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Friday, 18 January 2013 15:34

Diaries of AfterWorld

dalewj is a real avatar in a real MMORPG game called AfterWorld. Watch dalewj discover his own history. Watch dalewj discover the history of the world he lives in. He will fall in love. He will have friends die. He will finally become a citizen of the great AfterWorld.

AfterWorld: AfterWorld is a "free market economy" persistent-world massively multiplayer online game set in a science fiction setting of post-apocalyptic Siberia. The game currently features:

• A complex and unusual skills based role-playing system that involves more than a hundred different skills with each of them developed using unique game mechanics.

• An advanced craft system with branching production chains currently containing thousands different items.

• A realmoney trade in-game economic system designed in such a way that resource farming does not ruin the balance, but is an intended part of the gameplay for high-level characters.

Released January 2013
Kindle  eBook(epub)  Paper

Diaries of AfterWorld Book 1

Due June 2013

            Diaries of AfterWorld       

                    Book 2:  

Tuesday, 04 September 2012 18:17

Outside Orbit by Dale Johnson

Outside Orbit is the Second in the Outside Book Series. 

The Journey from Lunar to Enceladus is a long one and many things can happen in open space.  Join our pioneers cross our solar system to their new moon.  Landing on their moon will be the end of a long journey for 2500 humans on 21 ships.

They will meet obstacles; they will laugh during success and cry during death.  This is what life will be like in the future. 

Would you give your life to Enceladus?

 

Available Now on:  Kindle  |  eBook(epub)  | Paper  | iBookstore

 

No matter how many times you walk into a dome, Anton still gets a shock of amazement.  The Dome takes floors 2 thru 5 of the ship itself and is 1100 meters square.  If you look up you will see the dome itself rising another 2 stories above the top of the ship.  At the moment the dome is covered by black tiles.  Two weeks ago the mission had passed the point where the sun was strong enough to help the plants grow versus the loss of heat leaving the open dome.  At that point the dome is automatically covered with the night-time black panels and the internal sun-lamps are turned on each day.  They will remain closed until the mission lands, the sun mirrors are attached to the Main dome and the sun’s light becomes enough to grow plants again.

On the ground floor of the dome are the ground growing crops, mostly trees of fruits and some underground vegetables that don’t like growing in water.  This dome has orange trees and various types of nuts growing on the ground.   Each floor in the air is a full set of hydroponic growing systems.  The hydroponic floor systems cover the whole of the dome and can be walked on with the connecting ladder system.  Each of these floors contains thousands of plant systems.  Each system being  made of a single tall water tower rising eight feet high.  There are between one and six plants growing on top of these towers.  The plant will grow downwards to the bottom of the plant system and be manicured so that the food produced is correctly held up or let hang, depending on the plant type. 

Above each of the hydroponic floors is a full set of lights set to turn on and off each day to produce a daily light cycle.  When it is night time the lights change from sun-light to yellow-light to allow workers to work in the dome without effecting the sun cycle of the crops.  For each type of crop the actual sun-light is computer controlled to make the plant it’s happiest.  Some plants use more red light than others, while some use more blue light than others.   The computers maintain the whole balance.

Three of these hydroponic floors sit on top of each other and the ground floor on the dome.  The top floor having the tallest crops for that dome.  The floor above the ground flor in this dome holds different types of tomatoes.  Floor three grows squash, and floor four is totally comprised of beans.  All of the plants in this dome are younger than those on the other dome ship and are just about to bloom and fruit.  Encel18 and Encel19 have exact duplicate food in each dome, but are synchronized to pick food at different times.  Encel19 is picking and delivering food now from these four domes, while here on Encel18 these domes are about four weeks away from producing their first delivery to the fleet.

Each ship has sixteen domes, in groups of four, holding close to half a million plants.  The dome ships feed close to 2500 people every day.  Everything is automated so it can be done with thirty-two famers on each ship along with the Master Farmer.  The day time is when the farmers farm the plants, the night time is when the bots take control.  One can’t even go into the dome when the automated machines are picking the crops for delivery.  The sounds and speed of the machines can easily confuse and hurt even the most experienced farmer. 

