Monthly Archives: January 2013

Smart Phones and Kids: What Parents Need to Know!

Trying to stay on top of technology seems like a losing race to most of us. Thank goodness for geeks! Especially tech geeks who can break down concepts in plain old basic language. God bless them!. . . So when I  find enlightening post about tech toys, I feel obliged to share. Great information for anyone with a wireless family plan –  Bohemian Home Journal

Post by Jennifer Jolly – December 2012

Handing over a shiny new smartphone or tablet to a youngster is like giving them keys to a sports car and wishing them luck on the freeway. In this TECH NOW, find out how to head off inappropriate content, over-use and even Internet predators with simple steps that even a non-techie parent can manage.

Set the rules. Have a heart-to-heart about the rules of cyber-conduct. Let them know this is about keeping them safe, which is your job as a parent. Print out, sign and post a family Internet contract so that expectations and consequences are clear.

Set up content filters. You can set up filters that even your tech-savvy teens can’t hack through.

Android, Apple and Windows devices have settings or apps that with just three to five steps let you “set and forget” a list of filters. You can password-protect your settings, too, so that your kids can’t (easily) outsmart you and undo them.

Install surveillance software. The next level of protection is surveillance — with the understanding that you’re using these tools to protect, inform and empower your kids, not to spy on them. After all, teens need to learn about the trust, respect and privacy that comes with growing up. For free filters, try K9 Web Protection. It blocks sites in more than 70 categories, including pornography, gambling, drugs,violence/hate/racism, malware/spyware and phishing.

Additionally, the FTC this week said it is investigating whether some apps violate kids’ privacy rights by quietly collecting personal information and sharing it with advertisers and data brokers. The FTC recommends these six steps for parents:

— Try out the apps your kid wants to use so that you understand the content and the features.

— Use device and app settings to restrict a kid’s ability to download apps, make purchases through the app or access other material.

— Turn off your Wi-Fi and carrier connection using “airplane mode” to disable any interactive features, prevent inadvertent taps and block access to material you haven’t approved.

Turn off your Wi-Fi and carrier connection using “airplane mode” to disable any interactive features, prevent inadvertent taps and block access to material you haven’t approved.

— Look for statements about whether the app or anything within the app collects kids’ personal information. If you can’t find disclosures or assurances that information collection and sharing is limited, consider a different app.

— Check whether the app connects to social media, gaming platforms or other services that enable sharing photos, video or personal information or chatting with other players. If so, see if you can block or limit those connections.

— Talk to your kids about your rules for downloading, purchasing and using apps, and sharing information online. And make sure you tell them why it matters.

Jennifer Jolly is an Emmy award-winning consumer tech contributor and host of USA Today’s new daily digital TECH NOW . Email her at techcomments@usatoday.com. Follow her on Twitter: @JenniferJolly

I’ve been trying to talk several of my friends into starting a blog because I think they would be good at it and in turn find it enjoyable. Came across this post, thought it would be good to share and hopefully motivate some folks.

janinerussell's avatarThere is nothing to writing. All you do is sit down at a typewriter and bleed. --Ernest Hemingway

When I surpassed 50 followers, I wrote a post thanking all my readers for listening, and got a lot of feedback. I got asked how I created a blog that 50 people thought was worth reading in just 2 months, so I decided to make this post. (Not that I think my blog is super great or anything. Cause I don’t. I just try to make something that I would want to read.) So here are some ideas that might help take your blog to the next level.

Actually, I liked that thing I just said. Let’s make that #1.

1. Make a blog you would want to read.

This is your space. You have freedom to make it something that is 100% uniquely you. So don’t be afraid to change things that aren’t working for you to make it better. I’ve redone my “About Me” page, which should be…

View original post 963 more words

The Nam-Hai

My friend Peggy went to Vietnam recently (one of her stops on her trip around the world) If I ever get a chance to visit Vietnam, this place would be on the top of my list.

A paradisal resort near Hoi An which boasts 100 striking villas along the palm-fringed sands of White China Beach.

namhai2 namhai4 namhai1

Check out more pictures from Honestly WTF

Re-post by Erica

http://honestlywtf.com/travel/the-nam-hai/

No Mirrors in My Nana’s House

This first time I heard ‘Sweet Honey and the Rock’ I was blown away. I love this group. This is a video by Ysaye Barnwell (the writer and a member of Sweet Honey in the Rock) she was born in 1947. I read it is a personal song she published and someone later decided to broadcast it on Nick JR.

All Heart Lifestyle Expo

Come see me at the All Heart Lifestyle Expo February 2nd at the beautiful Tower Club in Tyson, http://allheartlifestyleexpo.com Register to have a professional photo head shot offered at a huge discount for all attendees. I’ll be there from sun-up to sundown providing an affordable option for a professional photo headshot.

Come to the All Heart Lifestyle Expo and meet experts in the fields of health, business, branding, law, social media, motivation and finance.

Go my FB page before February 9th and ‘enter to win’ a giveaway of a watercolor digital image file from your favorite photo. Winner announced on my business face book page  February 10, 2013

http://bit.ly/SEnQ2Ea Rafflecopter giveaway

Social Tsunami: Dr. Julian Bond on the Civil Rights Movement

MLK5_3The Inauguration ceremony of Barack Obama’s second term in the White House is of special significance this year; not only did it parallel with the birthday of slain civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr., this year commemorates 50 years since  ‘the March on Washington,’ the church bombing in Birmingham, Alabama that killed four black children, the murder of Medgar Wiley Evers,  the 100th birthday anniversary of Rosa Parks and 150th anniversary of the Emancipation Proclamation.

All of these events were social tsunamis that changed our nation.  In 2013 they will serve as a powerful reminders of our strength, individually and collectively.

I had the honor of discussing these notable moments in history with Dr. Julian Bond, civil rights leader turned professor of civil rights history. I caught up with him before his keynote speech at a MLK Day celebration at the Reston Community Center in Fairfax, Va.  To say I was honored is an understatement.

For more than 50 years Julian Bond has been a human rights and civil rights leader. In 1960 he co-founded the SNCC, the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee. Bond spent 20 years in the Georgia Legislature after first being denied a seat because of his outspoken views against the Vietnam War. For 11 years, until 2010, he was chairman of the NAACP.

Watch County Magazine in February on Cable Channel 16 and hear more of my conversation with Dr. Julian Bond.  County Magazine can also be seen via Video On Demand on the Fairfax County website.  www.fairfacounty.com

The Art of Packing

From Louis Vuitton webpage:

Screen shot 2013-01-16 at 11.44.29 AM

http://www.louisvuitton.eu/front/#/eng_E1/Collections/Women/The-Art-of-Packing/stories/The-Art-of-packing

Stylish Pups!

New Kind of French Manicure

I love this look!

Here’s to a Brilliant New Year

Happy New Year

Wishing everyone blessings and abundance in 2013
Thank you for being the supportive online community I enjoy so much!
May we all continue to share our thoughts, enthusiasm, likes and dislikes for all things that touch, influence and impact our lives.
I did not make New Year resolutions for 2013. My plan is to continue what I have always done; trying to be the best mother, friend, sister, aunt, cousin, partner, dog owner, employee, photographer, writer, media producer, and self advocate I can be.
Keep your eyes, heart and mind open to change and look forward to 2013 with anticipation of all the new and wonderful things you will experience.