Monkey Business

26 07 2008

My net friend Sarah over at Skyward Journey recently posted some pictures of her son Henry’s antics with oat bran in the kitchen.  Her shots inspired me to dig out and post a picture from our own family’s historical monkey business.

This picture was taken on May 18th, 2002, about 5 eeks before Emily turned 3. I didn’t find out about the disaster until I returned home late that night, but John didn’t tell me exactly what had happened.  He said only that “Emily was busy tonight after I put her to bed and you might want to take some pictures.”  I knew it was going to be bad/funny, so I snuck upstairs with my video camera in hand, not knowing WHAT I was going to find.  The video is hysterical, documenting both the room and my initial, heartfelt reaction.  It’s made funnier by the fact that I had to shoot in night mode because Emily was in the room in bed asleep.

This was the scene the next morning.  Baby powder EVERYWHERE.  It looked like a thin, magical snowfall had mysteriously hit!  She had to help me clean it up - and we did it in small doses because powder was filling the air.  On the plus side, the room did retain that sweet, baby powder smell for days afterward!

Do you know something?  This is just one of those experiences that every parent has at some point, but that no one really tells you about.  It goes along with kids cutting clothes and/or (their own or someone else’s), kids blurting out something you said at the dinner table the night before that was not meant to be shared with the outside world, and innumerable other little rites of passage that, before digital cameras, people rarely documented.

Like Sarah, I’m glad I grabbed the camera and documented for posterity Emily’s childhood mischievousness!

Start Slide Show with PicLens Lite PicLens



Securing Wireless Networks

25 07 2008

I was a few minutes early picking up my daughter, so I parked my car on the street in the residential neighborhood and pulled out the eeePC. There were four wireless access points in range, only one of which was secure. It would have been easy to connect to the unsecured networks. If file sharing were enabled on any of the computers in the house, it probably wouldn’t have been difficult to access data on those computers. I could certainly anonymously download anything I wanted from the Internet, because any kind of tracking or logging would point back to the house with the open wireless network.

Thanks to Jem on FlickrThere’s actually a debate about whether you should secure your wireless network. Securty expert Bruce Schneier runs an open wireless network at his house. He contends that it’s just common courtesy for guests to his home. He also lets them use his heat, water, and electricity. Most people disagree, citing these points:

  • An open wireless network allows anyone to use your Internet connection without your approval or supervision. So people can use it to pirate music and videos, send spam, or access child porn. When the feds come, guess who they’re going to want to talk to?
  • An open wireless network opens your computers up to potential attack. If you’re using your wifi network to share files between computers in your house, people using your wireless network may be able to access those files. Plus, passwords that you send over the wireless network could be intercepted if there’s no security.
  • An open wireless network violates your Internet provider’s terms of service. If your neighbor had a high speed Internet connection, and you could connect to it for free from your house, why would you sign up for your own connection? While enforcement is rare, the ISP could terminate your service and pursue legal action against you.

Regardless of where you fall in this debate, the one thing you shouldn’t do is leave your wireless network open simply because you don’t know any better. That’s what this post is about.

How do you make your wireless network secure? The first thing you need to do is log in to your wireless router. In most cases, you can do this through a web browser by typing in the IP address. My router’s address is 192.168.1.1, so I’d just type “http://192.168.1.1″ in the address bar of by browser, and it connects to my router. If you don’t know your router’s address, you can check this list to find out what the default should be. Your router should request a username and password. If you have never changed it, check the same list to find the default and use it to log in.

I can’t give you step-by-step instructions here, because all routers are different. This is all menu driven software though, and if you poke around a little you should be able to find everything.  I can tell you what to look for, though:

Router Password
The first thing you want to do is change the password for your router. If you leave it as the default, anybody can just find a list of passwords on the Internet and log in to your router. You definitely don’t want people doing that.