The fleet can survive with just one food ship, but it truly lives with two.

Outside Orbit by Dale Johnson

Tuesday, 04 September 2012 16:47

Outside Protocols by Dale Johnson

Outside Protocols is the first in the Outside Book Series. 

In 2074 the world has changed and not much is the same. Government. Religion. Earth. Science. Space Travel. Communication has had to grow in speed and strength. Is it still secure? Is it still reliable? Can a person sitting in an office destroy every space base and space ship with a single stroke of the keyboard? 

Join us on our journey to find the eX56 protocol. The journey will touch places like Mars, Davenport , Lunar, and a MMO. Will eX56 be found and dispatched? No matter what we will find good of old fashion common networking sense working together to find out what and where eX56 comes from. 

Available Now on:  Kindle  |  eBook(epub)  |  Paper  | iBookstore

“Hello everyone this is Rick at UVMSB, we are here to do a replication of the Stream Glitch to check for an artifact up here on the Mars station.  We expect to see it in a Trunk line from Central Mar Operations to UV Mars Station Branson.  I have with me Rori and Lonny my system admins who will be monitoring this side of the test.  Lonny can you guys give us a quick rundown on the artifact you found please?”

“Sure, Hi all this is Lonny.  What we think we have seen is an artifact in your Trunk line to UVMB.  What got our attention is it has happened yesterday and early today 3 minutes after the reported glitch to your Mars Stream.”

“Howdy all this is Falkin here on Earth, how exactly did you see the artifact?”

Rori starts talking before Falkin got exactly the whole sentence out.  “I noticed a red blip on the trunk both days.  Nothing fancy, just a few flashes of red on the trunk.”

A bit of silence before Rick finishes the thought for Rori. “Yes and we have done a dynamic test of the link and found no problems.  We have a physical test due tomorrow, but we wanted to check this out first, I figured it was important to you all down there.  BTW the trunk is a T9, and has 3 access points on the Station side and numbered UVM-9122K.”

“Yes we have no problem with this test, we need to get to the bottom of this glitch.  It has been going on way too long.” Comments Falkin. “Alright I will let you all do what you do; I will be in the background.”

“Hey everyone this is Capucine, I have my team online here and we are ready to go with the test, It will start in 45 seconds.  Any last notes from my side?”  A long silence tells everyone that either nothing needs to be said, or they are way too busy getting the test to work to deal with the vid call.

Lonny types into her terminal and appends the Trunk monitor over to a new video window in the fourth channel.  Everyone’s fourth screen should now show the full monitor.

A new voice to Lonny comes on the vid link and counts down  “5…4...3…2…1.. Replication, Cap everything looks like it is working here, checking with Gee to see what he has.”

“Ya it looks like it worked to me, I am running a grep against the output looking for changes right now.  It’s not exactly as easy as it should be, since the data in the stream was different by default.  But we will figure it out and be faster next time.  Give me another minute.”

Outside Protocols by Dale Johnson

Thursday, 29 March 2012 13:45

ArcMail

ArcMail

ArcMail

ArcMail archiving hardware provides simple setup, quick search and little or no maintenance. With more efficient email storage management, you can get what you need and get on with your day.  The ArcMail product list consists of:

  • ArcMail Defender:  ArcMail Defender provides the fastest archival search function in the industry, enabling employees or administrators to quickly find the emails they’re looking for.  Defender works with Exchange, Domino/Notes, and Sharepoint.
  • ArcMail GMAIL Guardian:  The Guardian is an email archiving solution that automatically encodes, indexes and archives all inbound, outbound and internal GMAIL mail, keeping you in compliance and protecting you from data loss.
  • ArcMail for Salesforce Chatter:  Salesforce Chatter archives your company’s Chatter logs for compliance, data discovery and to protect you from liability. Since Salesforce does not offer any archiving capability of its own, you need a solution that does.
  • ArcMail for IM: ArcMail for IM solves your IM liability risks by not only automatically archiving Yahoo!, AIM and MSN instant messages, but also their associated attachments, so you can find them in second.
  • ArcMail Could Storage Gateway:  The ArcMail Cloud Storage Gateway securely encrypts electronic communications and attachments and stores them in the remote location of your choice. Or choose to store on site locally on your SAN or NAS storage solution using fiber channel or iSCSI connectivity
 

ArcMail Defender

When your ArcMail Defender arrives, you’ll have everything you need to get up and running in about an hour. Compare that to software and managed services that can take weeks to implement and can require an additional server. Plus, our Linux-based operating system integrates seamlessly with almost any mail server.

