Beta Notice: We've just completed a major update to our content management system. While we hope you don't encounter any errors, new software could cause new errors. If you encounter an error (or see anything in the body of an article in the form "ERROR:xxx"), please contact the editors. If possible, please include details and a screen shot. Thanks!
 Email:   
Home
In This Issue
EasyPrint
Click here for the RSS feed's XML code. This is not a browser URL.
Get with the gratitude (continued)

Of course, at the top of the list is always my wife. Getting married in my mid-40s, it took me a long time to find the right woman and an equally long time to convince her to marry me. But she's wonderful and I'm reminded every day how lucky I am.

I have a lot more to be grateful for, but because many of the items I'd list are personal, I'm not going to subject you to a full reading. Instead, I'm going to recommend you make your own list, and then notice just how wonderful each of the items you list has made your life as well.

I will mention three groups of people I'm incredibly grateful for: you, the readers, our authors, and our advertisers. Without all of you, we couldn't be producing these magazines and, together, especially with projects like this summer's exploration of White House email, we can also make a difference.

By the way, we've turned our article series on White House email into a book called Where Have All The Emails Gone? How something as seemingly benign as White House email can have freakly national security consequences. It's our first printed book and we'll be formally announcing its availability soon. In the meantime, you can read some excerpts at http://www.EmailsGone.com.

The sheer insanity of it all
Finally, Thanksgiving sometimes seems to open a doorway to the craziness that's human nature. The post-Thanksgiving, pre-Christmas season often means the big income time for many businesses, lots of profligate spending, and sometimes provides a window into the darkness that's also within us all.

Back in 1998, I wrote about a business trip the day before Thanksgiving. It was nine years ago today, exactly, that I wrote It's a small world. This disturbing article tells the story of a fellow traveler, in this case another Lotus Notes administrator, who had a very tough time at the airport. I never found out who she was, or whether she was then or is now a reader of DominoPower, but I've always hoped she somehow found the article and knew that someone cared that night.

Before I wrap up this ode to the American psyche, it's important I end with a warning: Black Friday is a day when you should practice extra caution, both online and out in stores. As Hackers poised for Black Friday discusses, you should watch out for emails and offers that seem too good to be true.

A common scam is to pick the hot toy of the season and send out a spam email blast offering it for much less than the typical price. Victims end up entering credit card information on malicious sites designed to look like well-known, trusted ones. They might also unknowingly download a keylogger that can steal personal information people type in when making any kind of Internet transaction.

Be careful out there, ok?

Product availability and resources
Read David's guide to surviving Thanksgiving (and some computer stuff).

Read Thanks for the memories: how to take perfect Thanksgiving pictures.

Read Getting intimate with fall photography.

Read about Where Have All The Emails Gone? at http://www.EmailsGone.com.

Read It's a small world.

Read Hackers poised for Black Friday.

For more than 20 years, David Gewirtz, the author of Where Have All The Emails Gone? and The Flexible Enterprise has analyzed current, historical, and emerging issues relating to technology, competitiveness, and policy. David is the Editor-in-Chief of the ZATZ magazines, is the Cyberterrorism Advisor for the International Association for Counterterrorism and Security Professionals, and can be reached via email at david@zatz.com.




[ Prev ]

ZATZ Home  ·  News  ·  Back Issues  ·  Credits/Trademarks ·  Link To Us
-- Advertisement --

Write for OutlookPower today!
Share your experience and expertise with other Outlook and Exchange users, administrators, and developers. OutlookPower Magazine has grown nicely and now has new opportunities for contributing authors and editors.

Write about something you're an expert on and get your name in lights.

For Writers' Guidelines and to discuss topics, contact Staff Editor Steve Niles. This is your opportunity to shine in front of your peers, your clients, and other readers.

Click for more info!

-- Advertisement --

BECOME CONFIDENT AND PRODUCTIVE WITH OUTLOOK 2007 IN SIX WEEKS
You can become a confident, productive user of Outlook 2007 in six weeks.

The Introduction to Outlook 2007 online course makes it happen in just twelve short lessons. The course features an instructor-led online discussion forum, regular assignments and quizzes, printable class notes, and a certificate of completion.

Learn more, then register today, at http://www.ed2go.com/courses/io7.
The Power Magazine for Microsoft Outlook and Exchange Users at OutlookPower.com
Copyright © 1998-2008, ZATZ Publishing. All rights reserved worldwide.
Outlook is a trademark of Microsoft Corporation.