ReportWire

Tag: computer engineering

  • Parenting 101: 5 Lessons to keep kids safe online for the new school year

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    The back-to-school season is exciting – new knowledge, new digital tools, and new discoveries. But it also brings higher cybersecurity risks for both schools and children. Cybersecurity experts are urging children, parents, and school communities to stay extra alert during this period.

    “The back-to-school period requires additional efforts to keep children and school communities safe online. A new beginning means new digital tools, online searches, and registrations for learning platforms. All of that increases cyber risks that must be taken seriously,” said Karolis Arbačiauskas, head of product at NordPass, in a media release

    A new study by NordPass, in collaboration with NordStellar, reveals a worrying truth: many educational institutions are still using shockingly weak passwords to protect sensitive data. Entries like “123456”, “Edifygroup@1”, and “principal@2021” appeared frequently, showing a widespread reliance on predictable or outdated credentials that are easy for hackers to guess.

    This is why the back-to-school season is the perfect moment to talk to children about cyber hygiene – the dos and don’ts in digital environments – and to help them build strong habits for digital security and privacy. “Learning about cybersecurity can be fun. Many families of cybersecurity professionals make it a game – they host a small party with snacks and guide their children through five simple but essential exercises,” said Arbačiauskas.

    Cybersecurity experts advise to take these steps to preserve your own cybersecurity and that of your family members (it can also be used as inspiration for your family’s Cyber Party):

    • Create strong and unique passwords. Make sure every account in your family – whether it’s yours, your parents’, your significant other’s, or your children’s – uses a strong and unique password. The easiest way to do it? Use a trusted password manager to generate, store, and share them securely.
    • Turn on multi-factor authentication (MFA). Add an extra layer of security wherever you can, especially to access school portals, email accounts, and social apps. MFA helps keep hackers out even if a password gets breached – and they get breached more often than you think. A recent study by NordPass revealed that many educational institutions still use shockingly weak passwords.
    • Update devices and apps. Keep phones, tablets, and laptops up to date with the latest software. Outdated apps can contain vulnerabilities that hackers take advantage of to get backdoor access into your device. Updates patch these security holes so that cybercriminals can no longer exploit them.
    • Talk about phishing. Discuss cybersecurity with your family and why it matters. Teach them to never click suspicious links or open unknown attachments – especially in emails or messages claiming to be from the school. When in doubt, verify with the sender by using a website checker.
    • Adjust privacy settings. Review and tighten privacy settings on social media, online games, and school platforms. Limit what personal info is publicly visible and who can contact your kids online.

    – JC

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  • Salem students ‘lead the way’ at robotics showcase

    Salem students ‘lead the way’ at robotics showcase

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    SALEM — Collins Middle School seventh-grade robotics students Amelia Meegan and Sam Vietzke captured the Middle School Project Lead the Way Division at the One8 Applied Learning Showcase Friday, May 10, at the Track at New Balance.

    The feat was especially meaningful since the school’s entry into the One8 Showcase, spearheaded by science educator/Robotics Club advisor Gregg Beach, was its first-ever appearance.

    “I just thought it was important that we showed up,” said Beach in a news release. “The process of building, doing the work and showing up was reward enough. I’m not surprised (that we won) because we have so many great students and projects in this school.”

    The One8 Showcase, which included more than 300 schools, is a year-end student STEM showcase for Project Lead The Way, OpenSciEd, PBLWorks, and ST Math schools in Massachusetts for students in grades 5-12. Students shared their applied learning projects with industry professionals and had an opportunity to present to an audience.

    Student teams each had a table and display board on which they described their projects as industry professionals circulated and engaged students, offering verbal and written feedback.

    The Salem robotics students received commemorative One8 Showcase jackets as well as an invitation to the Philips Research Institute in Cambridge for a field trip.

    Amelia and Sam presented their robot MrukBot 9000, named after their beloved assistant principal Shamus Mruk, which was capable of 360 turns and was equipped with a bluetooth speaker, comically playing loops of Mruk’s favorite lines:

    – “What are you doing here?”

    – “Are you supposed to be here?”

    – “Where’s your pass?”

    – “Get back to class!”

    According to Sam, Amelia builds while he codes. “It took me about two days to code,” he said. “We know there were going to be other robots, but we were actually one of very few.”

