Student's laptop woes preventable
Beth Kramer
Issue date: 8/30/07 Section: News
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Sara Allison, a senior math education major, has taken her Lenovo ThinkPad to the Help Desk several times in the last two years. Her hard drive needed to be replaced twice; three keys fell off her keyboard; and she stepped on her CD drive, causing it to stop working.
"I'm computer illiterate… technology isn't my number one interest in life, so [when] worst comes to worst, I always just use other people's computers. I use my laptop to show off my sticker collection," Allison said.
Physical neglect and not backing up computer files are the top two reasons students bring their laptops in to the Help Desk, said Chris Wagner, Help Desk manager.
"Don't leave [your computer] on the floor under a pile of clothes…just take care of it," Wagner said.
Files can be backed up by storing them on a flash drive. Files may also be burned onto a CD-ROM. A third method Wagner suggests is e-mailing files from an NMU account to a personal e-mail.
E-mails carry their own dangers if opened from an unknown sender, Wagner said. Malicious programs, such as viruses, can harm computers.
The ILOVEYOU virus, sent out via e-mail, was so destructive that it forced Microsoft and other large computer companies to turn their e-mail systems off in 2001, according to an article posted by electrical-engineer Marshall Brain on the web site, www.howstuffworks.com.
Depending on what the virus was programmed to do, it can erase files, crash the computer or steal information. Viruses sent by e-mail, once they infect a computer, can also automatically mail themselves to every person listed in the virus-infected address book, according to Brain's article.
"Anything you download can potentially be malicious software, so be wary of the source which you're getting your software from," Wagner warned.
However, viruses aren't the only possible e-mail hazards.
Phishing, an attempt to gather the computer user's account information, can take the guise of an official e-mail from a bank or an online store.
"I'm computer illiterate… technology isn't my number one interest in life, so [when] worst comes to worst, I always just use other people's computers. I use my laptop to show off my sticker collection," Allison said.
Physical neglect and not backing up computer files are the top two reasons students bring their laptops in to the Help Desk, said Chris Wagner, Help Desk manager.
"Don't leave [your computer] on the floor under a pile of clothes…just take care of it," Wagner said.
Files can be backed up by storing them on a flash drive. Files may also be burned onto a CD-ROM. A third method Wagner suggests is e-mailing files from an NMU account to a personal e-mail.
E-mails carry their own dangers if opened from an unknown sender, Wagner said. Malicious programs, such as viruses, can harm computers.
The ILOVEYOU virus, sent out via e-mail, was so destructive that it forced Microsoft and other large computer companies to turn their e-mail systems off in 2001, according to an article posted by electrical-engineer Marshall Brain on the web site, www.howstuffworks.com.
Depending on what the virus was programmed to do, it can erase files, crash the computer or steal information. Viruses sent by e-mail, once they infect a computer, can also automatically mail themselves to every person listed in the virus-infected address book, according to Brain's article.
"Anything you download can potentially be malicious software, so be wary of the source which you're getting your software from," Wagner warned.
However, viruses aren't the only possible e-mail hazards.
Phishing, an attempt to gather the computer user's account information, can take the guise of an official e-mail from a bank or an online store.
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