Feral Jundi

Saturday, June 20, 2009

Technology: SOS Link Gearing Up to Turn Smartphones Into Personal Security Devices

Filed under: PMC 2.0,Technology — Tags: , , , , — Matt @ 11:55 PM

   I posted this in regards to enhancing a protective details security plan.  If you are protecting a client that has a smart phone, having a SOS Link set up on it could definitely help out.  Especially for stalkers or during the early phases of kidnapping. I am not sure about the language transmitter though, and I don’t think that would be enough to stop anyone.  But taking video and recording sound as soon as the SOS Link is pushed on a phone is very handy, and puts that information into the right hands.  That information could be crucial to the investigation of trying to find a person within the first 48 hours.  Even the GPS function will be nice, all the way up until the bad guys detain the phone.  Interesting stuff and the various applications being made for these phones is amazing. –Matt

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SOS Link

SOS Link Gearing Up to Turn Smartphones Into Personal Security Devices

SEATTLE, June 17 /PRNewswire/ — Beta testing commenced today on SOS Link, an innovative new application that transforms smartphones into powerful personal security systems. Currently being tested on the popular iPhone 3G, SOS Link combines a patented smartphone application with web-based wireless service to provide the world’s first mobile personal security system.

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Wednesday, June 17, 2009

PMC 2.0: Social Media Benefits Trump Security Fears

Filed under: PMC 2.0,Technology — Tags: , , , , , — Matt @ 11:52 AM

“Social media is here to stay,” says Lynn Franco, Director of The Conference Board Consumer Research Center. “Online social networks are more than just a fad among the younger generation. They’ve become an integral part of our personal and professional lives. They’re an effective way to keep in touch with people, connect with friends and family, and network with colleagues. Social media will also transform marketing as we know it. They’re powerful communication tools, and are becoming an essential part of successful marketing strategies.” 

   This is a new category (Private Military Company 2.0 or PMC 2.0-thanks to David Isenberg), which I think is essential.  Social media, new media, blogging, social networking–all of it, must be studied and looked at in regards to how it will impact our industry. I have delved into the concepts before, with my My.PMC and MySomalia.com post, and figured it was time to give it some more focus.

     And as I watch the news unfold about Iran, and how Twitter and social media is completely driving a mini-revolution there, I have to think that there are some really interesting and powerful tools that the PMC and PSC could use in their efforts.

     This blog is PMC 2.0, as is the other blogs about this industry.  I have found numerous Myspace and Facebook pages completely dedicated to security contracting.  Most of my friends use Facebook and similar sites to communicate back home with friends and family. Even Youtube, with it’s numerous training videos and combat videos, is fueling the social media movement. And because this industry will continue to be staffed with Millennials who understand and like these technologies, or even depend upon them, then the PMC and PSC industry must find ways to work with these folks and take advantage.

   For inspiration, I will continue to highlight companies and government agencies that utilize social media, and how their lessons and methods could be applied to our industry.  In essence, my focus will be to find technologies that will enhance a company’s Jundism. –Matt

(for example, check out NASA’s Spacebook, a social network site for employees)

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Social media benefits trump security fears

by HOLLIS TEMPLETONJun 10, 2009

WASHINGTON—With a growing number of military personnel, reporters and elected officials using Twitter, Facebook and MySpace while deployed to the Middle East, experts agree that the government’s ability to understand and harness these applications is crucial to protecting national security.

When 26-year-old Spc. Michael Williams left for the Middle East in 2006 as part of the 233rd Transportation Company during Operation Iraqi Freedom, his MySpace blog became a place to chronicle missions between Iraq and Camp Arifjan, a U.S. military base in Kuwait.

Because social media can easily lend itself to a breach of security, Williams said he has learned to practice self-censorship in order to protect the operational context of what he and his fellow soldiers are doing.

“I know others want to know what I do or what I have done,” he said. “I appreciate that…However, it has been proven since recorded history began, that some things just should not be divulged.”

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Friday, June 12, 2009

Technology: The Cantenna–A Field Expedient WiFi Antenna

     On most contracts out there, you will have access to some kind of WiFi or internet connection.  If you have access to some WiFi, yet you are a little far from that WiFi hub to get a full signal, you just might have to make a field expedient antenna to make a connection.  This little DIY site is awesome, and explains the parts and process for building a cheap WiFi Antenna that you could throw away after your contract is over.(save the nuts and bolts, the N type female chassis-mount connector, and wire if you want) You can also buy an amplifier to increase the strength of the signal. These parts are small and light for just a basic Cantenna, and I like that. To read more about WiFi antennas, check this out.

