abstract

June 4, 2009

face warp

May 26, 2009

irene

background

May 21, 2009

Guille is Henry, Miguel is Oleguer and luis.d is Puyol

face swap

jonhsoon,oga luis.d and guille

spain!!

November 5, 2008


basket street

November 4, 2008


bodyboard

November 3, 2008


October 27, 2008

1.tuenti because i can speak wiht my friend in internet
2.blogsome because i can put my things in internet
3.facebook because i can put my photos is like a tuenti

November 19, 2007

bloxorz

November 5, 2007
Games by Miniclip - Bloxorz Bloxorz

Consiga que el bloque caiga en el agujero cuadrado

Juega a este Juego Gratuito ahora!!

satoman it’s share

October 30, 2007

lesson 1

1. What is the name and age of one of the oldest calculating machines? - the abacus, which is around 5,000 years old. 2. When were mechanical calculators invented? the mechanical calculators were invented in the 1600s. 3. Who invented the “first” true ancestorial computer? When was this? Did it work? Charles Babbage invented the ‘first’ true ancestorial in the early 1800’s. Apparently his lastest design didn’t work., but this one did. 4. What allows today’s computers to do computing that wasn’t possible 200 years ago? the invention of something that could do calculations and other information processing with no moving parts and do it very fast. 5. What was Stone Hedge possibly used for? to calculate - to work out answers. 6. What are the four parts of a computer? input, storage, processing and output

champiñones

October 25, 2007

October 24, 2007

____________ (Name of Student being marked)

1/1 1. An original theme

1/1 2. Unique header

1/1 3. A personalized background

1/1 4. A Youtube video post

0/1 5. A Picture post

1/1 6. Links to all other classmates

1/1 7. Posted answers to Plugin Questions

1/1 8. Allows comments to be made

1/1 9. Counter

1/1 10. Pictures in sidebar

1/1 11. Animation in sidebar

1/1 12. Music Player

1/1 13. Proper formatting: pics fit nicely

1/1 14. Artistic touch: colour and appearance

1/1 15. Identity Theft Questions

0/1 16. Evaluation Post on your blog of another student’s blog

1/1 17. Evaluation Post on your blog of a student in another class

0/1 18. The History of Computers Questions

0/1 19. Separate Pages with your choice of information

1/1 20. Personalized Categories made for Posts

16/20 TOTAL MARK

_alejandro martin____________ (Name of student that did the marking)

lesson 2 questions

October 23, 2007

1.Square root is a positive number.

2.Even if you can’t offer a complete answer, help us get thing started.

3.A microprocessor is a computer processor on a microchip.

4.There are more than four main components of a computers.
But they are

1:Motherboard
2:CPU
3:Memory
4:Hard drive
5:Graphics card
6:Power supply unit
7:Roms, ie cd rom,dvd rom,cdrw,dvdrw etc
8:case

you could add far more to this list too,ie sound card.scsi,fans,water cooling, heatsink and fan, usb card, network card, firewire card…the list goes on and on…

5.Rnp279 and the trust is 90.

plugin queston

plug in areA hardware or software module that adds a specific feature or service to a larger system.

Which plugin do you think should be deactivated from the list of plugins at the top of your blog tool bar, explain why? I reckon the last plugin should be deactivated because it’s already deactivated probably meaning it has no use.

Are plugins usually made by the original developer of an application? Yes. Normally they are..

Do plugins work by themselves? Plugins are useless by themselves. They need a host program.

How are plugins different from extensions? The main difference is that plugins generally rely on the host application’s user interface and have a well-defined boundary to their possible set of actions. Extensions generally have fewer restrictions on their actions, and may provide their own user interfaces.

When did plugins first begin? in the mid 1970s.

identity theft

A classic example of consumer-dependent financial crime occurs when Bob obtains a loan from a financial institution impersonating Peter. Bob uses Peter’s personal identifiers that he has somehow acquired. These personal identifiers conform with the data retained on Peter by national credit-rating services. The identifiers include surname, given names, date of birth, Social Security number (U.S.), Social Insurance Number (Cda), current and former addresses etc. These data are all part of credit header information retained by credit-rating services. For Bob, these crimes are non self-revealing, although authorities can track Bob down unless he conceals his mailing address somehow. With consumers being credit-dependent, the onus shifts to them to re-establish their credit-worthiness with the lending institutions and credit-rating services.

Less commonly understood outside criminal intelligence and law enforcement circles is the impact of identification-based concealment crimes. As with credit-dependent consumer financial crimes, criminals acquire legally attributed personal identifiers and then clone someone to them for concealment from authorities. Unlike credit-dependent financial crimes, they are non self-revealing, continuing for an indeterminate amount of time without being detected.

The crimes include illegal immigration, terrorism and espionage, to mention a few. It may also be a means of blackmail if activities undertaken by the thief in the name of the victim would have serious consequences for the victim. There are cases of identity cloning to attack payment systems, such as obtaining medical treatment.

[edit] Personal guardianship
The acquisition of legally attributed personal identifiers is made possible by serious breaches of privacy. For consumers it is usually due to personal naivete in who they provide their information to or carelessness in protecting their information from theft (e.g. vehicle break-ins and home invasions). Guardianship of personal identifiers by consumers is the most common intervention strategy recommended by the Federal Trade Commission, Canadian Phone Busters and most sites that address “identity theft”. Personal guardianship issues include recommendations on what consumers may do to prevent their information getting into the wrong hands.

[edit] Agency guardianship
Governments trade off diligence in issuing both foundation and other means of identification documents providing access to benefits, privileges and services, for delivery of smooth and efficient services to their clients because they are right

In their May 1998 testimony on Identity Theft before a subcommittee of the Committee of the Judiciary, United States Senate, the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) reported on their response to consumer concern about the sale of their Social Security numbers and other personal identifiers by the individual reference service industry [credit-raters and data miners]. The FTC agreed to the industry’s draft of self-regulating principles restricting access to non-public information which includes “credit header” information on credit reports. The credit header data typically includes the individual’s name, address, aliases, Social Security number, current and prior addresses and telephone number.[2] According the industry the restrictions vary according to the category of customer. Credit-rating services gather and disclosure personal and credit information to a wide business client base.

Governments, in registering sole proprietorships, partnerships and corporations do not make an effort to determine if the officers listed in the Articles of Incorporation are who they say they are, potentially allowing criminals access to personal information through credit-rating and data mining services. Other poor corporate diligence standards include: i) a failure to shred confidential information before throwing it into dumpsters; ii) the brokerage of personal information to other businesses without ensuring that the purchaser maintains adequate security controls; and iii) the theft of laptop computers being carried off-site containing vast amounts of personal information.

If corporate or government organizations do not protect consumer privacy, client confidentiality and political privacy, the acquisition of personal identifiers to commit unlawful acts will continue to be a prime target for criminals.[3]

music

October 8, 2007

the grange

September 25, 2007