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@heiseonline@social.heise.de
2024-02-29 08:47:00

Mentafy: Kontrolle des Schreibprozesses für Lehrende, KI-Hilfe für Nutzende
Stammt der Text vom Prüfling oder der KI? Ein Start-up aus Köln möchte Arbeitsprozesse für Lehrende transparent machen und KI-Tools dabei nicht verdammen.

@Mediagazer@mstdn.social
2024-02-28 19:30:56

Netflix names Dan Lin, the producer of the Lego movies and the live-action adaptation of Avatar: The Last Airbender, as head of film, replacing Scott Stuber (Los Angeles Times)
latimes.com/entertainment-arts<…

@lukem@hachyderm.io
2024-02-29 22:02:21

I usually go ahead and mute most bots that reach my timeline but this one is terrific.
@…
beep.town/@initech

@fogelnet@heads.social
2024-03-30 14:05:08

Grateful Dead from Fri, Mar 30, 1973 at Rochester Community War Memorial on Live Music Archive!
#GratefulDead #TIGDH #LiveMusic

@benb@osintua.eu
2024-02-29 08:23:26

Syrskyi visits front line, reports Russian offensive at Orlivka held back: benborges.xyz/2024/02/29/syrsk

@SafeStreetRebel@sfba.social
2024-04-30 05:04:07

This Mothers' Day (Sunday May 12)... join us for a Special Edition Slow Ride to a truly-car-free space in our own back yard: Angel Island!
Meet at the Ferry Building Gate B at 11:30AM, roll at 12PM (SHARP!). The ferry costs $9.50 each way and accepts clipper card.

mothers' day slow ride special edition: angel island
map of angel island with a red line following a bike route along the island. callouts with arrows point to the start and end of the ride, as well as the location of a lunch break spot and bike parking
satellite image of the san francisco ferry building. the ferry building is outlined in green and labeled. ferry gate B is circled in green and labeled. just to the left / west of the ferry gate B is a red X and the words "meet here"
@AnthonyCollette@infosec.exchange
2024-02-22 14:06:04

For Security Teams Inside Organizations
Let’s take a deep dive into this piece of consumer messaging —
1958. American Football. A sports reporter bluntly asks coach Vince Lombardi “What are you going to change to turn this team around after a string of failures and losing seasons?”
His reply: “I am not going to change anything. We will use the same players, the same plays and the same training system. But we will concentrate on becoming brilliant at the basics.”
This is an incredibly motivating message. And it paid off!
In the next nine seasons, Coach Lombardi’s team, the Green Bay Packers, went on to win five NFL Championships and two Super Bowls.
The phrase “Brilliant At The Basics” found its way into popular culture, becoming a recurring theme.
And the graphic? For the general public, the lightbulb image = Good Idea.
Consumers are already familiar with these two concepts.
In Your Organization, You Define “The Basics”
Find the sweet spot between everything that’s possible and what your users are willing and able to do.
☑️ Ask yourself "What should our users know? What actions should they take?"
☑️ Define them clearly and give them a simple, catchy name — "The Basics."
☑️ Show your users "This Is How We Do It Here."
☑️ Let them know they can master The Basics.
☑️ Then let your users know there's More Where That Came From, if they're interested, but … The Basics are the focus.
We should deliver cybersecurity advice to non-technical people in bite-size, digestible pieces. Consumers hate feeling like they’re at the pointy end of a firehose. And they don’t like being lectured to. Let’s not overwhelm them. First lay a strong foundation, then line by line, concept by concept — build up from there.
My partner led consumer product development programs that sold $100M and $400M of consumer products every year. Now he develops consumer products for Pokémon. We have hard-won experience when it comes to speaking to and persuading consumers.
We want to share that with you.
Would you like to experiment with this messaging and these laptop stickers in your organization?
Three additional benefits for you:
☑️ Over time, if The Basics in your organization change, the graphics and the laptop stickers stay the same.
☑️ A campaign like this might help identify potential Cyber Champions in your organization.
☑️ The laptop stickers provide persistent visibility for Cybersecurity within your organization.
We’d be happy to send some free samples for you to try out with your users.
1.) Visit this Brilliant At The Basic page on our website: #BrilliantAtTheBasics
_________________
♻️ Please feel free to share this post and let others know about this offer.

@iragersh@mstdn.social
2024-04-30 00:45:06

Just wrote the following to NYC DOT DOT-646725-F7H7, my community board and my council district rep.
Part 1 of 2.
I walked past an older guy (I'm 73) struggling on crutches on W104 between Broadway and West End Avenue. He would have to cross West End Avenue where there is a full lane yellow hatched area in the middle of the road.

@AnthonyCollette@infosec.exchange
2024-02-22 14:06:04

For Security Teams Inside Organizations
Let’s take a deep dive into this piece of consumer messaging —
1958. American Football. A sports reporter bluntly asks coach Vince Lombardi “What are you going to change to turn this team around after a string of failures and losing seasons?”
His reply: “I am not going to change anything. We will use the same players, the same plays and the same training system. But we will concentrate on becoming brilliant at the basics.”
This is an incredibly motivating message. And it paid off!
In the next nine seasons, Coach Lombardi’s team, the Green Bay Packers, went on to win five NFL Championships and two Super Bowls.
The phrase “Brilliant At The Basics” found its way into popular culture, becoming a recurring theme.
And the graphic? For the general public, the lightbulb image = Good Idea.
Consumers are already familiar with these two concepts.
In Your Organization, You Define “The Basics”
Find the sweet spot between everything that’s possible and what your users are willing and able to do.
☑️ Ask yourself "What should our users know? What actions should they take?"
☑️ Define them clearly and give them a simple, catchy name — "The Basics."
☑️ Show your users "This Is How We Do It Here."
☑️ Let them know they can master The Basics.
☑️ Then let your users know there's More Where That Came From, if they're interested, but … The Basics are the focus.
We should deliver cybersecurity advice to non-technical people in bite-size, digestible pieces. Consumers hate feeling like they’re at the pointy end of a firehose. And they don’t like being lectured to. Let’s not overwhelm them. First lay a strong foundation, then line by line, concept by concept — build up from there.
My partner led consumer product development programs that sold $100M and $400M of consumer products every year. Now he develops consumer products for Pokémon. We have hard-won experience when it comes to speaking to and persuading consumers.
We want to share that with you.
Would you like to experiment with this messaging and these laptop stickers in your organization?
Three additional benefits for you:
☑️ Over time, if The Basics in your organization change, the graphics and the laptop stickers stay the same.
☑️ A campaign like this might help identify potential Cyber Champions in your organization.
☑️ The laptop stickers provide persistent visibility for Cybersecurity within your organization.
We’d be happy to send some free samples for you to try out with your users.
1.) Visit this Brilliant At The Basic page on our website: #BrilliantAtTheBasics
_________________
♻️ Please feel free to share this post and let others know about this offer.

@iragersh@mstdn.social
2024-04-30 00:45:06

Just wrote the following to NYC DOT DOT-646725-F7H7, my community board and my council district rep.
Part 1 of 2.
I walked past an older guy (I'm 73) struggling on crutches on W104 between Broadway and West End Avenue. He would have to cross West End Avenue where there is a full lane yellow hatched area in the middle of the road.