Emails are archived automatically without requiring attention from IT personnel. Daily status reports are sent to administrators so they can evaluate server traffic and performance. With ArcMail, you can reduce the workload of your mail server. 

Because the operating system, software, database, on-board storage and RAID disk management are all included, there’s no extra software to purchase and no need for an additional server. That makes Defender a scalable solution that provides you with mission-critical performance while keeping email archiving costs low. The premier email archiving appliance, Defender will pay for itself

  
 

ArcMail GMAIL Guardian

Moving your email to the cloud is a great way to save money, and with ArcMail Guardian, you can do it without sacrificing reliability and security. The Guardian is an email archiving solution that automatically encodes, indexes and archives all inbound, outbound and internal mail, keeping you in compliance and protecting you from data loss.

A bug in 2011 caused 150,000 Gmail users to lose access to their emails. The fact is that it’s easier to trust the cloud if it’s backed up by a grounded archive that gives you exclusive ownership and access to a copy of your emails and attachments. That is what ArcMail Guardian™ was designed to do.

ArcMail email archiving solutions provide the fastest search functionality in the industry. In business, time is money, and ArcMail Guardian™ will save you both.  If you are using a hybrid cloud/hosted email strategy, ArcMail Guardian™ is the ideal solution to securely and reliably archive all emails and attachments with a single strategy.

ArcMail GMAIL Guardian DataSheet (pdf)

 
ArcMail for Salesforce Chatter

Salesforce Chatter is an outstanding way to communicate with co-workers inside a secure, closed environment. For many regulated industries, including healthcare, finance and government, this added connectivity comes with added responsibility. That’s why it’s important to archive your company’s Chatter logs for compliance, data discovery and to protect you from liability. Since Salesforce does not offer any archiving capability of its own, you need a solution that does. ArcMail for Salesforce was created to not only archive Chatter, but to make it easy to find specific messages and conversations.

Our solution allows you to automatically encode, index and archive all of your Salesforce Chatter, keeping you in compliance and protecting you from data loss.  ArcMail for Salesforce integrates with the award-winning ArcMail Defender email archiving solution to securely store all Chatter and email in a single location, making discovery even easier.

ArcMail for Salesforce Chatter DataSheet (pdf)

 
 

ArcMail for IM

In today’s fast-paced business world, the ability to instantly communicate with co-workers and clients can do wonders for your company’s productivity.  That’s why chat tools like Yahoo! Messenger, AOL Instant Messenger (AIM) and MSN Messenger have continued to grow in popularity for countless industries.  But without archiving tools available for instant messaging communications, organizations in regulated industries like education, government, healthcare and finance, risk liability. Many don’t have IM usage policies or archiving solutions in place to ensure they stay in compliance. ArcMail for IM solves this problem by not only automatically archiving Yahoo!, AIM and MSN instant messages, but also their associated attachments, so you can find them in seconds.

ArcMail for IM is the only archiving solution that can integrate data from multiple messaging platforms, such as Google Apps email, Salesforce Chatter and Microsoft Exchange. This means that all your instant messaging data can be securely stored alongside your emails in a single location, making data discovery as streamlined and cost-effective as possible for your busy team.

With an easy-to-use interface and the fastest search functionality in the industry, ArcMail for IM helps you locate the instant messages and attachments you are looking for in mere seconds.

ArcMail for IM DataSheet (pdf)

   
ArcMail Defender Cloud Storage Gateway

The volume of electronic communications is greater than ever, and so is the need for an archiving and storage solution that puts you in charge of your data. ArcMail’s new Cloud Storage Gateway device gives you the power to search faster, store smarter and protect better without dragging down your bottom line with ever-growing hardware and maintenance costs. For regulated industries like healthcare, finance and government, the ArcMail Cloud Storage Gateway also lets you turn data compliance requirements into business intelligence assets by providing extensive data mining capabilities.

