and Libraries

Posted on September 24th, 2009 by Heather Braum

Presentation

Handout, low-res PDF

Handout, hi-res PDF

swklstech09 Delicious bookmarks

Find us on Facebook

Posted on September 23rd, 2009 by Heather Braum

If you use Facebook, become a fan of NEKLS on Facebook. Click on the Find us on Facebook button to go to the NEKLS Facebook page. We now have the page set up to bring in new articles on the NEKLS Website, the NEKLS Tech Blog, and the NExpress Library project site. Visit the page today and become a Fan!

The Top Ten Things Library Administrators Should Know About Technology

Posted on September 14th, 2009 by Heather Braum

Roy Tennant has put together a great list of the top ten things library administrators should know about technology. He also put the call out on Twitter for responses, and created a second post dedicated to those answers. I highly recommend you check both out.

My personal favorites?

  1. Technology isn’t as hard as you think it is.
  2. Technology gets easier all the time.

And from the Twitterati list:

  • Allow your staff time and resources to experiment – even if nothing comes of it. Innovation comes with risks.
  • It’s OK to fail.
  • No platform is forever. Ask not only how you’ll move onto it, but how you’ll move off of it.

Check out both lists when you have a chance!

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