Tuesday, July 23, 2019

Windows 10 Clipboard is Great!

Windows 10 has many new features, but one that I find myself using the most often is the expanded clipboard. Where previous versions allowed you to clip pictures and paste into a document, presentation, or email, the new version keeps history of your clips and allows you to choose which clip to paste. Here's how it works:

Be sure to enable the feature first:
Start > Settings > System > Clipboard
Set "Clipboard History" to "On"


Now, you can clip a picture, text, or anything else on your screen to the clipboard by pressing the following key combination, pressing each in order and holding down until you have all three pressed:
Shift - Windows Key - "S"

Your screen will darken, and you'll notice a small cross.  Put that cross on the top left of what you want to clip, and hold down your left mouse button, and drag it to select the region you want to clip. Stop pressing the left mouse button once you've selected what you intent to clip, and the image will go to the clipboard.

Now you have a choice.
You can go into the document or email where you want to paste the clip, and press: Ctrl - "V" (Press the Ctrl key first and hold it, then press the "V" key)
or
You can press  the Windows key, then "V" in the same manner, and choose which clip from the clipboard you want to paste. When you select the clip it will automatically be pasted into your document, wherever you have placed the cursor.


Bonus info: If you want to save the clip as a graphics file, just paste into Powerpoint, right click on the image, and select "Save As Picture". You can save it as a .jpg, .png, .gif, or other graphics format. This is a quick and easy way to quickly save things for posting on social media.

Have fun!
Mark









Thursday, July 11, 2019

The DoD "JEDI" Project is a Bad Idea


The Pentagon's plan to award a contract worth an estimated 10 Billion dollars over the next decade to Amazon or Microsoft should be of grave concern to anyone who cares about our nation's security. The contact is set to be awarded by the end of August, 2019.

Cyber is the next generation battlefield, it will be central to the outcome of the next conflict. Once this contract is implemented we won't even be managing our most critical asset, our information and the compute that powers it. The flow and control of information is the new measure of military capability, and we do not possess the overwhelming dominance we do in the kinetic warfare dimension.  We are "one of the many" in the cyber world, with only a slight advantage relative to those who would do us harm.

In the 4th century AD, the Roman Empire had a problem. The resources required to guard their far reaching territory stretched their existing legions, and the legions themselves became more expensive to train, outfit, and maintain. A series of Emperors saw it as easier to hire Germanic tribes to plug gaps than to outfit and maintain the type of loyal, Roman led army that had protected them for a thousand years. It started slowly at first, but before long, Rome had outsourced much of their military capability. The Germanic tribes were fierce fighters, and quickly learned Roman tactics and adopted elements of Roman culture. Before long, the balance of power shifted, and the Germanic leaders wielded as much power as the Emperor himself.  In 476, Germanic Chief  Odoacer deposed the Emperor Romulus Augustulus and made himself king, effectively bringing an end to the Western Roman Empire.
Outsourcing to the tech giants is the equivalent of the Romans outsourcing protection to the Germanic tribes. It may sound like a convenient idea, but as time passes we'll regret the decision.

Why does the idea of outsourcing our computing resource to either of these two big tech companies concern me?
  • Migrating a massive network like the DoD's to the cloud is like going in the roach motel, once you go in, you don't come out. We'll be stuck, and extracting us in the event we aren't satisfied will be a massive undertaking.
  • The corporations are effectively monopolies. They act, look, and operate exactly like the organizations that President Theodore Roosevelt worked so hard to break up for good reason - their concentration of power is not healthy for our nation or our people. This deal provides these monopolies with funding, resources, and power that will make them stronger than many nations in terms of influence.
  • Both are worth over a trillion dollars, making them two of the most valuable companies in the world. They don't need to get larger. https://www.wraltechwire.com/2019/07/11/as-tech-stocks-soar-amazon-cracks-1-trillion-in-value-joining-neighbor-microsoft/?
  • I deal with Microsoft often, and I compete against Amazon in the cloud. I know what these companies are capable of, and it's not in our interests to trust them. They aren't patriotic and they don't have the nation's best interests at heart. They care about profit and the do what they can get away with regardless of the impact.
  • Both have a history of outages (unforced errors). I'm concerned that they won't be able to handle an aggressive attack by a peer competitor with equal technological capabilities. https://www.readitquik.com/articles/cloud-3/top-7-aws-outages-that-wreaked-havoc/
  • Both have a history of Tax dodging and meddling in government affairs

Both corporations are multi-national operations with substantial presence in countries that are potential enemies, employing foreign nationals in areas of high responsibility and authority. Who is to say a high level executive with loyalty elsewhere couldn't override security protocols to access the network? He would already have access to adjacent resources, and that's over half of the battle for an experienced hacker.

We know that Amazon has a cozy relationship with China, and shares cloud technology with them. https://www.wsj.com/articles/amazon-to-sell-its-china-cloud-computing-business-1510628802

By outsourcing our critical classified networks, we will lose core competencies and skills to manage secure networks in DoD. The NMCI program to outsource the unclassified network decimated the technical skill of Marine network specialists. Techs coming out of the Corps used to have solid experience. Now they think basic user creation and administration is network engineering. It most definitely is not. We have already lost substantial technical expertise in our ranks due to outsourcing.

I'm not opposed to leveraging civilian expertise on a contract basis, or to outsource some functionality to American based companies, but to put all our eggs in the safe keeping of Amazon or Microsoft seems short sighted. Nevertheless, this contract will be awarded, and time will tell what the resulting effects to our national security will be. It is my sincere desire that my analysis is not correct.

Chapters Forty-One and Forty Two

     Forty-One  “Our Country won’t go on forever, if we stay soft as we are now. There won’t be any America because some foreign soldier...