You work best when it doesn’t feel like you’re working.
Technology is useless if it doesn’t improve your quality of life. I do some of my best work when I’m not really working. Like this time when I was “working” out on the Lanai
Technology is useless if it doesn’t improve your quality of life. I do some of my best work when I’m not really working. Like this time when I was “working” out on the Lanai
You work best when it doesn’t feel like you’re working. http://post.ly/18y39
Your iPhone Alarm might not work properly after time change next week http://post.ly/18wtK
If you use alarms on your iPhone, there may be a problem when we re-set the clocks back 1 hour on Nov 7. I suspect that Hawaii users, who do not change their times, will not be affected by this bug
An iPhone bug already seen when Australia switched between Daylight Savings Time and Standard Time a few weeks ago has now hit Europe. Twitter just lit up with reports of recurring iPhone alarms going off an hour later than usual. So even though the iOS clock changed correctly over the weekend, the alarm did not.
The United States midterm election is on Tuesday, November 2, and we encourage all eligible US citizens to get out and vote. We’ve made it easy to find your polling place and follow election news by visiting our Election Center mobile site at m.google.com/elections on your Android-powered phone or iPhone.
Google delivers Mobile Election Tracking App http://post.ly/18hnY
UH Students Personal Data violated. You could be at risk. http://post.ly/18hgI
FL MORRIS / FMORRIS@STARADVERTISER.COMUniversity of Hawaii spokesman Ryan Mielke displayed a now-disconnected server yesterday in a room on the West Oahu campus. A faculty member at the campus apparently inadvertently uploaded personal information of 40,101 students to the Web.
The University of Hawaii’s personal information breach of more than 40,000 students is the third-largest privacy breach detected by a Washington, D.C.-based privacy policy institution.
A faculty member at the West Oahu campus apparently inadvertently uploaded personal information of 40,101 students to the Web. The information belongs to students who attended the West Oahu campus from 1988 to 1993, and Manoa students from 1990 to 1998 and in 2001.
The information was posted by a now-retired Institutional Research Office faculty member at 2:46 p.m. Nov. 30, 2009.
Everything from a student’s Social Security number and citizenship to the highest level of education attained by parents, marital status and addresses were available online until Oct. 18, when the Liberty Coalition in Washington, D.C., discovered the information through a Google search
I’m enjoying a blast to my past as Stairway to Heaven randomly made its way to my music player
Looking for an Android phone? See Google Phone Gallery http://post.ly/18BRG