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Next, Shanghai and Dalian

November 2, 2009 by wroolie 6 Comments

I went to China for the first time in August (after 20 years of it being the one place I wanted to see more than any other).  That was for a family holiday in Beijing.  I had a fantastic time and was able to practice using Mandarin more than I ever have before.

Next week, I will be in both Shanghai and Dalian for business.  I have several meetings lined up and I am very interested in seeing the up-and-comers in the software development market.

Shanghai is the fastest growing city in the world.  I’m really looking forward to seeing it.  I suppose there will be a lot of construction in preparation for the World Expo next year.

Dalian is a place I’ve been wanting to see for the past few years as it has a vibrant software outsourcing market.

I’m spending a lot of time this week preparing and am really looking forward to the trip.

Exciting times.

Filed Under: China, Chinese, Offshoring, Software Dev & Productivity

The sneaky trick to sell me anti-virus software

October 19, 2009 by wroolie 8 Comments

So, this morning I get called downstairs because the kid’s computer is filled with viruses.  I’ve heard this before, so I wasn’t panicked.  We have up-to-date virus definitions and the kids know to be careful about what they download or sites they visit, so unless it is a threat that is really new, it should be okay.  I accept that it is still possible to get a virus on one of our pcs, but we try to be pretty vigilant.

But, when I looked at the computer, I nearly panicked.  Here’s what it looked like:

VirusScan

It filled the entire window.  My first impulse was to shut he pc down as quickly as possible in case it spread (I realise this may not be the most techie response).  The red “7 Viruses found” label was blinking.  How can you ignore the blinking text?

Then I looked closer.  I realised it was a web page disguised to look like Windows Explorer.  Our pc has more than one drive and the image only had a c drive.  I saw the URL in the browser address bar.  If I tried to right click on the image to view the source, it tried to download an executable.  When I viewed the page source using the menu items, the entire page was dynamically written with javascript.  It’s scary to think that things like this are out there.  I was able to figure out that it was just a browser popup with an animated image, but not everyone would be able to see it so quickly.

I showed the kids why it was fake and how to spot it if it happened again.  Someone had downloaded the exe before I got there, but the real Anti-virus picked it up and removed it. 

I suspect that it would install a new anti-virus on your pc and then tell you it expired so you could renew it.  I’m not sure how it works or if there is a legit company behind it, but it is very sneaky and under-handed.

Filed Under: Miscellaneous Rants Tagged With: Anti-virus, scam

Eric Wroolie: Gym Man

September 29, 2009 by wroolie 7 Comments

I’ve always hated going to the gym.  It’s not that I don’t like working out—I just prefer something like running.  Running is easy.  It’s solitary.  You can listen to music and not have to worry about being watched or criticized or anything.

Most of my experience with gyms goes back to my time in the Army.  Every post I was stationed at had a gym that soldiers could freely use in addition to our mandatory physical training.  I would occasionally go for periods of up to a week of regularly gym usage.

Arnold Schwarzenegger Color S-Africa
Creative Commons License photo credit: d_vdm

My memories of the gym are of bulky guys having lengthy conversations about their pecks, their lats, their gloots, whatever.  We shared the gym with soldiers from the infantry divisions.  As a linguist, it was a little unnerving (“Sure, they can kill a guy in a few seconds, but let’s see how quickly they can translate the People’s Daily.”). Just by standing in a gym, you were in danger of one these bulky, self-obsessed, guys tapping you on the should and saying “Spot me?”  So, not wanting to look like I didn’t know what I was doing, I would just grunt “Yeah, okay” and pray that the guys could actually bench press the amounts they were trying to lift.

I can remember working in one of the small controlled machines in the corner of the gym and listening to one guy spotting another on the bench press in the centre of the room—“Yeah Man!  You can do it!  Come on! Come On!  Yeah!  Yeah!”  My sarcasm made me want to mock them, but I wouldn’t dare.  However, if he had said “Eye of the Tiger, man!”, I would not have been able to control myself.

I pretty much stayed away from the gym after that.  I’ve run several 10ks, half-marathons, and marathons—but have stayed out of the gym.

As I get older, though, running is not enough to keep me fit.  I fear myself losing out to the obesity epidemic.  Either I have to exercise more or change my diet.  So, last week I joined the gym.

Joining the gym at 37 is not as easy as I thought it would be.  I wish I could have filled out an online form and just showed up at a time I thought it was empty.  Instead, I had to apply in person.  My big fear was that when I approached the reception desk at the local leisure centre and told them I wanted to join the gym, they would start laughing and say “I should think so!”  But, it was easy.

Once I filled in the paperwork, I had to book a meeting with a trainer to discuss my goals and set up a training plan.  I was nervous about this meeting.  I tried to think of a good answer to the question “So, what do you want to achieve by working out?”  I feel uncomfortable answering this question.  I don’t like bringing attention to areas of my body I’m unhappy with—especially to fit guy in his early twenties.  So my rehearsed answer was “You know, I want to do a little toning and work a little bit on upper body strength.”  But I really wanted to say “I want six-pack abs and I want people to gasp for the right reasons when I take my shirt off at the beach.” The answer I gave seemed to work and I am now set-up with a training plan.

The gym at the leisure centre is nothing like the gyms I used on Army bases.  So far, I’ve been going in the middle of the day and there seem to be mostly older people (older than myself) and no body builders.  I am now set-up with a direct-debit scheme that should keep me motivated to keep using it.  So far, so good.

Eye of the Tiger, man.  Eye of the Tiger!

Filed Under: Army Days, Bumblings, Growing Up Tagged With: Army Days, Gym

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