    Success at the One8 Showcase has inspired the two to keep tweaking the MrukBot 9000.

    “Our next step is to put a camera on it so we can watch a live feed, basically making it a Roomba,” said Amelia.

    “We want to install an AI vision sensor,” Sam added, something Beach plans to introduce to his robotics class and the after-school Robotics Club.

    Beach noted that Amelia and Sam are also both drama students, which was key to their presentation.

    Seventh-grader Edward Castillo Mesa also attended the One8 Showcase to present his robot, EndGame Chupacabra 3.1, named after the mythical Mexican creature, which he built to battle other robots.

    His robot earned “terrific” feedback from several industry professionals in attendance and he has designs on a new project for the 2025 One8 Showcase: A robot to locate lost hikers.

    “I want to build something that can actually help people,” he said.

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    By News Staff

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  • First Three Winners of Fairwinds Scholarship to the Turing School of Software and Design Scholarship Announced

    First Three Winners of Fairwinds Scholarship to the Turing School of Software and Design Scholarship Announced

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    Scholarship program created to bring greater diversity to software development career field

    Press Release



    updated: Jan 26, 2021

     Fairwinds, which provides Kubernetes configuration validation software backed by a suite of services and open source tooling, continues its commitment to diversity and inclusion programs by awarding the first three of six scholarships to the Turing School of Software and Design. The scholarships are designed to help students who identify as Black, Indigenous and People of Color (BIPOC) with both academic and cost-of-living aid while they pursue an education in software development.

    “Last year, Fairwinds asked a bold question in response to the Movement for Black Lives: ‘What can we do to help ensure more equity in tech?’” said Bill Ledingham, CEO at Fairwinds. “This partnership with the Turing School represents a big part of our answer to that question. We’re extremely proud of the first three scholarship winners and are excited to help these students achieve their dreams.”

    Throughout 2020, Fairwinds worked to identify ways to support Black lives within the company, nationwide and around the world. The Fairwinds Scholarship to the Turing School has been provided to:

    • Khoa – An immigrant whose parents were twice captured as they tried to make it to the U.S., Khoa experienced poverty, prejudice and a lack of inclusion growing up in the States. A family member who was a Turing School alumnus encouraged him to pursue his passion for software development and take a risk to change his life.
    • Cydnee – A Black, Spanish-speaking, first generation American with a passion for fighting for underrepresented communities, Cyndee is focused on building software that allows people to maintain their independence, particularly those that fit somewhere between what’s considered able-bodied and disabled.
    • Klaudia – A mixed-race woman having experienced prejudice from both her family and the outside world, Klaudia has supported herself from a young age. She put herself through college and is attending the Turing School to ensure that the software development industry is filled with people of diverse backgrounds and ethnicities.

    “We strive to have a diverse student population and realize there are very real barriers in place, particularly for women and people of color, to do our full-time program,” said Darren Smith, the Financial and Enrollment Advisor for incoming Turing School students. “This scholarship helps more of our students focus solely on their education to then succeed long term in their careers.”

    In addition to funding scholarships, Fairwinds has partnered with the Turing School’s Black @ Turing student group by providing funds to elevate networking and employment opportunities for Black students.

    About Fairwinds

    Fairwinds provides software and services for companies to ship cloud native applications faster, more cost effectively and with less risk. Leveraging Kubernetes best practices learned from thousands of customer deployments, Fairwinds enables companies to confidently run containerized applications on production-grade infrastructure at scale. Offerings include Fairwinds Insights – software for automating, monitoring and enforcing Kubernetes best practices for security, reliability and resource optimization; and ClusterOps – a managed service with Fairwinds experts deploying and managing Kubernetes infrastructure 24×7 for customers. For more information, visit www.fairwinds.com, read our blog or follow @FairwindsOps on Twitter.

    About the Turing School of Software & Design

    The Turing School of Software & Design is a nonprofit computer programming school on a mission to unlock human potential by training a diverse, inclusive student body to succeed in high-fulfillment technical careers. With over 1000 alumni and growing, we believe in a world powered by technology where the people building it represent the people using it. Contact: Lindsey Lucero | 719.359.3120 | lindsey@turing.io

    Source: Fairwinds

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