The ArcMail Cloud Storage Gateway securely encrypts electronic communications and attachments and stores them in the remote location of your choice. Or choose to store on site locally on your SAN or NAS storage solution using fiber channel or iSCSI connectivity.

Along with remotely storing your source documents, you can access every email, archived SalesForce Chatter message, instant message (IM) and attachment on any subject, from any date range, in seconds. The result is the fastest search time in the industry and greater cost savings.

ArcMail Defender Cloud DataSheet (pdf)

Wednesday, 15 February 2012 15:44

Inside Trend Micro Control Manager 5.5

Free for Download  -->


By Dale Johnson, Johnson Consulting

Published February 2012



Table of Contents


Chapter 1: Requirements and Installation

  • Your Server Needs
  • Thoughts on doing Installs, Upgrading or Uninstalling TMCM
  • Upgrading in Place. 
  • Installing the Server

Chapter 2:  Using the Dashboard

  • Summary Page
  • Widgets
  • Tabs

. 15



Chapter 3: Product Agents

  • MCP Agents
  • Control Manager Agents (TMI Agents)
  • Installing Agents

. 20


Chapter 4: Product Management

  • Products
  • Product Tree Management
  • Manage Product Tree
  • Searching
  • Replication
  • Single Sign-On
  • Tasks

Chapter 5: OutBreak Prevention

  • Outbreak Prevention Services
  • Turning a OPS Threat on
  • Settings

Chapter 6: Log/Reporting

  • Log Searching (Query)
  • Reporting
  • Log/Report Settings

Chapter 7: Updating

  • Updates
  • Manual Download
  • Scheduled Download
  • Deployment Plans
  • Scheduled Download Exceptions
  • User & Deployment Settings

Chapter 8: Administration/Settings

  • Administration
  • User Accounts
  • Command Tracking
  • Event Center
  • License Management
  • Settings
  • Tools

Inside SMEX

COPYRIGHT 2010 –   Johnson Consulting Inc.  All Rights Reserved.

No part of this book may be reproduced, transmitted, transcribed in any form or by any means, without written permission of Johnson Consulting Inc.  This book is provided as a guide “as is”, without warranty of any kind, either express or implied, including, but not limited to, the implied warranties of merchantability and fitness for a particular purpose.

This guide could contain technical and typographical errors.  Periodic changes are made to the information made herein; these changes will be incorporated in the new editions of this guide.

ScanMail for Exchange (SMEX) is a trademark of Trend Micro Incorporated.  All other product references are trademarked to the companies that own and distribute them.

Johnson Consulting, Inc.  21 Parliament Lane, Woburn MA 08101
www.jconsult.com   877-228-8595

Thursday, 10 November 2011 17:44

Contact Us

Thursday, 10 November 2011 15:45

Officescan

Wednesday, 09 November 2011 14:47

Virtual Desktop Security

Wednesday, 02 November 2011 16:40

Test

Wednesday, 19 October 2011 17:26

Inside NetClarity NACwall

By Dale Johnson, Johnson Consulting

Published November 2011


Only available to licensed users of NACwall
You may recieve your free copy by contacting Johnson Consulting Sales

(1-877-228-8595 or This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it )


Inside NACwall

COPYRIGHT 2011 –   Johnson Consulting Inc.  All Rights Reserved.

No part of this book may be reproduced, transmitted, transcribed in any form or by any means, without written permission of Johnson Consulting Inc.  This book is provided as a guide “as is”, without warranty of any kind, either express or implied, including, but not limited to, the implied warranties of merchantability and fitness for a particular purpose.

This guide could contain technical and typographical errors.  Periodic changes are made to the information made herein; these changes will be incorporated in the new editions of this guide.

NACwall is a trademark of NetClarity Incorporated.  All other product references are trademarked to the companies that own and distribute them.

Johnson Consulting, Inc.  21 Parliament Lane, Woburn MA 08101
www.jconsult.com   877-228-8595

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