     Also, if you are going to use WiFi over there, make sure to use password protected WiFi hubs, and only use the unsecured WiFi hubs at your own risk.  Also, make sure it is authorized in your AO to set something like this up.  Some camps would not be down with this stuff and others probably don’t care. As to the FCC’s thoughts on WiFi antennas, here you go. –Matt

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Tin Can Waveguide Antenna

How To Build A Tin Can Waveguide WiFi Antenna

Got no dough for a commercial WiFi antenna? Looking for an inexpensive way to increase the range of your wireless network? A tin can waveguide antenna, or Cantenna, may be just the ticket. This design can be built for under $5 U.S. and reuses a food, juice, or other tin can.

I am not an electrical engineer, nor do I have access to any fancy test equipment. I’ve built some antennas that worked for me and thought I would share what I learned. I have no idea if this is safe for your radio or wireless network equipment. The risk to you and your equipment is yours.

Building your Cantenna is easy, just follow these steps.

   1. Collect the parts

   2. Drill or punch holes in your can to mount the probe

   3. Assemble the probe and mount in can

Learn How to Build Antenna Here.

Saturday, June 6, 2009

Technology: New Widget–CNAS in the News

Filed under: Technology — Tags: , , , , , — Matt @ 10:48 AM

   There are couple of reasons why I have set up this new widget.  First, CNAS is filled with some very influential strategists and COIN experts (the CEO is Dr. Nagl).  Second, the ideas and concepts developed at this think tank, are what will impact the decision makers for the war, and thus impact the contracting industry. So it pays to follow the conversation. 

   This is also just a news deal.  So any mention of CNAS in the news, will pop up in this feed.  I think that would be the best indicator of any thought provoking ideas, because everyone is paying attention to them.

   For politics, like I said, I am apolitical on this blog.  Please do not take offense if you are not down with CNAS for whatever reason politically.  I am simply trying to monitor the top thought processes out there about the war. There are numerous think tanks I could put up, but this one seems to be the most influential to the administration. I could be wrong, and if the readers have suggestions or corrections, I am completely open.

     As for the ads, that is the latest deal with widgetbox, and if it becomes too annoying, I will just take it down and find another widget maker.  That is part of the reason why I put it down on the bottom.

   Finally, for the technical stuff, if you want to scroll through the stories on the widget, there is a bar just to the right of the various posts.  Left click and hold over that bar, drag it down or up to control.  Or just put your cursor over the topics and use your computer’s scroll feature. When you want to check out a story, just put your cursor over the title and click on it.  It is that simple and enjoy. –Matt

Podcasts: SAIS Hosted Book Discussion–‘War 2.0’, With Andrew Exum and Thomas Rid

Filed under: Podcasts,Technology — Tags: , , , , , , — Matt @ 10:16 AM

    I highly recommend listening to this discussion, if you want a good primer for the book War 2.0. –Matt 

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SAIS Hosted Book Discussion on Irregular Warfare With Scholar Thomas Rid on June 1

Thomas Rid, Calouste Gulbenkian Fellow at the SAIS Center for Transatlantic Relations and co-author of the new book War 2.0: Irregular Warfare in the Information Age; and Andrew Exum, fellow at the Center for a New American Security and founder of the Abu Muqawama blog, discussed Rid’s book on Monday, June 1. Click here to download audio of this event (right-click or ctrl-click and choose “Save As”).

Or listen to the discussion at this link to SAIS here.

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War 2.0: Irregular Warfare in the Information AgeBy Marc Hecker, Thomas Rid

Product Description

War 2.0: Irregular Warfare in the Information Age argues that two intimately connected trends are putting modern armies under huge pressure to adapt: the rise of insurgencies and the rise of the Web. Both in cyberspace and in warfare, the grassroots public has assumed increasing importance in recent years. After the dot-com bubble burst in 2000, Web 2.0 rose from the ashes. This newly interactive and participatory form of the Web promotes and enables offline action. Similarly, after Rumsfeld’s attempt to transform the US military into a lean, lethal, computerized force crashed in Iraq in 2003, counterinsurgency rose from the ashes. Counterinsurgency is a social form of war—indeed, the U.S. Army calls it armed social work—in which the local matrix population becomes the center of strategic gravity and public opinion at home the critical vulnerability.

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