Encryption
You want to encrypt the data that is moving between your wireless router and your wireless computers. Remember, these things are sent over radio waves. Anyone can “listen” to them and intercept the data. You want to make sure that the data is encoded in a way that only allows the right device to understand them. Your options here will probably be WEP or WPA. IF possible, you want to use WPA, because it’s the most secure. A network protected by WEP can now be hacked in less than sixty seconds, and a network without either doesn’t need to be hacked, because the traffic is already accessible.

WPA works like this: you define a “key” that is used to encrypt the data. The same key must be installed on the wireless router and all devices that are going to connect to your wireless network. The password on my network is a random string of characters from Steve Gibson’s Perfect Passswords page. We keep in in a text file on a thumb drive, and copy and paste it whenever we need to configure a new computer to use the network.

Basically, you need to put the same key in the configurations on both the wireless router and the computer. Don’t forget that once you change the configuration on the router, you won’t be able to connect to it until you set up the computer. So make sure you do it in the right order -) On the computer, you want to find the settings for your wireless network connection. The location of this control panel is going to be different depending on your operating system and version.

SSID
Your SSID (Service Set IDentifier) is the “name” of your router. This name is broadcast by the router, which is basically saying, “Hey, my name is Linksys and I’m over here. Come connect to me!” When your computer searches for wireless networks, it’s the SSID that shows up identifying your network. Changing the name makes it harder for people to identify what kind of router you have. You can also hide the SSID, which means you’ll have to type it in on the computer to connect to your network. Most experts agree that this offers little protection, though, because there are other ways to find your SSID.

Universal Plug & Play
One of the benefits of having a router is that it protects your computers from the Internet. Because it uses network address translation (NAT), computers scanning the Internet for security vulnerabilities can only see your router, not the computers that are connected to it.

In some cases, you may want people on the Internet to be able to traverse your router and access some resource on your internal network. In my house, for example, I run a web server. So my router is configured to forward web traffic to that server. I deliberately set up this configuration to allow people access to that resource.

Universal Plug and Play makes it easier to set up these kinds of connections by opening ports on your router as needed by applications running on your network. While UP&P may have some uses on an internal network if there aren’t any security holes in its implementation, you probably don’t want it automatically setting up connections between computers on your internal network and other devices out on the Internet. Find the setting on your router, and disable it.

MAC Address Filtering
Another thing you can to to protect your wireless network is to use MAC address filtering. A MAC address is unique identifier built into your network card. Theoretically, every network device has its own MAC address. Your router probably has a configuration setting that allows you to restrict which MAC addresses can connect to your network. You could enter the addresses from your wireless devices, and then those would be the only devices your router will talk to.

While this is a good idea in theory, it’s actually trivial to change the MAC address for a network card. So all an attacker would need to do is to capture some traffic, find the MAC address of an allowed device, and then configure his computer to use that address. While MAC address filtering would add another layer of security, the minimal protection provided probably isn’t worth the trouble of setting it up.

Remember to restart your router after setting all of these things, to ensure that the changes take effect. You will probably need to reconnect to your network after that. Then, you can rest easy knowing that those people sitting in the car across the street are using your neighbor’s wireless network.

Start Slide Show with PicLens Lite PicLens



Soul Windows

25 07 2008
Sunlit Sisters

Sunlit Sisters

It has been said that the eyes are the windows to the soul.  Today’s Shutter Sisters post is about just that and challenges us to find pictures where the eyes tell the story.  This shot does that for me.

Megan (on the right) has been away visiting my parents in Massachusetts for almost two weeks as part of the “turning 7″ tradition in our house.  We won’t see her for another week and a half, and Emily is taking it hard, much harder than Meg took it when Emily turned 7 and was gone for weeks with Grandma and Grandpa.

The girls’ devotion to each other is complete and their love for each other clearly expressed in their closed eyes.

Start Slide Show with PicLens Lite PicLens



All About Me

14 07 2008

I like reading, lilies, animals, nature, and the colors pink, purple, light blue, and white. When I grow up, I want to be a miner, a paleontologist, or an artist. I like horses.




South Dakota

14 07 2008

I have been to South Dakota. I saw elk, buffalo, and prairie dogs. It was fun.




…on the 5th of July!

