I didn’t get the whole idea of high school football. When I was in high school, I went to a grand total of zero point zero (0.0) games. It would have interfered with the Strat-o-Matic and D&D parties I did with my friends on Friday listening to Rush. Yeah, I’m not kidding about that.
This is the second post in a new series I’m posting for public feedback, licensed byAlgosec. Well, that is if they like it – we are sticking to our Totally Transparent Research policy. I’m also live-writing the content on GitHub if you want to provide any feedback or suggestions. Click here for the first post in the series, and here for post two.
This is the second post in a new series I’m posting for public feedback, licensed byAlgosec. Well, that is if they like it – we are sticking to our Totally Transparent Research policy. I’m also live-writing the content on GitHub if you want to provide any feedback or suggestions. Click here for the first post in the series.
This is the start in a new series I’m posting for public feedback, licensed byAlgosec. Well, that is if they like it – we are sticking to our Totally Transparent Research policy. I’m also live-writing the content on GitHub if you want to provide any feedback or suggestions. With that, here’s the content…
I have been in and around software development my entire professional career. As a new engineer, as an architect, and later as the guy responsible for the whole show. And I have seen as many failed software deliveries – late, low quality, off-target, etc. – as successes. Human dysfunction and miscommunication seem to creep in everywhere, and Murphy’s Law is in full effect. Getting engineers to deliver code on time was just one dimension of the problem – the interaction between development and QA…
With the upcoming EMV transition deadline for merchants fast approaching, we decided to take an in-depth look at what this migration is all about – and particularly whether it is really in merchants’ best interests to adopt EMV. We thought it would be a quick, straightforward set of conversations. We were wrong.
Sometimes I have a weekend when I am just amazed. Amazed at the fun I had. Amazed at the connections I developed. And I’m aware enough to be overcome with gratitude for how fortunate I am. A few weekends ago I had one of those experiences. It was awesome.

Threat Intelligence remains one of the hottest areas in security. With its promise to help organizations take advantage of information sharing, early results have been encouraging. We have researched Threat Intelligence deeply; focusing on where to get TI and the differences between gathering data from networks, endpoints, and general Internet sources. But we come back to the fact that having data is not enough – not now and not in the future.
Rich here.
A few things this week got me thinking about customer service. For whatever reason, I have always thought the best business decision is to put the needs of the customer first, then build your business model around that. I’m enough of a realist to know that isn’t always possible, but combine that with “don’t make it hard for people to give you money” and you sure tilt the odds in your favor.
The depths of summer heat in Atlanta can only mean one thing: the start of the school year. The first day of school is always the second Monday in August, so after a week of frenetic activity to get the kids ready, and a day’s diversion for some Six Flags roller coaster goodness, the kids started the next leg of their educational journey.