14 07 2008

Julescomment on my last post could not have come at a better time, as we were headed back out to Blossom tonight to hear Carmina Burana and the 1812 - with fireworks afterwards!  I managed to grab the tripod AND my camera manual to re-read while waiting for the music to start.  It’s been about 3 years since I’ve read it, and I made some interesting discoveries!

Before the concert, I played with some backlit portraits, messed around with some more obscure modes, fiddled with manual focusing, and set up the tripod waiting for the fireworks to begin.  Not surprisingly, Jules was right!  She suggested setting the shutter speed to 4 and the aperture to F11 to better capture the colors of the shells.  Unfortunately, the aperture in my Pentax Optio MX only goes to F8, but I was still able to get MUCH better shots using her suggestions and a tripod.

Now, I THOUGHT I had changed ISO to 400, but apparently it was still set at 100 (I think it reverts to default when I turn the camera off).  And I SWEAR that I set a shutter speed of 4, but the pic stats say I had only a 1 second exposure.  And I must have imagined setting the aperture to 8 since the image info says F-stop was 16 (APEX=8) and “max aperture” was 2.9 (APEX=3.1).  So I either still have a lot to learn about my own camera’s manual settings or I don’t really understand how to read the pic stats!  But I did have lots of fun taking fully manual shots of the fireworks tonight.  Thanks, Jules!

Start Slide Show with PicLens Lite PicLens



“Hey! There’s Gonna Be Fireworks…”

14 07 2008

I have been taking some online photography lessons from Jules over at the blog “Hey, Jules - Help Me Take a Better Photograph!” When she posted this post about shutter and aperture, we were finally getting into the meat of what I was hoping to learn.  I’ve played before with some of the the various mode settings on my Pentax Optio MX, but fiddling with aperture and shutter speed has always been beyond me.  But this summer, I’ve taken a deep breath, switched out of auto mode, and begun experimenting with the shutter and aperature priority settings.  (I’m not ready for full manual yet!)

This year’s fireworks were the perfect place to play and experiment.  Overall, I was pretty happy with my results.  I took over 75 pictures in about 15 minutes (this camera is about 3 years old, so lag time is rather long and I still had it set for a 1 second instant review) using various settings.  I didn’t use a tripod and I did no post processing except for a bit of cropping to tighten up the image.

In retrospect, I probably should have changed the ISO setting on my camera from my default 100 to 400 (there’s not higher ISO setting option).  But overall, I am starting to grasp the effect of tinkering with the aperture and shutter settings.

Here are the stats on this particular image (but don’t ask me to explain focal length or F-Stop yet - I’m still learning!):

Exposure Time: 1/8 sec

Focal Length: 7 mm

F-Stop: F 2.7 (APEX=2.9)

ISO: 100

Start Slide Show with PicLens Lite PicLens



Home is Where Your Heart Is

14 07 2008

If home truly is where your heart is, then Blossom Music Center was home for me and my family on July 4th.  For years and years, my family spent the 4th at this natural amphitheater in the heart of the Cuyahoga Valley National Recreation Area (now the Cuyahoga Valley National Park) south of Cleveland, Ohio with a picnic dinner, the Blossom Festival Band, Tchaikovsky’s 1812, Sousa’s Stars and Stripes Forever, and fireworks.  Then we’d head home, exhausted, but happy, to watch the various national network July 4th television shows.

As the years passed, my parents sold their house and took to the road as permanent travelers and my sister moved to Boston.  For a few years, I continued the Blossom tradition with my husband, his parents, and eventually, my oldest daughter.  But in 2000, we went out to visit my sister in Boston and our July 4th world was turned upside down.

After having watched the Boston Pops from the Esplanade on television as a little girl, I was determined to see them in person myself.  And if I was going to be there, I wanted to be in the front row and get on TV!  To make a very long story short, we did end up in the front row AND on television, but most importantly, we met some of the nicest, most patriotic, and most enthusiastic July 4th lovers you’ll find anywhere!  And of course, the Boston Pops put on a performance second to none!

In 2001, our second daughter was days from being born, so we couldn’t go out to Boston, but when we returned in 2002, our July 4th “family” welcomed us with open arms like long lost prodigal children.  Again, we sat in the front, were on TV, and watched an incredible show by America’s orchestra - with America’s patriots all around us.

And somehow it happened: Boston became our new July 4th home.  But this year, for a variety of reasons, we aren’t there.  Even though we went to Blossom last night - and the music was fantastic - it’s not the same as being in Boston because our adopted July 4th “family” wasn’t with us.  We’ve talked to many of them on the phone, we watched footage of them on TV via the internet, and we even heard the Boston Pops do Stars and Stripes at the July 3rd practice concert (again, via the internet), but it’s not the same as being there.  So we’re looking at our photo albums from past years, watching old concerts on VHS, and flying over the miles to be with them in spirit.

So today’s picture and post is about what America means to me:  freedom to chose, freedom to travel, freedom of the press, freedom of speech.  The coming together of people from a vast nation with vast differences of opinion, but the same indomitable spirit.  It is it the ancestors of these people who created what America has become, we who preserve the ideal of America today, and our progeny who will form the America of tomorrow.

“Oh say, does that star spangled banner yet wave o’er the land of the free and the home of the brave?”

Start Slide Show with PicLens Lite PicLens



Amazon Bowling Cake

14 07 2008

A while back, I blogged about some of the specialty cakes I’ve made.  Over the last week, this is the project that has kept me busy! This cake was made for Emily’s and Megan’s Amazon rainforest fundraiser birthday party at the bowling alley yesterday.  Em turned 9 last week and Meg will turn 7 next week.  They chose to have a joint birthday party again this year, but NOT at our house (first time ever): at the local bowling alley/entertainment center!  They also chose to raise money to preserve the Amazon rainforest in lieu of gifts.

So they asked me to create a “rainforest bowling” cake set in the Amazon with an anaconda, a jaguar, and poison dart frogs bowling.  Oh, and Emily wanted her candles in the trees and Meg wanted hers in the bowling pins.  As you can imagine, there are no existing patterns out there for that specific kind of cake!  So I browsed around online for inspiration, spent many nights mulling over the logistics, and started executing earlier in the week.

All the animals are made from fondant and were made pretty early in the week so they would dry.  In addition to the anaconda, jaguar and dart frogs, I made a black howler monkey and a capybara.  The tree trunks, bowling ball, bowling pins, winding river, and waterfall waves were also made from fondant.  The treetops were made from royal icing, placed on an upside-down flower former for the shape, and attached to the trunks with a glob of buttercream frosting.  The water of the river was enhanced with a light coat of glycerin t make it look wet and a sprinkle of blue shimmer powder for added pizazz!

The hardest part of making this cake was the assembly.  We got to the alley about 1/2 hour early and it took that time and more to set up the bowling pins, insert the trees, and pipe the greetings on the cakeboard.  Everyone thought the cake was spectacular, and most importantly, the kids loved it!  Even though several trees fell over during the party - and one leaned enough when we were singing happy birthday to catch its neighbor on fire! - this cake was definitely a sweet success!

Start Slide Show with PicLens Lite PicLens



Little Scientists

14 07 2008

Today’s Shutter Sisters post features a quote by R. Buckminster Fuller about children being born true scientists.  Our photo assignment today was to interpret his statement in photos.

I had a hard time finding a good picture for this assignment!  Most of my “kids as scientists” pictures feature their hair in their faces or a view of the backs of their heads as they are fully engaged in some child-like scientific activity.  This was a fun one, full-faced one I took last year of Megan at the Akron Zoo.

The zoo has a few kid-sized houses arranged in a loose settlement or prairie town style.  Most kids wandered in, about, around, and through, but Megan really got into the scene!  She is truly an experiential learner, so she put on the dress-up clothes, went to the “store” to shop for food (on the table there in the lower right), and got right to work churning the butter.  I love the tennis shoes sticking out from the bottom of the dress!

Start Slide Show with PicLens Lite PicLens